Jeffrey Siger - Inspector Andreas Kaldis 02 Assassins of Athens
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Jeffrey Siger was born and raised in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. He practiced law at a major Wall Street law firm and, while there, served as Special Counsel to the citizens group responsible for reporting on New York Citys prison conditions. He left Wall Street to establish his own New York City law firm and continued as one of its name partners until giving it all up to write full-time among the people, life, and politics of his beloved Mykonos, his adopted home of twenty-five years, and spear fish in its Aegean waters. When hes not in Greece, he enjoys his other home, a farm outside New York City. Murder in Mykonos, the first in his Chief Inspector Andreas Kaldis series, was the number one best selling English-language novel in Greece, and his second in the series, Assassins of Athens, is also a bestseller. The Greek press has described him as a prognosticator of Greeces societal unrest and attitudes.
For more information log on to www.jeffreysiger.com
Praise for Jeffrey Siger:
This is international police procedural writing at its best Booklist
With ten million Greeks, half of who think they are writers, how come we had to wait for a foreigner to come along to write such a book!
Esquire Magazine (Greece)
The must-read book of the week!
OK! (Greece)
Murder in Mykonos
Published by Poisoned Pen Press
ISBN: 978-1-615-95197-0
Published by Hachette Digital
ISBN: 978-0-748-11789-5
All characters and events inthis publication, other than those clearly in the public domain, arefictitious and any resemblance to real persons, living or dead, ispurely coincidental.
Copyright 2010 Jeffrey Siger
All rights reserved. No part ofthis publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, ortransmitted, in any form or by any means, without the prior permissionin writing of the publisher.
Hachette Digital
Little, Brown Book Group
100 Victoria Embankment
London, EC4Y 0DY
www.hachette.co.uk
To my brother, Alan. None better.
Petros Alafasos and Georgia Toli; Mihalis and Roz Apostolou; Olga Balafa; Tonino Cacace; Nikos Christodoulakis and Jody Duncan; Giannis Dimotsis; Lori Estes-Markari; Andreas and Aleka Fiorentinos; Nikos Ipiotis; Nikos Karahalios; Panos Kelaidis; Artemis Kohas; Alexandros Kontogouris; Dimitris and Elsa Kordalis; Nicholas and Sonia Kotopoulos; Manos Kounenakis; Ilias, Lila, Demetra, Maria, and Ioanna Lalaounis; Giancarlo and Diamara Leone; Sharon Lock-Sikinioti; Angelo Lyberopoulos; Ilias and Laoura Macropoulos Lalaounis; Linda Marshall; Roberto Mendes-Coelho and Edward Prendergast; Nikos Nazos; Nikos and Georgia Nomikos; Lambros Panagiotakopoulos; Barbara G. Peters and Robert Rosenwald; Eraldo, Antonella, and Camilla Prini; Christos Psallidas; Theodore, Manos, and Irini Rousounelous; Eileen Salzig; Antonia Sapounakis; Christine Schnitzer-Smith; Deppy Sigala; Alan and Patricia Siger; Jonathan, Jennifer, Azriel, and Gavriella Siger; Karen Siger; George and Efi Sirinakis; Ed Stackler; George and Theodore Stamoulis; Maggie Taylor; Pavlos Tiftikidis; Jessica Tribble; Sotiris Varotsis; Miltiadis Varvitziotis; Zanni Vasilakis.
And, of course, Aikaterini Lalaouni.
Athens is the cradle of Europe. Six thousand years of history still alive in one place, crammed with sources of Western mans intellectual thought and artistic expression. It stands as a symbol to the world, a source of infinite pride of Greece and endless wonder to its visitors.
But, like every great city, it has its dark side: places where a civilizations worst practice their values, or lack thereof, and where cops do battle every day. Those places no more define the soul and life of Athens than do their counterparts in Paris, London, or New York. But they do exist. And that is where stories such as this are told.
Andreas Kaldis once read or heard somewhere that the chatter never stopped in Athens. Not even at sunrise, when the earth itself seemed to pause to draw a breath. Like its people, the city always had something to say, whether you were in the mood to listen or not. Sun-up simply shifted the style of conversation from high-pitched shouts of an Athens at play to the anonymous din of a city at work.
Thats what Andreas was doing now, working. Turn off the damn siren, no ones listening. He was in a foul mood. The bodys going nowhere. Just like us in this goddamn coming-home-from-partying morning traffic.
Police officer Yianni Kouros said nothing, just did what his boss told him to do. Thats why Andreas liked him: he listened.
Andreas stared out the passenger-side window at a hodgepodge of neglected private and graffiti-covered government buildings. This section of Pireos Street, a formerly elegant avenue, began west of the Acropolis, ran northeast through the trendy, late-night bar and club area of Gazi, and ended with a name change amidst the around-the-clock drug and hooker trade by Omonia Square. What remained of its once-treasured three-and four-story buildings were now warrens of ground-level check cashers, bars, small-time retail shops, and cheap, foreign restaurants. It seemed every immigrant group in Greece had set up shop in this part of town. Truth was, they were everywhere; well, almost.
I remember when I was a kid my dad used to bring me down here for sweets on Sundays. Especially this time of year. He loved late spring.
Bet he wouldnt bring you here today, Chief.
Andreas nodded. God bless him, hed sit by the edge of the park at Omonia gesturing up ahead with his left hand, having coffee with friends while Id play. Everyone liked him. I thought that came with being a cop. I should have known better.
They were locked in traffic packed solid up to an intersection about one hundred yards ahead. The traffic light at the corner was red and, when a gap opened in oncoming traffic all the way back to the light, Kouros pulled the unmarked car into the empty lane and raced toward the intersection.
Christ, Yianni, at least turn on the lights.
Never turned them off, only the siren. Another reason Andreas liked Kouros: he listened but was no fool.
Kouros reached the intersection just as the light turned green. He swerved across the front of their lane and shot up the street to the right, narrowly missing the rear wheel of a motorcyclist whod jumped the light.
Andreas turned his head and stared at Kouros. He knew there must be a grin breaking out somewhere on the other side of that face. Andreas was a dozen years older than Kouros but, except for the few tinges of gray streaking Andreas slightly too long dark hair, youd think they were the same age, perhaps because Kouros boot-camp style haircut and compact, bull-like build made him look older than he was, or because Andreas hard work at keeping his six-foot two-inch athletic frame in shape paid off.
Kouros weaved through a series of far-from-fancy back streets running roughly parallel to Pireos. Just before Omonia he turned left and cut back across the road. Its only a couple blocks from here.
Andreas watched a hooker lean out from a doorway marked by a single white light above it, the local signal for hookers here.
Great neighborhood.
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