Summer is here and I have the perfect #BeachRead for #Free #mystery


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Missing: The Lady Said No

 

The hero is a bumbling police investigator.
Growing up, I always wondered what it was that led Columbo to catch his man. When I started this mystery novel, he came to mind and so Detective Augustus Grant was born.
This story is set around the multi-million dollar horse racing industry. When a well-known breeder is found dead just days before the big race, Gus is brought in to investigate.
Is it suicide, or something much more devious?

 

Gus followed the stiff-necked manservant to the door of the den, though his emotions were tugging him back to Rebecca like a starved man to a banquet.He couldn_t believe how beautiful

 

What readers are saying:

 

Missing: The Lady Said No is an addictive mystery filled with cagy characters with the backdrop of the greatest horse race known to man. Thereโ€™s a lot to uncover yet Biggar only reveals what she wants the reader to know at the time. Gripping sub-plots will keep you turning the pages, all leading up to an explosive climax. I read it in one sitting โ€ฆ yes, it was that good!

N.N. Light

The writer creates a group of characters that are hard to forget. The backstory on the characters plays an important roll in understanding who they are and why. Biggar only writes enough about the backstories to get you hooked which will leave you hanging on and wanting more. It all starts when esteemed breeder John Jorgenson is found murdered in his den. Because Jorgenson is so highly thought of in the community they call in the best crime solver for the case. Detective Gus Grant is on the case and he has a resume to impress. But just when the list of suspects canโ€™t get any bigger, his ex-girlfriend Becky walks back into his life. Becky just so happens to be the last person to see the victim alive.

Will Gus discover what really happened in Mr. Jorgensonโ€™s den? I wonโ€™t give to much away, because this is a page turner. A real must read! I highly recommend this book.

Lovely Loveday

 

Missing The Lady Said No eBook

Missing: The Lady Said NO

โœถWINNER OF N.N. LIGHT’S BEST OF 2017!!

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The Race is on to find a Killer in the heart of Kentucky horse country

Detective Augustus Grant is faced with his most baffling case to date. Well-respected race horse breeder, John Jorgenson, is murdered in his den days before the Kentucky Derby and the list of suspects is growing.

Complicating matters, Gus’ ex-girlfriend is the last person to have seen the victim alive.

Rebecca Hayes owes the Jorgenson family her loyalty. They gave her a new life after a disastrous affair leaves her alone and pregnant.

With all the evidence pointing in Becky’s direction, will Gus do his duty?

Or follow his heart?

http://books2read.com/TheLadySaidNo

http://amzn.to/2jXEbAP

https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/34033805-missing

 

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Excerpt

Gus followed the stiff-necked manservant to the door of the den, though his emotions were tugging him back to Rebecca like a starved man to a banquet.

He couldnโ€™t believe how beautiful sheโ€™d become. Sheโ€™d always been pretty, but now there was an added maturity to her features that suited her face. The tomboy figure he fondly remembered had become hills and valleys he ached to explore. Theyโ€™d been best friends, then lovers, then enemies. Itโ€™d been his fault, that was the worst of it. Heโ€™d let his drive for a career ruin the only good thing in his life. He could tell himself heโ€™d done his part. After getting his degree and returning to Bourbonville he had tried to find her. But she was right, he hadnโ€™t tried hard enough.

Their relationship had already been floundering; it had seemed easier to let it die a natural death. He regretted that now. One glimpse of her had brought back all the old feelings. Memories of happier times.

Ernest reached for the door knob and was stopped by the officer on guard.

โ€œSorry, only trained personnel are allowed.โ€

Ernest glared at him. โ€œIโ€™ve worked in this household for years; I believe I am trained.โ€

The sergeant exchanged a helpless glance with Gus. โ€œIโ€™m sorry, sir. Those are the rules.โ€

Gus stepped between the two men before a full-scale war broke out. โ€œItโ€™s okay, sergeant.โ€ He flipped open his badge. โ€œIโ€™m Detective Grant. Theโ€ฆโ€ He waved a hand toward the butler.

Ernest lowered his brows. โ€œManservant.โ€

Gus nodded. โ€œManservant, was just showing me the way to the crime scene.โ€

The officer checked his badge, then reached back to open the door. The stench of death was immediate, a toxic mix of human waste impossible to forget. Gus turned his head to draw one last clean breath and met Rebeccaโ€™s anxious gaze.

That look gave him pause.

Why was she worried? Just how well did Rebecca know the owner of Balmoral?

โ€œComing, Detective?โ€ The sergeantโ€™s voice interrupted his musings. Gus shrugged off his misgivings and followed the man into the room, sliding past the grim-faced Ernest.

Nancy knelt by the victim, her hands covered with white gloves and booties on her feet. She glanced up when he walked in and pointed at his shoes. Gus dug through his coat pockets until he found his booties, put them on, nodded to the sergeant, and made his way over to her side.

โ€œItโ€™s a bad one,โ€ she said, turning attention to her preliminary findings. โ€œSingle shot to the temple, through and through. Near as I can tell, time of death was sometime between midnight and three a.m., no sign of defensive wounds.โ€ She stopped and gazed at him with world-weary eyes. โ€œWho would do this, Augustus?โ€

Gus observed the brain matter splattered on the leather tufted chair and rich, red Aubusson carpet and his stomach churned. His first thought was crime of passion. There had been some effort made to set the scene up as a suicide. The gun rested in the victimโ€™s open hand, finger wrapped around the trigger. A cut crystal tumbler lay on its side nearby, a stain wetting the carpet. Gus touched the wet spot and sniffed, rubbing the tips of his fingersโ€”bourbon. The good kind. Not something a man bent on ending his own life would let go to waste.

โ€œIโ€™m not sure, Nancy, but I do know the brass will be all over this one, so take your time, okay? We donโ€™t want to miss anything.โ€

She huffed out an indignant breath. โ€œYou telling me how to do my job, now?โ€

He held up a hand to halt her blistering tongue. โ€œThe Jorgensons are big news, thatโ€™s all Iโ€™m saying. Donโ€™t they have a horse in the Derby this year?โ€

The sergeant, who had remained by the door, and watched their exchange with interest, piped up. โ€œForever Humble. Lots of money riding on that colt.โ€ His face became animated. โ€œYou ever see him race, Detective? Heโ€™s some kind of fast. Likes to run the outside track. Gives me a heart attack every time.โ€

Gus smiled. โ€œYou a betting manโ€ฆ?โ€

โ€œFish, sir. Everyone calls me Fish.โ€

Nancy chuckled and the young manโ€™s neck turned brick red.

โ€œIโ€™m not a gambler, no sir, but I admit I like to spend a Saturday now and then down at the track. Itโ€™s some exciting. You ever been, Mr. Grant?โ€

Gus shook his head. โ€œNo, canโ€™t say as I have. Not that fond of horses, though I guess thatโ€™s the wrong thing to say in this house.โ€ He admired the landscape watercolor on the wall, rolling hills with a herd of wild horses barreling straight at him, eyes crazy and manes flying as though they were about to burst the confines of paint and canvas.

โ€œAugustus, thereโ€™s something you need to see.โ€ Nancyโ€™s voice was muffled as she stretched, shapely butt in the air, to reach something under the leather chair. She grunted and tugged until a bronze sculpture came into view. When she stood it on the carpet, he saw it was about twelve inches in height, a warrior on a horse, raised arm carrying a spear.

โ€œThereโ€™s blood and hair fragments,โ€ she said, turning it carefully to inspect the evidence. โ€œI canโ€™t be sure until I get it to the lab, but this looks like a match to our vic.โ€

Well, that explained why there were no defensive wounds. The poor sop probably didnโ€™t know what hit him. Gus looked around until he found the suspiciously empty spot on the desk. He gave a wide berth to the corpse, conscious of Nancyโ€™s critical gaze. The desk was one of those massive claw-foot affairs, mahogany maybe, rich and elegant instead of simply functional. He pulled a linen handkerchief out of his pocket and checked the drawers. An assortment of papers greeted him, some on household expenses, most on Jorgensonโ€™s passionโ€”thoroughbreds. Nothing that looked like a cause for murder.

Gus was about to replace the documents when a slip of yellowed paper lodged in the back of the drawer caught his eye. He reached in, using the hankie, and retrieved the handwritten note.

Do what I told you to do, or the truth will destroy you

The threat inherent on the scrap of paper chilled his blood. There was trouble brewing in the Jorgenson household, and Gus was afraid Rebecca was somehow involved.

 

 

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16 Replies to “Summer is here and I have the perfect #BeachRead for #Free #mystery”

  1. Look at all the fun you were having while I was away on vacation! ๐Ÿ˜‰

    I truly love this one and it even one an award as one of the best reads of 2017.

    A crush on Columbo? I don’t know about that but I did see him like my favorite uncle or a father-figure. ๐Ÿ˜€

    Liked by 1 person

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