Posts Tagged ‘foreign gangsters’
WHAT YOU BREAK by Reed Farrel Coleman: Book Review
Gus Murphy is a man trying to regain his equilibrium. He was a policeman in Suffolk County, New York, on the tip of Long Island. He had a wife whom he loved and two teenage children who made his life complete; everything was going well until his son John died suddenly while playing basketball. In What You Break, the second in the series, this happened in the recent past–some three years ago. Gus’ world was turned upside down by his son’s death, and it hasn’t gotten any easier with time.
Now Gus drives a van for the Paragon Hotel as well as working as security for the hotel and its on-site club. Although Paragon may sound upscale, the hotel is anything but; it’s simply a place for a weary traveler to stay for a night while waiting for the next morning’s flight or for a businessman/woman to stay while visiting clients in the area. In other words the hotel is hardly a destination, more of an enforced stop.
Although he is no longer a cop, Gus still has a cop’s instincts, and when he picks up two passengers at Suffolk County’s MacArthur airport in Islip, his attention is drawn not to the annoyingly chatty man he’s transporting but to the man in the rear of the van who says nothing at all. “…he was a runner, that I knew. A street cop…knows a runner when he sees one.” Not surprisingly, he is right. This feeling of something “off” about the stranger is confirmed when the man enters the Paragon. When Slava, the night bellman, and the man exchange glances, Gus can see there’s a history between them and it’s not a happy one.
The next morning Gus is still thinking about the new guest when he gets a call from Bill Kilkenny, an ex-priest. Father Bill, as Gus still thinks of him, is probably Gus’ closest friend, a man who has kept the compassion of his former vocation but not the faith. He asks Gus to come to his apartment but gives no reason. Shortly after Gus’ arrival, another man comes in. He’s introduced as Micah Spears, and the ex-cop takes an immediate dislike to him. He knows it’s irrational, but there’s something about the man that rubs Gus the wrong way.
Micah explains that his young granddaughter, a recent college graduate, was killed, stabbed twenty-three times. He doesn’t want Gus to find the murderer; the guilty man is in prison for life. No, what Micah wants is to find the reason Linh was killed because he can’t think of any motive for her death. Gus refuses the job, but Micah has an inducement that’s hard to turn down: a fifty thousand dollar check to establish a foundation in the name of Gus’s late son plus a two hundred thousand dollar donation to a local hospital for research in the area of Gus’ choice.
So, reluctantly, because he can understand the pain of a man who has lost someone he loves without a reason, Gus accepts the case, little realizing it’s a first step into a maelstrom of violence and revenge.
Reed Farrel Coleman continues his winning streak with What You Break. It’s a hard-boiled novel featuring a protagonist with a broken heart. The characters are realistic, the setting is vivid, and the plot will keep you on edge until the end.
You can read more about Reed Farrel Coleman at this web site.
Check out the complete Marilyn’s Mystery Reads at her web site.