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Book details
  • Genre:FICTION
  • SubGenre:Mystery & Detective / General
  • Language:English
  • Series title:The Judge Series
  • Series Number:2
  • Pages:300
  • Paperback ISBN:9781667830247

THE ISLAND

A Mystery Novel set on Catalina Island

by Davis MacDonald

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Overview
Some omens are subtle. Others hit you over the head. Like a table cloth angrily pulled out from a loaded table. There's a huge crash. Drinks, food and plates fly. The person sitting across gets wet. Waiters get nervous. Dining room calm is shattered. All heads turn to gawk. The Judge should have known then the weekend was going to take a turn for the worse. A superstitious person would have known. The Casino Dining Room was well lit. 20 soft chandeliers hanging from the high ceiling cast light and created shadows over the gold gilt, moldings and 1920's fixtures of the great circular room. The dining room variably sparkled with silver, china and stemware laid out on sixty linen starched dining tables. The tables were spread around the ballroom in a three quarters circle. The final quarter boasted a small stage where a five man orchestra was pumping out elegant music from the 20's and 30s. It wasn't really a casino in the Vegas sense of course. There'd never been any gambling there. Not even in its heydays in the 1920's. But it was a circular structure of old world design and Italian definition. The tables were filled with stiff looking tuxedoed men and flowingly dressed women, mostly a little older, all with the scent of money. It could have been a Great Gatsby Party, moved forward 90 years and transported to this rugged Island off the Los Angeles Coast. Except that the assembled throng were a bit too weathered. The Judge and Katy, his intimate other……Was that the term these days? … Sat together amongst a collection of tables more or less reserved for the Yacht Club contingent of which he was a member, many of whom were well into their cups and having an uproariously good time. Conversations were flowing easily. Discussions of sail boats and motor yachts, new nautical equipment and electronics, repairs, and close scrapes anchoring or crossing the channel, competed with discussions of business among the black tuxedoed men. The woman talked of
Description
The Judge arrived at the Club dock in time to see a very inebriated Harvey White step off the float, miss his dingy, and disappear with a plop into the dark water. Harvey breached the surface immediately like a small skinny whale, hissing, gasping and snorting for help. None-too-steady hands were there to haul him out. It was a messy job given the sobriety of the help and the added challenge of the soggy tux. In the end Harvey was more or less dragged up and on to the float on his belly, protesting all the way. He was loaded aboard his dinghy and shoved off with well wishes in the general direction of his boat and Marion. He would not be part of the hastily assembled search squadron. The Club was known to be a party club and such things happened. It would have been amusing if the evening had not turned so serious. The Judge hoped the crew they'd pulled together to search the harbor would be up to the task. Bruce Wright dropped into the Judge's dingy beside him, on the theory that four eyes were better than two, and also a precaution in light of Harvey White's surprise dunk. Backup. They set off to the left on a clockwise sweep of their end of the harbor, another boat going counter-clockwise, and a third striking out into the middle of the fleet. The water, dark and murky before, now came alive here and there from the rays of the moon in full show above. It shot streaks of silver across the harbor and the sea beyond. Boaters returned from late dinners ashore and began to start generators and turn on cabin and spreader lights. These bathed the tide-swept harbor around their boats in an eerie half-light, artificial and cold. After 20 minutes the Judge and Bruce had made two circles of the fleet, run into the other two search boats three times, and everyone had come up dry. So far the three boat crews had stayed dry too, despite a flask liberally passed between the other two boats. On further reflection, none of them were dry, mused the Judge. He was normally a stickler for no alcohol while in command of a boat, however small. Bruce rarely drank except at parties. But between them they'd put away a considerable liquor locker of booze at the Casino Ball, as had the other boat crews. The Judge had decided to ignore this since there was really no one else available to look for Daisy across the harbor except for the solitary Harbor Patrol boat. The Harbor Patrol boat was sweeping the outer anchorage in front of Descanso Beach. They had constant radio contact. So far no luck there either. No Daisy. No Dinghy. No "Marty's sons". The Judge suggested they expand their search to the south, along Lover's Cove and perhaps a bit beyond, toward Pebbly Beach. Bruce concurred. The Judge pointed his dingy in that direction while Bruce radioed in their plan. It was close to 11:00, but the lights of the town were still ablaze along the water. Rays of red and blue and purple from the shop signs danced on the top of the small waves as the tide swept in. Music wafted from several bars, and small knots of tourists, some with fringe ringed straw hats from Luau Larry's, meandered here and there along the boardwalk. These holiday weekenders were determined to party hearty. Lover's Cove was empty except for fish, several of whom scooted under the boat, attracted by Bruce's portable light casting long beams around the Cove. No dinghy. No Daisy. No sons. Leaving the Cove they headed further south along the coast line. The lights of the town disappeared behind them. The water and the night here were both black. Punctuated only by the rays from the moon and the white wake they left behind. The wake rapidly folded back into the black without a trace. There was a light breeze sweeping in from across the channel. It chilled the Judge. It was that kind of night. They skimmed the water about 40 feet off Pebbly Beach, just outside the line of small soft breakers, Bruce shining his light alternately along the rocky be
About the author
Davis MacDonald writes classic murder mystery novels. Look for bold themes and exciting drama across the spectrum of our 21st century world as his characters vie for love, money, power and fame. A man of mystery, Davis MacDonald's award-winning "Judge Series Thrillers" draw upon real-life experiences and real characters to weaved fictional mystery novels intertwined with prominent social issues we all face in our first quarter of the 21st Century. Grab one of his nine novels, buckle up for some adventure, and enjoy the read. Odds are you'll be back for more. A man of mystery and a full-time lawyer, MacDonald is an award-winning novelist whose "Judge Series Thrillers" draw upon his real-life experiences, weaved around prominent social issues of our time. Couched between witty characters and rousing plot twists, like a literary magician he seamlessly injects critical issues that face us all in this first quarter of the 21st Century.