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Murder Most Strange (Turner Hahn And Frank Morales Case Files Book 3)

Murder Most Strange (Turner Hahn And Frank Morales Case Files Book 3)

Book summary

"Murder Most Strange" presents a riveting anthology of twelve homicide cases, skillfully investigated by detectives Turner Hahn and Frank Morales. This collection delves into the macabre, the bizarre, and the enigmatic, including cases of police corruption and sibling rivalry, as well as perplexing locked-room mysteries. Each narrative showcases the distinctive camaraderie and tenacity of these two detectives, revealing that beneath the surface, nothing is ever as straightforward as it appears.

Excerpt from Murder Most Strange (Turner Hahn And Frank Morales Case Files Book 3)

Blue Diamonds

Three round, perfectly matched, twenty-five-carat blue diamonds.

Worth—and here's where it got interesting—somewhere between ten to twenty million dollars. And that, we were told, was only a vague estimate.

Just the diamonds.

We were also informed the price could be tripled or quadrupled if they were set professionally in an expensive necklace or broach. But there was a problem. It would be near on impossible to sell the diamonds on the open market. Blue diamonds in general were so rare, and therefore so expensive, even one stolen diamond would immediately cause a sensation among diamond buyers. Three to be palmed off on the open market would be unheard of. Completely unrealistic.

So we had a set of problems to solve. 'We' being me and my red-headed, troglodyte lookalike partner, Frank Morales. Oh—I guess I should introduce myself. I'm Detective Sergeant Turner Hahn. Frank is a detective sergeant as well. We work the second shift of the South Side Precinct. We were—depending on how you wanted to look at it—the fortunate or unfortunate souls handed the case by our shift commander, Lieutenant Dimitri Yankovich.

As soon as we walked in to work our shift, Yank called us into his small glass cubicle for an office and handed us a brand new, brown casefile folder.

"Murder and jewelry heist about twenty minutes ago. The Josef Brothers jewelry store down on Patton and Hoyle Street. One Abraham Josef dead with his right temple crushed in by some heavy object. Three priceless diamonds, worth millions, missing. And ah—here's the interesting part. You'll love it. It looks like a case that fits both of your wheelhouses."

A grim little snarl of a smile played across the gaunt man's gray lips. And I distinctively saw a twinkle of mirth in the man's gun-metal gray eyes. Frank growled something underneath his breath which probably shouldn't be repeated. Hearing Frank's growl and eyeing Yank's pasty-white face, I can't say I was too amused myself.

If you want a description of Lt. Yankovich, think of Bela Lugosi's Count Dracula film image. Only taller. A slightly stooping grandson of Slavic immigrants. Yet the bone-thin man stood an inch taller than Frank and me. And both of us nudge the charts at a little over six-foot-four.

So that was our main entrée for the night. Simple. Find out who killed Abraham Josef. Find the diamonds. Arrest the culprits. We were experienced pros at finding bad guys. It would be as simple as falling out of bed.

Yeah, right. Not so simple.

When we pulled up to the curb two buildings down from the jewelry store, we saw the sidewalk in front of the store cordoned off with yellow police tape, with two police vans marked METROPOLITAN FORENSICS slapped on the metal sides. On both ends of the yellow tape a number of curious neighbors and passersby had gathered to watch the coming and goings of the uniformed police and lab-coated technicians. Their voices were low. But their interest in the case was quite obviously high.

Making our way through the crowd and ducking underneath the yellow tape, we stepped into the jewelry store and were immediately met by patrol officers Flattery and O'Connor. Two of the best uniformed patrol officers in the force. Both of them third-generation cops who were as experienced as we are.

Yes, the old cliché is true—police work can get into your blood. Into the family psyche to the point where kids watch their parents put on their uniforms and go to work. They hear the crazy stories. They listen to their dad's—or mom's—police friends' wild tales when they come over to visit. It gets into their blood. And they join up to carry on the family tradition.

Both were waiting for us with small spiral notebooks in their hands and quickly scoped out what had brought them here. The wife of Abraham Josef called in and said her husband had not returned home from work. In fact, had been missing for the last forty-eight hours. She said he left home just after dinner on Friday and said he'd be gone a couple of hours. He never came back.

Abraham Josef was a seventy-two-year-old jeweler who lived with his wife for the last forty-three years in marriage. Faithful husband. Devout Jew. Father of three grown kids who were, quite accurately, scattered all over the world. He was a pillar of wisdom and respect within his community. No police record. No traffic citations. Never been sick. He had, supposedly, no enemies. Except, somehow, someone had bashed in his head with a heavy object—and three priceless diamonds were missing.

Abraham had one brother, sixty-five-year-old Simon Josef. Apparently, Simon left Thursday morning to go on a monthlong vacation, traveling to the Holy Land with a large tour group.

Flattery and O'Connor decided to first check out the jewelry store to see if the old man was—perhaps—there, maybe lying on the floor after suffering some sort of trauma. Like a heart attack or a crippling injury. When they arrived at the scene, they found the back door to the store had been jimmied open; the security alarms still active but apparently reset before the silent alarms went off. And there was a smell—the smell of someone very dead.

They found the body of Abraham Josef sitting splayed back in his office chair, staring with lifeless eyes up at the ceiling. But before they found the body—they had to bust through an office door that had two deadbolt locks firmly securing the dead man's office as tight as a mini Fort Knox. Deadbolt locks that could only be locked, or unlocked, from someone inside the office.

And there it was—Yank's private little joke aimed at Frank and me.

A locked-room mystery.

How do you kill someone inside a room that has two deadbolt locks on the door which can only be unlocked by someone inside the room? And then—after committing the foul deed—how do you lock two deadbolts while standing on the other side of the door? Locks which must be manually locked or unlocked from inside the room?

"Okay, Hollywood. You tell me. Why does Yank do this to us?" Frank rumbled, his deep voice sounding like a smoldering volcano. "It's like he gets a perverse pleasure in handing us the toughest cases."

My Neanderthal-shaped friend calls me "Hollywood" whenever he gets cranky. And—reluctantly—I admit I look like a legendary actor. Long dead and gone. But in his time, he was a movie-matinee idol of the '30s and '40s with his jet-black hair, wiry mustache, and the forever grin on his lips of a wise-ass. Yes, I confess—I look so much like this famous actor I'm constantly reminded of it almost on a daily basis.

And I hate it.

But I suffer through it patiently because I have no other choice.

"Maybe he gives us these cases because he knows we'll figure it out. Our record is pretty good, you know."

"Your record is pretty good, buddy. I'm just along for the ride."

I looked at Frank. The guy was built like a gorilla with no neck but with a massive set of shoulders. His square-shaped head was covered either in long, stringy red hair pulled back into a man-bun riding on the back of his skull. A thin coating of red fuzz covering most of his face represented some kind of wannabe beard. Underneath his razor-sharp nose was a thick, magnificent-looking carrot-colored mustache.

Smirking, I shook my head humorously.

"For a guy who has an IQ twice as large as Einstein's, it both surprises me you became a cop instead of some kind of scientific maven, and it surprises me you hate to take on cases like this."

"I'm lazy," he replied with jarring frankness. "I've always been lazy."

"Sure," I nodded, grinning wider. "And my grandfather was Groucho Marx."

My grandfather was not Groucho Marx. And Frank is the complete antonym of the word "lazy."

Frank snorted in amusement and followed me through the rather spacious jewelry store and back through a set of offices and work rooms to Abraham Josef's main office. In the dead man's office, we found five forensics specialists hard at work dusting for fingerprints, and their lab-coated supervisor, Joe Weiser, standing in the middle of the room writing notes on a large clipboard in his hands.

"Ho! What news, fair damsel?" my genetic freak for a friend called out merrily to Joe.

The gum-chewing Joe looked up from his clipboard, saw us—and especially Frank—sighed, and shook his head in quiet frustration.

"Gee, Frank. Still have that speech impediment of yours? I thought you'd fixed it by now."

That's the way it always went with the three of us. We were friends. But Joe and Frank liked to trade barbs with each other anytime we worked together on a case.

"What do you have for us?" I asked.

"We've got fingerprints all over this room. Last count, forty or fifty of 'em. We got one window. It has a metal cage bolted to the brick wall on the outside. The window itself is sealed shut. We just removed the body from the crime scene. The guy was definitely iced by someone hitting him with a very heavy object. But, so far, we haven't found the murder weapon. And, of course, the pièce de résistance—the heavy oak door with its double deadbolt locks," Joe said, grinning. "I'd say, boys, you've got a hell of a case to figure out."

"Way to go, compadre! As always. Succinct. Efficient. And about as helpful as a freshly thawed-out lump of cold liver."

I grinned. Joe eyed the red-headed Frank patiently but eventually turned eyes toward me. "The only thing I have of a note of interest is a smear of Vaseline on one chair leg over there by the wall."

"Really? Let's take a look."

The gum-chewing forensic maven walked across the carpeted office to a far wall where two deep-brown leather chairs braced a coffee table holding an antique brass lamp on it. One of the chairs was pulled slightly away against the wall. On the right rear leg of the chair was a small forensic tag strapped to it.

"Up front, it's straight-up, ordinary Vaseline. A small sliver about a finger's worth smeared across the inside of the wooden leg."

"Fingerprints?" Frank asked, grunting in interest.

"Nope. Just a smear of the greasy stuff about a quarter of an inch by an eighth of an inch in width."

"Huh. Curious."

"What about the rest of the place? Find anything of interest?" I asked.

"This place is bigger than it looks. Josef Brothers' is more than just a commercial jewelry store. Turns out the other half of the business is a wholesale diamond-cutting business. The brothers have about six diamond cutters on the payroll. And from what I can gather, they're a very lucrative organization with clientele spread out all over the world."

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