Laura is a young intern in Washington, D.C., working for handsome and likable Congressman Hal Gannon. Laura falls for the charming Gannon, but when she catches a stewardess at Gannon's apartment, she vows to destroy him.
Private investigator Robert Brixton is a former cop who has also worked for the FBI. When Laura goes missing, Brixton is hired by Laura's family to gain insight into the case that the police might have missed.
Brixton tracks down rumors about Gannon-a staunchly moral "family advocate" according to his political position, but a womanizer according to gossip-but the congressman vehemently denies having anything untoward to do with Laura. Then Laura is found dead in the congressional cemetery, and many more questions are raised. . .
Donald Bain thrills again with Margaret Truman's Internship in Murder, the riveting next installment in the Margaret Truman's beloved Capital Crimes series.
At the Publisher's request, this title is being sold without Digital Rights Management Software (DRM) applied.
Release date:
August 25, 2015
Publisher:
Tom Doherty Associates
Print pages:
368
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"I'll have one of your patented Collins drinks," Congressman Harold "Hal" Gannon told party host Lucas Bennett.
"Tom or John?"
"What's the difference?"
"Bourbon or gin? Tom uses gin, John uses bourbon."
The congressman laughed. "Where did Florida's leading malpractice attorney learn so much about making drinks?"
"I bartended during law school, got interested in the subtler aspects of it. Besides, if doctors ever stop cutting off the wrong limb or leaving sutures inside patients, I might need a job behind a bar."
"Bourbon."
"One John Collins coming up. By the way, I only use Meyer lemons."
"As opposed to?"
"The usual lemons. Meyers have a deeper taste, a hint of orange," Bennett said as he prepared the drink behind the marble bar top in his posh waterfront home. "They were invented in China. Some guy tried to grow them in California, but his trees had a virus that damn near wiped out every other citrus tree in the state. They eventually figured it out." He shook the bourbon, freshly squeezed lemon juice, sugar, and ice in a stainless shaker, poured the concoction into a glass, added club soda, garnished it with an orange slice, and handed it to the congressman.
Gannon took a small sip. "Wonderful," he said, smacking his lips. "I know some bars in Washington that could use you."
"I'll send my surrogate," Bennett said as his twenty-two-year-old daughter, Laura, joined him and accepted his embrace.
"She's a lot prettier than you are," Gannon said.
"Which means she'll get better tips."
Lucas Bennett was a big man in every sense. He was overweight, but the pounds were solidly packed on his six-foot-two frame. His flowing white hair gave him the look of an orator of yore. His ruddy face and ready smile belied a keen legal mind and a killer instinct when engaged in an adversarial situation with another attorney. Hal Gannon had been one of those lawyers who'd once felt the heft of Bennett's intellect and the sting of his silver tongue.
But that was before Gannon put his Tampa law practice into mothballs and successfully ran for the U.S. House of Representatives from Florida's Fourteenth Congressional District. He was in his fourth term. In an amusing irony, Lucas Bennett, his former opponent in court, had been one of his most generous backers, and Laura had worked as a volunteer on his most recent campaign.
"Has Laura acquired your skills, Luke, as a-what's it called?-as a mixologist?"
"I make a dynamite cosmopolitan," she said, "and I can pop a cap off a beer bottle in the wink of an eye."
Both men laughed as Bennett's wife, Grace, joined them. "You have to get out from behind the bar, Luke," she said, "and mingle with our other guests."
Grace Bennett was reed-thin but not emaciated. A physical therapist at Tampa General Hospital, she was a workout fanatic, and her sinewy, muscular arms and chiseled face-not an ounce of excess flesh anywhere-testified to a lifetime spent in gyms and lifting paralyzed patients back into wheelchairs.
"I suppose I should," her husband said as he rinsed his hands in a small sink and dried them. Before he followed his wife to where their other guests were gathered on an expansive patio that led down to the water and the slip at which their small cabin cruiser was docked, he said to Gannon, "I know I've thanked you before for arranging Laura's internship in your Washington office, Hal, but I'll say it again."
"Looking forward to having her," Gannon said.
"Just make sure she doesn't fall in love with some knee-jerk Democrat," Bennett said jovially.
Gannon, a conservative Democrat, said, "Even if he's a Blue Dog?"
"Well, that might make a difference," said Bennett. "Enjoy your drink Hal. I'll be back in a few minutes to whip up another round."
Gannon's reference to Blue Dogs reflected his leadership in the House of Representatives' band of right-leaning Democrats who often sided with their Republican counterparts. They'd taken the name Blue Dogs to mock the Yellow Dog Democrats of the early 1900s who were branded with the nickname because it was said that they would vote for anything, even a yellow dog, rather than a Republican.
Gannon and Laura watched the Bennetts go through open French doors to the terrace.
"Your folks are great," Gannon said, placing his barely touched drink on the bar.
"You aren't drinking this?" Laura asked, picking up the glass.
"I don't drink much, just an occasional social sip. Didn't want to offend your dad."
Laura took a healthy swig and smacked her lips. "Yummy."
"I'll take your word for it."
Congressman Hal Gannon would be considered handsome by any standard. He had a shock of unruly black hair that defied taming, which could also be said about his earlier bachelor days in Tampa. He topped six feet in height, and even beneath his red-and-blue-striped sport shirt you could see that he was physically fit. Like Grace Bennett, Gannon was no stranger to gyms, both when he was home in Tampa and when in Congress, where he took full advantage of the House's workout facilities. His jaw was square, his green eyes probing, mouth always on the verge of breaking into a boyish grin. The Washingtonian magazine had named him one of the House of Representatives' handsomest men.
"Looking forward to coming to work for me?" he asked Laura, who took another sip of the drink.
"Are you sure I'll be working for you?" she said playfully. "When you work for someone, you usually get paid."
"We have rules about that in the House," he countered, "but maybe I can squeeze something out of the budget-if you're good."
"Good at what?" she asked, raising a nicely shaped eyebrow.
"Hal!"
Gannon looked through the open doors to where his wife, Charlene, waved at him.
"I'm being summoned," he said.
"Your wife is so beautiful," Laura said.
"She is, isn't she? Looking forward to when you arrive in D.C. The housing service landed you a prime spot, a two-bedroom on Capitol Hill, only a few blocks from the office, lots of space for you and your roommate. Roseann, my chief of staff, will help get you settled. Ace those final few exams before you come. I like my interns to be achievers and..."
"And?" she said playfully.
He shrugged. "Available, I suppose. Excuse me. See you in a month, Laura." He hesitated, came forward, kissed her cheek, and joined his wife.
Laura finished the drink her father had made for Gannon and placed it on a tray of dirty glasses behind the bar. She took in her image in the back-bar mirror. She was her mother's daughter, albeit more fleshy, more womanly. Her legs were long, her waist narrow. Unlike her mother, her bosom was large and amply occupied her pink silk blouse, its top buttons undone to reveal some cleavage. Both mother and daughter were brunettes, although Laura's hair had more of a copper tint to it; she wore it loose and shoulder length.
She turned her attention to the terrace, where what someone had said generated gales of laughter. It was a money crowd. Social gatherings at the house were always attended by her parents' wealthy friends, and Laura knew that she was fortunate to have been born into the Bennett family. She'd never wanted for anything and had been blatantly spoiled. She was in her senior year at the University of Southern Florida, majoring in health administration in its College of Public Health. She hadn't chosen that major. She would have preferred something more artistic, like acting or painting. But her father had convinced her that she should graduate with a usable degree, which wouldn't preclude her from pursuing artistic endeavors on the side. Law school? That's what Lucas Bennett really wanted for his only child.
Laura's attention went to Charlene Gannon, the congressman's wife. No doubt about it, Charlene was a stunning woman-silver-blond hair, lovely figure, and perfectly painted oval face. She and her husband made a picture book couple. The media, always on the hunt for juicy stories about elected officials, pounced on every aspect of the Gannons' private life, focusing most recently on the fact that Charlene spent little time in D.C. with her husband.
"Why would anyone choose to run for office and open himself to such public scrutiny?" Laura once questioned her father after reading that the public's view of members of Congress ranked only slightly higher than serial rapists and below identity thieves.
"Ego," he replied, "pure, unadulterated ego."
Hal Gannon certainly had such an ego. Maybe "self-assuredness" was a better term. Laura smiled as she watched him break into a contagious laugh at something a woman said. If anyone had the right to be self-assured, she decided as she went to the patio and joined in the spirited conversation, it was Hal Gannon, successful attorney, popular member of the U.S. Congress, and movie-star handsome.
A real hunk.
In a month she would be leaving Tampa for Washington to become an intern in his office. Growing up in the opulence of the Bennett family had been wonderful, as carefully measured and nurtured as her father's favorite drink recipes.