The Midnight Before Christmas - Hardcover

Bernhardt, William

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9780345428103: The Midnight Before Christmas

Synopsis

William Bernhardt has won critical acclaim for his bestselling series of legal thrillers featuring Oklahoma-based attorney Ben Kincaid. Now Bernhardt takes a holiday from the courtroom to deliver a suspenseful, pulse-pounding tale of Christmastime crime with all the trimmings.

'Tis the day before Christmas, and all through the town,
someone evil's at large, spreading mayhem around!

Thirtysomething lawyer Megan McGee is facing a quiet Christmas with her bulldog when Bonnie Thomas, a battered wife, comes looking for legal protection from her violent ex-cop husband, Carl. In a recent bout of rage, Carl vowed to kill their seven-year-old son, Tommy, rather than be separated from the boy. It's no idle threat, either--as Bonnie assures Megan: "He's tried before."

And when Tommy's school unwittingly allows him to leave with his father, Carl gets his chance to try again.

Now, with the town all but shut down for the holiday, Megan races against time--and terror--to keep Carl's Christmas Eve jaunt from turning into a slay ride.

This season, the weather outside isn't the only thing that's frightful. . . .

"synopsis" may belong to another edition of this title.

About the Author

William Bernhardt made his debut as a novelist with Primary Justice. His subsequent novels include Blind Justice, Deadly Justice, Perfect Justice--which won the Oklahoma Book Award and led The Vancouver Sun to dub the author "the American equivalent of P. G. Wodehouse and John Mortimer --Double Jeopardy, Cruel Justice, Naked Justice, and Extreme Justice. As an attorney, Bernhardt has received several awards for his public service, and in 1993 he was named one of the top twenty-five young lawyers in the nation. He lives in Tulsa with his wife, Kirsten, and their children, Harry and Alice.

From the Inside Flap

William Bernhardt has won critical acclaim for his bestselling series of legal thrillers featuring Oklahoma-based attorney Ben Kincaid. Now Bernhardt takes a holiday from the courtroom to deliver a suspenseful, pulse-pounding tale of Christmastime crime with all the trimmings.

'Tis the day before Christmas, and all through the town,
someone evil's at large, spreading mayhem around!

Thirtysomething lawyer Megan McGee is facing a quiet Christmas with her bulldog when Bonnie Thomas, a battered wife, comes looking for legal protection from her violent ex-cop husband, Carl. In a recent bout of rage, Carl vowed to kill their seven-year-old son, Tommy, rather than be separated from the boy. It's no idle threat, either--as Bonnie assures Megan: "He's tried before."

And when Tommy's school unwittingly allows him to leave with his father, Carl gets his chance to try again.

Now, with the town all but shut down for the holiday, Megan races against time--and terror--to keep Carl's Christmas Eve jaunt from turning into a slay ride.

This season, the weather outside isn't the only thing that's frightful. . . .

Reviews

In a new twist in holiday fare, Bernhardt, better known for his Oklahoma-set courtroom thrillers (Blind Justice; Deadly Justice), fashions a suspenseful tale of domestic violence with a plot-worn spin on the usual villains. On Christmas Eve, Megan McGee, formerly a priest and now a lawyer (since the death of her mother in the Oklahoma City bombing) is handed what seems an open-and-shut case of spousal abuse. A hysterical woman applies for an emergency restraining order against her menacing, drunken ex-husband. Except that Carl, the ex, is a cop, and Bonnie, the attractive wife, is not as victimized as she seems. In a desperate measure, Carl kidnaps their boy, Tommy, and the threats and recriminations roll one after the other. Though Megan, with her ungainly English pug, Jasper, in tow, is an appealing character, Carl and Bonnie, by turns described as hopelessly evil or duped by each other, come off as one-dimensional caricatures of feuding ex-spouses. In fact, it's difficult to believe that folks in a holiday mood will want to read this sour tale of evil manipulation and forced uplift.
Copyright 1998 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Midnight?it's the Black Voidthough Christmas is notorious for family rages. Here, Bernhardt, who usually writes legal thrillers about Oklahoma-based attorney Ben Kincaid (Naked Justice, 1997, etc.), focuses on Oklahoma City's own Carl Thomas, a big, violent, alcoholic cop suspended from active duty who's been divorced by his wife, Bonnie, and banned from seeing his son, Tommy. But on Christmas Eve a drunken Carl beats up Bonnie's new boyfriend, Frankie, splinters her front door, and slams his fist through its window. So Bonnie jams his fist upward, ``impaling it on a jagged piece of broken window glass. Pain coursed through Carl's arm, then his body, like the ripple of sheet lightning . . . .'' When Carl vows that he'll kill seven-year-old Tommy, rather than be parted from him, Bonnie goes to see lawyer Megan McGee for an emergency restraining order. So Carl picks Tommy up from school and takes him to Toys ``R'' Us for a Mighty Movin' Dino-Fighter before removing him from his mother's grasp. Bonnie really is evil, however, and has inveigled Frank into shooting Carl, who has a big trust fund coming to him at 40 and has willed it all to her. But, gosh, somebody has tried to kill Tommy with rat poison in his Chinese dinner. . . . Jolly Christmas fiction for the whole family. -- Copyright ©1998, Kirkus Associates, LP. All rights reserved.

Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.

He just couldn't stand it anymore. He cocked his arm back, clenched his fist, and propelled it on a line drive toward the other man's jaw.

His fist connected with a sickening thud. The other man's body crumpled to the front lawn like a hand puppet without a hand.

Bonnie screamed. "Frank! Frank!" She pressed her hands against her cheeks, seemingly paralyzed with shock and fear. "Carl, what have you done?"

She crouched beside the stricken man, cradling his head in her lap, brushing her hand over his closed eyes. "Frankie, are you all right? Speak to me! Please!"

Carl stepped back, somewhat subdued now that his opponent was out of commission. "I didn't think I hit him that hard."

"You maniac!" Bonnie shouted. "He's unconscious!"

Carl inched forward. "Let me take a look at him."

"Get back! Stay away! Help! Help!"

Neighbors began to emerge from the Federal-style homes lining the streets. Women in aprons stood in elaborate fan doorways, men burdened with packages huddled beneath porticos, all of them wondering what the commotion was about. A crowd gathered at the closest corner.

Carl grabbed Bonnie by the arms and jerked her to her feet. "Stop yelling! Stop!" He raised his hand as if to slap her.

"Help me!" Bonnie continued. "Someone please help me!"

Out the corner of his eye, Carl could see some of the neighbors cautiously moving forward. One woman was dialing a cellular phone.

He lowered his hand. "I just want to see my son!"

"You can't. He's mine!"

"He's ours, Bonnie."

"The judge gave him to me."

"The judge gave you custody--"

"And he gave you nothing!"

"Bonnie, please. I have to see Tommy. I need to see him."

"Why? So you can beat him up, too? I'm not letting you anywhere near him!"

Carl clenched his teeth. "I have to see him, Bonnie. He's my son!"

"Over my dead body!"

Carl's face became grim. "Don't say that, Bonnie. Don't say that."

Frank, the man sprawled across the front lawn, stirred. He propped himself up on one arm, blinking rapidly.

"Frankie!" Bonnie ran to his side. "Are you all right?"

Frank rubbed his jaw. "I ... think I'll live. But there's an off-key symphony playing in my head."

"Frankie, go into the house."

"I'm not going to leave you here with--"

"Frankie, please. It's for the best."

Frank hesitated, as if itching to disagree, but finally relented. With some effort, he pulled himself to his feet and hobbled toward the front door of the house.
Bonnie whirled back on Carl. "You could've killed him!"

"I wish." Carl pounded his fists together. "That sorry SOB sees more of my boy than I do."

"That's because Frank doesn't lose his temper." She drew in her breath. "And he doesn't drink."

Carl's face seemed to dissolve. "Bonnie..." He stretched out his hand. "I've been going to meetings."

"Save it for your parole officer, Carl. I can smell your breath from here."

"Bonnie, please--"

"I don't want you hanging around, Carl. I don't want you stalking us, harassing us. And I especially don't want you anywhere near Tommy."

"But, Bonnie, it's Christmas Eve!"

"I don't care, Carl. I can't trust you. I can't take the risk."

"But it's Christmas Eve! A family should be together."

"The family is together, Carl. Me, Tommy, and Frank."

"I'm his father. Not--"

"You don't know what being a father means, Carl. You never did."

"Bonnie, I'm begging you--"

"It's time you learned that no means no, Carl." A few of the braver neighbors were edging closer, crossing the street. "I can't take this anymore. I can't take being scared all the time, worrying that you're going to do some permanent damage. I want you to go away and never come back."

"Bonnie!"

"You heard me, Carl. Go away!"

His fists tightened like tiny balls of super-concentrated energy. Rage boiled through his body, coursed through his veins. "I can't accept that, Bonnie. I won't."

"You don't have any choice." She ran through the front door of the house and slammed it between them.

"No!" Carl rushed forward, his face flushed with anger. He pounded on the front door, beating it so hard it splintered the wood. "Let me in! Let me in!"

One of the neighbor men ran forward, grabbing Carl around the shoulders, trying to pull him back. "C'mon now, Carl. Let's calm down."

Carl whirled around and shoved the neighbor against the chest. The man stumbled backward, tripping on the front steps. He tumbled down, cracking his head against the concrete sidewalk.

"I want in!" Carl roared. "Do you hear me, Bonnie? I want in!"

"Go away!" she shrieked from the other side of the door. "The police are on their way!"

"I will see my boy!" He pounded the front door again and again and again, sending paint chips flying in all directions, making the whole frame of the house shudder. He was making a dent, but even in his rage, he knew he would never get in this way.

He jumped over the hedge and azaleas and crossed to the front window just to the left of the door. "I want in, Bonnie!" he howled.

"No!"

Carl reared back his fist and sent it sailing through the window. Glass shattered all around him as his fist broke through to the other side. The harsh insistent beep of the security alarm began to pulse. Blood dripped across his arm and down the windowpane.

Carl cried out in pain. His hand was sliced in more places than he knew, and it hurt. But he didn't let that stop him. He twisted his fingers around and reached up to unfasten the window lock.

Bonnie appeared on the other side of the window. "Stop it, Carl! Stop it!"

"All I want is to see my boy.""I can't let you do that, Carl. I can't take the risk."

"I'm coming in. And you can't stop me." His fingers touched the window lock.

"No," Bonnie whispered. She grabbed his protruding hand."Leave me alone!" Carl bellowed.

"I can't." She took his fist in both of her hands and jerked his arm upward, impaling it on a jagged piece of broken window glass.

Pain coursed through Carl's arm, then his body, like the ripple of sheet lightning. He screamed, then jerked his hand back through the window, clutching it close against his chest. Blood gushed from the open wound.

His face was spotted with blood and sweat. "You can't stop me," he said, gasping. "No matter what."

"He isn't here," Bonnie said, tears spilling from her eyes. "Tommy isn't even here. Please go away."

The sound of a police siren cut through the morning air. It was still several blocks away, but moving closer at top speed.

Carl pressed his wounded arm against his mouth. He clamped his other hand down on it, trying to stanch the flow of blood. "This isn't over," he said, gazing at his ex-wife through the spiderwebbed windowpane. "I'll be back."

He turned and raced down the street, barreling through a chain of spectators, ducking into the backyard three houses down.

Even after he had disappeared from sight, Bonnie's breathing didn't slow down. Her heartbeat didn't settle, and she couldn't stop clutching herself. Because she knew what he had said was true. She knew this wasn't over.

She knew he would be back.

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Other Popular Editions of the Same Title

9780345428110: The Midnight Before Christmas: A Holiday Thriller

Featured Edition

ISBN 10:  0345428110 ISBN 13:  9780345428110
Publisher: Ballantine Books, 1999
Softcover