In this 16th book in the 'Chet and Bernie' series, the detective team
searches for a missing 'internet famous' cat. The book works fine as a
standalone.
In the Chet and Bernie stories, Bernie Little and his
hundred-plus pound dog Chet are partners in the Little Detective Agency
in Arizona.
Bernie
is a West Point graduate, military hero, former police officer, and
good at his PI job. Sartorially, Bernie is a fan of Hawaiian shirts,
which are loose enough to hide a gun when Bernie's carrying.
Bernie is also the divorced father of 7-year-old Charlie, who's thrilled to have a detective for a dad.
Chet is Bernie's invaluable partner, who's always ready to clamp his jaw on perps and drag them off by the pants. 
The
books are narrated by Chet, whose somewhat limited vocabulary,
unfamiliarity with idioms, and doggie logic set the stage for plenty of
smiles.
*****
As the story opens, Bernie and Chet are at
Nixon's Championship Autobody, having a bullet extracted from Bernie's
vintage Porsche. As Bernie and Nixon talk about the black and white
Porsche being too conspicuous for a private investigator.....
.....teenage Bitty Pond and her mother Evelyn Pond arrive at Nixon's Championship Autobody to pick up their car.
Next thing you know, the Little Detective Agency is being hired for a job.
It
seems Bitty's cat 'Miss Kitty' - who has over six million followers on
the Slickety app - is missing. Not only does Bittty loves her feline,
but Miss Kitty brings in $75,000 a month from sponsors, and the Pond
ladies need the money.
One
of Bernie's first questions to Bitty and Evelyn is 'who has a key to
the house', and Bernie and Chet are soon off to interview Phillips Pond
(Phil), Evelyn's ex-husband and Bitty's father. Phil and his girlfriend
Yolanda live out in the desert, in a mobile home up on blocks....
.....and
as Chet reports, there's a chain-link pen around the back with the
biggest pig Chet's ever seen, "an enormous pink and black dude busy with
a watermelon rind." 
In
any case, Phil mistakes Bernie for a bill collector, Yolanda threatens
him with a shotgun, and the couple claim to know nothing about Miss
Kitty's disappearance. They behave squirrelly though, and Bernie thinks
they know more than they're saying. 
Later,
when Bernie and Chet return to re-interview Phil and Yolanda, Phil is
dead in the kitchen, Yolanda is gone, and Señor Piggy (as Chet calls
him) has burrowed out of his pen and run off. Bernie and Chet hurry off
to rescue Señor Piggy from coyotes, and when they bring Señor Piggy
back, Phil's body has disappeared.
Before long there's another
murder, and Chet deals with a stalker watching Bitty and Evelyn. As
Bernie and Chet continue to investigate, they meet a couple of cowgirls
who own 'Two Fillies Ranch', and run into rude bikers who impel Bernie
to use his famous uppercut when they call Chet a fleabag.
In
his personal life, Bernie does a favor for his ex-wife Leda; picks up
his son Charlie from Rocketry Club; and spends time with his fiancée
Weatherly - a sergeant with the Valley PD. Chet describes all this in
detail, though he's amusingly vague about the mischief he's caused
during these interactions.
Bernie
also hears from a Hollywood agent called Manny Ax, who wants to make a
Bernie and Chet PI movie. To smooth the way, Manny sends an enormous
wicker basket overflowing with flowers, Bernie's favorite bourbon, and
Beef Jerky Heavenlies, made by Doggie Deluxe, Hollywood's finest canine
emporium. Bernie's not on board with the movie idea, and asks Chet,
"What are we going to do? Send it back?"
Chet
is gobsmacked and says, "Had I heard right? Send it back? The flowers,
maybe - in fact why not? If it would make Bernie happy we could do
without the flowers. Would it help if I peed on them this very second?
Happy to. I'm a a team player don't forget. As for the bourbon, I
supposed that was up to him, water being my drink. But those Beef Jerky
Heavenlies? No way."
There's plenty of danger and adventure
before Bernie and Chet solve the case of the missing cat. The climax is
somewhat abrupt, but I enjoyed the book, especially Chet's narration.
I'll include a couple of examples of Chet's amusing remarks.
Talking
about Bernie's cars, Chet says, "Our ride's a Porsche, but not shiny
new. Far from it! We've had several Porsches in my career, for sure more
than two, which is where I stop when it comes to numbers, but all of
them - including the brown one with yellow doors that went off a cliff
and the one with martini glass decals that got blown up - were old."
Chet
observes, "Bernie is brilliant of course, but - and I mean this in the
nicest way - he's not at his most brilliant brilliance when it comes to
finances. Perhaps later I'll get into our Hawaiian pants business and
even the tin futures play, ruined by an earthquake."

With
this in mind, when Bernie and Chet eat at Julio Chan's Tex-Mex Hunan
Pagoda, where the sign over the door is a sombrero made of chopsticks,
Chet hears Bernie offer Julio a loan. Chet says, "As for what they were
talking about....Something about a loan from us? How would that make
sense? Hadn't Ms. Mendez - out bank manager and a woman of the
no-nonsense type - given Bernie a stern talking to on this very
subject?"
As always, this is a fun mystery, a must-read for Chet and Bernie fans.
Thanks to Netgalley, Spencer Quinn, and Minotaur for an ARC of the book.
Rating: 3.5 stars
































