Missing Persons

Missing Persons

by Michael Brandman
Missing Persons

Missing Persons

by Michael Brandman

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Overview

"A terrific read. Buddy Steel is my kind of Sheriff."—Tom Selleck

MISSING PERSONS is the first book in the new Buddy Steel mystery series by New York Times bestselling author, Michael Brandman. Even in a town called Freedom, justice has its price…

LAPD homicide detective Buddy Steel finds himself detoured from his own life when his ailing father, Sheriff Burton Steel, calls him home to Freedom to take over as deputy. Though relations between father and son have always been strained, and Buddy reluctantly agrees to the arrangement.

When he begins investigating the possible disappearance of a famous local televangelist's wife, he is met with outright antagonism. While the highly-secured husband insists that his wife is simply visiting a relative, the housekeeper who reported her missing fears she may have been murdered. And no one, from family members to ministry security and staff to the prosecutor's office seems inclined to help Buddy in his investigation. In fact, many go out of their way to stop him.

But the more he pokes and prods, the more he realizes that the Bible-thumping family and their television empire may be an elaborate cover for a less-than-holy enterprise. This is far more than a typical missing person case. But how far up does the corruption reach—and will Buddy pay the ultimate price for refusing to look the other way?

MISSING PERSONS is an emotionally propulsive thriller perfect for fans of Robert B. Parker, Sue Grafton, and Michael Connelly. Because there are dark secrets buried in this small town, and a missing person threatens to unearth them all—with deadly consequences.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781464210754
Publisher: Sourcebooks
Publication date: 04/02/2024
Series: Buddy Steel Thrillers , #1
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 262
Sales rank: 18,819
File size: 1 MB

About the Author

About The Author

Michael Brandman is the author of three Jesse Stone novels, each based on characters created by Robert B. Parker, all on the New York Times Best Sellers list.

With his longtime partner, Tom Selleck, he produced and co-wrote nine Jesse Stone movies and three Westerns.

His and Emanuel Azenberg's production of Tom Stoppard's Rosencrantz & Guildenstern Are Dead won the Venice Film Festival's Golden Lion Award for Best Picture.

He has produced more than forty motion pictures including films written by Arthur Miller, Stephen Sondheim, Neil Simon, David Mamet, Horton Foote, Wendy Wasserstein; David Hare, and Athol Fugard.

He is the father of two sons and lives in Los Angeles with his wife, the actress Joanna Miles.

Read an Excerpt

CHAPTER 1

A scorching heat wave blanketed the West Coast, bringing with it record temperatures, rolling blackouts, and a general feeling of malaise that infected everyone.

A fast-moving Mexican monsoon, however, was now gaining strength in the Gulf of Mexico, steaming up the California coast accompanied by gale force winds and heavy rain.

It would most likely reach the township of Freedom by late afternoon. I sat staring out the office window, elated that the storm would finally end the stultifying heat, but also apprehensive of the possible havoc it might wreak.

I was locked in a debate with myself as to whether I would order a takeout meatball-and-onion pizza from Larry's or the Kung Pao Chicken from Tsai's, when I noticed a late-model green Toyota Camry pull up in front of the County Courthouse. I watched as a middle-aged woman emerged, looked around, then headed inside.

After a few moments, I heard Sheriff's Deputy Johnny Kennerly talking with the woman. Then he appeared in my doorway and stood there, fanning himself with a legal-size yellow pad.

"There's a Rosalita Gonzalez here to see you."

I swiveled my chair around to face him. "What about?"

"You mean what does she want?"

"Yes."

"She wants to see you."

"So you said. What does she want to see me about?"

"I didn't ask."

"You didn't ask?"

"I'm a Deputy Sheriff, not a personal assistant."

"You had me fooled. I guess that means a donut run is out."

Johnny fanned himself faster. "Funny."

I soldiered on. "So you don't know why she's here."

"Correct."

"Do you find that at all strange?"

"No."

"I find it strange."

"And I should care about that because?"

I gave him my best dead-eyed stare.

"Would you like me to show her in?"

"Only if it meshes with your job description."

Johnny stopped fanning himself and grinned. "I'll check my contract."

He went to get Rosalita Gonzalez, who followed him into my office. She looked to be in her fifties, gray-haired, wearing a tight green summer shift that had once fit her better. She lowered her brow and eyed the surroundings, clearly uncomfortable.

I stood and offered her a seat. "If you're not too busy, Deputy Kennerly, would you please join us?"

Johnny nodded. He was a big man, six feet six, dark-skinned with large brown eyes and a wide mouth, features he had inherited from his African-American father. His Romanesque nose was a duplicate of his Italian mother's. He wore a khaki Sheriff's uniform with a handful of service badges pinned to his shirt. A .357 magnum was holstered on his hip.

"How may we help you, Ms. Gonzalez?" I sat down and smiled, encouraging her to speak.

She got right to it. "Have you ever heard of Barry Long, Junior?"

"Who hasn't?"

"I work for him. I'm nanny to his son."

"Okay."

"There's something wrong."

"Meaning?"

"Mrs. Long has disappeared." She glanced quickly at each of us, trying to gauge our response. "Sometime last week."

I glanced at Johnny who was seated beside Ms. Gonzalez. He gazed back, a quizzical look in his eye.

"Reverend Long," she continued, "told me she had gone away for a while. He said I was to take full charge of the boy."

"Did he mention where she had gone?"

"No."

"What exactly did he say?"

"What he didn't say was when she would come back."

"How old is the boy?"

"Barely five. He's very upset. Very unhappy. The Reverend is preparing for his annual Revival Celebration and he moves back and forth between the house and his apartment at the Pavilion. Now he takes me and the boy with him. The boy cries and carries on a lot. He's always screaming for his mother. When I try to talk about it with the Reverend, he tells me to handle it."

"What is it you want from the Sheriff's Department?"

"Reverend Long, he scares me."

She withdrew into herself for several moments, shoring up her resolve. She cleared her throat and went on. "He and the men around him. They're not good people. There's something wrong there."

"And you want us to look into it?"

"I want you to know what's going on. What you do is up to you. I can't be a part of it any more. I'm leaving."

"You mean you're quitting?"

"I mean I'm leaving. I'm going somewhere to hide and pray they never find me."

She stood and stared at me and at Johnny for several moments, before picking up her purse and walking to the door.

Then she turned back to us.

"I think they killed her."

CHAPTER 2

Freedom wasn't the future I had in mind for myself. At age thirty, I had been faring quite well as as a ranking LAPD homicide detective. I stand six-three in my bare feet, a former point guard, weighing in at one-seventy. I have blue eyes and dark blond hair, which I tend to haphazardly.

I worked out of the Hollywood division and lived within walking distance of the Cole Avenue Station. I was unmarried, with a promising career in law enforcement that impressed at least some of the women at my fitness club who believed, as did I, that hooking up was a satisfactory alternative to commitment. I was feeling as if I'd arrived, for whatever that was worth.

Then my father took ill. He hadn't felt well during his re-election campaign and once he claimed victory, he paid a much-delayed visit to his G.P.

He was quietly admitted to a private clinic where he underwent a battery of tests. One of the state's leading neurologists consulted on the findings and confirmed the initial diagnosis of Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis, otherwise known as Lou Gehrig's disease.

For the popular Sheriff of San Remo, a small, unincorporated coastal county located north of Santa Barbara, about to begin his third consecutive four-year term, this finding was nothing short of catastrophic.

He summoned the family. My sister flew in from Chicago. I drove up from L.A. Our stepmother, Regina Goodnow, herself the estimable Mayor of the township of Freedom, fluttered about the house doing all she could to ease the tension and make us comfortable.

My father, Burton Steel, Senior, was uncharacteristically subdued, his oversized personality deflated by the collapse of his heretofore robust health.

I'm Burton Steel, Junior. I hate the name Burton. I dislike the Junior part even more. Naming me after himself, in my estimation, was the ultimate in Burton Senior's egocentricity, one of his innumerable character flaws.

Having endured a childhood during which I was referred to as either Junior or B.J., when I turned twelve I stood up to him and refused to answer to any name other than Buddy. Which is what I'm called now.

My relationship with my father is complicated.

I can't say we're friends. He's autocratic to a fault, overbearing and implacable, and I could hardly wait to graduate from high school and get the hell out of his house.

I fled my life in Freedom and moved to New York where I studied criminal justice at John Jay College. Although my father sneered at my New York education, I graduated near the top of my class, and when the offer to join the LAPD popped up, I grabbed it.

Now the family was gathered in the living room of the home I grew up in, an English style manor house located in the hills above Highway 101, old now, and for the first time in memory, radiating an atmosphere of fear.

When the old man broke the news, he spoke haltingly, already exhibiting the effects of the disease on his vocal cords, his voice rough as gravel, and suffering a loss of velocity.

"I've been given a death sentence. I've got fucking Lou Gehrig's disease."

My sister, Sandra, gasped.

"It's in its early stages," he went on. "But I'm a goner, sure as shit."

Her Honor, my stepmother, chimed in. "Burton, please watch your language. You know how much I dislike all this swearing."

Regina lives within the confines of the psychological cage she constructed around herself and although clever and successful, she remains isolated from what she perceives as disagreeable thoughts and/or opinions. Especially if they're mine.

"Shut up, Regina," my father said.

"What can they do for it?" I pulled myself back from imagining the worst, hoping instead to hear some kind of optimistic prognosis.

"There's no cure. They've put me on steroids.

Prednisone. I can already feel the difference."

"You mean you feel better?"

"I feel worse. Steroids slam the weight on you. It won't be long before I look like fucking Sarah Huckabee."

"Burton, please," Regina snapped.

Sandra leaned forward. "Is there anything we can do?"

My father shifted his eyes to fix his stare directly at me.

"I need you, Buddy. I'm likely to fade pretty fast. I want you here as my Chief Deputy. I'll teach you the ropes. Train you to succeed me."

"You're kidding," I said, but I knew better.

CHAPTER 3

"So, what do we know about Barry Long, Junior?"

I was in the squad room, huddling with Johnny Kennerly and Captain Marsha Russo.

The three of us were seated at Marsha's desk. She and Johnny were in full regalia, their milk-chocolate-colored Sheriff's uniforms clean and sharply pressed.

I, on the other hand, was casually dressed. Adriano Goldschmeid jeans, an L.L. Bean plaid work shirt, a blue Ralph Lauren sport jacket, and Filson work boots comprised my wardrobe of choice.

Marsha was focused on her computer, scouring websites until she found what she was looking for and then proceeded to read aloud.

Russo is a formidable woman, strong-willed and feisty, in her early forties, a veteran of fifteen years with the Department. She pre-dated my father and when he appointed Johnny Kennerly as his Under Sheriff, he'd asked her to join the command unit as a Staff Captain. She's short and thickset, forever fighting a battle with the scale, and the old man frequently refers to her as a shtarker.

She had once been considered cute, but age and stress had taken their toll. Her trenchant wit and sharp tongue, however, keeps everyone on their toes.

"Here it is," she said. "Barry Long, Junior. Born: March 6th, 1984, LaGrange, Tennessee. Father: Barry Long, Senior. Mother: Selma Hickham Long, deceased. Brother: Hickham Long. Sister: Margaret Long. No other siblings."

"Go on."

"Graduated LaGrange High School, class of 2002. Graduated South Tennessee Seminary College, class of 2006. Performed missionary services in Montevideo, Uruguay, 2007. Founded the Heart of Our Saviour Ministry in 2008."

"When did he go on TV?"

"His first broadcast was July 4th, 2010, on WTWV in Memphis, a Christian broadcasting service. They still carry him, by the way."

Marsha continued to scroll.

"The Long ministry television broadcasts are currently seen in fifteen countries. They are reputed to gross more than twenty million dollars annually. The Heart of Our Saviour Revival Celebration is held every year during the first week of October and televised in those same fifteen countries."

"Is there any mention of a Mrs. Long?"

"There is. Mary Catharine Morecombe Long. Born: July 2nd, 1994. Memphis, Tennessee. Married Barry Long, Junior, June 29th, 2012. One child, Barry Long the third. Born: November 20, 2012."

"Which means she was pregnant when they got married," I interjected.

"And she was eighteen years old," Johnny added.

"That's a ten-year difference in their ages," I said. "When did they move to Freedom?"

"It doesn't say."

"Check the real estate records."

Marsha clicked onto a different site.

"They live in the old Schuyler estate," Johnny said.

"I found it," Marsha said. "The Horace B. Schuyler estate in San Remo County was sold to the Barry and Catharine Long Family Trust on September 14th, 2012, for a purchase price of three million, five hundred thousand dollars. Wow."

"Wow, indeed. Have you ever seen the Schuyler estate?" Johnny shook his head.

"I hear it's amazing," Marsha said.

"Shall we?"

"Shall we what?"

"Have a look."

"You mean actually visit the Schuyler house?"

"It's the Long house now."

Johnny watched as I picked up my pad and pencil and stood. "If we leave now, we can beat the rain."

CHAPTER 4

The Long house sat on sixty acres of prime oceanfront property, separated from the sea by ten plus acres of federally protected sand dunes.

The imposing mansion maintained its original nineteenth-century facade, despite the fact that it had been upgraded and modernized on several occasions over the years. Newly added floor-to-ceiling picture windows looked out onto the bay and the Pacific beyond. Its magnificent views remained impeded on the upper floors by sloping dormer windows that constricted the home's sight lines but maintained the architectural integrity of the original design.

After announcing myself at the call box in front of the estate's massive wrought-iron gates, I navigated the winding driveway that led to the rambling house. The grounds were immaculately tended. Rolling lawns were dotted with a variety of indigenous cactus and succulents. Acacia, palo verde, and live oak trees provided shade and character.

I parked in the circular motor court in front of the house beside a number of vans loaded with luggage and gear.

Johnny, Marsha, and I climbed the five steps to the wraparound front porch where we were greeted by a neatly groomed, efficient-looking young man dressed in a black suit, white shirt, black knit tie, and dark Ray-Ban sunglasses.

"Welcome to Long House."

The young man flashed a smile that revealed a mouthful of the largest and whitest teeth I had ever seen. I was mesmerized by them.

"How may we help you?" His smile reflected a forced sincerity.

"We'd like to see Mrs. Long."

The young man hesitated for a moment. "Mrs. Long isn't here."

"When do you expect her?"

"I'm not exactly sure."

"You're not sure."

"No," the young man said. "Mrs. Long is not in residence at this time."

"Do you know where she is?"

"I'm sorry, sir, I don't."

At that point, the door to the house opened and another man came out and headed in our direction. He was obviously a person of some importance.

"Hickham Long," the man announced, without offering his hand.

"Buddy Steel," I said. "This is John Kennerly and Marsha Russo."

Long acknowledged us. Then he turned to the young man. "That's all, Jeffrey. You can go."

Jeffrey looked at Hickham Long, then at me. He lowered his eyes and returned to the house.

"Now," Long said, "what can we do for you?"

"We're here to see Catharine Long," I said.

"I'm terribly sorry." Long shook his head. "My sister-in-law is away."

"Your sister-in-law."

"That's right. Reverend Long is my brother."

"I see. I'd still like to ask her a few questions. Have you any idea as to how we might contact her?"

Long shook his head again. "Not a clue."

He struck me as a disagreeable type, exhibiting no discernible warmth and exuding a general attitude of impatience, condescension, and imperiousness.

He was stocky, muscle-bound, possessing a physique molded by hours in the gym, mean-looking and sullen. His dense black hair was slicked back with pomade, rendering it strangely immobile. His face was marred by pitted chicken pox scars. He wore a black track suit with the word "Hickey" embroidered on the chest. A towel was draped around his neck. He had on black Nike sneakers. He regarded us disdainfully. "Was there anything else?" Mr. Long glanced at Johnny and Marsha, then returned his attentions to me when I asked, "Is your brother here?" "He's called Reverend Long."

"Okay. Is Reverend Long here?"

"Reverend Long is in conference just now."

"Can you interrupt him?"

"I can't. I'm sorry. He's preparing for the upcoming Heart of Our Saviour Celebration and has left strict instructions not to be disturbed."

"I see."

I stood silently, staring dead-eyed at Hickham Long, silently debating how I might best ring his chimes.

"I guess that will that be all, then." Long glared at me dismissively, flashed a humorless grin, and turned away.

"Not exactly."

He turned back. "I beg your pardon?"

"Please inform Reverend Long that we're here on official business."

"Didn't you get the memo?" Long snapped, a regular pit bull. "He's not available."

"Then make him available."

"What are you, hard of hearing? It isn't going to happen, Officer."

"Sheriff," I said.

"Excuse me?"

"I'm the County Deputy Sheriff."

"Good for you, Mr. County Deputy Sheriff. It still isn't going to happen. Next time call ahead for an appointment."

"Are you always such an obstructionist?"

This caught his attention.

"Obstructionist?"

"You know. Someone who manages to get in the way."

"I know the definition. Don't be condescending to me."

"I'm going to ask you one more time. Please inform Reverend Long that I'd like to speak with him."

A crooked smile broke out on Hickham Long's face. He waved his hand dismissively in my direction, turned his back, and started to walk away.

(Continues…)


Excerpted from "Missing Persons"
by .
Copyright © 2018 Michael Brandman.
Excerpted by permission of Poisoned Pen Press.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

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