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A
Carra King
A rookie
security guard at Dublin airport spots a pool of dried blood under a car:
the search for a missing tourist is over. The American is found bludgeoned
to death in the trunk of his rented car. Minogue soon learns that there’s
more at stake here than the murder of a visitor, more even than adverse
publicity for Ireland’s vital tourist industry: Patrick (Leyne)
Shaughnessy, the dead man, is scion of an Irish-American multimillionaire
and food tycoon, John leyne.
From the obscure lodgings in remote towns and villages, a confusing account
of Shaughnessy’s itinerary and interests trickles in. The investigation
traces him to historical sites that he visited with an unknown woman companion,
but is eventually stumped by Shaughnessy’s disappearance after a
sighting near the west coast. Meanwhile, background information from the
U.S. reveals him as a man with a troubled past: divorced, alcoholic, and
estranged from his father.
His woman companion maybe be Aoife Hartnett, an archaeologist from Dublin’s
National Museum. She cannot be found. As odd and idiosyncratic a pattern
as Shaughnessy’s journeys seem to have been, Minogue is soon able
to discern some method to them: they match sites where Aoife Hartnett
worked. Two of those sites have had antiquities stolen from them over
the past five years.
While the investigation broadens, Minogue continues to be fed information
about Shaughnessy’s past. John Leyne, he discovers, is a very influential
patron of many Irish American causes. One of Leyne’s passions in
recent years has been the collection of antiquities. With Minogue trying
to piece together these baffling shards of information into a mosaic which
will map his way to Patrick Shaughnessy’s killer, a body is discovered
in shallow grave not far from the site of the theft.
A Faustian bargain was made: payment is due. Venturing into his ancestral
homeland, to propitiate his estranged father brought him not the glory
he hoped, but a brutal end.
‘…the
kind of book for which the term literary mystery was coined. Fans.. should
be thrilled by Brady’s tough, smart, unsettling novel…’
(Booklist U.S.)
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