Raja Williams Mystery Box Set Read online




  Raja Williams Mystery Thriller Series

  Books 1-5

  Jack Thompson

  Copyright

  CONTENTS

  The Color of Greed

  C’est la Vie

  Swimming Upstream

  Diamonds Never Die

  Muerte en Las Vegas

  Note from the Author

  Vendetta in Venice Prologue

  Raja’s Rules

  Get Exclusive Material

  About the Author

  Titles by Jack Thompson

  Contact Jack

  The Color of Greed

  Prologue

  It was a dark and quiet night at the Alamitos Bay Yacht Club, just north of Seal Beach on the Southern California coast. A nasty Pacific storm rolling up the coast had chased the would-be boaters back to the comfort of their homes, and most of the boats had been tied down or dry docked earlier in the day. A thirty-five-foot cruiser floated idly next to the dock with dim light peeking out from several portholes. Although the storm had moved north hours earlier, it had churned up enough sea to send choppy waves now and again into the bay. As the boat rocked up on a wave, the name Maid Marion flashed momentarily into view in the moonlight. The sound of two voices interspersed with giggles echoed from below deck.

  A tan young man and a cute girl in shorts and a halter top were making out on the curved bed in the boat’s lower cabin. As he heated up, the young man made his move to climb on top of the girl. Realizing where things were headed, the girl straightened her arms between them and managed to break his grip momentarily.

  “Darryl, are you sure no one will see us out here? What if someone comes along? I don’t feel safe on this boat.”

  “Are you kidding? It’s just like a house on the water. We are completely alone, Sandy. Trust me.” Those two words were uttered countless times by a boy to a girl to invoke favor from the gods of love. Darryl’s hope that they would work yet again soared when Sandy smiled, untied her top and dropped it onto the floor. The two resumed their fevered grappling until a loud thud echoed in the cabin followed by an unpleasant scraping sound. Darryl ignored the interruption twice and pressed on, but when it happened a third time, Sandy’s eyes bugged wide and her body stiffened. Darryl knew he would have to deal with whatever was making the horrible sound.

  “What was that?” said Sandy, right on cue, reaching for her top.

  “Wait here,” said Darryl, impatiently. He was halfway to the stairs. “I’ll be right back.” He thought it was probably a tourist who hadn’t secured his boat well enough. A couple of quick knots and he’d be back for business. Darryl climbed up to the deck and peered around. A fog bank had blown into the bay limiting visibility. The thump repeated behind him. He turned and saw the front end of a forty-foot sports yacht scraping against the seaward side of the dock. It was an Azimut 40, high-end luxury and nicer than most, and there didn’t appear to be anyone on board. The edge of the hull screeched loudly as the boat pushed itself outward. Darryl hopped onto the dock and ran toward the boat that had turned and now drifted ten feet away.

  “Hello? Anyone on board?” he shouted, listening in between for any sign of life. Nothing. When the boat drifted back toward the dock again, he leaped onto the rear deck. “Hello,” he said, once more. The boat was dark and there was no sign of anyone. As he searched in the pale moonlight for a line to tie the boat, something bumped into the back of his ankle. He jumped and let out a girlish yelp. It was only an orange mooring buoy that had rolled across the deck. Darryl laughed at himself, shook his head and continued searching until he found the dock line. He tied the back end of the boat to a cleat on the dock, and then went below to look around.

  Meanwhile Sandy managed to get her top back on and came up on deck just in time to see Darryl ducking into the interior of the derelict yacht. She pulled on her sneakers, hopped onto the dock and from there to the rear deck of the other boat. She noticed the yacht’s name Clarice painted in cursive on the back panel. Several gruesome scenes from the movie The Silence of the Lambs flashed into her head. Sandy shivered involuntarily and decided not to follow Darryl below deck. Feeling safer in the open air, she climbed up to the overhead flybridge. There was a sundeck behind a control panel full of dials. She stepped onto the deck and noticed a rumpled piece of canvas along the railing. When she pulled one edge to move it out of her way, the canvas shifted and a man’s body rolled out and flopped on its back in the center of the deck. A bloody face with no eyes stared back at her. Sandy screamed.

  Chapter 1: Seagulls

  The police showed up within minutes, despite the late hour. Even a call from a small yacht club like the Alamitos got fast service. Yachts meant wealth, and wealth meant there were bound to be important people demanding action through their most influential connections. Most of the calls were not crimes. Noise complaints, a drunk girl running naked on the dock, a sick partygoer who fell over the railing. Even if there were crimes, like illicit drugs or prostitutes, the parties involved usually wanted them swept under the rug as quickly and quietly as possible. A cruiser would always show up, talk to a couple of people and be gone. Most of the time there wouldn’t even be a report filed.

  This was different. A dead body meant lots of attention. By default, the case fell to robbery-homicide. Hearing the location, Detective Rafferty knew better than to bitch. Cases involving the wealthy rolled downhill fast. He raced to the scene, hoping to get out in front of the media circus that was sure to come. Rafferty arrived at the Alamitos Bay Yacht Club at three-thirty, wishing he had stopped for coffee. He hated cases like this. Seeing the long row of expensive yachts reminded him how long he had until retirement, and how unlikely it was he would ever save enough to buy even the cheapest of the boats he saw docked there.

  Detective Rafferty stopped and took in the whole scene. The local uniforms had already set up flood lights to illuminate the dock. An officer had detained the young couple who had found the body, and was taking their statements. The coroner’s office had sent Dr. Sharon Becker, their top pathologist, who was already examining the body. Rafferty liked her. She knew her business and didn’t try to get into his. It didn’t hurt that she was easy on the eyes. One of the uniforms approached him.

  “What are we looking at?” said the detective.

  “White male, thirty-two. ID we found says the vic’s name is Randall Hope. The boat is not registered at the local yacht club.”

  “How did it get here?” said Rafferty.

  “Working on it,” said another detective who had arrived at the scene.

  “Those two found his body on his boat.” The officer pointed to the scared young couple sitting on the back of an emergency vehicle. The girl looked to be in shock.

  Rafferty walked over to the kids who had found the body. “You two all right?” he said, almost sounding like he really cared.

  “I am,” said the boy. “Sandy is pretty shaken.” Rafferty looked at the girl. She was in that state of shock where she looked like she was going to cry, but she couldn’t. She wouldn’t be much help.

  Rafferty turned to the boy. “So you’re Darryl Harmon?”

  “Yep.”

  “And this boat?”

  “It’s my dad’s. He lets me use it sometimes.”

  “I’m sure he does. You found the other boat drifting?”

  “Yeah. It wasn’t here when we first came on board. Must have drifted in when we were … you know.”

  “I think I do.”

  “It rammed the dock a few times. I went on board to tie it up. That’s when we found the body.”

  “See anyone else?”

  “No, sir. Just the dead guy.”

  “And you don’t know him?” r />
  “Never seen him or his boat. It’s a nice one, though.”

  “I’m not so sure he would agree. Okay. Make sure we have your phone number and such. You can go. I’m done with these two,” he said to one of the uniforms standing by.

  The other detective returned. “The boat — is it a boat or a ship? I can never remember.”

  “Go on, go on,” said Rafferty.

  “Oh yeah. It’s registered to a Clarice Smith Hope. She is the vic’s wife. It’s registered at the Catalina Island Yacht Club. Very exclusive. He must have been out somewhere near the island, and then the Catalina Eddy must have pushed the yacht into the mainland.”

  “Catalina Eddy? Sounds like a pirate name.”

  “It’s a weather phenomenon that swirls around the Catalina Island area. Currents and wind can move a boat around.”

  Rafferty turned to the uniformed policeman. “You get anything else?”

  The uniform looked at his notes. “No sign of a struggle. The witnesses claim not to know him. And—”

  “Yes?” said Rafferty, impatiently.

  “His eyes.”

  “What about them?”

  “He doesn’t have any.”

  Rafferty got interested for the first time. “Show me.”

  The officer led him to the yacht that was now secured properly to the dock. Spotlights had been rigged up and Rafferty could see Dr. Becker working up on the flybridge.

  “Hey, Doc. Hell of a night to be working. Anything interesting?”

  “Always. Come on up, Tommy.” Rafferty loved when the doc called him Tommy. It had a ring of familiarity he longed for. One of these days he would return the gesture. Rafferty stepped carefully onto the yacht’s rear deck and climbed the stairs to the flybridge. Lying face up on the sundeck was a man with empty sockets for eyes.

  “He wasn’t kidding,” said Rafferty, in the detached manner you might expect from a veteran homicide detective in LA. He had seen much worse.

  “Who wasn’t kidding?”

  “The kid downstairs. No eyes. What do we got? Some freaky ritual murder?”

  “Not unless you want to start arresting the seagulls.”

  “You’re telling me seagulls did that?”

  “Here’s a gull feather and those are bird droppings,” she said holding up a white and grey feather and pointing to several splotches on the deck. “Gulls eat shellfish, clams and oysters, and scavenge. Probably took his eyes for a couple of oysters on the half shell.”

  “Thanks a lot, Doc. I won’t eat oysters any time soon.”

  “The point is, no ritual murder. No sign of murder at all. Of course, we’ll need a tox screen and full exam to be sure. But with the hemorrhage in his cheeks, if I had to guess I’d say heat stroke or heart attack.”

  “You’re no fun today, Doc.”

  “Got to call ’em like I see ’em.”

  “Okay. Let me see if I understand this correctly. We have a stupid rich guy who stayed out in the sun too long, had a stroke and got blown over here by a wind called Eddy. That sounds like a wrap to me. Doc, let me know if anything turns up on the autopsy. Otherwise, I’m closing the book on this one.”

  “Will do, Tommy,” said Dr. Becker. Rafferty liked the sound of that.

  Chapter 2: The Widow

  The phone ringing next to the bed had not woken Raja. He kept the volume down to a barely perceptible level. Nor had the woman’s distraught voice on his computer messaging system pulled him from sleep. Although the early sun was just peaking over the treeline and into the bedroom of his three-story home on the northern tip of Clearwater Beach, Raja Williams had been awake for almost an hour. He had an uncanny sense of trouble when it was coming. Much like the internal clock that tells nocturnal beasts to head for the safety of their homes long before daybreak, or an animal’s recognition that a storm is coming before there is any change in the weather, Raja had a sixth sense about trouble. He thought of it as his own internal version of stormwatch. However, in Raja’s case, he always headed right toward the storm. Although someone might say that made him dumber than the animals, Raja saw it as a point of responsibility. If he knew about something, he should do something about it.

  And this morning he knew about something. The signs had been building inside him for nearly a day. That’s why he was awake and alert when the voice began.

  “Mr. Williams, my name is Clarice Hope. I need your help.” The voice sounded sad and desperate, two things Raja could never resist, especially in a woman. He grabbed the phone.

  “Hello. This is Raja Williams. Clarice Hope, did you say?”

  “Yes. I’m calling you at the recommendation of a mutual friend, Mary Steinberg. I didn’t know what else to do.”

  Raja could feel the agony choking her voice through the phone. He also knew by the throbbing at his temples that the storm brewing in his head the last couple of days was going to be a category five hurricane. He put the call on speaker and jumped up, pushing his wavy chestnut hair back and pulling a pair of jeans over his satin boxers.

  “Yes, I know Mary,” said Raja. Know her. She was Mary Steinberg, of the Connecticut Steinbergs, whose twin sons had been kidnapped for ransom in Mexico last year. He had saved them both and busted up a drug and kidnap ring working both sides of the southern U.S. border. But that was another case. “Sounds like you need help, Ms. Hope.”

  “Please. Call me Clarice. And it’s Mrs. Hope … or it was.”

  “Tell me what happened,” said Raja. He could feel the relief wash over Clarice at the prospect of a sympathetic ear.

  Clarice Hope poured out the recent events ending with, “My husband has been murdered.”

  “I’m sorry,” said Raja. There was not much worse than an unexpected widow, especially if she loved her husband. Mrs. Hope obviously had.

  “The problem is, the police have closed the case and ruled it natural causes, or, at worst, an accident. My husband was thirty-two years old and experienced at handling a boat on the ocean. I know it was murder. And I know why. At least partly. But, I can’t talk on the phone. I am prepared to pay you well if you will come out to Los Angeles and help me get justice. I’m a very wealthy woman, Mr. Williams. Money is no object.”

  “You’re right about that,” said Raja. He didn’t accept pay for his services. He did let clients cover the job expenses as a matter of exchange, and he did, on occasion, request a favor of a former client, no questions asked, which they always willingly did. He called it his pay it forward program. Raja looked at his watch. It was five in the morning on the West Coast.

  The woman continued, “Mary assured me of two things. You are the best at what you do. And, I can trust you. Right now, I need someone I can trust.”

  “I can be there by five o’clock. I’ll be flying into Long Beach Airport. Meet me in the Legends of Aviation Restaurant at five-thirty. You can buy me dinner.”

  “Thank you.”

  “I haven’t done anything yet. Hold your thanks until I’m done.” Raja always solved his cases, but solution is in the eye of the beholder. There was one thing he had learned as a private investigator. You can promise a client results, but not that the results will be what the client wants. Some people are unhappy with the truth.

  “Okay.”

  “I’ll see you at five-thirty.” Raja ended the call. He had a bad feeling about this case. Clarice’s husband would not be the only one to die. Nevertheless, he called Mickey, his pilot, at the airport to set his flight plan to LA.

  On the way to the Clearwater Airpark where he kept his private jet, Raja called the one person he needed to. Raja didn’t have many close friends, either personal or professional. It kept life a lot simpler. Vinny was the exception on both counts.

  “Now what?” said the familiar voice, feigning irritation.

  “I’m flying to LA to check out a case.”

  “Already?”

  “Gotta go where the wind takes me, Vinny.”

  “I don’t suppose you would take my bet th
at there is a female behind this particular wind,” said Vinny. “I’ll give you great odds.”

  “You know I’ve never been a gambling man. You want to ride along?”

  “I’m just beginning to unwind from our last case. Do you need me now?”

  Raja knew Vinny would go if he asked. “No. But, maybe later. I’ll keep you in the loop. What are you doing to unwind?”

  “You know the old saying, a gentleman doesn’t kiss and tell.”

  “That begs the obvious question.”

  “Nonetheless, my lips are sealed.”

  “Okay, well, have fun, whatever you are doing. I’ll call you if I need you.”

  “Later.” Vinny and Raja were the kind of friends who didn’t have to sweat the small details.

  After the jet did a rough slingshot takeoff, necessary due to the short runway length, the flight to LA was smooth with Mickey piloting Raja’s custom Hawker 1000. The plane had been retooled for short takeoff and landing and for increased range. The jet was fast as lightning and, with Mickey flying it, could drop on a dime. Raja had run across Mickey O’Toole flying guns in to rebels in the Congo, and assumed he was a gun dealer at the time. When he found out Mickey only flew small quantities of weapons into the country as a front for bringing in the desperately needed medical supplies that were otherwise being blocked by both sides in the civil war, he hired Mickey as his pilot.

  Mickey had a sweet deal, and he knew it. All he had to do was take care of any upkeep on the multimillion dollar jet and he could use it for his own rent-a-jet business in between flying Raja around. The jet touched down in Long Beach at five o’clock West Coast Time.

  “I don’t suppose you want to stick around for a few days?” said Raja.

  “I do have an Atlanta charter scheduled for Sunday that I’d like to make, if that’s okay with you,” said Mickey.

  “Sure, go ahead. I have a feeling I am going to be here for a while. How long is the charter trip?”

  “A week. It’s a honeymoon in the Bahamas.”

  “Okay. Better add a case of Dom on me.”