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Murder in the Extreme (Miranda Marquette Mysteries Book 2)

Murder in the Extreme (Miranda Marquette Mysteries Book 2)

Book summary

Miranda Marquette is on the verge of fame with her First Extreme All-Girl Sports Team, but when two teammates are murdered, her detective skills are put to the ultimate test. Balancing a reality TV deal and a high-stakes investigation, Miranda must uncover the truth before time runs out.

MURDER IN THE EXTREME is a thrilling mystery novel.

Excerpt from Murder in the Extreme (Miranda Marquette Mysteries Book 2)

Chapter 1

May 2008

The hair rose on the back of my neck. I could hear only the rush of air at 60 meters per second as I plummeted toward the outskirts of Lauterbrunnen, Switzerland, the base-jumping capital of Europe. After deploying my parachute, the resistance of the opened canopy billowed over me and tore at my arms and shoulders with what felt like a thousand pounds. When fully inflated with air, I floated peacefully downward, awed by majestic snow-covered peaks and lulled into tranquility by bleating sheep on the hillside below.

A scream from above grabbed my attention. Tara, our final jumper, dropped from the sky and plummeted past me. I struggled in vain to change direction, a cold sweat covering my skin despite the cool Alpine temperatures. But I could only watch as she fell. Down, down until there was no sky or wind. Only the cold hard ground.

It felt like hours before I finally landed. I struggled to rip the pack off my back and sprinted to my two other teammates, Annika and Patricia, who had jumped first. They held one another, sobbing with their eyes closed. After a glance, I couldn't look either, at Tara's broken body, the deadly result of a seven- hundred-and-fifty-meter free fall.

Relying on the name on his press pass, I screamed at the cameraman, “Stop filming now, Rocky!” and ran over to join my teammates. The stench of blood mixed with salty tears made me gag with the reality that Tara was dead.

Our three-person survival grip ended when Patricia pulled away. With ashen skin and a blank expression, she sank to the ground. She sat holding her knees, rocking back and forth, moaning quietly. Annika, nearly as pale, stood unmoving, her eyes fixed on Patricia. The police academy training from my former life kicked in. I fished the cell phone from my pocket and dialed 112.

I took a moment before the first responders arrived to breathe deeply, attempting to calm myself. My anxiety had improved considerably since I was acquitted of a murder charge last year, but symptoms of an impending anxiety attack were overtaking me. My ears were ringing, and my vision blurred. I knelt on the ground so I would be close to the ground if I lost consciousness. That had only happened once, but it was frightening and disorienting.

After I shivered in the cold sun for ten agonizing minutes, I started to come out of it. I opened my eyes to see an ancient ambulance chugging into the field where we waited, each in our own thoughts. It was followed by a black and white 1940s Mercedes with the familiar two-tone siren blaring. The first of two officers, who sported an Oktoberfest-worthy beer belly and a brush cut with graying temples, swaggered over to where we stood.

He asked with a heavy German accent, “Which one of you is Miranda Marquette?”

I raised my hand as if in grade school and flipped my long blonde hair out of my face. “I am.” I sounded weaker than I had planned.

The other officer spoke up. “Do you want to sit down, Fraulein? You look very pale.”

I refused to be a victim. “I'm fine,” I spoke louder and clearer, and he looked convinced even if I wasn't.

“Gut, then we will take your statements,” the first officer barked in broken English. “You,” he said, pointing to Annika, “and I will go this way.” He turned to me. “You speak with Officer Brecker,” and then to Patricia as if he saw her for the first time, “Are you all right, Fraulein?”

Patricia, still ghost white and rocking forward and back, like a headbanger at an AC/DC concert, didn't respond. He motioned to the paramedics to assist her. I stood watching as he and Annika walked through a meadow of daisies, purple salvia, and wild strawberries—a stark contrast to the gory scene behind them.

Officer Brecker and I walked in the other direction, toward the mountains. Twenty minutes prior, I had been in awe of the majestic snow-covered peaks, but as we approached them, I shivered with fear.

We strolled in silence for several minutes when he finally said, “What brought you and your friends to our country?” He read from a black and white college essay notebook.

I spoke, and my voice sounded to me as if reading a press release. “We are the First Extreme All-girl Sports Team or FEAST, four young, successful and independent women seeking fame, fortune, and an adrenaline rush. We participate in several extreme sports, such as BASE Jumping, beach sailing, skydiving, street luge racing, and all types of motorcycle racing, including on- and off-road racing.”

I lowered my head when I realized we were no longer a team of four. He touched my wrist and nodded. I flinched and pulled away. At that point, no stranger was welcome in my personal space, especially a cop. My disdain for the police had never vanished since I left the force nearly eight years ago after being ambushed and shot in the face. It remained unclear who had set me up, but several of my co-workers remained under suspicion.

Blinking back more tears, I continued. “This was our first BASE jump together. The other three of us had lots of experience, but Tara had only skydived a couple of times, and that was several years ago. I had recently done some ground training with her. She insisted she was ready for this. Now . . .” I sobbed and buried my face in my hands, wishing I could disappear. I had never been good with people seeing me cry, especially men. I pulled a tissue from my pocket, blew my nose,

and was ready to continue the interrogation.

He waited a minute, then looked at me with kind blue eyes and continued in a heavy German accent. “Why do you do this jumping if you know it is dangerous?”

“Extreme sports, for us anyway, are a means of building self- esteem and taking control of our lives. Some believe that simply having financial success is the cure-all for emotional issues. That isn't true. Taking risks is a kind of therapy for us. I've needed therapy since my mid-twenties when I quit my first job on the police force after an unfortunate accident. I don't know how you do it. I couldn't do this every day anymore, living with other people's tragedy.”

Ignoring my comment, he reviewed his notebook. “Is there anything else you can tell me about the deceased?”

It took a second to realize he was asking about Tara. “The four of us took a trip to Aruba three months ago to relax and get to know one another. I had recruited them for the team through a nationwide search, and we wanted to make sure we could get along for long periods on the road. So, what better way than traveling together?” I smiled fondly, thinking back on the time we spent together. “It worked out great. We all fit together. No drama. I couldn't believe my luck.”

He waited patiently while I thought back for a minute and tried to remember specific details about Tara that might be important. “I know that she got some text messages that she found disturbing while we were in Aruba, but she didn't go into

any detail about them when I asked her about it. She is a very private person. Or she was.” My stomach churned when I corrected myself to acknowledge that she was dead.

“Did she ever mention being threatened by anyone?” He tried to make the interrogation sound like a casual conversation. I continued, “I know her ex-husband was very unhappy about their break-up, but she didn't mention that he had been in contact.” I provided the officer with his name. “Do you suspect

foul play here? Tara's death was just an accident, right?” “I must ask these questions. It is routine.”

I wasn't convinced.

After the officers wrapped things up with Annika and me, they spoke to Rocky. I didn't know him or the other cameraman at the top of the mountain. Two of the girls had come for a few days before the jump, so I felt a little out of the loop. I decided to talk to the others later about whether they had gotten to know either of the cameramen before I arrived. The agency had provided them with instructions to film every possible moment of our adventure from Bernie Weinstein, our publicist. Bernie never missed an opportunity to get our faces in the news.

It seemed like overkill to me when they threatened the cameraman with handcuffs until he gave them his camera as evidence. He stomped around and threw down his hat as if he were a manager arguing a call at a baseball game, but they did not relent.

They received a call on their radio and left with sirens blaring and without interviewing Patricia. She lay on the ground with her feet elevated on a stone in the meadow under a blanket the paramedics had provided, advising her to rest for another half hour. They had treated her for shock as a precaution. But the reality of Tara's death hadn't even begun to sink in.

Annika and I sat on either side of Patricia, each lost in our thoughts. Mine was about the moment just before the jump. The other cameraman had been shooting most of our pre-jumping

activities before we plummeted off the cliff, but he and Tara had been in deep conversation before we jumped. It had looked as if he was helping her with her pre-jump checklist, but they could have been talking about anything. With his long stringy hair and mangled beard, I wondered if she was attracted to him. I was going to ask her about it when we landed safely at the bottom. I suddenly realized that he had never come down from the mountain after we jumped. He had disappeared.

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