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WHERE THE BONES LIE
Amateur Sleuth Mystery
BY NICK KOLAKOWSKI
BLURB
For Dash Fuller, Hollywood’s underbelly is home sweet home. He’s spent years helping to disappear the film industry’s worst secrets, and it’s left him a cynical burnout who loves bourbon a little too much. But when a young woman named Madeline Ironwood comes to him with a peculiar quest, Dash sees it as a chance for redemption.
Madeline is the daughter of Ken Ironwood, a notorious smuggler and murderer who disappeared 20 years ago. Ken’s skeleton was recently discovered in a barrel at the bottom of a dried-up lake, and Madeline wants to know who killed him.
Dash agrees to help, and as this desperate daughter and jaded cynic claw their way through a world of sun-bleached secrets, crooked cops, and Hollywood thugs, they soon uncover a massive conspiracy involving some of LA’s most powerful people.
Get ready for a fast-paced, darkly funny thriller with a twist you won’t see coming
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WHERE THE BONES LIE
Amateur Sleuth Mystery
BY NICK KOLAKOWSKI
Excerpt
Manny found me after my set on the Giggle Lounge’s second stage, the smaller one where they dump the newbies and terminally unfunny. I was working on new material but nobody in the audience laughed until I made jokes about traffic. When all else fails, you can always joke about traffic and Angelenos will at least give you a chuckle, even the hipsters from Silver Lake who work from home and travel around on electric scooters.
“You really bombed,” Manny said. He had followed me from the stage to the far end of the bar, where he cornered me against the wall – one of his classic moves, allowing him to use his massive girth to its most intimidating effect. “They pay you for that?”
“They pay me in alcohol,” I said, shoving a free drink ticket at the bartender, who retaliated with a watered-down rum and Coke. “Why are you here, Manny? You finally develop a sense of humor?”
“I got a sense of humor. I hired you, remember?” He jabbed a finger at my neon-orange Hawaiian shirt. “I also remember when you, the great Dash Fuller, the terror of paparazzi everywhere, used to wear lovely suits instead of that abomination.”
“Helps me blend with this crowd,” I said, noting how Manny’s two-piece Tom Ford suit was impeccable as usual, but his dress shirt was wrinkled around the collar. Given his intense dedication to always looking faultless – my image is the job, he liked to say – it was a startling flaw. Something big was distracting him.
“Maybe it’s time for you to unleash the bespoke,” he said. “I have an urgent quest for you.”
“I quit, remember? I’d rather dunk my head in a barrel of fire ants.”
“Oh, stop being dramatic. We need someone who’s not on the payroll. The scumbags are all over this one.”
“Not interested,” I said, draining the drink. Onstage, a shaggy dude in a Scooby-Doo t-shirt launched into his first joke of the night, about the ghost of Marlon Brando watching a Marvel movie. He was unfunny enough to make me feel better about my own performance.
“Yeah, like your standup career is going so well,” Manny snorted. “Come on, we both know you could use the cash. And you won’t have to hurt anyone this time. Promise.”
I considered it. It was five days until the end of the month, and I was down to a couple hundred dollars in my bank account. I had originally planned to re-download the usual gig apps and spend fifteen hours a day delivering food and driving people around until I could cover my rent. I preferred gigging for ZoomFood, a local app that paid a great rate but forced its drivers to wear a purple vest and baseball cap stamped with its yellow ‘Z’ logo, a humiliating costume I kept wadded in the corner of my car trunk. A job with Manny could spare me that exhausting fate.
I didn’t want to dip a toe back into his swamp. But I didn’t want to end up on Skid Row, either.
“Half in advance,” I said, already hating myself. “And if I don’t like where the job is going, I’m keeping the cash and walking away. Can you live with that?”
Manny nodded. “It’ll have to do. I’m not explaining the job here. Come outside with me.”
“Why? It’s a hundred degrees out.”
“More like eighty. Don’t tell me you’ve gone soft like all these twits in here.”
“Careful,” I said, gesturing for him to lead the way to the doors. “They’re very sensitive.”
We exited the Giggle Lounge. The air smelled faintly of smoke and the night sky had an orange tint. There was a fire in the rolling hills near the Getty Center, three hundred acres burned and counting, powered by the Santa Ana winds. As we stepped beyond the club’s bubble of air conditioning, the heat was like a feverish hand over my face.
Manny’s blue Mercedes SUV sat at the far end of the parking lot. He unlocked it to disable the alarm before leaning against the driver’s side door and pulling a vape from his suit pocket and sucking on it. “I get the comedy thing. It’s the girls, right?” he said, blowing a cloud of apple- scented vapor. “You’re still relatively young. You can score those hipster chicks, they’re fit from all that Pilates, they’ll do anything to show they’re marriage material. It’s got to be that. It’s sure as hell not the money. How much does the average comedian make? A buck-ninety?”
“Instead of exposing me to your grodiest fantasies,” I said, “how about you tell me what the wonderful world of Hollywood PR needs tonight?”
“Okay.” He blew a cloud of apple-scented vapor. “You follow Karl Quaid on social media?”
“I don’t do social media, remember?”
“Oh yeah, you’re one of the few smart people on that front, I forget. But even in your precious bubble, you know about the Karl Quaid situation, right?”
I nodded. How could I not? Karl Quaid was the front- page story on every tabloid website from here to Karachi. The studio had structured a superhero franchise around his performance as Doppler, a heroic vampire with the powers of eco-location and flight, and the first two movies had racked up almost two billion dollars at the box office. Of course, that was before Quaid went nuts.
“As of now, Karl’s officially crossed the line from weirdo to dangerous,” Manny said, taking another hit of nicotine. “Filming on the next movie starts in three weeks, and nobody can find the guy. One of the biggest stars in the world, and he disappears, poof. What makes it even worse is–”
“News said he’s got that actress with him, right?” I said. “The parents are upset?”
“Amber Rodney, yeah, and the shooting on her new show kicks off in a month. Thank everything holy she’s a couple years too old to be jailbait, but her parents are threatening to sue the studio, and so’s the streamer producing her show. That’s not even the worst of it. Karl’s posting about crazy Jonestown stuff – demons run the world, everyone needs to commit suicide at the same time, one big adios to save the environment. Police are getting a little too interested.”
“And you can’t find him?” I grinned, enjoying Manny’s discomfort. “Even with all his posting?”
“No. He’s smart enough to never post a photo of a place we recognize. It’s not a criminal investigation, technically, so we can’t get a court order for the location metadata. I got people sitting outside his houses – he’s got three, if you’re wondering. We’re watching his mom in Utah, his sister in Colorado, anyone else he usually hangs out with. Nothing.”
“And you think I can do something.”
The front doors of the Giggle Lounge crashed open, ejecting a crowd of drunken twentysomethings into the parking lot. Manny quieted until they stumbled past. “You were my best guy,” he said, not quite meeting my eyes. “Look, I’m sorry how it ended. I shouldn’t have asked you to do certain things. But I appreciated it, and I know the studios did, as well. This situation with Karl, it won’t be like the old days. We need fresh eyes on it.”
“Ten thousand,” I said.
“You don’t come cheap,” he said. “You’re well aware of what I can do.”
“Sure, but I can’t do that amount. How about four?” He nodded at my ancient Nissan Altima in the far corner of the lot, beyond the flickering edge of the Giggle Lounge’s neon lights, where I’d parked it in the forlorn hope that the shadows would cloak its rusted panels, the dented driver’s door, the sky-blue paint bleached in odd patterns by years of fierce sun.
“I can’t believe you’re driving that,” he said, “instead of that beautiful Benz you used to have.”
“I couldn’t deal with the Benz,” I said.
“Then upgrade to something that doesn’t burn as much oil as gas, mother of God. Please tell me it’s got more power than a Prius,” he said, and winked.
“Ten grand,” I said again, before dropping into a passable Liam Neeson imitation: “You need my very particular set of skills.”
We regarded each other. Manny’s gaze was like a laser heating flesh, and the longer I stayed within its focus, the harder it was to keep my face stony and my eyes neutral.
Except I was tough enough to win this round. He notched his head to the left, his laser drifting to the front of the club, and said, “Fine.”
“Half in advance.”
He patted his jacket. “Got it right here. Figured you’d drive a hard bargain.”
“Plus expenses.” Maybe I couldn’t tell a joke that brought down the house, but I could leverage a desperate soul.
He raised a hand. “Just a couple hundred bucks at most. I won’t give you more leash than that. You know what you’d do with it.”
Yes, something unbearably stupid. Deep in the tailspin of my former life, I’d tried to expense a bad weekend in Vegas. Studio accounting is a wiggly game, and its high priests ensure even the biggest blockbuster never earns a profit on paper, and yet they’d objected to my attempt to pass on several thousand dollars in liquor and gambling expenses. Nor had Manny appreciated my joke about itemizing Krystal (the champagne) and Krystal (the stripper).
“Fine,” I said. “But I’m not signing anything. No NDAs, no non-disparage agreements. I’ll never talk.”
“Yes, yes, okay. I love how you get more annoying with age.”
“Making sure we’re clear.”
Manny puffed again, tilting his head to follow the roaring lights of a 747 descending toward LAX. I wondered if he regretted his choice of profession. I could have told him that quitting feels liberating at first, but the memories never leave. I had cracked the heads of hangers-on who’d leaked to the press, stolen phones and laptops from expensive villas, rescued kidnapped dogs, and escorted pregnant girlfriends onto buses bound for Omaha, all so the studios could keep their stars untarnished and the money rolling in. How do you ever scrub clean of that?
And now they wanted me back in.
I hated how that idea made my stomach tingle, but I couldn’t deny a part of me had always loved the hunt.
Manny prodded my elbow with a thick envelope. “Here’s the first payment,” he said. “You know the drill: absolute discretion. You find Karl, you call me immediately, and only me. You got it? Silence, cunning, and deceit.”
Nick Kolakowski lives and writes in NYC. His recent novels and novellas include “Groundhog Slay” (Crystal Lake Publishing), “Payback is Forever” (Shotgun Honey), and “Boise Longpig Hunting Club” (Down & Out Books). Nick grew up as a voracious reader of mystery and crime fiction, and his own writing is an attempt to pay homage to the best of the genre while also using it as a lens through which to view our weird, sometimes not-so-wonderful modern life.
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Links to Nick’s websites, blogs, books, #ad etc.:
Amazon Kindle: https://amzn.to/442IiU3
Amazon Paperback: https://amzn.to/4jfxaI9
Website: https://nickkolakowski.com
Happy Reading!
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Special Giveaway: Nick will gift a physical copy of WHERE THE BONES LIE (North American winners only) to two lucky readers who comment on his Karen’s Killer Book Bench. Good luck!
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Thanks, Nick, for sharing your book with us!
Don’t miss the chance to read this book!
The title of book itself makes want to read this book because it intrigues me but reading the book excerpt really makes me want to read this book of this author who is new to me
Thanks for introducing me to this author
Thank you for sharing. This story sounds intriguing and exciting.
Thank you for coming here and sharing with us. The book sounds really interesting. I can hardly wait to read it.
Good morning, your book sounds very intriguing and like a great read, and I love the cover and the title also. Have a great day and a great week. Thank you for the chance.
Thanks for sharing your story. It sounds intriguing.
Welcome to Karen’s Killer Book Bench, Nick. I loved the excerpt and can’t wait to read your book. I’m intrigued and want more. Thanks for sharing your book with us today!
nice excerpt
Enjoyed the post today, sounds good!
Sounds exciting!