Mark McCoy knew it was going to be a bad day, and his feeling was confirmed when he walked into his office and found his boss dead. Guess who the prime suspect is? His motive? He was about to be denied a partnership in the legal firm where he's worked for the last eight years.
Mark is on the run trying to figure out who set him up. He doesn't know who he can trust. Can't blame the guy for wondering why typing pool secretary Sheila Rainey is willing to help him. They manage to stay a step ahead of the killer and the police, while they dig up clues leading them to the killer's identity. Can they find all the pieces of the puzzle before they're caught?
Written in first person, Mahogany Row is a short, taut thriller that doesn't know how to slow down. This edge of your seat whodunit jumps from one situation to another in an effort to get the hero out of hot water. Mark may not be a criminal lawyer, but he's not half bad in putting the clues together to come up with the overall picture.
You'll meet some nasty secondary characters who'll stop at nothing to do in the hero. Other characters, located in some unsavory parts of New York, supply clues and possible motives.
If you want the answers to this thiller, you'll have to follow Mark and Sheila as they uncover the secrets of Mahogany Row.