The Mummy's Ransom
A Ransom/Charters Mystery
-
- $12.99
-
- $12.99
Publisher Description
The Mummy's Ransom by Fred Hunter
A controversial exhibit of Chinchorro mummies is about to open in Chicago at Dolores Tower, the latest building by the equally controversial local developer Louie Dolores. The mummies - dating from 2000 to 7000 BC - are incredibly fragile, making their transportation and display very risky. Even worse, the pending exhibition is being protested by a group who regard the exploitation of the mummies to be desecration of their ancient dead, leading to both tension and excitement over the coming opening.
Lucky for Chicago Police Detective Jeremy Ransom none of this has anything to do with him. He figures as long as he can keep his friend, the elderly Miss Emily Charters, away from the opening, then there won't be a murder and he won't have to get involved. But first there are reports that a mummy is moving around the exhibit at night, then there are death threats against the developer, and when one night, alone in the exhibit, Louie Dolores is attacked by one of the mummies, Ransom is assigned to find out what's going on. With the sharp wits and intelligence of Emily at his beck and call, Ransom has to sort out the truth in what could be his strangest assignment ever before the a volatile situation turns fatal.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Murder, mummies and shady real estate dealings haunt this solid entry in Hunter's Ransom series (after 2000's Ransom at the Opera). Real estate baron and Chilean expatriate Louie Dolores brings an exhibit of ancient Chinchorro mummies to his massive downtown Chicago headquarters in an effort to counter some bad press. His image as a high-stakes destroyer of the city's classic architecture is, indeed, in need of philanthropic polish, but some aren't taken in by the ploy. When a "mummy" starts stalking the exhibit, it seems as if even the dead are displeased with Dolores. Chicago P.D. detective Jeremy Ransom, his partner, Gerald White, and grandmotherly confidante Emily Charters are presented with numerous suspects who might want to disrupt the show: Hector Gonzalez, the exhibit's nervous curator; his assistant, Lisa Rivera, whose relationship to the tycoon may be more than businesslike; Dolores's strong, independent wife, Martita; and a host of protesters picketing the exhibit. The mystery is, of course, not whether Dolores will be killed but by whom. The author introduces characters and clues easily and naturally into the story. His eye for details of the urban rich is true, right down to the credenza in Dolores's office and Martita's "pale pink blouse." Though the murder itself doesn't take place until well into the book, Hunter keeps things moving by detailing the thoughts, plans and foibles of his varied cast. Series fans will be well pleased, and even a few mummy buffs should pick this one up, despite the understated jacket art. FYI:Hunter is also the author of The Chicken Asylum (Forecasts, Sept. 3) and other novels in the Alex Reynolds series.