Please welcome author Elaine Viets back to
the blog today as she shares the first chapter excerpt from her new book, The
Dead of Night. This is the latest book in her Angela Richman, Death
Investigator Mystery Series. The book comes out on Tuesday, April 4rthm from Severn House.
The Dead of Night by Elaine Viets
Chapter 1
Like
everyone who grew up in Chouteau Forest, Missouri, I knew the legend of the
Cursed Crypt. The crypt was at Chouteau Forest University, one of the oldest
academies in Missouri. The stories claimed that the restless spirit of a
professor nicknamed Mean Gene Cortini had been causing death and destruction in
the Forest for two centuries.
I’m
Angela Richman, and I learned the legend of Mean Gene and the Cursed Crypt the
same way many local teens did: around a campfire in the woods that gave the
town of Chouteau Forest its name. When I first heard the tale, I was a gawky
fifteen-year-old, the daughter of servants who worked on the Du Pres estate. I
didn’t get many invitations to mingle with the cool kids, so when I was asked
to join them, I sneaked out of the house one Saturday night to drink beer in a
secluded part of the Forest.
It
was a chilly March night, and the bare tree branches scraped together like old
bones. I hated the bitter taste of the beer, but I wanted to adore my crush,
high-school linebacker Danny Jacobs. The firelight turned Danny’s blond hair
molten gold and highlighted his six-pack – the one under his tight T-shirt.
Alas,
the only sparks that flew that night were from the crackling fire. Danny was
devoted to the glamorous head cheerleader. He told us an ancient tale of
adultery and betrayal, and we shivered in fear. All except the cheerleader, who
was snuggled in Danny’s strong arms.
Here’s
the tale, distilled from a thousand nights around local campfires:
The
Cursed Crypt was a story of love gone wrong. What started as ordinary adultery
unleashed two hundred years of plague, fire, floods and, finally, murder at
Chouteau Forest University. The school was founded in 1820. The first president,
Hiram Thaddeus Davis, was a grim, grave man with a grizzled beard and
unforgiving eyes. He promised a well-rounded education in Latin, Greek,
history, the Classics, mathematics and “moral philosophy.” Nobody knew what
that was, but it didn’t seem to matter. The school was immediately successful.
By 1822, the fledgling university was housed in a fine red-brick building and
needed another professor.
Davis
hired a brilliant scholar with a European pedigree, Eugene Franco Cortini, to
teach Latin, Greek and biology. Cortini was devastatingly handsome, with thick
black hair and sculpted features. He spoke five languages. He discovered two
new species of American wild flowers – and named both after himself.
Cortini
championed the theory of evolution long before Darwin. He wrote that Native
Americans were really the lost tribes of Israel. And he preached that monogamy
was “not a natural or healthy state for the animal kingdom.”
Cortini
demonstrated his theory by having a passionate affair with Dolly, President
Davis’s eighteen-year-old wife. Poor, balding Davis caught his curvy blonde
wife in flagrante with Cortini, running her fingers through the professor’s
thick black curls. Never mind where his hands were.
Cortini
was fired on the spot, and banished from the campus. Before he left, he cursed
the school on a dark windy night. Cortini stood in a circle of stones in front
of the school, his hair wild and his black coat flaring, and shouted over the
wind, “My Italian grandmother was a strega – a witch – and I inherited
her powers. I am a streghone, a warlock. As long as I am banished from
this school, death and disaster will fall upon it. As long as I am on the
school grounds, it shall be safe.”
President
Hiram Davis laughed while the pregnant Dolly Davis, imprisoned in her room,
wept bitter tears. After cursing the school, the romantically handsome Cortini
left for St. Louis, some forty miles east.
Two
days after Cortini left, yellow fever struck the campus, carrying off six of
its twenty students. Each month, another disaster hit the campus: lightning
destroyed the huge oak in front of the school building. Disease killed the
school’s milk cows. Chouteau Forest Creek flooded the fields where the school
grew its crops.
Each
time, President Davis dismissed these occurrences as unfortunate events and
proudly declared that he “refused to give in to superstition.” He was a man of
reason – until a fire broke out in the stables and killed his favorite black
stallion.
That’s
when President Davis invited Eugene Cortini to return to the campus. Cortini
could no longer teach, but he was given a brick house to live in and conduct
his research. The school flourished for seven years, and expanded to two
buildings and a new dormitory.
Then
Cortini died suddenly at age thirty-seven in 1845.
President
Hiram Davis was taking no chances. He decreed that Cortini must be buried on
campus, but he didn’t want the man’s grave on display. Cortini was buried in a
crypt under the steps of the Main Building. His final resting place was hidden
by a heavy iron door, but Cortini wasn’t forgotten. Students and staff
whispered about the late Eugene Cortini, and noticed that Hiram Davis’s oldest
son had thick black hair. Both his parents were blond.
Shortly
after Cortini was in his crypt, President Davis died. But his school lived on,
and so did the legend of Mean Gene Cortini. Every seven years, a disaster
struck the school. The school tried to placate Cortini’s restless spirit by
lining his crypt with marble. In 1857, a Victorian administration added a
marble divan with a tasseled marble pillow, guarded by two weeping angels. A
marble slab on the wall proclaimed the tomb was “Sacred to the memory of Eugene
Franco Cortini, scholar, teacher, and researcher.”
These
improvements didn’t work. The seven-year disaster cycle continued. While the
school prospered, the legend lingered like a cloud over the campus.
More
than a hundred years later, Chouteau Forest’s crafty one percent figured out
how to make money out of the ancient tragedy. In the 1980s, the University
Benefactors’ Club started auctioning off “A Night in Mean Gene’s Cursed Crypt.”
The
money went to benefit Chouteau Forest University, which soon had a fat
endowment.
The
prize was a big one: if any auction winner could stay the full night in the
Cursed Crypt, they would be granted membership in the elite Chouteau Founders
Club, which ran the Forest. The winners’ future in the Forest would be
guaranteed.
So
far, only one person had stayed the night in the gloomy crypt.
I
was forty-one now, long past drinking beer while listening to ghost stories. I
worked for the Chouteau County Medical Examiner’s office as a death
investigator. That meant I was in charge of the body at the scene of a murder,
an accident or an unexplained death. It had been more than a quarter of a
century since I’d first heard the legend of Cursed Crypt in the night-struck
woods, and I didn’t believe a word of it.
Until
I saw the bodies.
Elaine Viets has written 34 bestselling
mysteries in four series: hard-boiled Francesca Vierling, traditional Dead-End
Job, and the cozy Josie Marcus Mystery Shopper novels. With her Angela Richman,
Death Investigator forensic mysteries, Elaine returned to her hard-boiled
roots. The Dead of Night is her newest Angela Richman mystery.
Elaine’s Deal with the Devil and 13
Short Stories was published by Crippen & Landru. She's been
toastmaster and guest of honor at the Malice Domestic Mystery Conference.
Elaine’s won the Agatha, Anthony and Lefty Awards and was shortlisted for the
International Thriller Writers Award for best short story. www.elaineviets.com
2 comments:
Congratulations, Elaine. This is an intriguing first chapter. Wishing you much success with your new novel.
What an great opening to a mystery. Thanks for hosting Elaine, Kevin.
Maryann
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