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Brian Freeman - Goodbye to the Dead (Jonathan Stride Book 7)

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Brian Freeman Goodbye to the Dead (Jonathan Stride Book 7)
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    Goodbye to the Dead (Jonathan Stride Book 7)
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    Quercus
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    2015
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    London
  • ISBN:
    978-1-78206-900-3
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Goodbye to the Dead (Jonathan Stride Book 7): summary, description and annotation

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NINE YEARS It is almost a decade since Duluth said goodbye to its innocence. The city creeps ever closer to the tenth anniversary of the year in which it found itself both gripped by murder and united in terror; and during which the pillar of its community, DS Jonathan Stride, had his home and heart torn to ribbons by the claws of cancer. NINE LIVES Cat Mateo, an orphan with a knack of landing on her feet, has bid farewell to a life on the streets. This once-stray teenager owes her rescue to Detective Stride, the father figure she holds close to her heart. But Cat holds something else to her chest a secret: the sheer power of which she could not possibly comprehend. A secret that, once out of the bag, will not just viciously scratch at Duluths still-healing wounds, but will make DS Jonathan Stride wave goodbye to his convictions about the events nine years before, and say hello to his darkest fears.

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Brian Freeman

Goodbye to the Dead

For Marcia

We are healed of a suffering only by experiencing it to the full.

MARCEL PROUST

Prologue

The Present

Serena spotted the Grand Am parked half a block from the Duluth bar. Someone was waiting inside the car.

Mosquitoes clouded in front of the headlights. The trumpets of a Russian symphony something loud and mournful by Shostakovich blared through its open windows. Serena smelled acrid, roll-your-own cigarette smoke drifting toward her with the spitting rain. Beyond the car, through the haze, she saw the milky lights of the Superior bridge arching across the harbor.

There were just the two of them in the late-night darkness of the summer street. Herself and the stranger behind the wheel of the Grand Am. She couldnt see the driver, but it didnt matter who was inside. Not yet.

She was here for someone else.

This was an industrial area, on the east end of Raleigh Street, not far from the coal docks and the paper mill. Power lines sizzled overhead. The ground under her feet shook with the passage of a southbound train. She made sure her Mustang was locked, with her Glock securely inside the glove compartment, and then she crossed the wet street to the Grizzly Bear Bar. It was a dive with no windows and an apartment overhead for the owner.

Cat was inside.

Serena felt guilty putting tracking software on the teenagers phone, but shed learned quickly that Cats sweet face didnt mean she could be trusted.

When she pulled open the door of the bar, a sweaty, beery smell tumbled outside. She heard drunken voices shouting in languages she didnt understand and the twang of a George Strait song on the jukebox. Big men lined up two-deep at the bar and played poker at wooden tables.

Inside, she scanned the faces, looking for Cat. She spied her near the wall, standing shoulder to shoulder with an older girl, both of them head-down over smartphones. The two made an unlikely pair. Cat was a classic beauty with tumbling chestnut hair and a sculpted Hispanic face. Her skinny companion had dyed orange spikes peeking out under a wool cap, and her ivory face was studded with piercings.

Serena keyed a text into her own phone and sent it. Look up.

Cats face shot upward as she got the message. Her eyes widened, and Serena read the girls lips. Oh, shit.

Cat whispered urgently in her friends ear. Serena saw the other girl study her like a scientist peering into the business end of a microscope. The skinny girl wore a low-cut mesh shirt over a black bra and a jean skirt that ended mid-thigh. She picked up a drinks tray she was a waitress and gave Serena a smirk as she strolled to the bar, leaving Cat by herself.

Serena joined Cat at the cocktail table where she was standing. The girls smile had vanished, and so had all of her adultness. Teenagers drifted so easily between maturity and innocence. She was a child again, but Cat was also a child who was five months pregnant.

Im really sorry Cat began, but Serena cut her off.

Save it. Im not interested in apologies.

She stopped herself before saying anything more that shed regret. She was too angry even to look at Cat. Instead, by habit, she surveyed the people in the bar. It was a rough crowd, not a hangout for college kids and middle-class tourists like the bars in Canal Park. Hardened sailors came to the Grizzly Bear off the cargo boats, making up for dry days on the lake with plenty of booze. She heard raspy laughter and arguments that would spill over into fights. The bare, muscled forearms of the men were covered in cuts and scars, and they left greasy fingerprints on dozens of empty beer bottles.

In the opposite corner of the bar, Serena noticed a woman who didnt fit in with the others. The woman sat by herself, a nervous smile on her round face. Her long blond hair, parted in the middle, hung down like limp spaghetti. She had an all-American look, with blue eyes and young skin, like a cheerleader plucked from a college yearbook. Maybe twenty-two. She kept checking a phone on the table in front of her, and her stare shot to the bar door every time it opened.

Something about the woman set off alarm bells in Serenas head. This was a bad place for her. She wanted to go over and ask: Why are you here?

She didnt, because that was the question she needed to ask Cat.

Why are you here, Cat?

I wanted to go somewhere. Im bored.

Thats not an answer.

Anna works here, Cat said. She and I know the owner.

Cat nodded at the waitress whod been with her at the table. Anna was playing with her phone as she waited for the bartender at the taps. One of the sailors made a grab for the girls ass, and Anna intercepted his hand without so much as a glance at the mans face.

She used to live on the streets, like me, Cat told Serena. Wed hang out together. If she found a place to sleep, she let me crash there, too.

I get it, but thats not your world anymore.

Im entitled to have friends, Cat insisted, her lower lip bulging with defiance.

You are, but no one from your old life is a friend.

Serena knew the struggle the girl faced. Not even three months ago, Cat Mateo had been a runaway. A teenage prostitute. When someone began stalking her in the citys graffiti graveyard, shed gone to Duluth police lieutenant Jonathan Stride for help. Serena and Stride had been lovers for four years, and she knew he had a weakness for a woman in trouble. Theyd helped capture the man whod been targeting Cat, and when the girl was safe, Stride made a decision that surprised Serena. He suggested that the teenager live with them, have her baby there, and grow up in a house with adults who cared about her.

Serena said yes, but shed never believed that it would be easy for any of them. And it wasnt.

Youre a sight for sore eyes in this place, a male voice announced.

A man in a rumpled blue dress shirt and loosely knotted tie stopped at their table. His eyes darted between Serenas face and the full breasts swelling under her rain-damp T-shirt. He wiped his hands on a Budweiser bar towel.

This is Fred, Cat interjected. He owns the bar.

The man shot out a hand, which Serena shook. His fingers were sticky from sugar and limes. Fred Sissel, he said cheerfully.

Sissel was around fifty years old, with slicked-back graying hair and a trimmed mustache. He wore the over-eager grin of a man whod tried to smile his way out of everything bad in life. Fights. Debts. Drunk driving. His cuffs were frayed, and his shirt and tie were dotted with old food stains. His face had the mottled brown of too many visits to a tanning salon.

So whats your name, and where have you been all my life? Sissel asked. The teeth behind his smile were unnaturally white.

Serena slid her badge out of her jeans pocket. My names Serena Dial. Im with the Itasca County Sheriffs Office.

Sissels mustache drooped like a worm on a fishing hook. The sailors at the other tables had a radar for the gold glint of a badge, and the tenor in the bar changed immediately.

Sorry, officer, is there a problem? Sissel asked, losing the fake grin.

Do you know this girl?

Sure, shes a friend of Annas.

Do you know shes seventeen years old?

Sissel swore under his breath. Hey, I dont want any trouble, he said.

Youve already got trouble, and if I find her in this place again, youll have even more.

Yeah. Understood. Whatever you say.

The bar owner raised his arms in surrender and backed away. Serena saw emotions skipping like beach stones across Cats face. Shame. Guilt. Embarrassment. Anger.

Freds a nice guy, the girl said finally. You didnt have to be mean to him.

Does he serve you alcohol?

No, Cat said, but Serena didnt trust her face. She leaned closer to the girl, and although there was no booze on her breath, she smelled cigarette smoke like stale perfume on her beautiful hair.

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