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Available 4.15.24


Flamingo Road

Flamingo Road, April 2017
Fia McKee #1
by Sasscer Hill

Minotaur Books
318 pages
ISBN: 125009691X
EAN: 9781250096913
Kindle: B01M09EOD0
Hardcover / e-Book
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"Horse lovers will love this mystery set in the racing world"

Fresh Fiction Review

Flamingo Road
Sasscer Hill

Reviewed by Sharon Salituro
Posted February 19, 2018

Mystery

Fia is a feisty policewoman who doesn't always do everything by the book. One night while on duty, she comes across a man strangling a woman. Fia tried to get him off Shyra, but he starts to run away, and Fia shoots him so now she is up against the review board. They decide that she has to be placed on leave until they figure out what happened. Fia thought that she would be okay, as Shyra was a witness to what happened, but Shyra is not giving up any information.

While all this is going on, Fia gets a call from her brother Patrick. Patrick's wife has left him, and his daughter Jilly and he needs Fia's help. Since Fia is on leave, she decides to visit her brother. Fia realizes that Jilly is a hand full. Jilly's favorite thing is her horse. One night Lia hears some noise and goes outside to investigate. Never would she think that she would find the horse dead. There seems to be a huge problem in this area of a gang, killing horses and cutting them up to sell on the black market. Zane works with a group that is trying to stop this violence. Fia and Zane work together to try and get answers to this hateful crime.

Fia gets a call from her old boss; he wants her to go undercover at several race tracks to find out what is killing horses right after they win a race. Fia needs to get close enough to find out what kind of drugs they are giving to these ponies. Little did she know that what she is doing intertwines with what Zane is investigating. I really enjoyed FLAMINGO ROAD. Sasscer Hill writes not only a book about family but of the racing community. I never realized all that it takes to get a winning horse. Sasscer always writes what crooked people will do to get their horse to win, even if it means they will die after the race. Sasscer also shows the love Fia has for her niece. Fia will do anything for Jilly, even risking her life.

I also like how the back story comes out about Fia. Growing up Fia was very close to her father, who was a horse trainer. Fia's father was murdered, and hopefully, she can find out the truth. FLAMINGO ROAD has a lot of mystery, a small bit of romance, but a lot of family love. I have been to Florida twice, and I love the way that Sasscer described the countryside. I thought I was back in Florida at the races. FLAMINGO ROAD is a great mystery, pick it up sit back and enjoy.

Learn more about Flamingo Road

SUMMARY

Baltimore police officer Fia McKee is put on leave for excessive use of force after interfering in a crime that turns deadly. Given a second chance, she is sent to work undercover for the Thoroughbred Racing Protective Bureau (TRPB) at the Gulfstream Park in Florida, where she works as an exercise rider. Her assignment is to watch and report back on two racetrack workers who have been suspected of illegal activities and whose horses continue to outperform all expectations, winning their owners unseemly amounts of money in the races. To complete her cover story, Fia moves in with her semi-estranged brother, Patrick, who lives near the racetrack. Her investigations are complicated when her niece, Jilly, disappears after a shadow gang takes Jilly’s beloved horse. Now Fia must work two angles—first to find out what’s really going on with the men who might or might not be gaming the system, and second to bring the men who prey on horses to justice. Along the way, Fia encounters Cuban gangs living off the grid, a (very handsome) do- gooder who’s close on their trail, and a cabal of super wealthy gamblers who will stop at nothing to ensure they always win.

Excerpt

My name is Fia McKee, and I was a Baltimore City cop until that November night when I drove through West Baltimore alone. Alone, because the department requires their cops to patrol in single-man units. It’s their way of stretching the law farther into the crime-ridden city. I eased my blue-and-white cruiser along the streets surrounding Lafayette Park Square, passing by St. James Episcopal Church and a stark ten-story apartment building, where a faint scent of mold soiled the night air. An odd mixture of nineteenth century brick row houses lined the square. Disintegrating buildings with decayed walls and boarded-up windows crowded against happier homes that had been carefully restored to their former beauty. Rolling to the corner, I hooked a right onto West Lanvale, the square’s southern perimeter. Scanning the deserted park on my right and buildings on my left, I let the Ford’s big police engine purr me toward the Methodist church at the end of the block. Someone had shot out the sodium-vapor lamp over the alley that ran between the stone parish house and the church on the corner. I let the cruiser idle a moment. Above the slate roofs, brick chimneys, and church spires, a small slice of November moon did little to illuminate the dim alley. A flash of white movement caught my eye. Two people—dark faces, dark clothes—struggled in the alley against the church wall. A white scarf wrapped around the neck of . . . a woman? I hit my search light and pinned them. Yes, a woman, her fingers tearing at the fabric stretched around her throat by the hands of a large man. The guy seemed oblivious to the sharp beam of my lamp. He must have been high on something. I radioed in my location and the assault to dispatch, then I was out of the car, running through the cold and into the alley. I pulled my service Glock. “Police! Let her go. Now.” The man seemed unable to see or hear anything beyond his need to destroy the woman he’d slammed against the stone wall. His lips curled in an ugly grimace. He twisted the scarf with such force the woman’s shoes lifted away from the pavement. I shouted another warning and ran toward them. He didn’t see me, didn’t stop. The fight drained from the woman. She was going to die. I closed in. The man saw me. His head snapped back. Just enough. I aimed for his ear and squeezed off the shot. He went down. The woman, choking, fell to her knees, then gulped air off the pavement like it was an oxygen mask. The man lay motionless near my feet, blood pouring from the entrance hole. A larger mass of blood and brain matter pooled beneath his head. The woman darted a glance at me, her almond-shaped eyes devoid of emotion. Her gasping filled my ears. Then I heard a rapid, shallow panting. I recognized it as my own. I checked the man for a pulse, not really expecting one. I felt no beat, and though he wouldn’t officially be declared deceased until he arrived at the hospital, there was no question in my mind he was already a corpse. A shuffling movement caught my attention. The woman was trying to crawl away. “Oh no you don’t” I said, grabbing her arm near her shoulder, moving around to see her face. “You have to wait for a medic. You may need to go to the hospital.” Her hands began to shake. The fear I hadn’t seen before widened her eyes. “No! I have to leave. I can’t be involved in this.” “Ma’am, can I see some ID please?” What was it with vics? Half the time they clung to me and the other half they tried to rabbit. If the woman had carried a purse, it was long gone, but her pea coat looked bulky enough. “Do you have a wallet? Maybe in your coat? I need to see some ID.” She rubbed at her throat, sucked in some air, and slid a hand into her coat pocket. I leaned forward, clasped her wrist, and said, “Take it out easy, okay?” She withdrew a wallet and when she handed it to me, her eyes had gone dead again. “I got nothing to say to you, lady cop. Nothing at all.” With a mental sigh, I took her wallet and flipped it open. A Maryland driver’s license said she was Shyra Darnell. I was more interested in another piece of ID behind the plastic window next to the license. A permit from the Maryland Racing Commission. A hot walker’s license from Pimlico racetrack, a world from my past. A world I knew well. Shrill sirens sounded in the distance. I stood up, looking away from the coffee-skinned woman and the dead man on the pavement. Above me, the moon floated over the church spire, as if wanting to drift to the rural land north of Baltimore, where I’d grown up. A place where the vastness of the sky and light of the stars weren’t hidden by brick, mortar, and stone. Or by the anxious, closed in feel of this city. The sirens drew close. The twirling flash of blue and red lights exploded into the square. I heard another squad car and saw lights where the ground swept down behind the church to the next street. Glancing back, I stared at the man I’d shot. This probably wouldn’t go well for me.


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