Joe & Denise
Daggyland #2 | (Paperback)
Daggyland #2 | (Paperback)
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Short Mystery Stories (The Daggyland Short Story Collections, Volume 2)
Get 10 great stories in one volume.
Published together for the first time are 10 masterful short stories by a winner of the Derringer Award for Short Mystery Fiction.
Who is this for?
- If you ravenously consume mystery novels by the bushel.
- If the annual Best American Mystery Stories anthology is among your must-reads.
- If you hanker to get your hands on the latest copies of Ellery Queen's or Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine.
Then Daggyland is for you!
Featured Stories:
- DOUBLE-SLAY: On a lonely road in the middle of nowhere, a sweet elderly couple encounter a serial killer. Possibly the most incompetent serial killer the world has ever seen. (A comical twist on the thriller genre).
- DECEIT: A wily churchman will do anything to keep scandal from falling on his family.
- BETRAYAL: A small boy makes a choice that haunts him for the rest of his life.
Welcome to Daggyland, a strange, sick little place where betrayal, vengeance, and murder are only the beginning! Get it today and treat yourself to a murderously good time.
Complete Table of Contents:
- Double-Slay (A comical tale of an incompetent serial killer)
- A Respectable Lady (A Sherlock Holmes Pastiche)
- The Cardinal's Blade (Cloak & Dagger in Renaissance Italy)
- Her Father's Killer (1940s Appalachian Tale of Justice)
- The Henrian Twist (A Weird Recursive Murder Story)
- Indoor Hunting Season (A Computer Geek Gets Revenge)
- The Box Top Man (Infidelity in a Cheever-esque Setting)
- The Knickerbocker Kill (Murder in a Cheever-esque Setting)
- Fork in the Heart (Middle-Class Angst and Boyhood Betrayal)
- Last Dance in Hoboken (A Wiseguy Takes Up Modern Dance)
Why Read This?
- Genre: Mystery / Short Stories / Historical Fiction / Psychological Drama
- Tone: Varied, ranging from gritty noir to historical intrigue and dark comedy.
- Perfect For: Fans of Alfred Hitchcock's and Ellery Queen's
- Mystery Magazine, and readers who love a mix of styles in one volume.
- Value: 10 stories in one volume (157 pages).
Product Details:
- Format: Paperback (Ebook available on store.)
- Length: 157 pages (~5 hours reading time)
- Series: The Daggyland Short Story Collections, Volume 2
- Print ISBN: 978-1941410462
- Content Warning: Murder, suspense, strong language, sexual themes.
Welcome to Daggyland. Get Volume 2 today!
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Shipping & Delivery
Shipping & Delivery
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Read a Sample
Read a Sample
In the famous novel The Maltese Falcon, private eye Sam Spade tells us, “When a man’s partner is killed, he’s supposed to do something about it.” Priscilla Mae Gregson would agree with that sentiment, only in her case it’s all about getting justice for her father, whether she and the old man saw eye to eye or not. This story had a plot but wasn’t really going anywhere until I remembered spending a weekend long ago on a lake in the woods. The sights, sounds, and smells of that natural setting in summer helped me anchor the story to a time and place.
* * *
Sometime after midnight, the blindfolded man started to stir. Cilly roused herself off the boards of the dock and sat up to watch him struggle against the ropes. All around them, the woods were throbbing with life, and the smell coming off the lake was tinged with the stench of summer’s rot.
Cilly flicked on her flashlight. Nothing. She rapped it once against the dock and flicked it again. The putrid yellow beam played across the man’s face and cast a glow on Cilly’s, too. The light revealed a woman in her twenties, dressed in a straw hat and a plain cotton dress. Small purple flowers spattered across white fabric. A clutch and a pair of crumpled gloves at her side. A plain young woman, but not a lean one. A girl with some heft to her, who had plaits of dirty blond hair pinned tight to the back of her head.
“Oh,” the man moaned.
“Mmm-hmm,” Cilly said, slapping the fellow’s cheeks.
The only thing bigger than this man she’d ever seen on this dock was a catfish she plucked out those waters with her daddy, back when she was just a little thing. Daddy had taught her to work a line in these waters. Those critters were not so bad when you peeled the skin off them like a sock and pan-fried them in butter and cornmeal. Brown butter hid the taste of Clingman Lake.
She missed those days. The lake was loud as life, but Daddy wasn’t.
Cilly slapped the fellow’s cheeks again. “Waylon,” she said. “You hear me? Time you was waking up. Go on—get yourself roused.”
Behind her she heard Bradley’s footsteps. She could smell him sneaking up on her. For a moment she got a chill, like when she crushed on him back in high school. She always knew when he was around, thanks to the cigarettes and hair oil he and his brothers used. Not that he ever paid her much mind back then.
“I won’t have you harming him,” Bradley said.
“Course not,” she hissed. “We just having a talk is all. Ain’t that right, Waylon?”
She felt Bradley’s boots retreat. She pulled the handkerchief out of Waylon’s mouth and peeled back the blindfold.
“Who that?” he said, wriggling. “Who that?”
He was a small but plump son of a gun, the smell of perspiration oozing through his damp suit and shirt. Nice suit, the kind he must have gotten off the rack at the Ivey’s on Haywood Street, and asked his tailor to let way out.
“Cilly? Lil’ Bit, is that you?”
She took her head. “Nuh-uh. We’re not gonna play that way no more, Waylon. Lil Bit’s gone, understand? I’m grown up. Ain’t Lil’ Bit no more. It’s Priscilla now. Miss Priscilla Mae Gregson, just the way my mama would’ve wanted it.”
The term Lil’ Bit had always been an insult wrapped in a nickname, anyway. A way of mocking her size. She was happy to be rid of that name.
“Well, well, well, it is you. Old Lil’ Bit’s back in town. I thought that was you I saw in the bar, but I didn’t recognize you on account on how thin you’re looking. Did you slip me something? Something to lay me out?”
She didn’t answer.
Waylon’s face hardened. “I know it was you, girl!”
“And I know it was you, Waylon. That’s why we’re having ourselves a trial here tonight. Maybe, if we’re lucky, even an execution.”
