Down Among the Dead Men

“What'll it be today? A knotty puzzle mystery? A fast-paced police procedural? Something more high-toned, with a bit of wit? With the British author Peter Lovesey, there's no need to make those agonizing decisions, because his books have it all.” —The New York Times Book Review

In a Sussex town on the south coast of England, a widely disliked art teacher at a posh private girls’ school disappears without explanation. None of her students miss her boring lessons, especially since her replacement is a devilishly hunky male teacher with a fancy car. But then her name shows up on a police missing persons list. What happened to Miss Gibbon, and why does no one seem to care?

Peter Diamond has been sent to Sussex on a Home Office internal investigation to look into breach of conduct by a fellow police officer—a failure to process DNA evidence related to a cold case. As he asks questions, he begins to notice unsettling connections between the cold case and the missing art teacher. Could the two mysteries be connected? How many other area disappearances have gone unnoticed and uninvestigated? Diamond and his hapless supervisor have stumbled into a web of related crimes. Will Diamond be able to disentangle them?
1

“Are you sure this thing works?” Danny asked Mr. Singh, the gizmo man.
     “You want demonstration?”
    “I’d be a mug if I didn’t.”
    “No problem. Where did you leave car?”
    “A little way up the street.”
    “What make?”
    “It’s the old white Merc by the lamppost.”
    “Locking is remote, right?”
    Danny dipped his hand in his pocket, opened his palm and showed the key fob with its push button controls.
    “Very good,” Mr. Singh said. “We can test. Go to car and let yourself in. Step out, lock up and walk back here. I am waiting on street with gizmo.”
    Danny was alert for trickery. He wasn’t parting with sixty-odd pounds for a useless lump of plastic and metal. But if it really did work, he could be quids in. Thousands.
    The gizmo, as Mr. Singh called it, looked pretty basic in construction, a pocket-sized black box with two retractable antennas fitted to one end.
    No money had changed hands yet, so the guy had nothing to gain by doing a runner. Danny stepped out of the little coffee shop and did exactly as suggested. Walked to
the Mercedes, unlocked, got in, closed the door, opened it again, stepped out, locked, using the smart key, and walked back to where Mr. Singh was standing outside the shop with the gizmo in his hands.
    “You locked it, right?”
    “Sure did,” Danny said.
    “Where is key?”
    “Back in my pocket.”
    “Excellent. Leave it there. Now go to car and try door.”
    Danny had walked only a few steps when he saw that the lock pins were showing. Just as promised, the car was unlocked.
    He was impressed. To be certain, he opened the door he’d apparently locked a moment ago.
    “Good job, eh?” Mr. Singh said when Danny went back to him.
    “Nice one. Who makes these things?”
    “Made in China.”
    “Wouldn’t you know it?”
    “Simple to operate. You want to buy?”
    “How does it work?”
    “Okay. You know how key fob works?”
    “Using a radio signal.”
    “Right. Sending signal from fob to car. Programmed to connect with your car and no other. But this gizmo is signal jammer. Breaks frequency. You think you lock up, but I zap you with this.”
    “Let me see.”
    Danny held the thing and turned it over. “All I have to do is press this?”
    “Correct. All about timing. You are catching exact moment when driver is pointing fob at car.”
    “Hang on. There’s always a sound when the locks engage. And the lights flick on and off. If that doesn’t happen, the driver will notice.”
    “Did you notice?”
    Danny hesitated. “There was traffic noise and I was thinking of other things.”
    “So?” Mr. Singh flashed his teeth.
    “In a quiet place the driver would notice.”
    “Don’t use in quiet place. Street is better, street with much traffic.”
    Danny turned the jammer over and looked at the other side, speculating. “How much are you asking?”
    “Seventy, battery included.”
    He made a sound as if he’d been burnt. “Seventy is more than I thought.”
    “Fully effective up to fifty metres.”
    Danny handed it back. “I don’t suppose it works with the latest models.”
    “Now I am being honest. Very new cars, possibly no. Manufacturers getting wise. Any car up to last year is good. That gives plenty choice. To you, special offer, not to be repeated. Sixty-five.”
    Danny took a wad from his back pocket, peeled off three twenties and held them out.
    Mr. Singh sighed, took the money and handed over the jammer.
    “Before you go,” Danny said. “There’s something else. This gets me into the car, but it doesn’t let me drive it away. I was told you have another little beauty for that.”
    Mr. Singh’s eyes lit up again. “Programmer. Which make? BMW, Mercedes, Audi?”
    “I need a different one for each make, do I? How much will it cost me?”
    “Two hundred. Maybe two fifty.”
    Danny whistled. This was getting to be a larger investment than he planned, but he thought about the top-class cars he could steal. “Let’s say the Bimmer.”
    “BMW three or five series I can do for two hundred.”
    “Is it difficult to operate?”
    “Dead easy. All cars now have diagnostic connector port. You plug in and programmer reads key code.”
    “Then what?”
    “Code is transferred from car’s computer to microchip in new key. You get five blank keys gratis as well.”
    “So I can drive off using the new key? Have you tried this yourself?”
    “No, no, no, I am supplier only. Supplying is lawful. Driving off with some person’s car is not.”
    “But you can show me how the thing works?”
    “You come back with two hundred cash this time tomorrow and for you as special customer I am supplying and demonstrating BMW three series programmer.”


Next afternoon special customer Danny drove away from Brighton with the programmer and the pride of a man at the cutting edge of the electronic revolution. In his youth he’d used a wire coat hanger to get into cars. He’d graduated to a slim Jim strip and then a whole collection of lock-picking tools. But the days of hotwiring the ignition were long gone. In recent years anti-theft technology had become so sophisticated that he’d been reduced to touring car parks looking for vehicles left unlocked by their stupid owners. For a man once known as Driveaway Danny it had become humiliating. The Mercedes he was driving was twelve years old. He’d liberated it in July from some idiot in Bognor who’d left it on his driveway with the key in the ignition.
    Everything was about to change.
    He would shortly be driving a BMW 3 series.


It wasn’t easy to nail one. For more than a week he patrolled the streets of the south coast town of Littlehampton (which isn’t known for executive cars) with his two gizmos in a Tesco carrier bag. The new technology called for a whole new mindset. He wasn’t on the lookout for a parked car, but one that happened to drive up while he was watching. He’d need to make a snap decision when the chance came. If the chance came.

Late Sunday evening it did. After a day of no success he was consoling himself with a real ale at his local, the Steam Packet, near the red footbridge over the River Arun. He lived in a one-bedroom flat a few hundred yards away and liked to wind down here at the end of a long day. The pub was said to have existed since 1840, trading under a different name, because the cross-channel ferry that departed from there hadn’t come into service until 1863. Welcome Aboard the Steam Packet, announced the large wooden board attached to the front with a profile of a paddle steamer—and in case the maritime message was overlooked, the north side of the pub had a ship’s figurehead of a topless blonde (in the best possible taste, with strategically dangling curls) projecting from the wall. With a little imagination when seated in the terrace at the back overlooking River Road and the Arun you could believe yourself afloat. This was a favourite spot of Danny’s, nicely placed for seeing spectacular sunsets or watching small boats chugging back from sea trips. But at this moment, alone in the half-light at one of the benches around 9:30 on a September evening, his thoughts were not about sea trips or sunsets. He’d just decided he’d wasted his money on Mr. Singh’s gizmos. How ironic then that this was the moment when a silver BMW drove up and came to a halt in the parking space across the street.
Crime Writers' Association Diamond Dagger for Lifetime Achievement Recipient
Mystery Writers of America 2018 Grandmaster

Praise for Down Among the Dead Men 


A New York Times Best Crime Novel of 2015
July 2015 IndieNext Selection


"What’ll it be today? A knotty puzzle mystery? A fast-paced police procedural? Something more high-toned, with a bit of wit? With the British author Peter Lovesey, there’s no need to make those agonizing decisions, because his books have it all."
—The New York Times Book Review

"[A] strikingly classy whodunit."
—Morning Star

"[Lovesey is] a nimble standard-bearer for the whodunit tradition that goes back to the Golden Age of detective fiction . . . a cunning logic puzzle, a devilishly inspired bit of story crafting."
—Richmond Times-Dispatch

"Lovesey takes seemingly incongruous story lines and ties them tidily together."
—Dayton Daily News 

"Lovesey not only spins a satisfying whodunit—there’s a contemporary case as a subplot, too—but continues to develop the complicated, intriguing relationship between Diamond and his boss, Assistant Chief Constable Georgina Dallymore."
—The Strand Magazine

"One of Lovesey's finest."
—Mystery Scene

“Lovesey’s plotting is smart, his style engaging and drily funny.”
Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine

"Lovesey is a masterful plotter, and that alone would earn him praise and fans, but his characters are memorable, and Diamond is a glittering gem among them. In addition to those strengths Lovesey adds wit, humor, and finely structured prose."
—Alfred Hitchcock Mystery Magazine

"Peter Lovesey’s Down Among the Dead Men gives us Diamond at his best."
—Open Letters Monthly

"This is the kind of clever, densely packed puzzle we don’t see much of these days. It’s engrossing, well-written and original."
—The Buffalo News

"Peter Lovesey is a marvel. If you love or even like mysteries, he needs to be at the top of your must-read list."
—Bookreporter

"Lovesey is in top form in Down Among the Dead Men . . . A fascinating read. Great plotting and exciting action."
—Fresh Fiction 

"Peter Lovesey is back with a winner . . . When you finish reading Down Among the Dead Men, you'll have a smile on your face, knowing that you've just been given a lesson in deduction by a master."
—Kittling Books

"[A] novel of engaging prose, intriguing and credible plot, and believable characters with a likable lead. In Down Among the Dead Men, Lovesey delivers a fine read."
—New York Journal of Books

“Diamond is a wonderfully rounded character whose lines are witty and whose observations about people’s characters and motives are brilliantly insightful. Vintage Diamond mystery, spiced by his comic encounters with his supervisor: a must for devotees of character-driven British crime fiction.”
Booklist, Starred Review

"Dallymore and Diamond illustrate that good cops and intriguing mysteries can go together. Ideal for those who prefer cerebral rather than graphic whodunits."
—Library Journal

Praise for the Peter Diamond Series

“Peter Diamond is impatient, belligerent, cunning, insightful, foul, laugh-out-loud funny . . . A superb series.”
—Louise Penny
 
“I’m jealous of everyone discovering Lovesey and Diamond for the first time—you have a wonderful backlist to catch up on. Me, all I can do is wait for the next book.”
—Sara Paretsky
 
“What'll it be today? A knotty puzzle mystery? A fast-paced police procedural? Something more high-toned, with a bit of wit? With the British author Peter Lovesey, there's no need to make those agonizing decisions, because his books have it all.”
—The New York Times Book Review
 
“Mr. Lovesey's narrative is swift, but he takes time out for local color and abundant humor, the latter springing from the book's quirky characters . . . Lovesey is a wizard at mixing character-driven comedy with realistic-to-grim suspense. And in a writing career spanning four decades, he has created a stylish and varied body of work.”
The Wall Street Journal
 
“Next to Jane Austen, Peter Lovesey is the writer the tourist board of Bath, England, extols most proudly . . . The enduring draw of the Peter Diamond books derives both from the beguiling Bath cityscape and the brusque character of Diamond himself.”
—NPR
Peter Lovesey is the author of more than thirty highly praised mystery novels, including the Peter Diamond Investigations and the Sergeant Cribb Investigations. He has been awarded the CWA Gold and Silver Daggers, the Cartier Diamond Dagger for Lifetime Achievement, the Strand Magazine Award for Lifetime Achievement, the Macavity, Barry, and Anthony Awards, and many other honors. He lives in West Sussex, England. View titles by Peter Lovesey

About

“What'll it be today? A knotty puzzle mystery? A fast-paced police procedural? Something more high-toned, with a bit of wit? With the British author Peter Lovesey, there's no need to make those agonizing decisions, because his books have it all.” —The New York Times Book Review

In a Sussex town on the south coast of England, a widely disliked art teacher at a posh private girls’ school disappears without explanation. None of her students miss her boring lessons, especially since her replacement is a devilishly hunky male teacher with a fancy car. But then her name shows up on a police missing persons list. What happened to Miss Gibbon, and why does no one seem to care?

Peter Diamond has been sent to Sussex on a Home Office internal investigation to look into breach of conduct by a fellow police officer—a failure to process DNA evidence related to a cold case. As he asks questions, he begins to notice unsettling connections between the cold case and the missing art teacher. Could the two mysteries be connected? How many other area disappearances have gone unnoticed and uninvestigated? Diamond and his hapless supervisor have stumbled into a web of related crimes. Will Diamond be able to disentangle them?

Excerpt

1

“Are you sure this thing works?” Danny asked Mr. Singh, the gizmo man.
     “You want demonstration?”
    “I’d be a mug if I didn’t.”
    “No problem. Where did you leave car?”
    “A little way up the street.”
    “What make?”
    “It’s the old white Merc by the lamppost.”
    “Locking is remote, right?”
    Danny dipped his hand in his pocket, opened his palm and showed the key fob with its push button controls.
    “Very good,” Mr. Singh said. “We can test. Go to car and let yourself in. Step out, lock up and walk back here. I am waiting on street with gizmo.”
    Danny was alert for trickery. He wasn’t parting with sixty-odd pounds for a useless lump of plastic and metal. But if it really did work, he could be quids in. Thousands.
    The gizmo, as Mr. Singh called it, looked pretty basic in construction, a pocket-sized black box with two retractable antennas fitted to one end.
    No money had changed hands yet, so the guy had nothing to gain by doing a runner. Danny stepped out of the little coffee shop and did exactly as suggested. Walked to
the Mercedes, unlocked, got in, closed the door, opened it again, stepped out, locked, using the smart key, and walked back to where Mr. Singh was standing outside the shop with the gizmo in his hands.
    “You locked it, right?”
    “Sure did,” Danny said.
    “Where is key?”
    “Back in my pocket.”
    “Excellent. Leave it there. Now go to car and try door.”
    Danny had walked only a few steps when he saw that the lock pins were showing. Just as promised, the car was unlocked.
    He was impressed. To be certain, he opened the door he’d apparently locked a moment ago.
    “Good job, eh?” Mr. Singh said when Danny went back to him.
    “Nice one. Who makes these things?”
    “Made in China.”
    “Wouldn’t you know it?”
    “Simple to operate. You want to buy?”
    “How does it work?”
    “Okay. You know how key fob works?”
    “Using a radio signal.”
    “Right. Sending signal from fob to car. Programmed to connect with your car and no other. But this gizmo is signal jammer. Breaks frequency. You think you lock up, but I zap you with this.”
    “Let me see.”
    Danny held the thing and turned it over. “All I have to do is press this?”
    “Correct. All about timing. You are catching exact moment when driver is pointing fob at car.”
    “Hang on. There’s always a sound when the locks engage. And the lights flick on and off. If that doesn’t happen, the driver will notice.”
    “Did you notice?”
    Danny hesitated. “There was traffic noise and I was thinking of other things.”
    “So?” Mr. Singh flashed his teeth.
    “In a quiet place the driver would notice.”
    “Don’t use in quiet place. Street is better, street with much traffic.”
    Danny turned the jammer over and looked at the other side, speculating. “How much are you asking?”
    “Seventy, battery included.”
    He made a sound as if he’d been burnt. “Seventy is more than I thought.”
    “Fully effective up to fifty metres.”
    Danny handed it back. “I don’t suppose it works with the latest models.”
    “Now I am being honest. Very new cars, possibly no. Manufacturers getting wise. Any car up to last year is good. That gives plenty choice. To you, special offer, not to be repeated. Sixty-five.”
    Danny took a wad from his back pocket, peeled off three twenties and held them out.
    Mr. Singh sighed, took the money and handed over the jammer.
    “Before you go,” Danny said. “There’s something else. This gets me into the car, but it doesn’t let me drive it away. I was told you have another little beauty for that.”
    Mr. Singh’s eyes lit up again. “Programmer. Which make? BMW, Mercedes, Audi?”
    “I need a different one for each make, do I? How much will it cost me?”
    “Two hundred. Maybe two fifty.”
    Danny whistled. This was getting to be a larger investment than he planned, but he thought about the top-class cars he could steal. “Let’s say the Bimmer.”
    “BMW three or five series I can do for two hundred.”
    “Is it difficult to operate?”
    “Dead easy. All cars now have diagnostic connector port. You plug in and programmer reads key code.”
    “Then what?”
    “Code is transferred from car’s computer to microchip in new key. You get five blank keys gratis as well.”
    “So I can drive off using the new key? Have you tried this yourself?”
    “No, no, no, I am supplier only. Supplying is lawful. Driving off with some person’s car is not.”
    “But you can show me how the thing works?”
    “You come back with two hundred cash this time tomorrow and for you as special customer I am supplying and demonstrating BMW three series programmer.”


Next afternoon special customer Danny drove away from Brighton with the programmer and the pride of a man at the cutting edge of the electronic revolution. In his youth he’d used a wire coat hanger to get into cars. He’d graduated to a slim Jim strip and then a whole collection of lock-picking tools. But the days of hotwiring the ignition were long gone. In recent years anti-theft technology had become so sophisticated that he’d been reduced to touring car parks looking for vehicles left unlocked by their stupid owners. For a man once known as Driveaway Danny it had become humiliating. The Mercedes he was driving was twelve years old. He’d liberated it in July from some idiot in Bognor who’d left it on his driveway with the key in the ignition.
    Everything was about to change.
    He would shortly be driving a BMW 3 series.


It wasn’t easy to nail one. For more than a week he patrolled the streets of the south coast town of Littlehampton (which isn’t known for executive cars) with his two gizmos in a Tesco carrier bag. The new technology called for a whole new mindset. He wasn’t on the lookout for a parked car, but one that happened to drive up while he was watching. He’d need to make a snap decision when the chance came. If the chance came.

Late Sunday evening it did. After a day of no success he was consoling himself with a real ale at his local, the Steam Packet, near the red footbridge over the River Arun. He lived in a one-bedroom flat a few hundred yards away and liked to wind down here at the end of a long day. The pub was said to have existed since 1840, trading under a different name, because the cross-channel ferry that departed from there hadn’t come into service until 1863. Welcome Aboard the Steam Packet, announced the large wooden board attached to the front with a profile of a paddle steamer—and in case the maritime message was overlooked, the north side of the pub had a ship’s figurehead of a topless blonde (in the best possible taste, with strategically dangling curls) projecting from the wall. With a little imagination when seated in the terrace at the back overlooking River Road and the Arun you could believe yourself afloat. This was a favourite spot of Danny’s, nicely placed for seeing spectacular sunsets or watching small boats chugging back from sea trips. But at this moment, alone in the half-light at one of the benches around 9:30 on a September evening, his thoughts were not about sea trips or sunsets. He’d just decided he’d wasted his money on Mr. Singh’s gizmos. How ironic then that this was the moment when a silver BMW drove up and came to a halt in the parking space across the street.

Reviews

Crime Writers' Association Diamond Dagger for Lifetime Achievement Recipient
Mystery Writers of America 2018 Grandmaster

Praise for Down Among the Dead Men 


A New York Times Best Crime Novel of 2015
July 2015 IndieNext Selection


"What’ll it be today? A knotty puzzle mystery? A fast-paced police procedural? Something more high-toned, with a bit of wit? With the British author Peter Lovesey, there’s no need to make those agonizing decisions, because his books have it all."
—The New York Times Book Review

"[A] strikingly classy whodunit."
—Morning Star

"[Lovesey is] a nimble standard-bearer for the whodunit tradition that goes back to the Golden Age of detective fiction . . . a cunning logic puzzle, a devilishly inspired bit of story crafting."
—Richmond Times-Dispatch

"Lovesey takes seemingly incongruous story lines and ties them tidily together."
—Dayton Daily News 

"Lovesey not only spins a satisfying whodunit—there’s a contemporary case as a subplot, too—but continues to develop the complicated, intriguing relationship between Diamond and his boss, Assistant Chief Constable Georgina Dallymore."
—The Strand Magazine

"One of Lovesey's finest."
—Mystery Scene

“Lovesey’s plotting is smart, his style engaging and drily funny.”
Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine

"Lovesey is a masterful plotter, and that alone would earn him praise and fans, but his characters are memorable, and Diamond is a glittering gem among them. In addition to those strengths Lovesey adds wit, humor, and finely structured prose."
—Alfred Hitchcock Mystery Magazine

"Peter Lovesey’s Down Among the Dead Men gives us Diamond at his best."
—Open Letters Monthly

"This is the kind of clever, densely packed puzzle we don’t see much of these days. It’s engrossing, well-written and original."
—The Buffalo News

"Peter Lovesey is a marvel. If you love or even like mysteries, he needs to be at the top of your must-read list."
—Bookreporter

"Lovesey is in top form in Down Among the Dead Men . . . A fascinating read. Great plotting and exciting action."
—Fresh Fiction 

"Peter Lovesey is back with a winner . . . When you finish reading Down Among the Dead Men, you'll have a smile on your face, knowing that you've just been given a lesson in deduction by a master."
—Kittling Books

"[A] novel of engaging prose, intriguing and credible plot, and believable characters with a likable lead. In Down Among the Dead Men, Lovesey delivers a fine read."
—New York Journal of Books

“Diamond is a wonderfully rounded character whose lines are witty and whose observations about people’s characters and motives are brilliantly insightful. Vintage Diamond mystery, spiced by his comic encounters with his supervisor: a must for devotees of character-driven British crime fiction.”
Booklist, Starred Review

"Dallymore and Diamond illustrate that good cops and intriguing mysteries can go together. Ideal for those who prefer cerebral rather than graphic whodunits."
—Library Journal

Praise for the Peter Diamond Series

“Peter Diamond is impatient, belligerent, cunning, insightful, foul, laugh-out-loud funny . . . A superb series.”
—Louise Penny
 
“I’m jealous of everyone discovering Lovesey and Diamond for the first time—you have a wonderful backlist to catch up on. Me, all I can do is wait for the next book.”
—Sara Paretsky
 
“What'll it be today? A knotty puzzle mystery? A fast-paced police procedural? Something more high-toned, with a bit of wit? With the British author Peter Lovesey, there's no need to make those agonizing decisions, because his books have it all.”
—The New York Times Book Review
 
“Mr. Lovesey's narrative is swift, but he takes time out for local color and abundant humor, the latter springing from the book's quirky characters . . . Lovesey is a wizard at mixing character-driven comedy with realistic-to-grim suspense. And in a writing career spanning four decades, he has created a stylish and varied body of work.”
The Wall Street Journal
 
“Next to Jane Austen, Peter Lovesey is the writer the tourist board of Bath, England, extols most proudly . . . The enduring draw of the Peter Diamond books derives both from the beguiling Bath cityscape and the brusque character of Diamond himself.”
—NPR

Author

Peter Lovesey is the author of more than thirty highly praised mystery novels, including the Peter Diamond Investigations and the Sergeant Cribb Investigations. He has been awarded the CWA Gold and Silver Daggers, the Cartier Diamond Dagger for Lifetime Achievement, the Strand Magazine Award for Lifetime Achievement, the Macavity, Barry, and Anthony Awards, and many other honors. He lives in West Sussex, England. View titles by Peter Lovesey