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Babylon
Blues It’s 1994, and veteran homicide detective
John Bowers teams up with his partner
Minola Raye to solve another grisly murder
in Babylon—Portland, Oregon’s fringe
district of losers and forgotten victims. Like
hungry sharks, Babylon’s riffraff feed on the
innocent and vulnerable, and only case-hardened
cops like Bowers seek justice in a system that has no
heart.

Blue
Butterfly is the first in a series featuring Detective
John Bowers.
Tracking a call
girl's killer through Portland's sleazy sex trade, John uncovers a
police bureau prostitution ring and bags a political primetime
player with an appetite for S&M. While the cops, ME and
prosecutors touch all the bases in a job they sometimes love to
hate, the Bureau's dirty little secrets begin to unravel.
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BLUE BUTTERFLY

Critics and readers welcome a promising
new series with veteran Detective John Bowers of the Portland, Oregon,
Central Precinct Robbery-Homicide Division:
"A good, gritty novel and a promising debut of a new Northwest
series." -- Michael Breiter, Phoenix Magazine
"The window into the Portland dominatrix scene is original and
gripping. Bates combines gritty realism with three-dimensional
characters that make this a welcome addition to Northwest crime
fiction. Bates can write!" -- Peter J. Wolverton, St. Martin's
Press
"Bates brings an intriguing, intelligent voice to crime fiction. The
first in a series of police procedurals anchored in Portland, Oregon,
Blue Butterfly only whets our appetite for more." Sgt. R. Johanson,
Ret., CHP
PREVIEW:
"Minnie squatted and slipped her
hands in her pockets. Rule of thumb sizing up a homicide scene: mouth
shut, eyes and ears open and hands holstered. The first thing that
struck Minnie as she stared through her designer dark glasses was how
pale the woman was. Black moles speckled her flesh like a toad’s
belly. She wore bordello lingerie: a black satin corset with scarlet
ribbons. One shoe was on, a bright red, needle pump with a gold bow.
The knees on both black mesh stockings were shredded. The toenails
were painted with orange flame enamel. Flecks of blood peppered the
upper lip, and dried mucus plugged both nostrils. A half-open stare
reflected a frantic fight for breath. What looked like a mild measles
rash scattered in a bandit-mask pattern across the woman’s face was in
fact a sign of asphyxiation. Death had not been a sudden escape – she
had time to comprehend what was happening to her.
Minnie’s first impression was a trick gone bad. This victim had no
obvious defensive wounds so whoever had betrayed her trust had been
swift and purposeful. There were no signs of remarkable savagery on
the corpse: no cigarette burns, stab wounds, bite marks or missing
body parts – all private perversions Minnie had seen practiced on
prostitutes before, the ones thrown out in the woods to rot like
garden mulch. In the beginning, this must have been a compliant
victim.
Sergeant Raye stood up and traversed the same path back across the
parking lot to avoid unnecessary contamination of the scene. No closer
examination of the victim was possible until the ME and his team
arrived to process the body.
This was not going to be a quick collar, no easy pieces. Prostitutes
kept careless company, dangerous liaisons which were furtive,
ephemeral and anonymous thus becoming easy prey all too often. Dumpers
were the hardest cases to crack. No murder scene, few clues, no
witnesses. Not a good beginning for Minnie’s first case at Central – a
real shitcan."

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