Unholy Fire
Description
A Civil War whodunit by former US congressman and second-novelist Mrazek (Stonewallâs Gold, 1999) describes a combat veteranâs 1863 quest for a prostituteâs murderer.
John âKitâ McKittredge is a Harvard senior when the Civil War breaks out, and he enlists with patriotic fervor. Commissioned as a lieutenant, Kit sees action early, leading a platoon at Ballâs Bluff. Wounded in the stomach, Kit is soused with laudanum by doctors who (lacking antibiotics) fully expect him to die within days. Incredibly, he survives, though not without gaining a solid addiction. In recognition of his valor, the army offers him a noncombatant post, assigning him to the Provost Marshallâs office, responsible for investigating crimes and corruption. Thereâs plenty of both, for the unprecedented war budget has brought every species of swindler, embezzler, and common thief to Washington, D.C., along with more whores than Baptists and a government staffed by cutthroat opportunists who could make Machiavelli blush. On his first assignment, investigating war profiteers who supplied defective artillery to the army, Kit is bluntly warned (first by a mysterious stranger, then by a congressman) not to dig too deep if he knows whatâs good for him. Undeterred, he presses on but is soon diverted by the murder of an unknown woman last seen publicly at the birthday party of the notoriously debauched General Hooker (his name already synonymous with prostitution). As Kit looks into case, he finds that the victim (a prostitute named Anya Hagel) had a number of unsettling connections to some very prominent members of the government. He also finds that General Hooker has taken an interest in Kitâs career, inviting him to join his staff and introducing him to prominent military and political figures. If this is the carrot, what is the stick? Well, thereâs the inconvenient matter of Kitâs opium addictionâand his bad luck in falling in love with Amelie, a prostitute who used to work with Anya.
Tautly gripping, with vividly malevolent characters and some excellent historical color.