Read The Best American Mystery Stories 2015 Online

Authors: James Patterson,Otto Penzler

Tags: #Literature & Fiction, #Short Stories & Anthologies, #Anthologies, #United States, #Mystery; Thriller & Suspense, #Mystery, #Anthologies & Literature Collections, #Genre Fiction, #Collections & Anthologies

The Best American Mystery Stories 2015 (60 page)

 

Barbara said, “Department policy is to shoot the suspect in that situation, not the gun.”

“I know it is.”

“Do you know why that’s the policy?”

“Because the objective is to eliminate the threat posed by the suspect. The only sure way to do that is to kill him, and kill him instantly. Just wounding him might make him pull the trigger out of reflex, or anger. And trying to shoot the gun out of his hand might make it go off too.”

Barbara nodded, straight-faced, as if she’d known any of that herself twenty-four hours ago. She couldn’t admit it, but her first reaction yesterday had been delight when she heard what Keith had done. Captain Smith needed to explain to her that disarming a suspect is the goal when the suspect is suicidal, but when they’re homicidal it’s a different story.

Keith said, “I just couldn’t put a bullet through his head.”

“From what I understand that was a tough shot, shooting the hammer. A small target, behind glass?”

“The bullets we use are big enough to go through glass without breaking up or changing trajectory. And there was no chance I’d miss. I’m too good a shot. If I can’t make that shot from fifty yards, I don’t have any business being a sniper.”

His lips twisted into a grimace. “Well,” he added, “I guess I don’t have any business being a sniper regardless. If you can’t take that shot . . .” He waved vaguely, then ran that hand through his hair, a gesture of helpless frustration. “Well, at least you can tell the brass I wasn’t hot-dogging it. I’m sure they’ll wish I was.”

“Do you still want to be a sniper?”

“No, I guess I don’t.”

“Do you still want to be a police officer?”

Desperation flashed in his eyes. “Yes! But—Jesus! What if . . . what if I can’t take
any
shot? What if somebody pulls a gun, points it at my partner—or at me!—and I can’t shoot him?”

Barbara said soothingly, “We can examine that. I’m going to recommend we keep on meeting while you’re on suspension. We should meet two or three times a week. During those sessions we’re bound to get some idea what you’re capable of. If I think you can still fulfill all your responsibilities as a patrol officer, I’ll recommend you be returned to active duty—once the investigation into yesterday is finished. But understand, not everyone is capable of shooting a person. A lot of people couldn’t do it even if their life depended on it. And that’s not necessarily a bad thing.”

“How can it change?” he cried, frustrated and angry. “For God’s sake, all the people I shot before! Why would it change now?”

“People change.”

She wanted to say more. She wanted to tell him there was a reason why the military preferred eighteen-year-old recruits, boys who were so young they didn’t yet have fully developed consciences and higher reasoning faculties. But like so many other revelations, it would be better if her patient came to that realization himself.

Still, she could offer Keith some consolation.

She said, “Think of it this way. Whatever else happens, you saved Clarence’s life. And Valerie’s. You saved them both.”

He nodded, relaxing visibly.

Then he said, “You know, it’s like she cast a spell on me. April.”

“She might have been the catalyst for change, but she didn’t force change upon you. Remember, you worried about shooting that drug dealer before you and April ever talked about your job. Before you met Cory.”

Keith nodded, relaxing some more. He sighed. “Still, if I’m going to have all this trouble—if I’m going to lose my career and everything—you’d think I should at least get the girl.”

Barbara smiled wanly.
You’ll get another one
, she almost said.
When you’re ready.

But she didn’t think hearing that would help him right now, so she didn’t say it.

Contributors’ Notes

The author of eight novels and more than 120 short stories,
Doug Allyn
has been published internationally in English, German, French, and Japanese. More than two dozen of his tales have been optioned for development as feature films and television.

Allyn studied creative writing and criminal psychology at the University of Michigan while moonlighting as a guitarist in the rock group Devil’s Triangle and reviewing books for the
Flint Journal.
His background includes Chinese-language studies at Indiana University and extended duty in USAF Intelligence in Southeast Asia during the Vietnam War.

Career highlights? Sipping champagne with Mickey Spillane and waltzing with Mary Higgins Clark.

His first published story won the Robert L. Fish Award from Mystery Writers of America, and subsequent critical response has been equally remarkable. He has won the coveted Edgar Allan Poe Award twice, five Derringer Awards for novellas, and the Ellery Queen Readers’ Award an unprecedented twelve times.

• A few years ago, in my hometown, a judge’s widow and two elderly lady friends shared a convivial lunch at a local steak house. On their way home, they rear-ended a car hauler. No one was hurt. The widow was cited for driving under the influence and released.

The story made a splash in the papers and on TV, but the small-town buzz it created was totally sympathetic to the three ladies. What purpose had been served by their public humiliation?

The phrase I heard constantly repeated was,
“In the old days, this never could have happened.”
They were right. In the old days, in our small town, the story would have been quietly suppressed. No harm, no foul.

In those days our town was run by an old-boy network, a loose circle of friends (lawyers, judges, doctors, cops) who golfed and hunted and partied together. Policy decisions that affected the entire county were often made by a few friends over drinks at the Yacht Club.

A conspiracy? In a way it was, but I’m not complaining. My own youthful misdeeds, from DUIs to street scuffles, were glossed over and dismissed because I came from a “good” family. If those exceptions hadn’t been made, I and many of my friends might be living very different lives now. And wearing ankle bracelets.

Still, those days weren’t all Hallmark card moments. I know mistakes were made, some of them pretty egregious, which gave rise to this story. What if the old-boy network, with the best of intentions, made a fatal mistake?

God, I love this game.

 

Andrew Bourelle
’s fiction has been published in
Hobart, Kestrel, Jabberwock Review, Prime Number Magazine, Red Rock Review, Thin Air, Weave, Whitefish Review
, and other journals and anthologies. He is an assistant professor of English at the University of New Mexico. He lives in Albuquerque with his wife, Tiffany, and son, Benjamin.

• I wrote this story several years ago, when I was a graduate student at the University of Nevada, Reno. I had been interested in writing a modern-day western for a while, and after reading Cormac McCarthy’s
No Country for Old Men
, I decided to go for it. I wanted to write a fast-paced story where I could put my foot on the gas and not let up. I also tried to take common western themes and subvert them. Instead of riding off into the sunset at the end of the story, Jack is riding toward the sunrise. He has his whole life ahead of him, a life where he’ll never be able to outrun what he’s done.

I’m indebted to my former professor Christopher Coake, who gave me excellent advice for revising the story. I’m also thankful to Amy Locklin for first publishing the story in the anthology
Law and Disorder.

 

Tomiko M. Breland
is just beginning her literary career. Her short fiction has won the
Ploughshares
Emerging Writer’s Award and placed in the
Writer’s Digest
Popular Fiction Contest. She runs a small editing, manuscript review, and graphic design business out of her home in Monterey, California, where she lives with her husband and two sons, and is completing her first novel. “Rosalee Carrasco” was her first published piece of fiction.

• According to Stephen King, original stories occur when “two previously unrelated ideas come together and make something new under the sun.” I think that’s the best way to describe what happened with this story. I had this idea that I wanted to write a short story that cheated—that accomplished what a novel accomplishes (telling the past, present, and future of a cast of three-dimensional characters) in a very short space. I came up with my form, and then tinkered with a number of story ideas, all terrible, for several weeks. And then I read an article about a horrific social media bullying incident—and there was my second idea.

I began with a Stephen King quote because I think that Rosalee has the bones of King’s Carrie: she is a sympathetic outcast, her “becoming a woman” is witnessed by others, and we even have the backdrop of a girls’ locker room. But what happens when that girl’s “becoming a woman” is witnessed in the age of Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram? When bullying becomes viral and untraceable, public and exponential? Nothing good. My second idea—Rosalee and her tragic but not unbelievable circumstances—poured itself into my first idea with the smoothness and liquidity of juice into a glass carafe, taking shape the way you always hope your stories will when you start out. To ensure that I really,
really
stuck to the short story form, I challenged myself to keep each character—past and future—to just one typed page, and that resulted in a dense little story that packed some punch, and I found that I had written “something new under the sun.”

 

Previously a law student, theater technician, television director, and union organizer,
Lee Child
is now the globally best-selling author of the Jack Reacher series.

• I was asked to contribute to
Belfast Noir
on the basis of my father being a Belfast man, which meant I had spent time there both before and during the Troubles and was familiar with the culture that had led in that tragic direction.

Family legend has it that when my grandparents moved in the 1940s, they sold their house to a couple named Morrison, whose first child, Ivan, went on to become the musician Van Morrison. I was interested in the idea of foreign fans seeking out his birthplace, but in the end opted for an imaginary writer instead of the real-life singer. (But the story’s title,
Wet with Rain
, is a common line in Van Morrison’s lyrics—as well as a perpetually reliable description of Belfast’s weather.)

I was also interested in the idea that although Belfast’s rifts were relentless and implacable to the point of psychosis, there must have been participants who on occasion opted for restraint, and
Wet with Rain
is about one of them.

 

Michael Connelly
is the author of twenty-seven novels and one book of nonfiction. Ten of his novels—featuring the characters LAPD detective Harry Bosch, defense attorney Mickey Haller, and journalist Jack McEvoy—have hit the number-one spot on the
New York Times
bestseller list. His books
Blood Work
and
The Lincoln Lawyer
were produced as films starring Clint Eastwood and Matthew McConaughey. He is executive producer of the streaming television show
Bosch
, based upon his long-running series of books. He lives in Florida and California.

• The task faced by Dennis Lehane and Michael Connelly was figuring out how to legitimately bring together two characters who live and work on opposite coasts of the United States. Harry Bosch is an LAPD detective and Patrick Kenzie is a Boston private eye, and it would seem never the twain should meet. But it was decided by the authors that the most believable way to pull this off was to have Harry Bosch follow a lead on a cold case to Boston. And so Connelly wrote the setup. Evidence in the cold case leads to identifying a solid suspect in Boston. He gets on a plane and lands in Boston. From there he stumbles into Kenzie and the story goes from there. Since Boston is Lehane’s turf, he sort of met Bosch at the airport and took it from there.

 

Joseph D’Agnese
is a journalist, author, and editor who has written for adults and children alike. His nonfiction has appeared in
The Best American Science Writing
two years in a row. His crime fiction has appeared or will appear in
Shotgun Honey, Plots with Guns, Beat to a Pulp, Alfred Hitchcock’s Mystery Magazine, Ellery Queen’s Mystery Magazine
, and
Sherlock Holmes Mystery Magazine.
One of his short stories was a finalist for the 2014 Derringer Award. He’s the author of three popular history titles, a children’s picture book on the Fibonacci sequence, and some novels. He lives in North Carolina with his wife, the author Denise Kiernan (
The Girls of Atomic City
).

• The seeds of my story “Harm and Hammer” were planted the day I visited the Biltmore Estate in Asheville, where I live, and encountered a blacksmith who entertained tourists by playing his anvil as a musical instrument. The sound of hammers on steel struck me as so beautiful, so clear, so pure, and so unlike any instrument I’ve ever heard that it lodged in my mind and never left. I’m not religious, but I am still strongly moved by hymns. Two of my favorites have always been “Amazing Grace” and “Jerusalem,” probably because the lyrics hint at their composers’ inner struggles. Years after I’d first seen that smithy’s anvil performance, I began to find the notion of combining these two disparate elements—the anvil and the hymns—in one story nearly irresistible. I just needed a protagonist. That got me thinking about the sort of person who might be drawn to obsessively play the anvil as a form of expiation. Before long I envisioned a young woman consumed with guilt, her anvil perhaps offering a somewhat healthier form of self-flagellation. Naturally, because of the way my mind works, it wasn’t enough to have one crime in the story. The deceit and violence, like the music itself, had to ripple outward.

 

A former journalist, folksinger, and attorney,
Jeffery Deaver
is an international number-one bestselling author. His novels have appeared on bestseller lists around the world, including the
New York Times
, the
Times
of London, Italy’s
Corriere della Sera
, the
Sydney Morning Herald
, and the
Los Angeles Times.
His books are sold in 150 countries and translated into twenty-five languages.

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