Stroud - Snipers Moon
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- Book:Snipers Moon
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- Publisher:Random House Publishing Group;Bantam Books
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- Year:2012
- City:New York
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SNIPERS MOON is psychologically acute, rich with suspense and black humor. A first-rate police thriller. Strouds talent is undeniable.
Jonathan Kellerman
A standout, with an ingenious plot, suspenseful pacing and strong, gritty dialogue.
Publishers Weekly
Quite simply the best debut cop novel since Joseph Wambaughs The New Centurions an absorbing page-turner.
The Flint Journal
This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are products of the authors imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.
SNIPERS MOON
A Bantam Book
Grateful acknowledgment is made for permission to reprint lyrics from Heartattack and Vine by Tom Waits copyright 1990 by Fifth Floor Music, Inc.
All rights reserved.
Copyright 1990 by Mair, Stroud and Associates, Inc.
Library of Congress Catalog card #: 90773.
No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publisher.
For information address: Bantam Books.
eISBN: 978-0-307-81528-6
Bantam Books are published by Bantam Books, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc. Its trademark, consisting of the words Bantam Books and the portrayal of a rooster, is Registered in U.S. Patent and Trademark Office and in other countries. Marca Registrada. Bantam Books, 666 Fifth Avenue, New York, New York 10103.
v3.1
You got to tell me, brave captain,
why are the wicked so strong?
How do angels get to sleep
when the devil leaves his porch light on?
T OM W AITS
Heartattack and Vine
August 17, 1968
Two oclock in the morning
J ohn Keogh was a man without metaphor. Madelaine was his wife and her body was as well known to him as his own; a sequence of sensations and images, surfaces, tastes, scents, warmth in the hollow places of her neck, the rising of muscle and bone along the line of her shoulders, her black hair with a soft light in it fanned out across the white sheet in the pale-blue glow from the window, her voice a wine-scented vibrato, sharp and somehow dizzying in the darkness of their room. Keogh was on his right side, close to her hip, aware of her heat, his left hand on her chest so he could feel her voice, her left knee touching his thigh. The sheet, rumpled and twisted from their movements, was now pulled away to uncover his wife from her breasts to her knees.
Something about the openness of it, the dark shadow at the base of her rounded belly, her strong tanned legs apart, her heavy white breasts with the nipples hard and violet in the slow blue lightall of this made Keogh hard again, slowly, in time to his pulse, the way hardness comes back to men in their forties.
Madelaine felt him at her hip.
Well, Johnny this is a compliment.
Keogh was past talk. He was feeling a violence that was disturbing to him. He did not think of himself as a man with passions. Men with passions seemed weak to him. He dealt with them every day, down in the city, men who had a hundred reasons for the damage they did, every one of them rooted in passion.
Madelaine took him in her left hand.
After twenty years and a child, Johnny? Her smile changed as Keogh moved his hand down over the soft swell of her belly, through the delicacy of her hairs, sliding a finger into her, the heat and the silkiness making his heart pound in his thick chest.
For a long moment she moved against his hand, her legs stretching and opening. When she pulled him down to kiss her, Keogh could feel the nails on her right hand cutting into his neck. There was a singing of blood in his ears. Then she was up and gone, taking the sheet with her, leaving him sprawled stupidly in the middle of the empty bed, on his back, watching her as she went to the glass doors that opened onto the backyard. Blue light from the swimming pool poured in through the sheer curtains. A blue aura shone around her hair and her hips and her shoulders.
Johnny, you look like a moth pinned to a card. Get up and come for a swim. She turned, pulling the sheet around her, and opened the glass doors.
What? Skinny-dip? Madelaine come back here. What about the Bukovacs? Keogh was sitting up now, fumbling in the tangle of bedclothes for his pajama bottoms, finding them, tugging them up and over his hips and his erection. The sight of this made her laugh, a sharp clear sound that went right across their yard.
Madelaine! Come inside!
She laughed again and, turning, let the sheet fall to her feet. She stepped out onto the damp stones of the patio. Keogh stood there for another three beats, staring at his wifes naked bottom, watching her as she went on tiptoe across the flagstones and out onto the lawn. Halfway to the shimmering blue of the in-ground pool, she turned and waved him on.
The sight of his wife standing naked on the family lawn, in the middle of the family lawn furniture, the outrageousness of the thing filled him up and pulled him out the door. Natural velocity carried him to her, standing there in the blue light, her tanned body marked by white breasts and the violet delta below her blue-white belly, her hands on her hips, smiling at him and feeling the cool night wind on her skin. Keogh came down the steps and across the lawn to her, stepping on the cuffs of his pajamas, the grass wet and slippery between his toes.
What if they see us? he whispered, looking over toward the dark bulk of the Bukovac house beyond the cedar hedge.
What if they do? Irina runs around her backyard in a towel all the time. Ive seen you lusting after her, you hound. This just makes us even. Come on.
She took his arm and led him over to the tiles at the edge of the pool. All the lights were on. The water was as clear as the air above it, tinted a tourmaline blue by the round porthole lights set into the pool walls a few inches below the surface. Keogh and his wife stood by the waterside for a while, arms around each other. Keogh was thinking about the water. It would be cold. Leaves had blown into the pool. There was a cluster of them in the deep end. Hed have to get them out with the vacuum. God, he thought. Romantic sonovabitch, arent you?
John I got a letter from Frank today.
Keogh felt a dull surge of old anger. Oh, yes, little Frankie would be sure to write his mother. Where was a letter for his da? No no. Go straight to mother. Standard for that boy.
Well, is he doing all right?
She thought about it for a while.
Yes. Well, he says he is. Its over a month old. Military mail. It went from Danang to Honolulu. He doesnt say a lot. That boy from Union City? Hes related to your desk sergeant?
Nicolucci?
Madelaine shook once under his arm. He pulled her closer.
He stepped on a Betty Crocker? Something like that?
A Bouncing Betty. A kind of bomb they put in the ground.
Keogh had been learning the names of a new war. His son was twenty now, a rifleman in the Sixth Cavalry. Keogh had read all about the Tet offensive, about Hue and Khe Sanh. Cronkite had talked on the news about America losing this war. He got secondhand stories from other cops about Arc Lite creepback, and hearts and minds, and body counts. It seemed a damned stupid little war to John Keogh, fought on the far side of the moon for thieves and criminals.
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