Wednesday, March 26, 2025

A Spicy Cozy Mystery Set in Las Vegas

 




Viva Las Vegas

I wrote a spicy cozy mystery entitled “The Salacious Scribes Mystery” that takes place in Las Vegas and is about a group of erotic romance writers who go to the Adult Entertainment Expo and while there, their promoter is murdered.

For research purposes while writing this book, I decided to go to Las Vegas and play tourist in the city in order to get some inspiration for some of the scenes of my story. I planned to stay with my husband at the Bellagio and hoped we would get of view of the famous water show for which that the hotel is known. We were very lucky to score a 14th floor view of the fountains with Las Vegas’s version of the Eiffel Tower in the background.

While there, I played the slot machines for the first time. It was fun; I lost; will never do it again; but it was a once in a life time experience.

From there, I was seriously inspired to get to know the history of Las Vegas so my husband and I booked a night-time tour of the Neon Museum where we could see the old neon signs of the retro Las Vegas hotels that existed before they were blown up in order to make way for newer and snazzier hotels. There is such a beauty in well crafted neon and this museum lived up to its reputation.

After that, we visited the Mob Museum. I wrote an entire chapter in my book that described this very interesting museum. Here’s an excerpt:

“My husband and I both enjoyed the HBO series, The Sopranos, and the organized-crime movies by Martin Scorsese and Francis Ford Coppola.  So, we headed out in the blazing Vegas sun to go see the museum. After a short drive, we found it and parked.  The museum was a three-storied brick building.

Once inside, we traveled back to the infamous days of crime in Las Vegas and throughout the United States, starting from the 20s when prohibition had allowed opportunists, such as Al Capone, to make their fortunes satisfying the thirst of Americans who craved alcohol.

The first room we visited showed a simulated police lineup where visitors could pose, holding up signs that looked like license plates with unique numbers.  Some teenagers posed in front of a back wall that showed a height chart. They had their picture taken by a professional cameraman supplied by the museum and had a hard time keeping a straight face because they kept giggling.

Next, we saw the blood-stained wall where the Saint Valentine's Day Massacre occurred in Chicago. Circles surrounded the bloody holes where Al Capone and his gang had mown down their rivals. My husband sat in a real electric chair and I took a picture, capturing the moment.

The teenagers caught up with us and one of them sat in the electric chair.  His friend pulled down a nearby lever and, as he did so, his buddy on the electric chair twitched as if he were being electrocuted. It was cute to watch them having such a good time, especially at a museum.

Next, my husband and I walked into a room wallpapered with dollars.  We read a sign that told us about the “skim” at the Stardust. It explained how profits were under-counted and under-reported to the IRS by the crime bosses. The owner at the Stardust, Frank "Lefty" Rosenthal, arranged for a bit of those profits to be skimmed off periodically and sent back to the mob bosses on the east coast. It was the basis for the movie Casino.  I remembered watching how great Robert di Nero and Sharon Stone were in the movie and it got me thinking about the naked lady that Bluebeard was with on the night he was killed.  What if she, like the Sharon Stone character, was in-deep with organized crime?  Maybe she helped Bluebeard make his drug deals? Maybe they did even worse crimes together? Child porno, perhaps? Human trafficking? What if they were stealing authors’ stories and publishing them under another name?  It certainly was a lot to consider.

My husband interrupted my revelry by saying, “Come on, honey.  Let’s see the rest of the museum.  You seem glued to this exhibit.”

“Sorry, hon.  I was just thinking about Bluebeard.”

“Forget about him.  You’re with me now.  We don’t have much time left before you have to drive me to the airport.”

I put his hand in mine and said, “I’m sorry, honey. You’re right. Let’s go see the next one.”

He smiled and we went together to see the next room.  Right next to the skim room was an exhibit my husband really enjoyed.  There were two long and narrow halls that were fashioned to look like firing ranges and at the far end of each hall were life-sized paper targets shaped like men. My husband got a chance to touch, hold, and “fire" an actual Tommy Gun at one of the “men”.

The next room was the centerpiece of the Mob Museum. It was the real-life second-floor courtroom where hearings had been held to expose organized crime in 1950 and 1951.

We left that room and saw a film that showed the bloody remains of dead gangsters.  Real members of The Mob had been interviewed. We went downstairs and watched clips from Goodfellas and The Godfather.”

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So, that’s a brief excerpt of my spicy PG-rated cozy mystery that takes place in Las Vegas. Why not give it a read and decide whether or not you’d like to spend a few days there where you can do some historical research along with seeing shows, eating good food, playing the slots, and drinking more than you should. What happens in Vegas stays in Vegas, right?

This cozy mystery costs only 99 cents and is available at most eBook stores including Amazon.

Here is the Amazon Link:

https://amzn.to/3VIWaOI






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