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Authors: Robert W. Walker

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“Then you have him dead to rights! Congratulations! Now release me the bloody hell out of here!”

“Ransom's the one figured it out; he's the mastermind behind the arrest.”

“And Rance, is he shot like Denton said?”

“Wounded 'bout here and here.” He indicated entry and exit wounds on his own body.

“But he's been spared his life?”

“So far.”

“Thank God! Where is he?”

“Cook County Hospital. It'd be the morgue but for his cane—or so said the midwife who patched him up.”

“Midwife?”

“Tewes's sister Jane.”

“Sister? Look, how so, his cane?”

“I found the cane splintered by the bullet from a Sharps .44, I'm afraid. Could've done a hell of a lot more damage had the bullet not been deflected by the bone handle of Ransom's cane.”

“The wolf's-head cane. I give it to him years ago. Carries it everywhere…” mused Philo. “That is a wonder indeed.”

“Surgeon Fenger is working on Rance as we speak, and from accounts I got over the phone, well…only time'll tell if eternity wants the big man or no.”

“I gotta get over there. You've got my word, Drimmer. Release me just until I can be sure Rance is all right, and I promise I'll return.”

Drimmer's mind raced with what Kohler might do to him in the event he should honor such a deal without either authority or formal paperwork.

“Com'on, man! What's there to think about?” pressed Philo.

“This isn't a Sunday school we're running here. You think for one moment Kohler'd just let you step outta that cell on a
promise
you'll come waltzing back?”

Philo raised both hands to the bars. “Despite all the evil that's passed through these hands, I am a man of my word.”

“Bedrock honest, heh?” Griffin half joked. He then stared into Philo's eyes. “One bloody hour, and you're back, do you understand? No one's to detain you.”


Deal
and thank you, Griff.”

Griffin signaled the bored turnkey to let the prisoner out. The Bridewell cage door swung wide and Philo made a dramatic exit, sucking in the air of freedom on the other side of the bars.

“Find a phone and call me here at the station every fifteen minutes. I want to know your whereabouts at all times, Keane.”

“Bullshit, you want to know how Alastair is faring under the knife.”

“Dr. Fenger's the best in the city.”

“The state.”

“Perhaps the country.”

“Touché!”

“Leave out the basement rear, this way. And call in like I said.”

“You've my word, and again, thank you.”

“Just don't make a mess of it, Philo. Don't make me come searching for you at Muldoon's or—”

“I've not had a drink in forty-eight hours.”

“Then bloody come back here, and I'll see to it you have your drink, but you cannot go running about the city.”

“As Oscar Wilde says, ‘I can resist everything save temptation.'”

“God, I know I'm going to regret this! Don't be a sot, man! You could be the best photographer in Chicago, the top of your chosen profession—”

“Art, my friend. It is art.”

“I know nothing about that, but if you applied yourself a sober man set on a goal, what with your talent, and your contracts with Montgomery Ward and all—”

“What contracts? We never had nothing in writing, Trelaine and I.”

“Ohhh…mistake.”

“Besides, they're not likely to hire a former ‘felon' even if innocent, not since the papers carried on how I murdered all those women, and their own account executive!”

“Well look, for the moment, we've…we've got Ransom near dead, so think of someone other than your bloody self, heh?”

“Aye…you're cut of good cloth after all, Griff. I'll ne'er forget this kindness.”

Griffin pushed him out the basement door. “Just go and try to be inconspicuous.”

“Yes, yes, of course!” Philo was off, a bounce in his step that Griffin had never seen before, like a man who'd just been satisfied by a woman, but this had to do with freedom.
Given a taste of it, would the man be capable of honoring his bargain? Griff doubted it, and in the back of his mind began to plot where he'd have to hide when Kohler learned of this “early release program” instituted by a second-rank inspector. Then it dawned on him how to handle it no matter what. Claim it by order of Inspector Alastair Ransom, his last order before passing out, and quite possibly a man's dying wish. Pass the bloody buck to a man near death.

 

The wound sustained by Ransom proved a nasty one. The entry point the size of a silver dollar, and the exit wound a gaping fist-sized explosion of flesh and tissue. If Dr. Christian Fenger couldn't keep Ransom alive, no one could; if Fenger
could
save him, it'd be a testament to genius and skill.

Either way, it remained the will of their unknowable God.

How was one to know, Jane wondered as she watched, fascinated, at Fenger's side in the operating theater, dressed as Dr. James Francis Tewes. What was most excruciating was the interminable waiting—filling Jane with grief and pain. Jane realized how much she'd learned from Alastair, and just how much he meant to her after all.

Perhaps and hopefully, the Almighty had yet to finish with Ransom
, Jane thought while watching the surgeon's scalpel flit over his flesh.
But then again, perhaps God was absolutely done molding this man.

Surgeon Fenger's work was that of an artist. Jane became mesmerized, focusing on the surgery. A voice in her head kept repeating the prayer:
Save him, save him for me, Christian
.

Another voice in her head answered: Ransom's fate lies in the hands of his Maker, not Christian. Still, it seemed a tug-o-war between God and surgeon.

In which case, Jane Francis feared that Ransom's life ended here.

A novel like
City for Ransom
does not get written in a vacuum so much as a mineshaft. Thanks to an array of authors ahead of me, authors whose fascination with Chicago created a rich vein for a storyteller like myself to mine,
City for Ransom
, and its Dickensian ala Conan Doyle characterizations, came into being. My first novel, penned while I was a sophomore and junior in high school in Chicago, required research if I were to convey the inner workings of the famous Underground Railroad through the eyes of a fourteen-year-old Missouri boy (
Daniel & The Wrongway Railway
, 1982). Since then, all forty-two novels I've seen through to publication have conveyed research, whether police procedurals, suspense, young adult, even horror titles. To create
City for Ransom
and its sequels (
Vengeance for Ransom, Innocence for Ransom
, and hopefully more) the author was led to the “Mother Lode” by Mr. Kenan Heise, author, historian,
Tribune
reporter, and owner of the sadly closed bookstore, the Chicago Book Exchange. Mr. Heise, who gave assistance to my hero, John Jakes, when Jakes needed to dig into Chicago history, told me where to sink my pickaxe for the best titles on Chicago during the years I wished to write about—Detective Alastair Ransom's gaslight Chicago. The following $300 worth of books are by authors I must ac
knowledge, most of which were sold to me by Mr. Heise, as most—like all great books—are out of print:

Medicine in Chicago 1850–1950
by Thomas Neville Bonner;
Reminiscences of Chicago During the Civil War
, Citadel Books,
Chicago
by Finis Farr;
The Gangs of Chicago
by Herbert Asbury;
Gem of the Prairie
by Herbert Asbury;
Chicago
by Stephen Longstreet;
Wicked City
by Curt Johnson with R. Craig Sautter;
Chicago
by Lloyd Lewis and Henry Justin Smith;
Chicago Ragtime
by Richard Lindberg,
Crime in Chicago
by Richard Lindberg;
German Chicago
by Raymond Lohne;
The Chicagoization of America
by Kenan Heise;
The Journey of Silas P. Bigelow
by Kenan Heise; and
Perfect Cities—Chicago Utopias
by James Gilbert,

Other titles I stumbled on and devoured for my understanding of the city where I grew up include
The Pinkertons
:
The Detective Agency that Made History
by James Horan;
The Real World of Sherlock Holmes
by Peter Costello;
Chicago Then and Now
by Elizabeth McNulty;
Graveyards of Chicago
by Matt Hucke and Ursula Bielski;
Chicago's Famous Buildings
by Franz Schutze and Kevin Harrington;
Chicago—A Pictorial History by Herman Kogan and Lloyd Wendt; Elmer McCurdy—The Misadventures in Life and Afterlife of an American Outlaw
by Mark Svenold;
Forever Open, Clear and Free
by Lois Wille;
Central Michigan Avenue
by Ellen Christensen;
Man and the Beast Within
by Benjamin Walker, and
America
by Alastair Cooke.

However, the book that sparked the initial idea for
City for Ransom
goes way back to the 80s for me (it's been percolating for a long time). This title Dean R. Koontz insisted I read: Jurgen Thorwald's
Century of the Detective
. Even then Inspector Alastair Ransom was roaming about inside my head looking for a way out while I spent decades with Jessica Coran in my popular Instinct Series and Lucas Stonecoat in my Edge Series.

Thanks also to the wonderful team at Avon/HarperCollins, especially copyeditor and detail-conscious Patrice
Silverstein; May Chen, who handled me with grace; and brave young editor Lyssa Keusch, who proved the only person in all the publishing world to see the potential of the rough, early stages of
City
, and without whom Ransom would never have found his way out of this author's mineshaft (head), so that now this “gem of the prairie” named Alastair has finally come into the gaslight, proudly riding in a hansom cab, his scrimshaw wolf's-head cane tapping to the beat of hooves.

About the Author

ROBERT W. WALKER
Master of suspense and bone-chilling terror, Robert W. Walker, a graduate of Northwestern University, has penned forty-two novels and has taught language and writing for over twenty-five years. Having grown up in the Windy City and having been born in the shadow of Shiloh Battlefield, near Corinth, Mississippi, Robert has two writing traditions to uphold—the Chicago one and the Southern one—all of which makes him uniquely suited to write
City for Ransom
and its sequels, which he is currently working on.

Rob has written in many genres, including historical, mystery, YA, and horror under four frightful personalities. Walker saw
Final Edge, Grave Instinct,
and
Absolute Instinct
published in 2004. The author lives in Chicago where, between books, he enjoys all that the city has to offer. You're invited to write Rob at
www.RobertWWalker.com

Visit www.AuthorTracker.com for exclusive information on your favorite HarperCollins author.

Advance
Praise
for
CITY FOR RANSOM

“Walker's masterful prose cuts like a garrote, transporting us with panache and style into an historical thriller with teeth. Ransom's the best new hero in period fiction.”

JA Konrath, author of
Whiskey Sour & Bloody Mary

“Walker's taken on Caleb Carr's territory, with a superb haunted protagonist with a graveyard on his back. Ransom your soul for this one; it's that mesmerizing.”

Ken Bruen, Macavity Award Winner for
The Killing of the Tinkers

“Gut-wrenchingly suspenseful, luridly atmospheric, and utterly plausible, Walker's creation is a brilliant mix of Conan Doyle, Erik Larson, and Wes Craven. You'll be shocked, stunned, beaten to hell, and riveted to the peerless quality of this page-turner.”

Jay Bonansinga, author of
Frozen
and
The Sinking of Eastland


City
is crime noir at its finest.”

David Ellis, Edgar
®
Winner, author of
In the Company of Liars


City
is…deep, surprising…vivid and passionate.”

Barbara D'Amato, author of
Death of a Thousand Cats

“Inspector Alastair Ransom's Chicago is brutal and violent, cloaking mysteries and intrigues in a facade of propriety as spectral and illusory as the grand and gleaming buildings of the vanished ‘White City.'”

Richard Lindberg, author of
Chicago by Gaslight: A History of Chicago's Netherworld, 1880–1920

This book is a work of fiction. The characters, incidents, and dialogue are drawn from the author's imagination and are not to be construed as real. Any resemblance to actual events or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.

CITY FOR RANSOM
. Copyright © 2006 by Robert W. Walker. All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. By payment of the required fees, you have been granted the non-exclusive, non-transferable right to access and read the text of this e-book on-screen. No part of this text may be reproduced, transmitted, down-loaded, decompiled, reverse engineered, or stored in or introduced into any information storage and retrieval system, in any form or by any means, whether electronic or mechanical, now known or hereinafter invented, without the express written permission of HarperCollins e-books.

EPub © Edition NOVEMBER 2008 ISBN: 9780061979361

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