Felicity will be awarding an eCopy of The Insanity of Murder to 3 randomly drawn winners via rafflecopter during the tour, and choice of 5 digital books from the Impulse line to a randomly drawn host.
The Insanity of Murder
by Felicity
Young
~~~~~~~~~~~~~
GENRE: Mystery
~~~~~~~~~~~~~
BLURB:
To Doctor Dody McCleland, the gruesome job of dealing with the results
of an explosion at the Necropolis Railway Station is testing enough. But when
her suffragette sister Florence is implicated in the crime, matters worsen and
Dody finds her loyalty cruelly divided. Can she choose between love for her
sister and her secret love for Chief Inspector Matthew Pike, the investigating
officer on the case?
Dody and
Pike's investigations lead them to a women's rest home where patients are not
encouraged to read or think and where clandestine treatments and operations are
conducted in an unethical and inhumane manner. Together Dody and Pike must
uncover such foul play before their secret liaisons become public knowledge -
and before Florence becomes the rest home's next victim.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~
EXCERPT:
Wake up, Miss Dody, wake up.’ Annie’s voice invaded
Dody’s dreams. She screwed up her eyes under the lemony flare of the electric
light and focused on her bedside clock — ten past three — and moaned.
‘Telephone call for you, miss. The police want a
word,’ her maid said.
At the mention of police, Dody flung back the
bedclothes and allowed Annie to help her into her silk kimono and slippers.
‘Did the policeman give you his name?’
‘No, miss. But it weren’t Chief Inspector Pike if
that’s what you were thinking.’
Annie never tired of showing her disapproval of
Matthew Pike, a regular visitor to the house. In most households the maid would
be disciplined for such impertinence, but in her own home Dody preferred to
choose her battles. There were battles enough to cope with at the mortuary. She
sighed, rubbed the sleep from her eyes and made her way down the three flights
of stairs to the telephone in the hall.
Superintendent Shepherd’s fuss and bluster made his
voice hard to hear above the static. She dug the telephone’s receiving device
into her ear, only catching fragments of speech. ‘Necropolis Railway …
explosion … bodies … Armageddon …’
‘You want me at the railway station now to help
retrieve body parts?’ Dody translated.
The static on the line was swept away as if by a
broom. ‘Miss, err, Doctor. Have you not listened to a word I’ve said?’
Battles, Dody reminded herself. ‘I’ll be there as
soon as I can, sir.’ She set the earpiece back on its hook and turned to Annie
who was hovering on the stairs. ‘Wake Fletcher, please, and have him bring the
car to the front of the house. And give Florence my apologies when she gets up
— I assume she’s home now? I’ll probably miss her at breakfast.’
Annie glanced back up the stairs and opened her
mouth as if she were about to say something, then changed her mind. Dody had no
time for playing games with the maid. ‘Lay my work clothes out on the bed,
please.’
‘Cape too, Miss Dody?’
‘No, I think my black velvet coat is more
appropriate. I will need full use of my hands and the cape will get in the
way.’
The black will also hide the stains, Dody thought
as she steeled herself for whatever the night had in store for her.
Headlamps from half a dozen police vans and several
fire engines shone on what was left of the station. Fletcher parked on the
other side of Westminster Bridge Road and opened the passenger door for Dody.
As soon as she stepped from the car a police sergeant scurried over to her.
‘You can’t park ’ere, ma’am, the ’ole place is
out-a-bounds.’ Behind him other policemen were attempting to erect wooden
barricades around the perimeter of the bombsite, their progress hampered by a
crowd of spectators, many wearing overcoats over their night things, jostling
for a closer look at the carnage.
‘Give us a look!’
‘What’s goin’ on ’ere?’
‘That racket near shook me out of bed!’
‘This road needs to be blocked off too,’ the
sergeant shouted over his shoulder before returning his attention to Dody.
‘I’m Doctor McCleland, senior autopsy assistant to
Doctor Bernard Spilsbury. Superintendent Shepherd has requested my presence at
the scene.’ Dody had to shout above the din of police whistles, clanging bells,
and the cries of the onlookers. She had no formal identification with her, but
found a letterhead from the Paddington Mortuary in her pocket and handed it
over.
The sergeant glanced at it and nodded his head.
‘That’ll do. Come with me then, ma’am, and watch your step.’
Dody told Fletcher not to wait, that she would find
a telephone and call when she needed a lift home. She followed the sergeant,
picking her way across rippled tarmacadam that could have been shaped by the
sea. A fire engine chugged past, heading away from the Necropolis Station,
firemen clinging to its sides. Dull light reflected through the soot on the
men’s once dazzling brass helmets. Another engine near a cluster of police vans
broke away, also heading for home. Perhaps the fire is under control now, Dody
thought. She could see no flames from the ruined station and only the
occasional thin plume of smoke.
She had never seen the aftermath of an explosion
before and the first thing that assaulted her senses was the appalling smell. A
projectile must have penetrated a sewerage pipe near a public convenience and
raw sewage flooded the area, motorcar headlamps dancing upon pools of effluent.
After carefully stepping around one such evil-smelling mire, she found herself
confronted by a miasma of other odours: brick dust, industrial-smelling smoke,
and a metallic tang she guessed might be gunpowder. No odour of recent death,
thank goodness. Now that was a smell to which she was accustomed.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~
AUTHOR Bio and
Links:
I
was born in Germany and educated at an English boarding school while my parents
travelled the world with the British army. I think the long boring plane trips
home played an important part in helping me to develop my creative imagination.
I
settled with my parents in Western Australia in 1976, became a nurse, married
young and had three children. Not surprisingly, it took ten years to complete
an Arts degree (English lit) at UWA.
In
1990 my family and I moved to a small farm 40 kilometers NE of Perth (Western
Australia) where I established a Suffolk sheep stud, reared orphan kangaroos
and embarked upon a life of crime writing.
https://www.facebook.com/felicityyoungauthor
http://www.felicityyoung.com/
http://felicityyoungblog.com/
Buy
link: http://www.amazon.com/Insanity-Murder-Dody-McCleland-Mysteries-ebook/dp/B00RKU7QM8/ref=sr_1_1?s=digital-text&ie=UTF8&qid=1441061929&sr=1-1&keywords=insanity+of+murder&pebp=1441061932519&perid=046MFTPYZ49TQN759TRN
~~~~~~~~~~~~~
GIVEAWAY INFORMATION and
RAFFLECOPTER CODE
Felicity will be awarding
an eCopy of The Insanity of Murder to 3 randomly drawn winners via rafflecopter
during the tour, and choice of 5 digital books from the Impulse line to a
randomly drawn host.
http://www.rafflecopter.com/rafl/display/28e4345f1308/
Thanks for hosting!
ReplyDeleteWhat are your hobbies?
ReplyDeleteWelcome to the Angel's blog. I hope you have a great tour. Allana Angel
ReplyDeleteWhat a nice surprise to discover this book is only 99 cents right now! I look forward to reading it and hope your tour is successful!
ReplyDelete--Amber Angel