The past is never past. Sometimes it repeats itself. And sometimes it comes back to pay a visit. Blu Carraway, flush with cash and back in business, never had it so good. Or so he thought.The reality is his love life is in shambles, his business partner is spending too much time with women half his age and not enough time on the job, and someone close goes missing. Bluâs business partner goes off the rails, his friends show their true colors, and he realizes that getting closure sometimes means walking away from everything. With a case from the past gone wrong twice, a loved one in trouble, and an unanswered marriage proposal, itâs a bad time to be in it for Blu Carraway Investigations.
Boy, was it ever! A bad time to be in it, that is.
Blu’s life is a mess. An interesting mess, but still a mess. All of his life. His love life, his business and relationships with his friends.
Some of his problems include murder, kidnapping, an elusive girlfriend and two news reporters.
This was an enjoyable book that kept me guessing. I really like Blu Carraway. His house, too.
Thank you, Mr Burnsworth. When will I be able to see Blu again?
Chapter OneBelize City, Belize, August, mid-MondayPaco squinted as he stared out over the courtyard, the afternoon sun a brilliant blaze. Sounds of local women selling vegetables, cheap pottery, and trinkets to tourists filled the air. The clinking of dishware. Some of the vendors were lucky enough to have an umbrella or canopy to shield them from the burning heat. Most werenât.
The pavement baked Pacoâs feet through his cowboy boots.
He lifted his straw hat, one with an orange band heâd bought from a local Mennonite child, and wiped his brow. The air tasted of salt, dust, and tamalito grease.
His two partners, a Belizean Creole called Lin and a Jamaican named Peter, were already in position. Lin nodded at him from the other side of the square. Paco checked on Peter and found him fifty meters due east scoping out the three young women theyâd come for.
Well, really it was just one of them they wanted. The other two women were going to be a bonus. The contract was to grab the woman with the family name of Kincaid, make a phone call when they had her at their hideout, and then do whatever they wanted with the other two. And eliminate any resistance.
The stupid chicas had only one guard with them. Some tall, middle-aged Bufon Paco guessed was half-Cuban, half-gringo, who wore sunglasses and dressed in light-colored fatigues and military style boots. He looked fit but was most likely nothing but an easy target. In the three days Peter, Lin, and Paco had tracked the women, the man with the sunglasses always kept watch from behind.
The past two nights Paco had dreamt of shooting the man through those sunglasses.
Using the sleeve of his shirt, Paco wiped his forehead one more time and then replaced his hat. He watched Peter wait until the women and the man passed and then fell in behind them.
God, the women were beautiful. Suntanned white girls in their early twenties. Perfect teeth. Curled, long hair. Linen blouses, short shorts, and sandals. After he shot their protector, his dreams ended with tying each of them to a bed, the fear in their eyes giving him immense pleasure.
And today was the day his dream would come true.
Paco watched the group pass through a crowd of old people in bright clothes unloading from a tour bus.
Except Peter didnât emerge behind them when the women came through the other side of the gray-haired mass.
Neither did the sunglass-wearing guard.
Paco smiled and thought, good, Peter took him out already.
He nodded at Lin who gave him a thumbs-up.
The women perused another row of vendors.
He and Lin followed, coming from opposite ends.
The women were just ahead. Paco caught sight of their toned caderas and thanked his god again for tight American shorts. He picked up his pace as he threaded through the crowd.
After about forty meters, something didnât seem right any more. He should have caught up to them by now. And Lin should have joined him.
Paco stopped, checked his phone. No messages.
Looking around, he thought he spotted the women turn down an alley.
Where were Peter and Lin?
It didnât matter.
He had to get the woman now. Especially with the guard out of the picture.
Paco knew he could handle her by himself, even if the other two females had to die to make things easier. He sprinted after them, cut down the alley, and found himself alone with nothing but a dead end. The only noise he heard was the market from which heâd come.
An abandoned car on blocks with its hood open mocked him. Dust kicked up from his boots as he skidded to a stop. Paco turned around. No one had followed him.
He turned back and looked straight down the barrel of a revolver.
His eyes would notâcould notâkeep from staring at the black hole in front of him that brought death. Where in the hell did this come from? There had been no sound.
A manâs voice said, âEsto es donde dar la vuelta y a pie.â (This is where you turn around and walk away.)
Thinking fast, Paco said, âQue buscaba para mi hija.â (I was looking for my daughter.)
The thumb of the hand holding the revolver cocked the hammer back.
Anyone else would have soiled his pants at this. But Paco knew the man had made a very big mistake. Other peoplesâ mistakes, and Pacoâs awareness of them, were how he had survived this long. The cocked pistol an armâs reach from his face had caught him off guard. If it had been five feet away, the perfect distance for control,he would have had a problem.
But this closeâ
Paco swung an arm at the hand with the pistol and ducked the other way, all in one motion just like heâd done before.
Except another gun fired.
Paco felt an inferno of heat and lead tear through his leg. He screamed and crashed to the ground.
A large, military boot kicked him in the face. It jolted his focus off the pain in his leg for a second and onto the sunglasses of the man from his dreams. Paco spotted a second pistol in the manâs other hand. He hadnât seen the second gun because he couldnât tear his eyes away from the first. The man had outsmarted him.
The man smiled down at him and said, in Spanish, âWho hired you?â
The pain flooded back. Paco seethed out a âPiss off.â
The man with the sunglasses put his large boot on Pacoâs injured leg and stepped down hard.
Paco had never felt pain so great in his thirty-three years on this earth. He tried to scream, but nothing came out. He swam in a horizon of white noise.
The pressure on his leg let up. The boot kicked him in the ribs, ripping his concentration away from his leg once more, long enough for him to breathe.
âYour two friends wonât be joining us. Tell me who hired you. Do it now. I wonât ask again.â
Pacoâs mind recovered enough from the pain to formulate a last desperate plan. He slipped a hand behind his back and pulled out a derringer.
Before he could aim it, the man standing over him blasted his hand from two feet away. And Paco felt a different twinge of pain that almost matched the firestorm in his leg. He lifted his hand to where he could look at it. Two of his fingers were missing.
Then he saw nothing.
Chapter TwoCharleston County, South Carolina, August, mid-MondayDAY ONEMick Crome sat on a stool at the inside bar of the Pirateâs Cove on the Isle of Palms. He finished off a second pint while staring at all the liquor bottles lined up on the shelves in front of him. They had a habit of staring back. Maureen, his sometimes girlfriend and bartender a hundred miles north up in Myrtle Beach, was pissed off at him. He couldnât chill and watch her tight rear end as she poured drinks tonight. Maybe not tomorrow night, either.
The current bartender serving the beers, a friend named Brack Pelton, wasnât exactly his type. At six feet and with a perpetual suntanned complexion, Brack looked like he should be tending bar in the Bahamas, not owning two watering holes in the South Carolina lowcountry.
Pelton asked, âYou want another one, Mick?â
Even inside the place, the smell of the Atlantic Ocean directly behind him cleaned out his sinuses. The song streaming on the barâs sound system, âParadise Cityâ by Guns and Roses, was a real classic.
Crome nodded, hooked a boot heel on the bottom rung of his stool, and pulled a vape pen out of the breast pocket of his weathered leather vest.
He couldnât figure out what exactly heâd done wrong with Maureen but was sure it might have something to do with the two women he traded vodka shots with the night before. Mainly
because neither of them was Maureen. Maureen hadnât taken too kindly to him cancelling their date so he could follow a lead only to end up getting drunk and crashing at another womanâs pad. She didnât believe him when heâd tried to explain that nothing had happened. The lead was legit, but even he knew he should have just gotten the information over the phone.
What did people say in times like this? Câest la vie?
Whatever.
Pelton set a fresh pint of draft down in front of Crome. âHavenât seen you or Blu around in a while. Howâs it going?â
The kid, Pelton, meant well. If Crome hadnât taken a liking to him, and if he hadnât watched a video of the kid, empty handed, take on an armed giant of a man and win, he might have picked a fight with him just for fun. But the kid had saved his best friendâs daughter and was an unofficial partner in the private investigation firm Crome co-owned. Unofficial because just about everything Crome did was unofficial. The official side was handled by his main partner, Blu Carraway.
Crome said, âBluâs on a security job. In Belize, the lucky bastard. Should be back in a day or two.â
A voice from behind him said, âHi, Crome.â
It was female and familiar. Damn.
Anyone else would have been a welcome change to his wandering thoughts, a defense mechanism he used to avoid thinking about Maureen.
Hell, Maureen in her most pissed-off state would have been a welcome companion compared toâ
The female voice interrupted his thought. âArenât you going to invite me to sit down?â
Crome saw the smirk form on his own face reflected in the mirror behind the bar. He also saw the strawberry-blond curls, red lipstick, and tight dress of his newest problem. âItâs a free country.â
Harmony Childs pulled out the stool next to him and sat. âThat bad-ass biker routine wonât work on me, Sugar. Youâve seen me in my underwear.â
Twenty years his junior, nuttier than a pecan tree, driven, and drop-dead gorgeous, Harmony was the very clichĂ© of Kryptonite for him. She was also one of the two women heâd traded shots with last night.
It was true; he had seen her in her underwear. But not out of her underwear, thank God, or he and Maureen wouldnât have lasted this long.
Harmony said, âDonât tell me youâve still got a hangover. Iâd hate to think you couldnât hang with us, given your propensity for bars and liquor.â
She really was beautiful. And sheâd matched him shot for shot, unless the bartender was feeding her and her friend water instead of Citron. But that couldnât be because heâd watched all their shot glasses get refilled from the same bottle.
âNot on your life, Dolly,â he said.
Pelton came over, grinned at the young woman, and said, âWhatâll it be, Ms. Harmony?â
If Peltonâs wife caught him doing anything more than casual flirting, sheâd string him up by his testicles. Especially if it was with Harmony. Or her cohort, Tess Ray. Which reminded Crome, when there was one, the other wasnât far behind.
Tess pulled out the stool on the other side of Crome and sat. âSorry Iâm late. There was another double homicide in North Charleston.â
Shorter than Harmony, with shoulder length blonde hair that fell in layers, Tess wore dark-rimmed glasses, a business dress with no sleeves, and medium heels.
Sheâd been the second woman from the night before. Two women to one man, a bottle of vodka, and all he had to show for it was a nasty headache, a stiff back from the couch heâd crashed on alone, and a pissed off girlfriend. Must be his lucky day.
Crome opened his mouth to say âhowdyâ but got cut off before he could start.
âIt would be nice if your partner was around,â Harmony said.
âYou guys make good copy. Maybe you all could give us something besides gang violence to report on.â
Harmony and Tess were eager-beaver news correspondents whoâd recently gone independent.
Tess asked, âSo when is Blu due back in town? Soon, right?â
Every damn woman whoâd ever laid eyes on Blu Carraway fell in love with the bastard.
Again, Crome opened his mouth to speak, and again got interrupted. This time by the other local lady killer, Peltonâs dog, Shelby.
At the sight of the chow-collie mix, Harmony and Tess both slid off their stools and swarmed the mutt. The damned canine seemed to be eating it all up, dancing around between them, his wagging tail high in the air.
The song ended, and in the lull before the next one began, Crome checked his iPhone, the one that felt like an old-fashioned pair of handcuffs restraining him from freedom. The one that came with the business of running a private investigation firm. The one that his partner had made him take.
Heâd missed a call.
The number wasnât familiar, but whoever had called left a voicemail. He listened.
It sounded like Maureen. âMick? Iâm in trouble. Please helpââ
A manâs voice cut her off. âListen Crome, itâs payback time. You took from me so Iâm taking from you. Iâll be in touch.â
His phone showed a text message. He tapped to open it up and stared at a picture of a scared Maureen with a gun to her head.
Billy Idolâs âEyes Without a Faceâ started playing, blowing a hole through the world.
***
Excerpt from Bad Time To Be In It by David Burnsworth. Copyright © 2018 by David Burnsworth. Reproduced with permission from David Burnsworth. All rights reserved.
David Burnsworth became fascinated with the Deep South at a young age. After a degree in Mechanical Engineering from the University of Tennessee and fifteen years in the corporate world, he made the decision to write a novel. Bad Time To Be In It (July 2018, Henery Press) will be his sixth. Having lived on Charlestonâs Sullivanâs Island for five years, the setting was a foregone conclusion. He and his wife call South Carolina home.
Visit these other great hosts on this tour for more great reviews, interviews, guest posts, and giveaways!