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1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

Things are never easy for Scottsdale private eye Lena Jones. Her partner in Desert Investigations, Jimmy Sisiwan, is leaving for a moneyed wife and a job at Southwest Microsystems, and her old captain at the Scottsdale Police Department is off to his home in Brooklyn. Meanwhile, she's doing security for Warren Quinn, director of a documentary film about the American World War II camp for German POWs at Arizona's Papago Park, from which some prisoners once escaped.

One surviving escapee, Käpitan zur See Erik Ernst, a man now in his nineties and confined to a wheelchair after a boating accident, has just been murdered. What's more, the man's Ethiopian caregiver begs Lena to clear him as a suspect in the murder.

Lena, experienced in probing the past for answers to the central mystery of her own life—who is she?—learns that after their daring Christmas Eve escape Ernst and two other POWs had hid out in Arizona's rugged Superstition Mountains. Nearby on Christmas night, a farm family, the Bollingers, had been slaughtered. A jury didn't convict the only survivor, the teenage son, despite some suggestive evidence. What might Chess Bollinger know about Ernst—and vice versa? And how much can Lena trust filmmaker Warren Quinn, either as a client, a witness, or a lover?

In this complex, stunning case based on real Arizona history, Betty Webb spins another evocative, haunting story in her Lena Jones mystery series.

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    • AudioFile Magazine
      Picture your classic private investigator, tough, dogged and clever; then imagine that detective as a gorgeous blonde working not in dark city streets but in the sunny desert around Scottsville, Arizona. Private eye Lena Jones is brought to life by Marguerite Gavin, who sounds appropriately savvy and confident telling her story in a strong no-nonsense voice. In this fourth desert mystery, Lena is overseeing security for a studio making a documentary about escaped German prisoners. Lena solves the murders of the forties and also recent crimes tied to this blood-soaked past. Besides her portrayal of the scrappy sleuth, Gavin's depictions of other characters, especially Nazi captain Erik Ernst, are outstanding. This mystery is both well plotted and well read. D.L.G. © AudioFile 2012, Portland, Maine
    • Publisher's Weekly

      January 23, 2006
      At the start of Webb's fast-paced fourth Lena Jones mystery (after 2004's Desert Shadows
      ), the scrappy workaholic PI is supervising security for filmmaker Warren Quinn, who's shooting a documentary about the escape of German POWs from a prison camp in Scottsdale, Ariz., in 1944. When someone murders the leader of the escapees, arrogant, disagreeable Erik Ernst, now 91 and retired in Scottsdale, suspicion falls on the former U-boat commander's Ethiopian immigrant care-giver, Rada Tesema. Believing Tesema to be innocent, Lena agrees to investigate. Meanwhile, Lena's personal life is in disarray. Raised in foster homes and wary of close relationships, she's drawn to Quinn but is suspicious of his motives. Her partner in Desert Investigations, Jimmy Sisiwan, is getting married and taking a job with Lena's biggest customer, while Lena's mentor in the Scottsdale police department is returning to Brooklyn. Webb combines evocative descriptions of place with fine historical research in a plot packed with twists.

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