Too Late to Run
Author: John Perich
Publisher: John Perich
Pages: 402
Genre: Mystery/Thriller
Format: Kindle
Book Description:
Too Late to Run is the
third book in a series of gritty mystery novels starring Boston photojournalist Mara Cunningham. This
time, Mara reluctantly aids a crooked real estate developer from her past who's
been detained on trumped-up charges. But each clue she uncovers turns up more
enemies - backwoods militias, corrupt bankers, and a mysterious pyromaniac -
and raises doubts as to her friend's innocence.
Buy Links:
Excerpt
When the feds came for
Mickey Scanlon, they came hard: guns out, blue windbreakers with big yellow
letters, “ON THE GROUND, ON THE GROUND NOW.” They shouldered their way through
the lobby of Greenfield Development Associates, the largest of Scanlon's
several fronts, just after twelve noon .
The receptionist, a twenty-two-year-old intern chosen for her cup size, had the
sense to hit the panic button beneath her desk before an agent whipped around
the counter and cuffed her. The cuffs were too tight, she whined.
Mickey Scanlon—just past
fifty, tan as a baseball glove—saw the pulsing light in the alarm panel above
his office door: three quick strobes, pause, another three. He reacted with
accomplished haste, executing perfectly a routine he had only drilled once.
Standing, he tugged his laptop free of its docking and dropped it into the
bottom drawer of his desk. It adhered to the inside of the drawer with a dull
thump. Leaving the drawer open, he crossed to two small filing cabinets
opposite his desk. A black metal box sat atop each one. He pulled the tab on
the first, waited for the hiss he'd been warned to expect, then did the same
for the other. All this in less than ten seconds.
Scanlon had his cell
phone out when the agents kicked in the door. They dropped him on his stomach,
cuffed his hands behind his back, patted him down for weapons, then hoisted him
to his feet. They marched him out of his office, ignoring the smoke coming out
of his filing cabinet and his remarkably bare desk. They walked him past a
dozen witnesses: some inside associates, aware of the full extent of his real
estate rackets; some innocent employees, tenuously aware of Scanlon's two
previous arrests. An SUV with tinted windows waited in the parking lot,
surrounded by armored vehicles and men with dogs.
They pushed him into the
back seat of the SUV, keeping his head free of the roof by yanking on his suit
collar. He turned to say something to the offending agent. The words were lost
in the chaos, but the look in Scanlon's eyes was obvious: too wide and hesitant
to match the bluster in his voice. The agent slammed the door and the SUV drove
off.
I knew none of this at
the time; I wasn't there. I had to piece together details from multiple sources
hours after the fact. At the time I was at a corner table in the window lounge
of Top of the Hub, fifty stories above the Back Bay ,
trying to swallow my pounding heart.
Across from me sat Jeremy
Brandt, a man from whom Mickey Scanlon might have learned about roguish charm.
Brandt wore his silver hair and blue eyes like honors from the Queen. He had on
a navy blazer over a tight T-shirt and chinos. He was sifting through a large
leather portfolio with one hand, flicking by glossy blowups of the best
photographs I'd taken over the last six years. I took another sip of ice water,
wondering if I might swap out for something stronger.
Jeremy Brandt made
headlines two years ago when he quit Control
Center at CNN. Four
months later, he surfaced as the owner of Flashpoint, a high-volume news blog.
Most of America
knew Flashpoint for its list articles and eye-catching photos. “Seven Things
You Never Knew About the Human Brain”; “Eighteen Extreme Sports Stunts You
Won't Believe Are Real”; and so forth. But the blog's ad revenue also financed
a small but dedicated team of freelance journalists. Brandt poached hip young
voices and distinguished veterans from The Atlantic, The Los Angeles Times, and
elsewhere, trying to do with a staff of twelve what the media had fumbled with
for the last twenty years: break meaningful stories to a mass audience.
And here he was, looking
through my photos, hence my pulse pounding in my throat. Well, that and our
occasional eye contact across the top of my portfolio. I'd told myself that
morning, as I zipped up my pantsuit, that most of Brandt's legendary looks came
from makeup artistry and TV magic. I hadn't been prepared for how good he'd
look in a casual outfit. Or how good his voice would sound when it was pitched
low enough for just the two of us. Or how good he'd smell.
Easy there, Mara.
Brandt closed the
portfolio carefully, as if shutting the door on a sleeping child's room, and
rested the binding on the edge of the table. He drummed the fingers of his left
hand (no ring) on the leather and pursed his lips.
"These are
good," he said.
I nodded, deflating into
my comfortable Chiavari chair and resting my hand against my ice water. I could
see it in the way he held his breath at the end of the sentence. Better luck
next time. Thanks but no thanks.
"This isn't what I
had in mind, though," he said.
I nodded again, tucking
my hair behind my ears. "I tried to select as broad a variety as possible
to showcase my range. But I've mostly been doing crime scene photography for
the Tribune for the last four years. I do believe most of those skills would
translate into any other field, so I'd …"
He smiled, letting me
speak. I could see he wanted to say something but was too polite to interrupt,
so I trailed off and let him jump in.
"I don't doubt
it," he said. His voice hit that baritone register that soothed my nerves
like warm oil. "But this isn't what I'm looking for. I know plenty of
photographers already."
I looked away, my face
warm. Of course he did. Brandt came up as a war correspondent in the Persian Gulf and Kosovo. He wouldn't need a freelancer
from Boston
who'd snapped a few car crashes. Realizing that, however, left me more confused
than embarrassed.
He saw my brows knit and
continued, both hands up. "This was my fault. I must not have been very
clear in my first email. Of course this is what you'd think I meant."
Still nothing. My stomach
climbed halfway up my throat. Spit it out, handsome.
"I wanted to see a
portfolio of your writing."
The room seemed to grow
still. I drew my hand off the table and clasped it in my lap, hoping he
wouldn't see me shaking.
The waiter chose that
moment to reappear. "Another of those, sir?" He gave a short bow
toward Brandt's empty beer glass in that way waiters have.
Brandt nodded. "And
you, ma'am?"
I found my voice somehow.
"Manhattan ."
"Any preference for
your whiskey?"
"Yes. No. I don't
care. Whatever you … you know."
The waiter gave another
short bow, as if he received these orders every day, and sidled off, leaving me
alone with Jeremy Brandt's gentle grin. "Not the answer you were
expecting?" he asked.
"Not hardly," I
said. I had covered the State House beat for the Boston Tribune up until five
years ago, when I'd pulled a stunt that the paper had threatened to fire me
over. The union and the owners had reached a compromise: I could keep working
for the paper, but I would never write another word. Gary, the metro desk
editor, had kept me on as a photographer. But the work had been drying up over
the last four years: more freelancers, fewer pages per issue, less money to go
around. All of which led to this midday
interview with Jeremy Brandt.
But no, not the sort of
interview I'd been expecting at all. "I hate to talk you out of your
brilliant idea," I said, "but you know I haven't written for the
Tribune for some time."
He nodded. "And I
heard about why. That's what inspired me to take a look at you. I need writers
with that sort of initiative. Writers with the stones to point out the obvious,
no matter who it might embarrass."
"I didn't realize
the story had traveled that far." I felt the blush flowing down to my
collarbone again. The encouragement in Brandt's eyes didn't help any.
"I heard it from
Saul Kirkadian, actually." My mentor at the Tribune, he'd left last August
after more than forty years on the beat. "In full disclosure, he was my
first choice. But he gave me your name instead and told me why I should give
you a look. I trust his judgment."
"And I trust
yours."
My Manhattan arrived on a literal silver
platter, next to Brandt's beer. We took our drinks and toasted. Every moment of
eye contact between us ended in mutual smiles, as if we were in on some private
joke.
"I'm recruiting
feature writers in all the big metros," he said. "Boston , Atlanta ,
LA , Chicago . People with experience and a viewpoint,
not just content mills."
"So you're not
looking for 'Twenty Reasons Boston is Better Than New York'?"
"There aren't
any." He grinned. "But no, I want feature copy. The sort of articles
you'd write for the Tribune, if you had your way. And more of them too. Ours is
still a high-volume business."
"You'll get
them."
"Good. The hours
might get crazy."
"That's fine."
I kept nodding, then checked my head. My hours didn't entirely belong to me;
the class I taught in Cambridge
at Sandy 's
self-defense school was another obligation. "There are a couple of
evenings—"
Brandt held a hand up.
"You set your own schedule. So long as copy gets to the editors on time, I
don't care what else you do."
"Really?" The
release of tension had left me feeling playful. "You don't want me signing
a morals clause?"
Another moment of
lingering eye contact. "I don't think either of us would last very long
with a morals clause."
I lowered my eyes to my
drink and stomped on the brakes in my head. Pleasant enough to dwell on what
Brandt was doing to my imagination—and what he might do to other parts of
me—but that was as far as it could go. This man was, potentially, my future
boss. I'd screwed my life up in the past by going after the wrong older man.
My cell phone vibrated in
my purse, trembling against my leg. I kicked it aside. Whoever it was could
wait.
The check came; Brandt
paid it. We stood, gathered our things, and went for the exit. I overheard
murmurs and saw a few heads snap up as we passed: is that? Do you think? And
who's she? I smirked at the notion of appearing in the celebrity pages, before
remembering I didn't want anyone knowing about my job hunt. Shit. Hopefully no
one recognized me.
"Do you have a writing portfolio?" Brandt asked as we reached the street.
"Absolutely."
"Send it to me, and we'll do this once more."
We set a follow-up for the day after next. As a metro photographer, I was notionally on call throughout my entire shift. In practice, the Tribune needed me less and less every day. I could spare the time for another date with a silver fox. Interview, Mara. Not a date, an interview.
"I'll see you then." We shook hands, his fingers warm against my palm. Then I jogged to where I'd parked my car, heels clacking on the pavement.
While the maverick captain of new media had been flattering me over drinks, I'd missed one text and one call. I didn't recognize the phone number on the call, so I left it alone. The text was fromGary ,
an assignment he wanted me to cover. Three-alarm fire, Vassall Street in Quincy .
And like that, the pleasant flush of the afternoon vanished. My brain queued up a list of items to consider: traffic at this time of day, crowds gawking at the fire, who I knew amongSouth Shore
first responders.
Playtime's over; back to business.
"Do you have a writing portfolio?" Brandt asked as we reached the street.
"Absolutely."
"Send it to me, and we'll do this once more."
We set a follow-up for the day after next. As a metro photographer, I was notionally on call throughout my entire shift. In practice, the Tribune needed me less and less every day. I could spare the time for another date with a silver fox. Interview, Mara. Not a date, an interview.
"I'll see you then." We shook hands, his fingers warm against my palm. Then I jogged to where I'd parked my car, heels clacking on the pavement.
While the maverick captain of new media had been flattering me over drinks, I'd missed one text and one call. I didn't recognize the phone number on the call, so I left it alone. The text was from
And like that, the pleasant flush of the afternoon vanished. My brain queued up a list of items to consider: traffic at this time of day, crowds gawking at the fire, who I knew among
Playtime's over; back to business.
Discuss this book at PUYB
Virtual Book Club at Goodreads.
About the Author
While working in a
variety of Boston-area tech startups, John Perich has still found time to write
and publish several gritty crime thrillers, particularly the Mara Cunningham
series (Too Close To Miss in 2011; Too Hard to Handle in 2012).
His latest book is the
mystery/thriller, Too Late to Run.
For More Information
- Visit John Perich’s website.
- Connect with John on Facebook
and Twitter.
- Find out more about John
at Goodreads.
- Visit John’s blog.
- More books by John
Perich.
- Contact John.
Blog Tour Organised by:
No comments:
Post a Comment