Read An Excerpt From ‘The Life and Death of Rose Doucette’ by Harry Hunsicker

Dallas PI Dylan Fisher thought he was done with his ex-wife—but now he’s solving her murder.

Intrigued? Well read on to discover the synopsis and an excerpt from Harry Hunsicker’s The Life and Death of Rose Doucette, which releases on October 1st 2024.

Dallas private investigator Dylan Fisher hasn’t seen his ex-wife, Rose, in three years—which is why he’s surprised when she asks him to meet her at a hotel. Rose Doucette is a homicide detective, and she wants Dylan’s help with a murder investigation that she’s been asked to step back from but can’t seem to let go.

They review the details of the case and part ways—but as Rose is leaving the parking lot, Dylan sees a suspicious car begin to follow her. Feeling uneasy, he tails the car and tries to warn Rose, but he’s too late—the driver of the car shoots her, killing her instantly, before speeding away.

The police are determined to pin the murder on Dylan, so he’s left with no choice but to find the killer himself. Teaming up with Rose’s widower, a defense attorney named Tito, the pair dive into Rose’s past to figure out who could’ve wanted to kill the woman they both loved—and what they were trying to hide.


We hadn’t seen each other in three years.

A long time, but not long enough to forgive.

She’d reached out to me with the request to meet and suggested the location, a bar in a hotel where rooms started at seven hundred a night. Not a place either of us would have ever considered staying.

An odd choice, but my ex-wife was an odd woman. Or maybe I was the odd one, and I just didn’t realize it. Introspection was never my strong suit.

The bar smelled of vanilla-scented candles and leather. It was dimly lit, decorated with oil paintings of fox-hunting aristocrats and Rubenesque women lounging about naked. An English gentleman’s club transported to the plains of North Texas.

A waiter led me to her table in the corner.

She smiled as I approached. “Hello, Dylan.”

“Rose.”

Silence ensued, which I’d say was awkward but maybe, like the oddness, I was wrong about that too. I remained standing, trying not to stare too long into those eyes of hers. They were the color of mahogany and had always been a weakness of mine.

After a moment, she pointed to an empty chair. “Would you like to join me? It’s been a while, hasn’t it?”

“A little over a thousand days, but who’s counting,” I said, sitting down and sliding the chair so that my back was to the wall.

Old habits for both of us. Rose was in a similar position against the wall perpendicular to mine.

The waiter took our order. Club soda for me, a martini for her.

When he left, I said, “Since when do you drink martinis?”

Back when we were together, she’d preferred merlot, and then only a glass or two a week. Her stepfather had been an alcoholic prone to violence, and that tended to stay with a person.

“I’d like to hire you,” she said, ignoring my question. Her eyes fixed on mine as if she was trying to gauge my reaction.

“So much for the small talk, huh?”

I had left the police department and gone private around the time we split. My workload was typical for a cop turned PI— missing persons, asset retrieval, insurance cases.

Rose, however, had stayed on the force, and I couldn’t imagine her ever leaving.

“And what’s with meeting here?” I asked. “You working vice these days?”

Despite being a luxury hotel, the lodging of choice for presidents and pop stars, the bar had a reputation as a good place to hook up with a high-end call girl. When I’d been on the force—a patrol officer in those days—a county commissioner had died from a heart attack while in the missionary position with one in a room upstairs.

Last I heard, Rose was still a homicide detective with the Dallas police department, and a very good one at that. She taught classes at Quantico, consulted with other departments on cases they couldn’t solve, and had a clearance rate in the nineties. Vice would be a big step down, and Sergeant Rose Doucette never went backwards for anything or anyone.

“Still on the murder beat.” She paused. “So how have you been? You look good.”

“I’m upright. Beats the alternative.” I debated what to say next.

“You look . . . good too.”

That last part sounded stiff, and I hoped she didn’t notice.

The truth was she looked anything but good. Her skin, normally olive, was sallow; dark circles cupped her eyes. She’d always skewed petite, five-four or so, one ten-ish. Now the navy blazer she wore draped her shoulders like an oversized blanket, her cheeks hollow and sunken.

She was forty-two, a year younger than me, but she seemed used up, like there wasn’t much gas left in the tank.

“I look like roadkill,” she said with a chuckle. “But thanks for saying otherwise.”

The waiter brought our drinks. While he fussed with cocktail napkins and a bowl of salted nuts, I watched Rose scan the room, eyes darting from one corner to the next, clearly uneasy. It was a little before lunch. Other than a pair of men at the bar wearing Dockers and golf shirts—business traveler chic—we were the only customers present.

The waiter departed.

“To old friends.” She raised her glass, took a drink.

I tilted my club soda in her direction. “Interesting choice of words. Old friends.”

“Does that mean there’s no chance you’d ever think of me as a friend?” she asked. “You still hate me?”

I didn’t reply because I wasn’t sure. The line between hate and something else was as thin as a strand of hair.

The two guys at the bar left. The room felt lonely and cold.

“Thanks for meeting with me,” she said. “Guess I’m the last person on earth you want to see. For what it’s worth, you’re still the most standup guy I know.”

I wondered if I’d made a mistake coming here. “Tell me why you need a PI.”

Occasionally, an old colleague from the force would reach out for assistance with a matter that required someone with the skills of a police officer, but who wasn’t burdened by the regulations associated with a badge.

I was usually happy to oblige, especially if it meant helping someone who was getting a raw deal from the system. I liked to think of myself as a GPS for justice, a way to get that particular concept back on the right road when it got lost.

“I’m in a bind, Dylan. I need help.” She took another drink. “From someone I trust.”

I looked at her more closely.

In addition to the fatigue, there was something else wrong that I couldn’t identify, an air about her that clouded the table like cigarette smoke. The way she held her arms, the angle of her head. The tendons along her jaw line tight against her skin.

With a start, I recognized what it was, an emotion I’d never seen from her before.

Fear.

Rose Doucette, a twenty-year veteran of the Dallas police department, was afraid.

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