Welcome to my stop on the virtual book tour for Dungeon Of Horrors organized by Goddess Fish Promotions.
A randomly drawn winner will receive a $20 Amazon or B&N Gift Card. Don’t forget to enter.
And you can click on the tour banner to see the other stops on the tour.
Dungeon Of Horrors
by Hawk MacKinney
Genre: Suspense / Horror
Synopsis
The bank’s newest Trust Officer Terri Stanley prepares the requested department’s internal audit. Finding puzzling inconsistencies and a jumble of misappropriations and unexplained offshore accounts, she follows protocol and immediately punches in the listed number for the Executor-Trustee, Craige Ingram.
Wealthy land owner/parttime PI Craige Ingram reaches the file back to homicide Lt. Grayson MacGerald after finishing a quick read-through of the preliminary forensic report from Coroner Fred Dinkins on the unexpected death of bank President Royce Sedgewicke. Dinkins’ meticulous autopsy findings verify that a massive apparent heart attack was not from natural causes, confirming what these longtime SEAL buddies suspected.
When Ingram gets a call from Terri Stanley, the bank’s attractive, newly-hired Trust Officer, wanting to discuss in confidence possible account irregularities discovered during her audit, he never imagines the twisted world of money and greed that would involve a psychopath’s trail of bloody body parts strewn along Ingram’s river property, or that Terri and her son would disappear.
Confronted by a race against time, Ingram fears that Terri might become one more on the list of dead who crossed a twisted mind bent on thrill-kills and retribution.
Enjoy this peek inside:
A testy Barry Jamison Peters sat at his desk in the bank, nervously folding and refolding a once immaculate handkerchief. At forty-two, Barry looked haggard way beyond his years—the prep school and college gridiron hunk with a perpetual chip on his shoulder long gone to flabby chunkiness, a once pleasant face now drawn. Like he’d done all his life, he waited, listening as the workday ended. The ebony-glass high rise became still and quiet as the five o’clock hired help scurried to the suburban parkway. Breaking routine attracted attention, and he sure didn’t want that.
Math whiz nerd Barry liked numbers. “You can trust numbers,” he once told a new teller. Barry didn’t mind working late; the solitude was warm and familiar. He glanced at his Carrara marble clock that graced his orderly desk. “Thirty more minutes,” he murmured.
At breakfast that morning, he played with a slice of dry scorched toast. His puffy eyes in a sagging face buried in the morning paper hardly glanced in the direction of his frumpy wife when he said, “I have to work late again.”
She tugged at the waist of her soiled sloppy nightgown. In more ways than looks, she matched him dull for dull. “What’s so different?” she said grumpily. “When you’re around, we never talk.”
In that moment his look glittered into the hate-side of disgust. She’d served him divorce papers three times, stopping when her checking account bottomed out. She never paid any of her lawyers, and the last one lost the papers in the bank’s parking deck where the idle-talk crowd found them.
At the half hour, on the mark, Barry took the elevator to the main floor. His steps quickened through the red marble foyer with its malachite green columns and tall, ornate clock beneath the enormous oil painting of the Steamship Company’s first steam locomotive. The duplicate master keys seared his sweaty palm. He unlocked the steel-barred grill into the safety deposit vault, inserted both slender keys and turned them at the same time. He pulled out the long, flat box, raised the lid, pocketed the small velvet satchel from inside, replaced the box, removed the keys and made sure the grill locked behind him. His heart drubbed faster… anxious to get to Royce’s secret place and the vintage collection of Cabernets in the cellar beneath the street. He took the elevator to the fourth floor, then the parking garage connector and the fire stairs down to the street. He scuttled across McIntosh, turned down the narrow alley with its unused railroad siding, brushed beneath the tangle of overgrown Woodbine Creeper and slipped the new key into his new lock. Once inside, he made sure the door locked behind him. The stale, dank air closed in around him. He was safe. No one could find him there.
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About Author Hawk MacKinney:
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Internationally acclaimed author and public speaker, Hawk MacKinney began writing mysteries for his school newspapers. Following graduation, he served in the US Navy for over 20 years. While serving as a Navy Commander, he also had a career as a full-time faculty member at several major state medical facilities. He earned two postgraduate degrees with studies in languages and history and has taught postgraduate courses in both the United States and Jerusalem, Israel.
In addition to professional articles and texts on fetal and adult anatomy, Hawk has authored several novels that have received national and international recognition. Moccasin Trace, a historical novel, was nominated for the prestigious Michael Shaara Award for Excellence in Civil War Fiction and the Writers Notes Book Award.
Known for his terrifying suspense and unique “Southron” dialog, Hawk has published five novels in the Moccasin Hollow Mysteries: Hidden Chamber of Death, Westobou Gold, Curse of the Ancients, Dead Gold, and Blood of the Dragonfly.
In a change of direction, Hawk has also published three books in The Cairns of Sainctuarie science fiction series: The Bleikovat Event, Volume I; The Missing Planets, Volume II; and The Inanna Phantom, Volume III.
His latest work is a series called the Moccasin Trace Mysteries. Dungeon of Horrors is the first book in the series, and the second book – Blood in the Shadows – is in development.
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Sounds like Dungeon of Horrors would keep me on the edge of my seat.. and maybe up at night! Can’t wait to get a copy.
Chelsea B – At times the writing set this writing to taking a break—one writes from truth & calls it fiction. Thank U for leaving a comment.
Hawk MacKinney
http://www.hawkmackinneyauthor.com
This promises to be dark and disturbed. I am curious.
Mary PRESTON – Good morning Mary P. Thank U for posting…always a pleasure to see you following. Am not sure which comes first dark &/or disturbed. In lethal situations it’s a chicken or the egg toss up, & the dark can have the daily illusion(s) of being absolutely a pillar of one’s community. It gets sort of creepy, i.e. curious, when one writes about from what one has lived with.
Hawk MacKinney
http://www.hawkmackinneyauthor.com
FUONLYKNEW – Thank you for following & hosting the Moccasin Trace Mystery, Dungeon of Horrors…& for the comments your follows submit. It’s real pleasure to have back-&-forth(s) with them…much appreciated.
Hawk MacKinney
http://www.hawkmackinneyauthor.com
We appreciate you featuring DUNGEON OF HORRORS today – thank you.
An intriguing and fascinating series which would be enthralling.
ANNE – Here’s hoping the tale told bewitches & enthralls through twists of intrigue.
Hawk MacK
http://www.hawkmackinneyauthor.com
This sounds like a really good horror story.
MARCYMEYER – There’s plenty horror for any reader.
Hawk MacK
Sounds like a book I will enjoy.
Rita WRAY – Wishing U the best on the lottery.
Hawk MacKinney ‘s wide and extensive professional and life experiences are sure to enrich his writing!
Nancy
allibrary (at) aol (dot) com
allibrarycefdb51301 – My travels & education(s) contributes to every setting & character(s) written. This writer loves letting his characters develop their own personality & plot(s)…TO A POINT. One never lets characters drive the tale but the unexpected is fun. Write the last chapter first.
My husband and I both read Hawk MacKinney’s books. Whoever buys the book first, gets to read it first.
THE STEWARTs-Audrey&husband – The various ways my readers approach/read my books is more important to me than any royalties. You two sharing my titles WITH one another is one of those many ways that make for treasured memories. Thank U for sharing…
Hawk MacK
http://www.hawkmackinneyauthor.com
this sounds like a thrilling book to read
Wendy HUTTON –…hopefully your read as much fun as the writin’…thank U for dropping by, commenting.
Hawk MacK
Suspense / Horror – with this genre, sure to be an interesting read!
Thank you for sharing it.
Barbara Montag
jalapenomamamn/Barbara MONTAG – Mixing a blend into genres is great fun in telling the tale…you’re welcome to the sharing.
Hawk MacK
http://www.hawkmackinneyauthor.com
Sounds like a great horror story.
lisavance – A mystery with a bit of madness…enjoy…
I like the cover and peek inside. Thanks for sharing!
susan12151962 – The graphic artist did a great job catching the mood.
Sounds like a genius idea for a horror book.
David HOLLINGSWORTH – Genius or not, horror has its place no matter what map one is in/on.
Hawk MacK
http://www.hawkmackinneyauthor.com
Hope it does awesome!
sportsrockman – thank U.
This sounds like a really good read.
Debbie P – Enjoy the read.
I enjoyed the synopsis. Thanks for the giveaway!
Debodrah WELLENSTEIN – The editors did a great job on the synop—I like it as well.
This sounds like a really interesting suspense read! Thanks so much for sharing it.
K – Cross & double-cross—games for amateurs who most always screw up.
Sounds great! Thanks for sharing
lisavance – Thanx for commenting.
Is it hard to think of names for your characters?
Barbara Montag
jalapenomamamn/Barbara MONTAG – Not at all. Names might be changed for miscellaneous reasons that had little to do with plots.
love a good suspense/thriller
Wendy HUTTON – enjoy the read.
looks like a fun one
Daniel M – Was a fun write
I hope you have a nice Thursdayu.
Deborah WELLENSTEIN – It already is.
The synopsis is interesting. Thank you for sharing it.
Cynthia CONLEY – I would like to claim doing the synopsis but I didn’t. I liked it as well.
Hawk MacKinney
http://www.hawkmackinneyauthor.com
I think is is interesting that Hawk MacKinney writes in several different genres!
Nancy
allibrary (at) aol (dot) com
Nancy – I work in 3-4 manuscripts at the same time—each in different genre. keeps me on my toes with different vocabs/mannerisms/plots, i.e.one can’t do a Queen Elizabeth I when dealing with that period. There wasn’t but one. It’s historically erroneous & shows a lack of attention. Can’t take a nap while writing. Thanx for the comment—it’s a detail but one a professional won’t overlook. Just one of my major studies at Cambridge.
Hawk MacKinney
http://www.hawkmackinneyauthor.com
This sounds like an interesting book and I also like the cover.
Ann FANTUM – Cover is nice; hope U like the read.
Do you prefer paperback or hardcover books?
David HOLLINGSWORSTH – Either one as long it’s a book in my hand.
Do you have a certain writing schedule?
Barbara Montag
jalapenomamamn/Barbara MONTAG – Yes. Timer-schedule so not to sit at a desk/keyboard. Early 430; 945am; noon break; afternoon 245pm; snack-time 6pm to 7pm-ish; catch-up items on my to-do lists.
thanks again for the giveaway and best wishes with your book
Wendy HUTTON – Thank U.