Killer Among Us
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The witness protection program had simply not worked as promised. He and his wife had been relocated to a one horse hick town in West Tennessee, with a promise to start life over – on the right side of the law, this time.
His factory job lasted less than a year. A strike and major labor dispute had cost him his job, and his running around with other women had cost him his wife. He never intended for any of this to happen, but it seemed he was meeting failure at every turn. He had made that difficult move from the underworld to the real world with all good intentions of making it stick, but it wasn’t working. Things were dragging him back, and he was finding it too easy to drift into the dark side of life once again.
He knew that if he crossed back over, all chances and opportunities for a life in the real world were over – his one chance gone forever. While he resisted, it just didn’t seem to matter, circumstances were taking him back, and he couldn’t stop himself.
He started by renewing some old contacts, asking the right questions and finally by offering his services for hire. It didn’t take long for things to happen, and contract offers coming his way.
They started with a call from Anthony ‘Tony’ Scarsetti. He had worked for Tony in the past, and he believed they held a mutual respect for each other – him for his skills and Tony for his leadership. Tony was a rival of Steve Carrollton, and their competition for the vices in Memphis and on Beale Street was well known. Evidently, Carrollton had been temporarily sidelined, but his operations continued. Tony was looking for some professional help to make his temporary situation a permanent one.
Once again in his life, things were looking up, and he was feeling good about himself - being useful. His skills were needed, and he would again be a contributor. His little house on Mullins Avenue, in this hick town of Humboldt, would also be useful. Quiet, out of the main activity in Memphis, Humboldt allowing him to operate under the radar. Besides, the government had bought it, why not put it to good use?
He would start by sharpening the skills that had once made him successful. After all, failure was not an option in this business – only death. Hours in the local forests and woods would give him the privacy required; he had the perfect set-up and the perfect location. Nobody local to challenge him, and besides, if someone did - he was still the best at what he did. Everybody knew that.
~
The tickets arrived in his post office box in a medium sized brown envelope. American Airlines First Class to Miami and a First Class Cabin for a cruise to the Bahamas. It also contained $5,000 in large bills, and more would be paid when the job was complete. He’d never been on a cruise before. In fact, the largest boat he’d ever been on was one he and his brother used for cat fishing when he was a kid.
Things were good again. He wasn’t going to make the same mistakes he had made in the past. At the top of his game he was the best, and he intended to be at the top of his game.
Gerald Darnell
AUTHOR’S BIO -Gerald W. DarnellGeralddarnell@msn.comhttp://www.geraldwdarnell.comA Florida native, Gerald grew up and attended high school in the small town of Humboldt, Tennessee. Following graduation from the University of Tennessee, he spent time in Hopkinsville, KY, Memphis, TN, Boston, MA and Newport, AR before moving back to Florida – where he now lives.Gerald worked as a Senior Manager with several Fortune 100 companies, before officially retiring in 2007. His non-fiction book, ‘Don’t Wake Me Until It’s Time To Go’, is a bio-narrative including humorous stories and events spanning his life from pre-high school to retirement.His fiction books are what he calls ‘Fiction for Fun’. They use real geography and include pictures and characters some readers might recognize. The ‘Carson Reno Mystery Series’ are adventure mysteries set in the early 1960 time period, with the primary geography being Memphis and small southern towns. Core characters continue through each book, along with new and unique characters for each story.During the early 70's the author worked from an office in the Memphis Peabody Hotel, so many of the events about the hotel in Carson Reno’s stories are real, as well as many of the characters you meet.His books are available at selected bookstores, gift shops, on-line and through Amazon and Barnes and Noble . e-books are available at Amazon’s Kindle and Barnes and Noble’s Nook formats.Carson Reno Mystery SeriesWritten by author Gerald W. Darnell, the Carson Reno Mystery Series currently contains 14 adventures. The main character, Carson Reno, is a private detective with an office located in the lobby of the Peabody Hotel in Memphis, Tennessee. The setting is the early 1960’s, and while the many adventures take Carson around the country, most of the stories are centered in West Tennessee and the Southern United States.Carson is a tough, hard drinking and womanizing private detective – but the author blends humor and character involvement to make the stories an easy read for all ages. Many of the characters continue through each book, but it isn’t necessary to enjoy them in any particular order; each is standalone in story and content. Real geography is mixed with real time events, reflecting the dangerous and turbulent times of our country in the 1960’s. Books are lightly illustrated with real pictures (when available), and they are all rated PG-13 – minimizing language and graphic violence.Most books are offered in both hard and soft cover, and ebooks of all adventures are available in Amazon’s Kindle and Barnes and Noble Nook formats. Six books have already been created as audio books - these can be found on Audible.com, Amazon.com and iTunes. Additional books are currently in audio production.All Carson Reno Mystery Series books can be purchased on Amazon.com, Lulu.com, Authorsden.com, selected bookstores/gift shops and through the author’s website – http://www.carsonrenomysteryseries.com‘Life is cheap, make sure you buy enough’®
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Killer Among Us - Gerald Darnell
Killer
Among Us
A Carson Reno Mystery
Written by
Gerald W. Darnell
Killer
Among Us
Copyright 2011 by Gerald W. Darnell
ISBN: 978-1-257-03976-0
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever without written permission, except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles and reviews, without written permission from the publisher.
Gerald W. Darnell
crpublishing
carsonreno@msn.com
The characters and events in this book are fictitious. Any similarity to a real person, living or dead, is coincidental and not intended by the author.
Be sure to check out Carson Reno’s other Mystery Adventures
Murder in Humboldt
The Price of Beauty in Strawberry Land
Horse Tales
SUnset 4
the Crossing
Cast of Characters
Carson Reno - Private Detective
Rita - Hostess Starlight Lounge
Marcie – Peabody Hotel Operator
Andy – Bartender Down Under
Nickie/Ronnie Woodson – Owners Chiefs Motel and Restaurant
Tommy Trubush – Carhop Chiefs
Jack Logan – Attorney Partner
Leroy Epsee – Sheriff Gibson County
Jeff Cole – Deputy Gibson County
Scotty Perry – Deputy Gibson County
Elizabeth Teague – Airline Stewardess and friend of Carson’s
Mary Ellen Maxwell – Humboldt Socialite and owner of Maxwell Trucking
Judy Strong – Vice President of Maxwell Trucking
Gerald Wayne – Owner Wayne Knitting Mill
Nuddy – Bartender Humboldt Country Club
Larry Parker – Chief of Detectives Shelby County
Vincent Torelli – Relocated Hit Man
Julia Torelli – Wife of Vincent Torelli
Stuart Burton – Vincent Torelli relocation alias
Vickie Burton – Julia Torelli relocation alias
Vince Hickey – Vincent Torelli alias
Mason ‘Booker-T’ Brown – Head porter Peabody Hotel
Myles Berman – Humboldt Lawyer
David Gray – Julia Torelli’s brother
Tony Scarsetti - New Jersey Mafia family head
Freda Burke – Divorcee from Horn Lake, Mississippi
Tommy Herder – Manager Strasburg Department Store
Bill Hopper – Owner Hopper Motors
Clovis Davidson – Sales Manager Hopper Motors
Joe Richardson – Associate Drake Detective Agency
Marvin LaDuke – Memphis Lawyer
Steve Carrollton – Head of Memphis Mafia family
Bubba Knight – Mafia associate
Bobby James – Mafia associate
Jerry ‘Junebug’ Jackson – Mafia associate
Johnny Coode – Mafia associate
Lewis LaForge – Head of New Orleans Mafia family
Roland Vega – Mafia associate
Lenny Bruno – Mafia associate
Dedication
Without names, I dedicate this book to all my friends and classmates who have special needs in their life. Copies of this book, and all the Carson Reno series will be sent to them for their reading. I hope they enjoy the trip down memory lane – my wish is that we have many, many more.
Contribution Credits
Elizabeth Tillman White
Mary Ann Sizer Fisher
Judy Steele Minnehan
Material Credits
Humboldt Public Library
Gibson County Historical Website
Humboldt Courier Chronicle
Libby Lynch
Prologue
Carson’s closest friends are enjoying a Caribbean cruise vacation, when one of the cruise guests turns up missing. Missing is one of Humboldt’s well-known and prominent attorneys, and foul play is suspected. Mary Ellen Maxwell might have unknowingly witnessed the crime and needs Carson’s protection.
Something is seriously wrong – the Mafia has become the target of an unknown adversary and they are scared. Bad guys are turning up dead and the missing attorney could be a part of it – after all, he was heavily involved in defending the Memphis Mafia.
To make matters worse, the Memphis Mafia’s kingpin is also seeking Carson’s protection from this unknown threat. The bad guys are killing each other, and by protecting a friend, Carson has put himself in the middle of an underworld war.
Join Carson as he tries to find the ‘Killer Among Us’
Chapters
Roof Top Party
The Cruise
New Client
Vince and Julia Torelli
Rat
Catching Up
Bobby James
Humboldt
Mary Ellen Maxwell
2416 Mullins
Tragedy
Marvin LaDuke
The Memphis Queen
New Orleans
Back to Humboldt
An Unfriendly Welcome
Dirt Nap
Life is cheap – make sure you buy enough
Carson Reno
Humboldt/ Milan/ Trenton/ Jackson, Tennessee Areas
Gibson/Madison/Crockett County
Introduction
The witness protection program had simply not worked as promised. He and his wife had been relocated to a one horse hick town in West Tennessee, with a promise to start life over – on the right side of the law, this time.
His factory job lasted less than a year. A strike and major labor dispute had cost him his job, and his running around with other women had cost him his wife. He never intended for any of this to happen, but it seemed he was meeting failure at every turn. He had made that difficult move from the underworld to the real world with all good intentions of making it stick, but it wasn’t working. Things were dragging him back, and he was finding it too easy to drift into the dark side of life once again.
He knew that if he crossed back over, all chances and opportunities for a life in the real world were over – his one chance gone forever. While he resisted, it just didn’t seem to matter, circumstances were taking him back, and he couldn’t stop himself.
He started by renewing some old contacts, asking the right questions and finally by offering his services for hire. It didn’t take long for things to happen, and contract offers coming his way.
They started with a call from Anthony ‘Tony’ Scarsetti. He had worked for Tony in the past, and he believed they held a mutual respect for each other – him for his skills and Tony for his leadership. Tony was a rival of Steve Carrollton, and their competition for the vices in Memphis and on Beale Street was well known. Evidently, Carrollton had been temporarily sidelined, but his operations continued. Tony was looking for some professional help to make his temporary situation a permanent one.
Once again in his life, things were looking up, and he was feeling good about himself - being useful. His skills were needed, and he would again be a contributor. His little house on Mullins Avenue, in this hick town of Humboldt, would also be useful. Quiet, out of the main activity in Memphis, Humboldt allowing him to operate under the radar. Besides, the government had bought it, why not put it to good use?
He would start by sharpening the skills that had once made him successful. After all, failure was not an option in this business – only death. Hours in the local forests and woods would give him the privacy required; he had the perfect set-up and the perfect location. Nobody local to challenge him, and besides, if someone did - he was still the best at what he did. Everybody knew that.
~
The tickets arrived in his post office box in a medium sized brown envelope. American Airlines First Class to Miami and a First Class Cabin for a cruise to the Bahamas. It also contained $5,000 in large bills, and more would be paid when the job was complete. He’d never been on a cruise before. In fact, the largest boat he’d ever been on was one he and his brother used for cat fishing when he was a kid.
Things were good again. He wasn’t going to make the same mistakes he had made in the past. At the top of his game he was the best, and he intended to be at the top of his game.
Roof Top Party
M y office address is officially listed as 149 Union Avenue – L6, which means I occupy office 6, located just off the lobby of The Peabody Hotel – Memphis, Tennessee. I actually would consider my address to be 3rd Avenue – not Union, but the address has its perks.
The location itself is also handy. All my phone calls come through the hotel operator, which is also my answering service. I eat lunch and breakfast in the employee dining room at a great price. I have a beautiful lobby to greet potential clients, and please don’t forget the duck show - it happens twice a day. Aside from the perverts who hang out in the lobby restrooms, I can’t find a lot of fault with my office arrangements.
Besides, this is 1962 and people are accustomed to the modern ways of doing business. Appearance is everything, or at least a close second to whatever is first. The new real estate buzz is ‘location, location, location’ – I think I have one of the best.
The hotel directory and telephone yellow pages show L6 occupied by ‘The Drake Detective Agency’. That can be confusing, because the name on my office door reads:
Carson Reno – Private and Confidential Investigations
I am Carson Reno and always have been. There has never been a Drake working from this office, or any other in Memphis, that I am aware of. However, when I opened the agency I just could not find any rhyme or rhythm in ‘The Reno Detective Agency’. Besides, everybody who has watched Perry Mason knows Paul Drake and who knows, people may think this is a branch office or something. A little free publicity and promotion never hurt any business, just as long as they call or show-up with money.
A large number of my clients consist of damaged spouses looking for dirt and evidence on the unfaithful partner. It is possible that infidelity has made me what I am today – not a rich man, but I can pay my bills. Occasionally, I get some insurance investigation work – searching for someone who has successfully snookered the insurance company for their own goodwill, or some poor smuck who filed false claims and skipped. But mostly I deal with the underbelly of our society, where you find some very bad people and never make friends with anyone.
When I’m not specifically working on a case, I try to spend as much time as possible in or near the office. Another advantage of the Peabody is having access to restaurants, bars, shops and the downtown activity, so staying close is never a problem.
Afternoons and early evenings will usually find me at the ‘Starlight Lounge’ – just off Winchester. Not only is it a good place to ‘hang-out’, it is a great place to look for clients or, in fact, to look for those my clients have hired me to find! The ‘Starlight’ has live entertainment starting at noon daily – yes, I said noon. Everyday it is loaded with housewives who use the early part of the afternoon and evening to visit The Starlight for some drink and dance before the husband comes home from work. They cook dinner early, put it in the oven and dance on over to the Starlight for an afternoon of wine and martinis. I have a friend who calls the place Club Menopause
– I think that is an appropriate name.
Of course with the ladies come the men – generally just in search of some companionship, but sometimes in search for much more. Regardless, these are my clients, or potential clients, and I see no harm in getting to know as many of them as possible.
Rita is the head hostess at the