Close
post-featured-image

Excerpt: Crimson Lake by Candice Fox

opens in a new windowamazons opens in a new windowbns opens in a new windowbooksamillions opens in a new windowibooks2 26 opens in a new windowindiebounds

opens in a new windowImage Place holder  of - 34

Six minutes in the wrong place at the wrong time—that’s all it took to ruin Sydney Detective Ted Conkaffey’s life. Accused but not convicted of the brutal abduction of a 13-year-old girl, Ted is now a free man—and public enemy number one. He flees north to keep a low profile amidst the steamy, croc-infested wetlands of Crimson Lake.

There, Ted’s lawyer introduces him to private investigator Amanda Pharrell, herself a convicted murderer. Perhaps it’s the self-isolation and murderous past that makes her so adept at tracking lost souls in the wilderness, but her latest target, missing author Jake Scully, has a life more shrouded in secrets than her own.

Not entirely convinced Amanda is a cold-blooded killer,Ted agrees to help with her investigation, a case full of deception and obsession, while secretly digging into her troubled past. The residents of Crimson Lake are watching the pair’s every move…once Ted’s true identity becomes known, the threats against him become violent and the town offers no place to hide.

opens in a new windowCrimson Lake will be available on March 6th. Please enjoy this excerpt, and check out the audiobook read by Euan Morton.

Chapter 5

The newspaper article about Amanda Pharrell mentioned an office in Beale Street. I washed my face, brushed my teeth and arrived at the office at eight o’clock, wearing a neatly ironed light cotton shirt and grey trousers. It was already too humid for the town’s resident wild dogs, who lounged under trees by the Crimson Lake Hotel.

When I tried to decide what this was all about, I came up blank. Sean’s reasons for asking me to see Amanda were vague – the lawyer had learned during my trial that I over-worried about the small stuff and it was easier when he just told me what to do. I could only think that Sean had directed me towards this Amanda character because she was an ex-inmate, like me, and maybe she was having some trouble going about life as a pariah. Maybe he’d been involved in her case, way back when. Maybe he thought the two of us would have tips for each other on how to get through the day when nine out of ten people in the world would like to see you dead. Maybe, if she was doing worse than me (which I could hardly believe was possible), I might be spirited on in my own recovery and the two of us could get through it together.

Lying on my new bed the evening before, I’d been googling stuff about infant geese and read that if an injured baby bird won’t eat, it’s sometimes helpful to put it in the same box as another bird its age, so that it can be led by example. One orphaned bird cheers the other one on to survive. Maybe Sean thought that two public enemies were better than one. I didn’t know.

My punctuality was a mistake. I stood outside the small converted weatherboard house crammed between the bank and corner store, and looked at the drawn blinds. I thought I heard meowing behind the door. I took the article I’d printed about Amanda from my back pocket and examined it, checked the address. I found myself reading the words again, incredible as they were.

Convicted Killer Opens PI Agency

Kissing Point Killer Amanda Pharrell began trading in private investigations this week from a shopfront on Beale Street. Pharrell acquired her private detective’s licence while serving eight years in prison for the stabbing murder of Crimson Lake teenager Lauren Freeman in 2006. While some district residents have expressed dismay at the business venture, Crimson Lake Local Member Scott Bosc said there are no licensing restrictions preventing Pharrell Private Investigations from investigating “everything from insurance fraud to murder” in the greater tropical north. Pharrell indicated that the agency, which has been open three days, has already received inquiries.

There was a handwritten note in the window of the little office.

Hours 10 am – 10 pm

After hours, see Shark Bar.

**

The Shark Bar was an ageing tropical-themed diner, complete with potted bird of paradise plants and hibiscus-flower murals exploding over the walls. The counter was covered in junk – cups of novelty pens, battered three-month-old magazines, coral dive pamphlets and miniature solar-powered Hawaiian ladies who swayed at the hips. There was a waitress wiping the counter and two people at the tables; a colourfully tattooed junkie scouring newspapers and a lady reading a crime fiction novel, gray wisps creeping in from her temples into her orange curls. I went over and sat down, and she lifted her eyes to me.

“You start at ten?” I said. “Jesus. This place really is a holiday town.”

“Excuse me?” The woman frowned.

I sat back, disoriented.

“You’re Amanda Pharrell?”

“Who?”

“Sorry.” I laughed. Felt my face burning. “Sorry, ma’am.”

I patted her novel in consolation, stood up and backed away. The anaemic-looking tattooed butterfly across the room hadn’t looked up. I went over and stood uncertainly by the table. One of her hands lay fidgeting by the edge of the paper.

“Excuse me? Ms. Pharrell?”

“If it ain’t me, then Vicky over there is your last shot.” Amanda looked up over thick-framed red glasses and motioned to the waitress with her chin. I sat down, unsure whether to feel relieved or disappointed. There were five newspapers between us, three in a stack on her right, one under her hands and one on the left. I reached out but she didn’t shake my hand, just stared like she didn’t know what it was.

“Edward Conkaffey,” I said. “Ted.”

“Sean’s guy.” She gave me the once-over. “I didn’t expect you to be so tall.”

“I didn’t expect you to be so . . .” – I looked at the tatts – “colorful?”

She smiled. There was a twitch to her. A repetitive jerking of her head sideways an inch or two. I told myself not to stare.

“You know Sean, do you?” I said.

“I do not.”

“Well, this is interesting. How did you come to speak to him about me?”

“He called me,” she said. I waited for more. There wasn’t any.

We examined each other in ringing silence. Her arms were skinny and veined, but there seemed to be an awful lot depicted on them. Radios and microphones, birds and angels, lush jungle plants hiding gaping Louisiana-style plantation houses. Feathers and beautiful women in portrait: black, Asian, a mixture. On her left hand, a rabbit in a three-piece suit.

“Sean said you’d be able to begin work over the next week or so,” she said. “That right? Or do you need the weekend?”

“Sean said I’d come work for you?”

“Yes,” she said.

I laughed.

“Is that funny, honey?”

“Yes,” I said, smiling. “It’s funny. It’s funny and annoying and ridiculous.”

“What the hell did you think he was sending you my way for?”

“I don’t know, to be honest.” I shrugged. “I guess I didn’t think too much about it. I’ve been following his directions mindlessly for about a year now.”

“Hmm.”

“I guess I wondered if maybe… Maybe he thought I could help you. Both of us being ex-inmates. I see you’ve been out for a couple of years, but –”

She laughed hard. “Do I look like I need your help?”

“No.”

“I’m doing fine, sweetheart.” She patted my arm, patronising. “It’s funny that you assumed he wanted you to help me, rather than wondering if he wanted me to help you. You’re the one wearing Eau de Jack Daniels.”

“It’s Wild Turkey.” I sniffed the collar of my shirt.

“Sean wanted you to get off your arse and get to work.”

“Yeah, thanks.” I cleared my throat. “I get it.”

She smiled. The whole thing was steadily becoming absurd, uncomfortably absurd, a joke gone wrong. A prank. I glanced towards the door.

“From what I understand, you run some homegrown private investigations firm?”

“That’s right.” She twitched.

“And Sean thinks I’m just going to throw my lot in with you and start working cases like nothing ever happened?”

“I don’t think he’s under any illusion that nothing happened.” Amanda got bored looking at me and turned the page of her newspaper, examined the pictures carefully before letting her eyes drift to the text. “He’s well aware of what your life has become. That’s probably why he thought of me. Because I’m the only person in Queensland likely to hire someone accused of what you’ve been accused of.”

My stomach really wasn’t taking this well. I looked at the door again.

“He said you’re up shit creek,” she said, smiling. “I had a look at your case. I think he’s right.”

“Christ. Look, pardon me, Ms. Pharrell. But just because you’re the only person in around who would hire me for detective work –”

“For anything, really.”

“For anything,” I conceded, “doesn’t mean I’m interested. I mean, you yourself. You’re –”

“A convicted murderer?” She looked up at me. “Look, sugarplum. Convicted, acquitted. Guilty, not guilty. Charges entered. Charges withdrawn. It’s all the same around here. If you don’t get it now, you will soon. You’re doing time. We’re both doing time.”

I toyed with the napkin holder beside me. Sean had dropped me in the middle of an awkward mess, but scoping out the town I’d decided to settle in for employment opportunities for me had been very kind. I supposed I was lucky that I’d stopped in Crimson Lake, and the local ex-con who had work was an investigator. If I’d picked somewhere else, I might have got a type of employment less suited to my skills. If all Sean had been looking for was someone who had also committed or been accused of a violent crime, and who therefore wouldn’t mind taking me on, I might have ended up gutting fish with serial killers or cleaning toilets with child molesters. I told myself Amanda would turn out to be a lucky break. I looked at her twitching before me, picking her nails. Murderer, I thought, then scolded myself.

“We’re a good match,” she continued. “Think about it,” she continued. “What’s the real difference here, between you and me?”

“There’s plenty of difference,” I said.

“Okay, you’re still in denial.” She turned back to the paper, waved dismissively at me. “That’ll wear off.”

We sat in silence for a long time, Amanda reading the newspaper like I wasn’t there at all, me staring at the top of her head, her glasses, the flaming orange roots of her dyed black locks. I couldn’t believe how casually she was talking about my life. My charred wasteland of an existence. She slurped her coffee, loudly, like a child. I sat bewildered and disturbed in my seat, the passenger of a car wreck, trying to reorient my up and down, trying to understand why my forward motion had stopped.

“So how free are you to work?” she asked finally.

“Free?”

“Available.”

“I’m pretty available, I guess.”

“What’s your background?”

“Drug squad. Couple of related homicides,” I said. My mind was spinning. “I can’t believe we’re even having this conversation.”

“Why not?”

“I mean, is your business real?” I leaned forward, conspiratorial. “You actually have clients?”

“It’s real.” She smirked. “What? You think it’s a front or something?”

“No, I just. You’re a convicted murderer. Don’t people wonder if you’re dangerous?”

“I’m a convicted murderer,” she whispered, her red lips spreading into a grin. “I am dangerous.”

“So why do people hire you?”

“Dunno.” She shrugged. “Guess they think I’ve got the criminal mind. I’m on the bad-guy wavelength. I can sniff out the cheaters and the dodgers and the villains using my ultra-evil senses.” She snuffled loudly.

“Huh.”

“It also helps that I’m the only private investigator this side of Brisbane.”

“Right.”

“Well, look.” She leaned back and gave the weary groan of someone resigned to doing a huge favor that could possibly sink their entire business. “I’m willing to give you a shot. As a favor to Sean.”

“But you said you don’t know Sean . . .”

“I don’t.”

“But –”

“Why don’t we try this out?” she said. “We can head back to the office, and I’ll set you up with your pick of the case files this morning. We can use one of those as a sort of unpaid trial. See if you’re any good.”

“What case files?”

“Oh, I’ve got plenty that’d suit you.” Her head jerked once harder, her ear almost touching her shoulder. “Infidelity cases. Insurance stuff.”

“That’s just lovely, but I’m not interested in going around snapping pictures of bare arses in hotel rooms.”

Amanda’s entire demeanour changed, cracked with open-mouthed laughter. She gave herself a little hug, like she was being cuddled by the very humour itself.

“Bare arses in hotel rooms! Oh lordy!”

“I’m not so sure this is a good idea. This whole thing.”

A long slurp of coffee. “Well, I’m not here to convince you.”

I looked at my hands. Thought about good ideas, bad ideas, Sean. And money.

“I’m not interested in working for free,” I said. “This is not an apprenticeship, and I’m not fourteen.”

“Well, it was worth a shot, love. You’ve got to admit.”

“What are you working on?”

“Oh, you’re not having my case,” she laughed. “I don’t work well with others.”

“Neither do I,” I said. “So maybe we ought to forget this thing altogether.”

Vicky the waitress had come and barricaded me into the booth just as I was about to dramatically exit it. She stood with her pad and pen and smiled. I looked at Amanda, and she returned my gaze passively, the choice mine. I ordered a coffee with milk and sugar and Vicky went away.

“This is going to be difficult.” Amanda gave a bored sigh and stared at the windows.

“I think you’re right.”

“Most people have almost forgotten who I am in this town,” she said, ignoring me. “What I did. If they haven’t forgotten, they’re at least not as confronted by me as they were when I first got released. They’re used to me, I guess. But you? You’re going to be like a ghoul around here, once the mob finds out you’re in town. I really think you should take the office. The night work and the bare arses in hotel rooms.”

“No thanks.”

She tore a corner off the newspaper and folded it into a tiny, bulging square. I watched her stick it between her front teeth, pressing it flat, before sucking it onto her molars.

“Look.” She munched the paper thoughtfully. “I feel for you, mate. So I might let you follow me around for a little while. See if you can do more than kick down doors. But you better keep your brim down. You’re going to have to be incognito, you understand? Like a mosquito in a burrito.”

She seemed pleased with her impromptu rhyme. Slurped her coffee with a smile. I considered whether to thank her.

“You could grow a beard, maybe.”

“I’m trying,” I said, feeling my stubble.

“So, you want to do it? Are we partners?” she asked, the long-suffering exhaustion gone and excitement of a girl about her. I rolled my eyes, and she clapped in glee.

“Tell me about your case,” I said.

Vicky brought my coffee, and Amanda pulled a couple of silver rings off her left middle finger. The two smaller rings, I realised, were holding a much larger ring on the base of the finger. It was so large that it clunked loudly on the table when she finally got it off. She rolled it towards me and I caught it before it could roll off the table.

“The local celebrity is missing,” she said.

 

Copyright © 2017 by Candice Fox

Order Your Copy

opens in a new windowImage Place holder  of amazon- 50 opens in a new windowImage Place holder  of bn- 22 opens in a new windowPoster Placeholder of booksamillion- 33 opens in a new windowibooks2 71 opens in a new windowindiebound

post-featured-image

7 Books by Writing Duos

Sometimes two really is better than one. Writing can be a lonely pursuit, but not for these dynamite duos – with their powers combined they can create stories that are twice as amazing. From the historical mysteries by Rosemarie and Vince Keenan (known as Renee Patrick) to the quarter-century partnership between Douglas Preston and Lincoln Child, here’s a selection of titles that show what happens when writers partner up.

opens in a new windowAmerican Drifter by Heather Graham and Chad Michael Murray

opens in a new windowPlace holder  of - 72New York Times bestselling author Heather Graham has teamed up with celebrated actor Chad Michael Murray. The two met through Graham’s daughter, and after discussing Murray’s idea for a book, they decided it was a match made in heaven! The result is a novel of passion and danger in the captivating thriller, opens in a new windowAmerican Drifter, the story of young army veteran River Roulet and the enchanting Natal, the journalist he falls in love with.

opens in a new windowDangerous To Know by Renee Patrick

opens in a new windowRenee Patrick is the pseudonym for married authors Rosemarie and Vince Keenan. The two teamed up to write the Edith Head and Lillian Frost mystery series, bringing to life glitz and glamour of Hollywood’s Golden Age. Dangerous to Know is the second installment in this series, starring aspiring actress Lillian Frost as well as well known historical Hollywood figures Edith Head, Jack Benny, George Burns, Marlene Dietrich, and more.

opens in a new windowCity of Endless Night by Douglas Preston & Lincoln Child

opens in a new windowImage Place holder  of - 90Doug Preston and Lincoln Child have been writing novels together for more than twenty-five years. Over that time, their process has changed, but the result hasn’t—Agent Pendergast has been hailed as a “ruthless descendant of Holmes” by Publishers Weekly, and has become one of crime fiction’s most enduring characters. How do they do it? Lincoln Child says it’s easy, so long as you respect your partner and are willing to accept criticism and learn from them. Here’s to many more years of collaboration, and many more opens in a new windowPendergast novels!

opens in a new windowMoon Hunt by Kathleen O’Neal Gear & W. Michael Gear

opens in a new windowImage Placeholder of - 38 In addition to being married, New York Times bestselling authors Kathleen O’Neal Gear and W. Michael Gear have written more than thirty novels together across genres. Their first collaborations were written in a tiny Colorado cabin with no running water and only wood stoves for heat. Their latest, opens in a new windowMoon Hunt, is the third epic tale in the Morning Star series about Cahokia, America’s greatest pre-Columbian city.

opens in a new windowWithout Mercy by Col. David Hunt & R.J. Pineiro

opens in a new windowPlaceholder of  -7Some writing partnerships are all about what you can bring to the table. In the case of Col. David Hunt and R.J. Pineiro, one brought the real-world knowledge and the other the writing chops of an acclaimed writer. The result is opens in a new windowWithout Mercy, a terrifying and topical thriller that feels like it could happen at any minute. When ISIS detonates nuclear weapons in two key American strongholds, the United States plunges into chaos and the CIA scrambles to prevent a third tragedy.

opens in a new windowNever Never by James Patterson & Candice Fox

opens in a new windowPoster Placeholder of - 40James Patterson is famous for collaborating with a huge variety of authors. He’s worked with Maxine Paetro, Michael Ledwidge, Mark T. Sullivan, and many, many, many others. He’s got a tried-and-true process: Patterson provides a detailed outline, sometimes as long as 80 pages, and then his co-author starts writing chapters. Weekly phone calls between the collaborators contain honest feedback and discussion of the project, resulting in consistently amazing commercial fiction. We particularly like his collaborations with Candice Fox. The Detective Harriet Blue series is hard-boiled crime with an Australian background and a likeable main character.

opens in a new windowThe Dangerous Ladies Affair by Marcia Muller & Bill Pronzini

opens in a new windowThe Dangerous Ladies Affair by Marcia Muller and Bill PronziniMarcia Muller and Bill Pronzini are, so far as we know, the only living couple to share the Grand Master Award from the Mystery Writers of America. They also share books, partnering up to write the charming historical mystery series Carpenter and Quincannon. Muller writes Carpenter’s viewpoint and Pronzini writes Quincannon’s in a brilliant collaboration from a longtime couple and writing team. opens in a new windowThe Dangerous Ladies Affair is the most recent novel featuring the firm of Carpenter and Quincannon, Professional Detective Services.

post-featured-image

Traveling Through the Murderous Past

opens in a new windowImage Placeholder of - 11 Written by opens in a new windowCandice Fox

I’ve spent the last month driving up the east coast of the US on my honeymoon, and in that time I’ve managed to visit the sites of four infamous and brutal murders.

Don’t be too shocked. That’s not even the weirdest thing I’ve ever done.

For the true crime nuts among you, (and I know there are a few), I thought I’d write a little bit down about what visiting those places was like and the feeling they have left me with. Because I guess all us crime freaks imagine ourselves getting some kind of strange pleasure or satisfaction out of being in a place where something that intrigues us so deeply occurred. I was drawn to these places as though by animal instinct, and approached them with my heart thumping. But what did I really expect to find?

I guess in some ridiculous corner of my mind I imagined that if I could actually physically go to where Hae Min Lee of Serial was buried, for example, I’d find answers as to who killed her. That there’d be some soiled confession letter buried under the log itself, or a symbol carved into a tree, or a wispy shred of fabric that defied every police search, every curious websleuth who trudged that rugged path before me. Something that eluded even the family of Hae herself, who had surely been there themselves to see where she had been laid to rest by her killer.

Predictably, and sadly, there was none. I guess you (and I) both knew that deep down. Such a find wouldn’t hold water even in the realms of the worst fiction.

I guess I also wondered if by going to the site of this terrible loss if I might be able to feel some of it more tangibly, and with some further legitimacy. That I might somehow become worthy of the sadness I feel for these strangers. These families I have never met and these victims, some of whom were born and died before I was even born. Because I do feel sad, but I don’t feel like I deserve to. I don’t feel like I’ve earned it. And I can’t think of a way to do that. This seemed like a pretty good shot.

I found the site of the infamous log behind which Hae Min Lee was found in Leakin Park, Baltimore, by following the instructions online. My husband parked the car at the nearby rest stop and walked back through the park with me, a little embarrassed as we ducked off the path by the side of the road and made out way into the bramble. It was tangly but not terribly dense in there, which is something Sarah Koenig was right about in Serial – you could still clearly see the road and the cars going by from 127 feet into the bush. Tim and I were a little confused as to which log we were looking for, but used pictures from Google to narrow it down from two potentials to one. I sat there, expecting something, looking at the leaf-littered earth at my feet, the place where she had lain. My husband stood nearby looking at the creek, probably wondering who the hell he married. I think he gets my weird desire to visit the places from traumatic stories to a certain point. He does it himself. We trudged around Boston making note of the sites of scenes from his favourite Spenser novels. So there.

But, granted, he might not have understood completely when I got my phone out and played ‘All My Life’ by K-Ci and Jo-Jo for Hae. Ok, Ok, Ok, I know how weird that sounds. But hear me out. I don’t know if there are ghosts or spirits or whatever the hell floating around in the universe, and I’m not prepared to completely reject the idea just yet (I’ve seen some shit, ok?). And I’ve never been given a really good guide. I spent most of my high school science classes quietly lighting things on fire at the back of the room. And my mother’s interpretation of Catholicism somehow includes reincarnation (and mermaids!). I have no grasp on the afterlife or whatever the hell happens in it.

Placeholder of  -58
Candice Fox sitting on the log near where Hae Min Lee’s body was found.

 But I figured that if even the tiniest part of Hae was around there somewhere, I knew she liked the song, and I thought it was unlikely she’d heard it in a long, long time. Because as I sat there listening and waiting for whatever might come, I realised how incredibly lonely a place this was. Yes, the road was just nearby. People, too. We’d even passed a group of school kids and teachers doing a nature walk by the bridge not a half a kilometre away. But the place where Hae was buried was closed in on all sides by thin green forest, making a sort of timeless bubble. I felt sick to think that she might have lain here forever, had she not been found, so close to life, but so completely detached from it. And even though she had been found here, there was not a thing to mark that horrible consequence. No shrine. No stone marker. Not so much as a cardboard ‘DON DID IT!’ sign pinned to a tree, which I would have put money on being the first indication that we were in the right place. Just an old, rain-soaked wooly rug someone had dumped (I checked it for bodies) and liquor bottles scattered here and there throughout the brush (there was one brandy bottle, but not the same as the brand mentioned in Serial). If some tiny part of Hae resides in this place so full of, and empty of clues, she has nothing but the sound of the slowly wandering creek to latch on to. In Hae’s diary, which Sarah read on Serial, she wrote that she was so excited Adnan danced to ‘All My Life’ with her instead of Stephanie at their prom. I wondered if playing it might help her, if she was there, return to a happier time. I know it’s weird. I’m weird. Get over it.

If the absence of any marker of the loss of Hae Min Lee at her burial site surprised me, it didn’t prepare me for the lack of, and sometimes deliberate erasing, of evidence from the three other sites I visited. Tim and I used our GPS and some co-ordinance obtained online and stopped on the side of a featureless stretch of parkway at Oak Beach, Long Island, where the bodies of ten people were found. Most of them were prostitutes working off CraigsList, but one was an Asian man in women’s clothing, and one was a toddler. Standing far out on the edge of the marshland where crab boats rocked back and forth, we could see a single white cross, but there was no way of knowing if it was related to the finding of the remains of these women (and one man and one child). The bramble at the side of the road was impenetrable. Whoever the killer was, he (or she) likely pulled up to the side of the road along this parkway at various spots and dragged or threw the bodies of his victims in, as each was found less that ten feet from the asphalt, some wrapped in burlap. The Long Island serial killer, sometimes known as the Gilgo Beach killer or the Craigslist Ripper, is still out there.

In LA, we drove along the private and leafy Cielo Drive looking for number 10050, where the glamorous Sharon Tate and the friends and employees with her that night lost their lives at the hands of the Manson family. The residents of Cielo Drive have obviously become tired of the ghost rides and celebrity murder tours roaring up and down their street, as they’ve done a good job of scrambling the house numbers. Tate and Polanski’s house is gone, and there’s no way of really telling where it stood. Walls of desert peppered with harsh plants creep up on each side of the street between the mansions, and a lone security guard loiters in someone’s doorway looking bored.

We took the car to 875 South Bundy Drive and found that there remains some scattered pieces of the scene burned on my mind of Nicole Brown-Simpson and Ron Goldman’s murders. Those peach-coloured tiles are still there, but the famous gateway has been blocked off and turned to the side, where a tall wooden gate guards the residence within. The house number hides behind the fronds of a potted palm, and the garden on either side of the doorway has been allowed to grow over, sheltering the dark space that so many remember from those awful photos.

In the end, I found no clues, and I felt no more justified for the sadness I feel over all these lost lives. And because I don’t feel like I’ve earned my grief for them, the guilt of a ‘gawker’ haunts me. Because surely I’m not the first to have come to these places and closed my eyes and breathed the air, tried to understand what happened, how it might have been interrupted.

As we turned and headed back toward Redondo Beach I posed a hypothetical to my husband. If I could have made a video of one of the killer’s lives after the murders and showed it to them, what did he think they would have done? I asked him to imagine that somehow, for example, I could take snippets of a greying and bloated OJ Simpson in prison coveralls and cuffs at his kidnapping trial, and splice it with pictures of Nicole’s crime scene. If I could have cut in images from the murder and civil trials, the aftermath, the strangely behaved and lonely OJ devoid of friends. If I could have showed him OJ not as the star but as the murderer who got away. What if I could have taken this short video from a future that may never have been and showed it to OJ himself back in time, if I could have put it in his hands just as he was getting in his Bronco that night, just as he pulling out and turning to drive to Nicole’s condo.

Would seeing what was to come change his actions? Or is killer rage just killer rage? Is fate, fate? Were these people meant to die?

Are monsters just monsters, no matter what you try to do to stop them?

Tim didn’t know. I don’t think I do, either. We drove on through LA toward the airport, and left these scarred and barren places behind.

Order Your Copy

opens in a new windowPlace holder  of amazon- 87 opens in a new windowPlace holder  of bn- 90 opens in a new windowPlaceholder of booksamillion -23 opens in a new windowibooks2 46 opens in a new windowindiebound opens in a new windowaudible

 Follow Candice Fox online on Twitter ( opens in a new window@candicefoxbooks), opens in a new windowFacebook, and on her opens in a new windowwebsite. Enter for a chance to win an early copy of Crimson Lake here. Pre-order the Audiobook from Audible here.

post-featured-image

Excerpt: Crimson Lake by Candice Fox

opens in a new windowamazons opens in a new windowbns opens in a new windowbooksamillions opens in a new windowibooks2 23 opens in a new windowindiebounds

opens in a new windowPlace holder  of - 63

Six minutes in the wrong place at the wrong time—that’s all it took to ruin Sydney Detective Ted Conkaffey’s life. Accused but not convicted of the brutal abduction of a 13-year-old girl, Ted is now a free man—and public enemy number one. He flees north to keep a low profile amidst the steamy, croc-infested wetlands of Crimson Lake.

There, Ted’s lawyer introduces him to private investigator Amanda Pharrell, herself a convicted murderer. Perhaps it’s the self-isolation and murderous past that makes her so adept at tracking lost souls in the wilderness, but her latest target, missing author Jake Scully, has a life more shrouded in secrets than her own.

Not entirely convinced Amanda is a cold-blooded killer,Ted agrees to help with her investigation, a case full of deception and obsession, while secretly digging into her troubled past. The residents of Crimson Lake are watching the pair’s every move…once Ted’s true identity becomes known, the threats against him become violent and the town offers no place to hide.

opens in a new windowCrimson Lake will be available on March 6th in hardcover and as an audiobook. Please enjoy this excerpt.

Prologue

I was having some seriously dark thoughts when I found Woman. The only company I’d had in a month was my gun, and they can start to talk to you after a while, guns, if you’re alone with them long enough. The weapon watched me with its black eye as I rattled around the bare house, saw when I failed to unpack the boxes in the hallway day after day. It lay on its side and judged my drinking. Halfway down a bottle of Wild Turkey one night, I started asking the gun what its fucking solution to everything was if it was so smart. A gun has only one answer.

The night before I found Woman, there’d been another brick through the front window. It was the third since I’d arrived in Crimson Lake, and I hadn’t bothered to patch it up this time. I’d looked at the glass for a while and then gone out to the back porch and taken up residence there as the sun began to set, watched it blinking red across the wetlands, dancing on the grey sand. The house was falling apart anyway, which was why I rented it so cheap. The previous inhabitants had done a good job on the back porch, though. There was a wide wooden bench and sturdy stairs, and the wire fence at the bottom of the yard that kept me safe from the crocs was intact.

The fence was also very familiar. I was used to looking at the world through diamond wire.

I’d sat there in the evenings wondering if the former residents had been hiding from something too, relishing in the predictability of nightfall as I did. The stickiness. The swell of insect life. The crocs beginning their barking in the dark, hidden, sliding in the wet and smelling me up here on the porch.

Between the vigilantes out the front and the crocs out the back I felt like I was in prison again, which wasn’t so bad, because it was secure. I was free from the decision to run, because I couldn’t run anymore from my crime. Then the gun reminded me, sitting beside me on the dry, cracked wood, that I still had an avenue out. I was just looking at the weapon and agreeing a little and swigging the last remnants of the bourbon when I heard the bird down near the fence.

I thought she was a swan at first. The sound coming out of her wasn’t like anything I’d ever heard a bird make: a kind of coughing squeak, like she had a rock in her throat. I bumbled down the hill through the long grass and, incredibly, she approached me from the other side of the fence, so that I could see a mess of little grey and yellow chicks all swirling and scattering clumsily around her as she tried to walk. The goose seemed to rethink the approach and stumbled back, hissing and flapping one great white wing.

“Jesus Christ, are you nuts?” I asked.

I do that when I’m drunk. Talk to things. My gun. Birds. She was nuts though, clearly, waddling around wounded and plump on the banks of the croc-infested Cairns marshlands. I glanced out over the water and then opened the gate.

I’d never opened the gate before. When I’d moved into the rundown house thirty days earlier I’d asked the estate agent why the previous residents had even installed one. Unless they had a boat, which it didn’t appear they had, there was nothing out there in the water but certain death. He hadn’t had an answer. I stepped out tentatively and my bare feet sank into the muddy sand, crab holes bubbling.

“Come here.” I waved at the bird, gripping the gate. The goose flapped and squeaked. Her babies gathered together, a terrified bundle of fluff. I looked out at the water again, seemed to spy a hundred black ripples that could have been croc eyes. The sun was down. It was their time now. “Come here, you stupid bitch.”

I sucked in a gutful of air, rushed forward and lunged at the bird, missed, lunged again and gathered it upside down in a tangle of bones and limbs and claws and feathers. It snapped at my nose, ear, eyebrow, drew blood. The chicks scattered, reformed, clicking and squealing an infantile rendition of their mother’s noise. I turned and threw the goose into my yard. The chicks followed, drawn along in a frantic row by some instinctive fishing line. I slammed the gate closed, ran up the yard and grabbed a towel that had been hanging on the verandah rail, leaving the gun sitting on the step.

#

On the way to the vet, the big bird and her chicks stuffed into a cardboard box, the squealing got to me. It was a heartbreaking distress siren. I yelled, “Jesus, shut up, woman!”

I guess her name was Woman from that moment on.

In the sterile light of the vet’s office, the bird seemed smaller somehow, peering from the bottom of the box at the man who had opened the door for me. She and the chicks were revealed united, a panting mound of crooked feathers in the dark. They were all silent now. I stood back so the vet couldn’t smell my breath, but from the disdain on his face as he’d watched my hack parking job and my bare sandy feet coming up the drive I was fairly sure he had me pegged. I folded my arms and tried not to take up too much of his tiny examination room with my hulk. The vet didn’t seem to have recognised me yet, so I took a chance and spoke up as he lifted the struggling Woman out of the box, wincing as she snapped at his collar.

“She can’t walk on that foot there,” I said.

“Yep. Looks fractured. This wing too.”

I watched as he folded the goose into her natural shape, reassembling the barely contained terror-mess that she was until her feet were beneath her thick, round frame and her wings lay flat against her sides. The bird looked around the room, black eyes big and wild. The vet squeezed her gently all over, lifted her tail and looked at her fluffy rear.

“So I’ll just leave her with you, I guess?” I clapped in summation, startling the bird.

“Well, that’s up to you, Mr . . .?”

“Collins,” I lied.

“That’s up to you, Mr Collins, but you’re aware we don’t have the resources for unpaid treatment here?”

“Uh, no. I wasn’t aware.”

“No, we can’t treat this animal without compensation.”

I scratched my head. “I found her, though.”

“Yes,” the vet agreed.

“Well, I mean, she’s not mine. Doesn’t belong to me.”

“You’ve said.” The vet nodded.

“So that’s not my goose.” I pointed to Woman, tried to tighten up my slurred speech in case that was why I was being misunderstood. “Neither are they.” I pointed at the chicks. “They’re… dumped, I suppose. Abandoned. Don’t you people rescue abandoned animals?”

“We people?”

“Vets.”

He gave me a long stare. “This is not a native Australian goose. This is an Anser. A domesticated goose. It’s an introduced species in this country. I’m afraid a wildlife rescue wouldn’t treat it either.”

“Well, what will you do with her?” I asked. “If I just leave her here with you?”

The vet stared again. I blinked under the fluorescent lights. Their gentle humming filled the room like gas.

“Christ,” I said. “Well, okay. This is a business, I s’pose. You can’t just go around rescuing everything for free.” I took out my wallet and flipped through the red and blue notes there. “How much is it to fix a broken goose?”

“It’s a lot, Mr Collins,” the vet said, squeezing Woman again around the base of her long, lean neck.

#

Seven hundred dollars later I drove home trembling and sick and the new owner of a family of domestic geese. It wasn’t the fact that I now had exactly fifty-nine dollars to my name that gave me the shakes. The vet had noticed the name on my credit card was Conkaffey, not Collins. It’s an unusual name. People don’t forget it. And it had only been a month since it was all over the national news. I’d watched his face harden. Watched the lines around his mouth deepen, and then his eyes begin to lift. I grabbed the box of birds and left before I could see the look on his face.

I was sick of that look.

Chapter One

I didn’t know Sean was there until his shadow fell over me. I jolted, grabbed my gun. I’d fallen asleep in my usual place on the porch, spread out against the wall on an old blanket. For a moment I thought an attack was coming.

“This is a sorry sight,” my lawyer said. The morning light was already blazing behind him.

“You look like an angel,” I said.

“What are you doing sleeping out here?”

“It’s glorious,” I groaned, stretched. It was true. The hot nights on the porch behind the mosquito netting were like a dream. The roll of distant thunder. Kids laughing, lighting fires on the faraway bank. The old blanket was about as thick as the mattress I’d had in segregation.

Sean looked around for a chair on which to place his expensively fabricked backside. When he didn’t see one he went to the step, put the coffees he’d been carrying and the bag on his elbow on the wood and started brushing off a spot. Even in the Cairns humidity there was some silk in his ensemble, as always. I sat up and joined him, scratched my scalp awake. I’d placed Woman and her young in the cardboard box turned on its side in a corner of the porch, a door made out of a towel. The big goose hissed at the sound of us from behind the towel and Sean whipped around.

“Don’t tell me—”

“It’s a goose,” I said. “Anser domesticus.”

“Oh, I thought it was a snake.” The lawyer gripped at his tie, flattened and consoled it with strokes. “What the hell have you got a goose for?”

“Geese, actually. It’s a long story.”

“They always are with you.”

“What are you doing up here? When did you get here?”

“Yesterday. I’m heading to Cairns, so I thought I’d stop by. Got a sexual assault defendant who’s jumped bail. I’m going to try to talk him back down. Everybody flees north.”

“If you’ve got to hide, it’s better to do it where it’s warm.”

“Right.” Sean looked at me. “Look, good news, Ted. Not only have I brought my favourite client a delightful care-package, but as of this morning your assets are officially defrosted.” They took the block off your bank account this morning.”

“Just in time,” I said. “I’m down to my last few bucks. Those birds are officially the most expensive thing I own.”

The white-haired man handed me a plastic bag of goodies. Inside were a couple of paperbacks and some food items. I didn’t have the heart to tell him about my fridgeless state. There was an envelope of forms as thick as a dictionary in the bag. He took one of the coffees and handed it to me. It smelt good, but it wasn’t hot. There wasn’t anything at all within twenty minutes’ drive of the house, certainly nowhere that made a decent cup of coffee. It didn’t matter. The scary forms and the cold coffee couldn’t possibly dampen my joy at seeing Sean. There were about twenty-one million people in Australia who believed I was guilty of my crime. And one silk-clad solicitor who didn’t.

“I imagine there’s something in that envelope from Kelly,” I said.

“Adjustments to the divorce settlement. Again. Semantic stuff. She’s stalling.”

“It’s almost as though she wants to stay married to me.”

“No. She just wants to watch you wriggle.”

I sipped the coffee and looked at the marshlands. It was flat as glass out there, the mountains on the other side blue in the morning haze.

“Any sign of…?” I cleared my throat.

“No, Ted. No custody inclusions. But she doesn’t have to rush, she can do that any time.”

I stroked my face. “Maybe I’ll grow a beard,” I said.

We considered the horizon.

“Well, look at you. I’m proud of you,” Sean said suddenly. “You’re a single, handsome, thirty-nine-year-old man starting all over again with a rental house and a few too many pets. You’re not really that much worse off than a lot of guys out there.”

I snorted. “You’re delusional.”

“Serious. This is your opportunity for a do-over. A clean slate.”

I sighed. He wasn’t convincing either of us.

“So are they guard geese?” he asked, changing the subject.

I had to think for a moment what he meant.

“The Nazis used geese to guard their concentration camps,” he explained.

“That so?”

“Can I take a look?”

I waved. He approached the box cautiously, squatted and lifted the towel with manicured fingers. He wore houndstooth socks. Probably alpaca. I heard Woman squeal from the gloomy depths. Sean laughed.

“Wowsers,” he said.

“All still alive?” I asked.

“Looks like it,” Sean glanced at me. “You looking for work?”

“Not yet. Too soon.”

The little geese pipped and shuffled around in the box. Claws on cardboard. He left them alone.

“Would you do me a favour?” Sean said.

“Probably.”

“Would you check out a girl in town named Amanda Pharrell?”

“Would I check out a girl?” I looked at him, incredulous.

“A woman,” Sean sighed and gave me an apologetic smile. “Will you pay a visit to a woman in town?”

“Who is she?”

“Just a woman.” Sean shrugged.

“What do I want to visit her for?”

“You’re full of questions. Stop asking questions. Just do what I tell you. She’ll be good for you, that’s all. Not to date. Just to meet.”

“So it’s not romantic in any way.”

“No,” Sean said.

“Then what the hell is it?”

“Jesus, Ted,” he laughed, before an adage he’d used many times during my trial prep. “I’m your lawyer. Don’t ask me why. Just do it.”

I made no commitment.

We sat for a while talking about what he was doing in Cairns and how long he’d stay. Sean was sweating through his linen trousers. His poreless nose was burned already by the sneaky tropical sun, slowly cooking the unwary Sydney man through the wet air. I’d managed a nut-brown tan just trudging around the property for a month, walking to the shopping centre to buy Wild Turkey. I hoped I’d fit in eventually. That I’d grow safely unrecognisable from the man who had graced the cover of the Telegraph for weeks at a time, the broad-shouldered ghoul in a suit hanging his head outside the courthouse, pale from jail. A beard might do it, I thought. And time. I’d need plenty of time.

Copyright © 2017 by Candice Fox

Order Your Copy

opens in a new windowPoster Placeholder of amazon- 15 opens in a new windowPlace holder  of bn- 5 opens in a new windowPoster Placeholder of booksamillion- 33 opens in a new windowibooks2 42 opens in a new windowindiebound

The owner of this website has made a commitment to accessibility and inclusion, please report any problems that you encounter using the contact form on this website. This site uses the WP ADA Compliance Check plugin to enhance accessibility.