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Murder Times Four Box Set

Four gay mystery thrillers by best-selling author Edward Kendrick. Contains the stories:<br><br><strong>Murder on Rainbow Lane</strong>: My name is Adam Moore, and I am not a happy camper at the moment. Someone is killing the residents on Rainbow Lane cul-de-sac. If that wasn't bad enough, they're trying to frame me for the murders. My only hope of proving my innocence? Detective Steve Jarrett ... if I can convince him I'm not the man he's looking for. Although he may be the man I've been looking for all my life.<br><br><strong>Premonitions</strong>: When Daniel moves into the house he inherited, he gets premonitions something isn't right. Then he meets Griffin, who lives off the grid, and they become friends. Daniel's ex appears, suggesting Daniel turn the house into a restaurant, with his help. When Daniel refuses, bad things start to happen. As the attraction between Daniel and Griffin grows stronger, will they survive what Ray does next?<br><br><strong>The Elevator Murders</strong>: When Tony finds a dead man in the elevator at his apartment building, he and his friends try to solve the murder. Kirk, an admitted playboy, tries to help them, but is rebuffed until he finally explains to Tony why he's the way he is. What Tony learns about Kirk, plus a third murder, changes everything, as Tony tries to deal with his feelings for Kirk while not becoming the next murder victim.<br><br><strong>The Hitchhiker Murders</strong>: When married PIs Brent and Quinn Collins are hired to find Andrew, who disappeared while hitchhiking, little do they know they will become embroiled in murder. Two other young men have gone missing under similar circumstances, their bodies found buried in the mountains. Brent and Quinn believe they know who is responsible for the killings. Can they prove it without ending up dead themselves?

Edward Kendrick · LGBT+
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150 Chs

Chapter 2

“You’re safe here,” Brent told him. “The youngest person is Neil Dunn. He’s twenty-two and lives over there with his parents.” He pointed to the house two doors down with the fenced backyard.

“Is he…?” Reed started to say, before quickly taking a drink of his tea.

“Gay?” I replied. “We haven’t figured that out, yet. Don’t worry. If he isn’t, we won’t hold it against him.” Looking at Reed, I lifted an eyebrow in question.

He didn’t answer my unspoken query, saying instead, “So almost everyone here—” Reed swept an arm around, “—is?”

“For sure I am,” Tyler said, coming into view across the grass separating his house from Reed’s. “Hi. I’m Tyler Sanders. I keep seeing you, but I haven’t had a chance to come over since you moved in.”

“Reed Fleming,” Reed replied. “Would you like some iced tea?”

“Sure.” Tyler grabbed the last chair while Reed went in to get another glass of ice. “So what’s he like?” Tyler asked quietly.

“Seems nice enough. Not sure he’s gay, but…” I shrugged.

“I am,” Reed said, obviously overhearing me as he came back onto the patio.

Brent grinned. “So we outnumber the others eleven to five. Or twelve to four, depending on Neil.”

“How can you notknow if he’s gay?” Reed asked.

“Because, my dear boy,” Tyler replied, “the only time we see him is when he comes home during semester breaks from college, or over the summer when he’s not…wherever he spends his free time.”

“He doesn’t socialize?” Reed frowned. “Does anyone around here?”

“Socialize? You bet,” Brent said. “For one, we have barbecues in the park on the far side of the turnaround circle. Every holiday and whenever someone wants to celebrate something, like a birthday.”

“Even in winter?” Reed asked in surprise.

I nodded. “Nothing like a warm fire and hot food to make the day special. Now, if it’s snowing like crazy, we will pass and do it at someone’s house. Usually David and Luke’s since they have the largest house other than the Dunns.”

Reed thought a moment. “So the eleven to four means there’s at least two guys who are couples. Well, four if you want to get technical.”

“Yep,” I said. “David and Luke are married. Eliot and Frank are shacking up together.”

“They live—where?”

“Dave and Luke are just to the right of the park, as you face it. Eliot and Frank are two doors down from them on the same side.”

“CC in next to me,” Brent said.

“CC?”

“Chase Clark. Ergo, CC, when we’re in the mood to tease him,” Brent explained. “Nice man. About our age. Well, mine anyway. Adam here’s old.”

I snorted. “Thirty-one is not old.”

“Younger than me,” Tyler pointed out. “So definitely not. For your information, Reed, I’m thirty-two. And Jake, who lives between our two gay couples, is thirty-three, so Adam’s really a youngster.”

“Mick and Ginger Nelson live to the left of the park. They’re in their forties. Owen is twenty-six. The youngest if you don’t count Neil.” I glanced at the others. “Have I missed anyone?”

“Nope,” Brent replied.

Reed said worriedly, “I’m never going to remember all the names.”

“Give it time. Once you get to know them, you will,” I told him. “As a matter of fact, the Fourth is coming up a week from Monday which means…”

“Party time,” Brent and Tyler said in unison.

“One-track minds,” I grumbled, getting laughs from all three men.

“It’s for everyone?” Reed asked.

“Yep,” I told him. “If you live here, you’re invited.”

“Invited, hell,” Brent said. “It’s mandatory.”

Reed seemed puzzled. “If it is, then why don’t you know if, umm, Neil? Right? If he’s gay?”

Brent shrugged. “I was overstating the mandatory part. Of course no one hasto attend—and he doesn’t. His folks may be old timers, but like Tyler said, Neil goes away to college. And when he is here, he doesn’t stick around. He undoubtedly has friends his own age he hangs out with.”

“Okay. That makes sense.”

After that, the conversation got more general. Brent asked Reed what he did for a living. When Reed said he worked for a brokerage firm, they started talking about stocks and bonds, since Brent is a financial planner.

Tyler started to tell me about his newest role at the Playhouse, where he’s one of the principal actors. He wanted to know if the TV station I work for was planning on doing a story on the theater’s upcoming production. Since I’m only a cameraman, I had no clue. Then, when he was certain the others were engrossed in their conversation, he told me he’d see me the next evening. That’s sounds like an assignation, I know. But it wasn’t. We both moonlight at a local film company, making porn films. Me as a cameraman. Him as one of the actors. We were due to start shooting two new ones tomorrow night. Hey, what we do helps pay our mortgages—which works for us. No one who knows seems to care, but we don’t go around bragging about it.