The Body in the Barrel Cover
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THE FIRST BOOK IN THE TRILOGY…

The Body in the Barrel

As an underage runaway, Mona Oakheart didn’t have a lot of options when she first got off the bus in San Diego back in the fifties. She lied about her age to get a job distributing wine, beer and spirits, and it lead to a relationship that left her a single mom. Not a problem for Mona, who could raise her young daughter, run a downtown bar, and start a fledgling pornographic film company all at the same time. Until disaster strikes. Since that tragedy she has been running on empty, living a horror.

Seven years later, a barrel bangs repeatedly on the hull of a docked tuna boat in the San Diego Bay. The fishermen call the Harbor Police, and Gary Reines is the harbor cop who responds. A woman’s body is crammed inside. No identification – but Mona’s business card is found under the bra. SD Homicide Police immediately wonder about the connection. While downtown, giving a statement, Mona meets Gary, who has had his own hard knocks. A recent Viet vet, a wounded warrior, he lost his mom to a drunk driver when he was in high school, and enlisted to go to war instead of college. He finds himself drawn into a relationship with Mona.

The investigation skirts around some shadowy dealing by the Chinese Tong, long a player on the San Diego waterfront, the blind political ambition of a City Councilman, and secrets that Mona shares with Gary’s father and Gary’s boss, the head of the Waterfront Agency. It is the first part of a trilogy that arcs across the Pacific from San Diego, through Hawaii, to Guam, the Philippines and beyond.

About Book The Body in the Barrel
About Book The Body in the Barrel
You can feel the Pacific sun on your back and taste the salt water in the wind. A boat jockey harbor cop, plus Mona Oakheart, a scrappy club owner, one of the most vivid female leads in contemporary crime fiction, makes The Body in the Barrel a must read for fans of hard-edged mysteries with heart.
–David Madsen, author of Vodoun, USSA, Black Plume, and the screenplay for Copycat
The-Body-in-the-Barrel_backcover
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PROLOGUE: October 1943

Sticks and Stones

“Sticks,” Palos, was the nickname the barrio gave my friend Alonzo, because he was so skinny. Alonzo’s a funny name for a Chinese kid, but his dad was Filipino. We met at a boxing center for barrio kids in a National City garage. Some guy set up a boxing ring in his garage, what can I tell you? Everybody called me Stones because since I started boxing as a kid, I would take on anybody in that ring. It was a long time ago, but some things don’t ever really change.

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