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Five Knives Book Tour & Giveaway – Luv Saving Money

Five Knives Book Tour & Giveaway

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Five
Knives
A
Will Finch Mystery Thriller Prequel
by
D.F. Bailey
Genre:
Crime Thriller
 
One
Reporter.

 

Three Dead.

 

Five Knives.

 

 

FIVE
KNIVES welds the intensity of Jack Bauer’s “24” to the
scorching heat of THE GIRL WHO KICKED THE HORNET’S NEST.

 

 

Theauthor is a great talent.” — Aaron C. Brown, Amazon Top 1000
Reviewer

 

 

When
a man plummets to his death from an apartment tower, Will Finch’s
shock soon becomes a nightmare. As he studies the open windows above
the corpse, Finch notices a lamp blinking erratically behind a drawn
curtain on the eleventh floor.

 

 

When
he investigates the distress signal, Finch discovers a woman
handcuffed to a bedpost. Over the following week, he uncovers a
conspiracy that ties the murder to a series of bombshells. The
victim’s bankruptcy. A global stock fraud. A murder spree that
began in Baghdad and is now haunting the citizens of San Francisco.
Is this the work of a serial killer, a copycat — or both?

 

 

But
before he can file his report for The San Francisco Post, Finch’s
leads evaporate. Within days, three victims are dead. Does a pattern
of five knife wounds provide a clue? Can he unravel the mystery
before he — and his fiancée — are caught up in the web of
murder?

 

 

Five
Knives is the prequel thriller in the Will Finch crime series — a
novel that opens on the first day of Will Finch’s journalism
career. Everything that Finch learns about crime reporting begins
with Five Knives.

 

 
 
An
Amazon bestselling author, D.F. Bailey is a W.H. Smith First Novel
Award and a Whistler Independent Book Award finalist.

 

 

In
2015 D.F. Bailey published The Finch Trilogy — Bone Maker, Stone
Eater, and Lone Hunter — three novels narrated from the
point-of-view of a crime reporter in San Francisco. Second Life
(2017) is the first in a series of stand-alone books that follows the
characters established in the trilogy. The series prequel, Five
Knives, came out in 2018.

 

 

His
first novel, Fire Eyes, was optioned for film. His second novel,
Healing the Dead, was translated into German as Todliche Ahnungen.
The Good Lie, another psychological thriller, was recorded as an
audiobook. A fourth novel, Exit from America, made its debut as an
e-book in 2013.

 

 

Following
his birth in Montreal, D.F. Bailey’s family moved around North
America from rural Ontario to New York City to McComb, Mississippi to
Cape May, New Jersey. He finally “landed on his feet” on
Vancouver Island — where he lives next to the Salish Sea in the
city of Victoria.

 

 

For
twenty-two years D.F. Bailey worked at the University of Victoria
where he taught creative writing and journalism and coordinated the
Professional Writing Cooperative Education Program — which he
co-founded. From time to time he also freelanced as a business writer
and journalist. In the fall of 2010 he left the university so that he
could turn “his pre-occupation with writing into a full-blown
obsession.”

 

 
CHAPTER ONE
SAN FRANCISCO. FALL, 2007.
Will Finch saw the corpse less than a minute after he heard the horrible noise. He never
imagined that death could sound so leaden. And yet, so wet. The punch of a heavy body
splatting onto flat concrete. A splash punctuated by a gasp. Then a faint wheeze as the lungs
released a final breath into the city night.
At first, he couldn’t see the body. Four people stood on the sidewalk blocking his view. Their
heads tipped down at an angle as they absorbed the catastrophe that sprawled next to their
feet.
“What happened?” Finch pushed forward and stepped around the blonde girl. She held a hand
to her mouth and let out a cry.
“I don’t know.” The boy next to her glanced at the building above them. “He fell,” he offered with
a stony expression. Finch studied them a moment. Two couples in their midteens, white,
vibrant, all well-bred and dressed for dinner at an upscale restaurant in nearby Jackson Square.
Probably making their way down to the Embarcadero where they could catch a street car or
train back to their suburban homes. He checked his watch. 11:18. These kids were probably
trying to beat their midnight curfews.
But now he observed the change coming over them. The reality seeping in. One by one, the
cold hand of death caressed their faces and forced them to look again at the bloody pulp on the
ground. Turn and watch. This is what I can do.
“Did you see him fall?” Finch studied their shocked expressions.
Two girls and two boys, standing stock-still. They all shrugged and glanced away from the
corpse. One of the boys lurched to the sidewalk curb and vomited into the gutter.
“Yeah. I did.” The blonde rubbed a hand over her mouth, her trance now broken. “Just in the last
second.”
“Do you have a phone?”
“What?” She glanced at him for the first time. Her eyes swept over his face as if she were
memorizing the features of his eyes, nose, mouth.
“To call 9-1-1.”
Her look suggested some uncertainty. Then she rummaged through a small purse that hung
from her shoulder by a chain strap.
“Here.” She offered Finch her Nokia.
He made a mental note of her number on the flash screen, then placed the call. The dispatcher
advised him that a response team would be by as soon as possible. Meanwhile, he should
remain on the line and not leave the scene. As he waited, he leaned his buttocks on the door of
a parked car, pressed his ear
to the cellphone and stared at the building. He counted fourteen stories which rose above the
Bank of America outlet on the corner of Stockton and Washington Streets. He tried to determine
how many apartments had open windows. Maybe six. His eyes swept from room to room,
scanned for fluttering curtains or someone above who might be peering back at him. Nothing.
Then he detected something unusual. Behind the curtains in an apartment on the eleventh floor
a lamp clicked on, then off. On and off. As the pattern continued Finch tried to time the periods
of each interval. Five seconds, seven, ten. Then the apartment blinked into darkness. And lit up
again.
Finch made another calculation: the intermittent flashes came from the sixth window along the
left side of the building. He guessed that each apartment had two windows facing the street.
The third apartment in from the north side on the eleventh floor had one window open, one
closed. The room behind the closed window was the source of the flashing light.
He took the phone from his ear and passed it to the blonde.
“What’s your name?
“Alice.”
“Alice?”
“Winkler,” she added.“All right, Alice. My name’s Will Finch. The 9-1-1 dispatch said someone should be here soon.
They want you to stay here and stay on the line.” He gave her a serious look. “Now I think I saw
something up there, so I’m going to see what happened.”
“Okay.” She said this as if she were making a polite concession and then held the phone to her
ear and nodded. She turned to her friends. Both were tending to the boy who’d lost his dinner.
Will walked along Washington Street past the bank and approached the glass doors that led into
the apartment building. He tugged on the handles. Both doors were locked. He stepped to the
curb and turned his attention back to Alice and her friends. Three pedestrians had come to their
aid, and then an
older couple coaxing a Shiatsu on a leash paused to provide more support. Another minute
passed, and Finch saw a couple approaching the apartment doorway from the interior elevator
bay. He stepped up to the door. When it opened, he smiled at the two women strolling past him
and said, “Thanks. I don’t
seem to have a key.”
He rode the elevator alone up to the eleventh floor and wondered if he’d counted everything
correctly. The car door opened onto a hallway illuminated by covered fluorescent ceiling lights.
The carpets bore a floral pattern of braided roses that stretched from one end of the empty
corridor to the other. As he eased toward the north side of the tower, he detected the flat odors
of fried food. Years of fried chicken and beef dinners had added their heavy flavors to the stale
air. He guessed that the building was about thirty years old. Perhaps it had once been an
impressive residential tower, but years of wear and disrepair had tarnished its pedigree.
He stepped along the passageway counting off the numbers on the street-side apartments.
1110, 1108, 1106. He approached 1104, the third door from the end of the hallway. Like all the
others, it was closed. He knocked once, twice — and again.
Nothing. He pressed an ear to the wood panel. From the apartment’s interior, he could make out
a quiet mewling. The sound of a puppy whimpering? In the distance, he heard the wail of
approaching sirens.
He hesitated for a moment and wondered what he was doing. What business is it of yours?
Good question, he decided and made a bargain with himself. He would try the door handle, and
if it were locked, he’d go back to the street and tell the emergency responders what he’d
discovered. On the other
hand, if the door were unlocked, he’d go in. He turned the handle. The door opened.

He stepped onto the beige carpet and closed the door behind him. He paused a moment to
assure himself that he was making the right move. Who could know? The apartment appeared
to have a standard one-bedroom layout. To his right stood a galley kitchen with an eating nook
that faced into the living room. On the left, a bathroom. Adjacent to the bathroom a closed door
— which Finch assumed led into the bedroom.
Directly in front of him, he could see the living room window had been pulled open. The sheer
drapes, drawn tight to the side window frames, lofted slightly in the breeze coming off the bay.
Finch sniffed the air. It smelled fresh, full of life. He heard the emergency vehicles stop on the
street as the blare
from their sirens wound down. The whimpering noise he’d heard from the corridor was
detectable again.
He walked to the open window and stood to the left of the window frame. From there he peered
onto the street. Directly below him lay the corpse, which from eleven floors up, appeared to be
little more than a sack of flattened pulp leaking a dark stream of blood that slipped toward the
curb. A crowd of
fifteen or twenty people made way for the ambulance crew. A fire truck pulled up behind the
ambulance. One of the attendants approached Alice, who still held the phone to her ear.
They began to talk and she slipped the phone into a pocket. Her friends moved to the corner
across the street. One of the boys waved to her, a gesture to let her know they were still
present, if not at her side.
The trucks left their flashers on alert. The silence surprised Finch, and for a moment he tried to
grasp the conversation of the ambulance crew as they attended to the body. He could make out
a few words, some standard commands, he guessed, but no complete sentences.
Then he heard the mewling again. He turned from the window and approached the bedroom

door.
“Hello?” He tapped the door panel with a knuckle and said, “There’s been an accident. I’m here
to check on you.”
The whimpering now turned into something more human.
A gasp of surprise.
“What? See-See, is that you?” A woman’s voice, rigid with fear.
Finch eased the door open. The bedroom was half the size of the living room. The curtains were
pulled tight across the window. With her left hand, the woman clutched the bedpost opposite the
door. Her left leg was poised on the floor as if she was about to stand. The right calf was curled
under her thigh
and resting on the bed. She wore a bra and panties. Nothing else. Her almond-blonde hair was
disheveled. It appeared as if she’d just showered but hadn’t had time to dry and brush her hair.
From where he stood Will thought that she could be leaning on the post to support herself.
“Jeez. Who are you?”
Her question came out with another whimper. Finch felt confident she was the source of the
cries he’d heard from the hall.
“Do you need some help?”
“Help?” A startled frown crossed her face, then a rising awareness that something had changed.
“Get me that key,” she demanded and shook her wrist against the bedpost. She flicked her free
hand toward the bureau in the corner.
Finch now saw the handcuff that clamped her left wrist to the post. He moved to the bureau and
examined a standard handcuff key that sat in a glass ashtray on top of the bureau. Will almost
picked up the key, then thought again. He turned to face her.
“Who busted you?”
“Busted me?” A flash of panic gripped her face. “No one busted me. This is all a setup for some
psycho with a rape fantasy.”
A stick lamp stood on the bedside table next to her. He assumed that she’d been able to reach
the light with her free hand.
“Was that you clicking the lamp on and off?”
“Yes, damn it!” Her panic shifted to exasperation. “Now get the key so we can both get out of
here before it’s too late.”
She tipped her head back toward the bureau.
“Before what?”
“Before we both get thrown out the fucking window!”
The panic in her voice sent a chill through him and he knew he had to take her seriously. At the
same time, his doubts and uncertainties multiplied. He didn’t understand what was going on.
Not half of it. But he had to make a decision. Will grabbed the key from the ashtray and
approached the woman.
“What’s your name?”
“Jojo.” She shifted her right leg off the bed.
“Jojo who?”
“Joanne Joleena. Jojo. Get it?”
“Hey, look — I don’t need the attitude.” He examined the key and the handcuff fastened to the
bedpost. It took a moment to determine how they fit together.
“All right. Just unlock me,” she pleaded with another gasp of exasperation. “Please.”
Finch unlocked the cuff from the post and took it in his left hand.
“What are you doing?”
He noticed that she had two script tattoos on her forearms. One read Forever Young. The other,
Love Now. “Where are your clothes?”
“In the bathroom.”
He locked the free cuff around his right wrist and slipped the key into the half pocket in his
jeans. “Okay, let’s get you dressed.”
“What the fu—”
“Come on.” He yanked on the cuff and pulled her toward the bathroom. “Let’s get going before
it’s too late.”


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the tour HEREfor exclusive excerpts and a giveaway!









Author: Angie

Mom, blogger, social media influencer, healthcare worker

16 thoughts on “Five Knives Book Tour & Giveaway”

  1. I like the cover since it depicts the name of the book but feel it needs a little pop of color to bring out the knives. I have no questions for the author.

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