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Free Thriller of The Week Excerpt Featuring Dead East by Steve Winshel

On Friday we announced that Steve Winshel’s Dead East is our Thriller of the Week and the sponsor of thousands of great bargains in the thriller, mystery, and suspense categories: over 200 free titles, over 600 quality 99-centers, and thousands more that you can read for free through the Kindle Lending Library if you have Amazon Prime!

Now we’re back to offer our weekly free Thriller excerpt:

Dead East

by Steve Winshel

4.3 stars – 3 Reviews
Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled
Here’s the set-up:

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Terrorism doesn’t just happen in faraway places. Someone is killing innocent Americans and no one knows it is part of an intricate plot involving unseen forces. Jarvis is a private detective who knows what war looks like the way a firefighter knows the heat of a blaze; he has lived it, survived it, and come home to a world he thought would be safer. When his best friend, a skilled army sniper who has found a way to employ his talents during times of peace, is found poisoned and near death, Jarvis sets his sights on the assassin. He discovers far more than a single act of unexplained violence. What unravels is a dirty, dangerous, and shocking threat that takes him around the world and back home again as he tries to stop an act of calculated and unforgivable terror.

And here, for your reading pleasure, is our free excerpt:

Chapter One

November 24, 2001

Kandahar Province, Afghanistan

 

Brilliantly white walls surrounded a dozen children playing in the courtyard. Quiet men hand-scrubbed them each evening. Now they reflected the late afternoon sun, echoing the slap of a hard rubber ball each time it banged against a wall and into the hands of a little girl playing in one corner. A puff of dirt swirled and then resettled with each bounce. Two teen boys kicked a worn soccer ball at the other end of the courtyard, navigating between the legs of the swarm of children. Voices called to one another to come play a jumping game, or to wrangle over who would get to eat the first cookie when they went home. The sounds ricocheted off the walls and were like notes from a choir. Beyond the wide north wall was the school building, not much larger than the courtyard. On the other side, the south wall separated the children from the packed dirt road that split Sharzi into two tiny villages. The road ran straight for a hundred yards before resuming its winding path for another quarter mile and then emerging into desert that appeared like a mirage and went to infinity. Looking up into the glare of the sun, one saw the tops of three-story buildings and escarpments made of hand-molded clay and ancient cement.

 

Over the cacophony of the youngsters playing and mothers chattering as they entered the courtyard to pick up their charges and walk them home for the afternoon meal, no one heard the rumble of approaching vehicles.

The lead Humvee came around the bend at the beginning of the stretch of road. The grinding of an engine fighting too much sand and not enough oil caught the attention of a woman in full Burkha about to step into the school entrance. Only her eyes were visible, but they conveyed fear and contempt with clarity. An armored car following a few feet behind the Humvee cleared the curve and both vehicles began to cover the fifty yards of straightaway to the school.

From an open window above and next to the school a large, rough stone arced over the balcony. It lazily tumbled, seeming to waft like a leaf, picking up speed as it descended to the empty road. The space beneath it filled with the front of the Humvee just as the stone seemed ready to fall harmlessly to the dirt. The loud crack startled the driver as the glass in front of him shattered into a thousand spidery strands. Breaks squealed and metal strained against inertia to bring the driver and soldier next to him slamming forward, the vehicle sharply turning to the right and ramming into a low wall in front of a home on the main street. The armored car cut left to avoid hitting the side of the Humvee, now blocking most of the street. All movement stopped and for several heartbeats, the only sound was of cursing and motors running. The woman entering the school froze; the children and other parents inside the courtyard and those scattered throughout the small structure were still unaware of the tableau just yards from them.

Jarvis stepped out from the passenger’s side of the armored car, M-16 angled down but balanced in his arm to quickly raise and point in any direction. He moved to the Humvee, using it as a shield while looking inside. He took in the rock, the windshield, and the empty street.

“Rock from up there.” He spoke to the two men in the Humvee, but loudly enough for the sergeant in the driver’s seat of the armored vehicle behind him and the two soldiers in the back seat to hear. He pointed to the open balcony to his left with the muzzle of his rifle.

“God dammit!” The Humvee driver pushed open his door and stomped into the center of the road.

“Stay near your vehicle until we secure the area!” Jarvis barked.

“Shit, Jarvis, it’s just some god damned kid.” The Humvee driver wore his helmet askew and had a plastic water bottle in one hand. He started around the front to pull out the rock that was embedded in the windshield.

“I said get back…” Jarvis’ next words were cut off by a single shot from behind and to his right, the side of the street opposite the school. The bullet tore out the driver’s throat. A geyser of blood shot upward before the dead man could crumple to the ground. His knees hit the dirt the same time a burst of automatic fire began to strafe the Humvee from the same direction as the rifle shot. Jarvis was already rolling on the ground, backwards to the relative safety of the armored vehicle.

“Down, down, down!” He returned fire in the direction of the burst that was tearing up the side of the Humvee, cutting through the metal doors. Jarvis could hear the dying groans of the soldier on the passenger side. He looked across the street, where the rock had come from, the trigger for the ambush. New gunfire would come from there any second. The enemy did not disappoint. Just as Jarvis rolled under the armored car, half a dozen shots struck the side of the vehicle above him. Unlike the Humvee, they did not penetrate.

Shouts from inside the armored vehicle. Instructions to one another, and the sergeant’s voice over it all.

“Jarvis! Get in, get in!”

Under the armored car, the still-running motor almost drowned out all sound. Jarvis dragged himself in a half-circle against the rough dirt road to look at the spot where the first shots had come, killing the Humvee driver. No one was visible. He spun back to see the other side of the street, banging his helmet against the oil pan on the undercarriage. Sweat poured onto his face. A burst of automatic gunfire from the direction of the school raked the driver’s door just above Jarvis’ head. He ducked and waited for it to stop.

The Humvee blocked any forward progress for the armored car. They’d have to move it or back away. Neither option was promising. Jarvis heard the door on the other side of the armored vehicle open. Automatic fire spat out, this time coming from one of his guys. Jarvis could see the boots of the soldier. Muddy, torn, brown canvas. Legs of camouflage pants covered in dirt. Their passenger, Brin, had spent three weeks alone, hidden in the desert, half-buried in berms, moving slowly from rock to crevice. Stopping for hours, sometimes for an entire day. Chameleon, patient and inexorable. He’d scouted, alone, gathering information. Sometimes taking a single shot, set up days in advance. Jarvis’ team had picked him up this morning to bring him back to civilization for a couple days.

A staccato of gunfire came from the open window opposite the school, raining down on the armored car. They were caught in a crossfire. Brin had stopped shooting and Jarvis could hear the two soldiers still in the armored vehicle yelling instructions.

“RPG!” Brin shouted and Jarvis whipped around to see where the blast would come from. But Brin wasn’t warning of incoming fire. He was arming Jarvis. A three-foot long metal tube slid under the armored car and hit Jarvis in the side. He rolled over and grabbed the heavy gun that shot a grenade up to a hundred yards with deadly accuracy. In one movement he flipped up the safety and pulled the scope to his eye. The space under the car was just enough for him to squeeze the grenade launcher onto his shoulder if he pressed down on the dirt road with his chest and strained his neck. The angle was hard and he had to expose himself to the open air to point it up enough to get the balcony in his sights. It was far enough to the left of the school that there was little danger of collateral damage. He pulled the trigger just as another round of automatic fire hit the roof of the armored car.

The kick from the launcher slammed his head into the floor runner on the driver’s side. The sound of the retort hadn’t reached his ears before the grenade hit the open balcony and the explosion created a volcano of white rock and plaster. Shouts of wounded men speaking Farsi rose over the ruckus. Less than two minutes had passed since the US Army vehicles had come around the bend. The scene inside the school was furiously calm, as parents raced to cover their children and keep them from going outside to see the action. A few bits of rock from the shattered balcony fell onto the courtyard, but no one was injured.

Jarvis waited, holding his breath. Nothing. The next burst of gunfire would come from the opposite side of the street again, where Brin was. He began to turn around, opened his mouth to tell Brin to get in the armored car and they would turn around, get the hell out. Before he could get the words out, he heard Brin shout again.

“RPG!” Jarvis was confused for a moment, looking at the weapon still in his hand, the extra grenade attached to the underside. Then he understood. The tone was different in Brin’s voice. RPG, but this time it was incoming.

Jarvis scrambled out from under the armored car, back towards the side of the street with the balcony he’d just fired on. The risk of being shot was lower than being blown up. He pulled himself up and turned to open the door of the armored car to get the other two soldiers out. His sergeant waved him off, opening the door himself and pulling at the soldier behind him.

“Go, go, go!” the driver screamed.

Jarvis ran across the street and dove for a low wall beneath what remained of the balcony he’d destroyed. On the other side of the armored car, Brin ran in the opposite direction, toward the muzzle of the grenade launcher, his gun firing. Jarvis held his helmet down with one hand and peered over the wall. He saw the two soldiers getting out of the armored vehicle, Brin running hunched over, gun blazing, and above them all in the sky, coming over the low buildings on the outskirts of the village, a US helicopter equipped with small, deadly missiles.

Almost in slow motion, Jarvis saw the grenade spit out of the launcher across the street and head toward the armored car. The explosion was almost instantaneous. Jarvis locked eyes with his sergeant, or thought he did, as the vehicle burst into flames and the two soldiers coming out the driver’s side were shredded. Burning pieces of car and flesh rained down on the street. Jarvis felt a spray, not sure if it was fuel or blood. He pulled his head down and immediately there was a second explosion, next to him on the same side of the street. The wall of the courtyard erupted, the concussive force throwing Jarvis three feet back. Large chunks of rock and plaster fell into the space that moments ago had been filled with children playing and shouting.

Jarvis was uninjured. He leapt up and saw the helicopter closing in, large caliber machine guns strafing the building across the street where Brin had been running. Brin lay splayed on the street, in one piece, moaning. The helicopter passed over the street and hovered 150 feet above the school, guns at the ready. Jarvis waved to the helicopter and looked back to Brin.

Two men in Afghan garb, wearing scarves covering their faces, were on either side of him. Another held an automatic rifle at the ready. The two soldiers in the helicopter were not looking that way. The men in the street dragged Brin toward the building where the grenade had been launched. Jarvis jumped up but the Afghan man with the gun sprayed bullets in his direction and Jarvis could not return fire, dropping to the ground instead. The helicopter turned toward the street and the soldier strapped against the open door returned fire at the Afghan who’d pinned down Jarvis. The man in the street was cut in half, but Brin was already gone.

Jarvis pulled at the radio on his belt.

“One man alive, they’ve got him in the building below you. Hold fire!”

The helicopter would land only to pick up the wounded, careful not to risk losing more men or equipment to the Taliban or Al-Qaeda or whoever hated the Americans at the moment. The voice of the pilot came over the radio and Jarvis could see the man’s mouth moving a hundred feet up in the air at the same time.

“Another ground patrol is on the way. 17 minutes out.”

Jarvis looked across the street, then above where the balcony had been. No movement. Moans and cries of anguish came from the rubble to his left, from what was left of the wall of the school’s courtyard and the people buried beneath or cut down by flying fragments of rock. Eerie silence filled the space between the shouts for help. In the distance, a siren slowly emerged. The village was small, but after generations of war they were prepared for death and violence. An ambulance would be there in moments. The warren of homes and shops across the street where Brin had disappeared stretched back further than he could see. Brin might be in the building from where the grenade had been fired. Or he could be two hundred yards deep in the maze of narrow walkways and angled doors that were less navigable by a stranger than a Greek labyrinth. Four men were dead already. Jarvis had fought in the first Gulf War. He’d seen what happened to captured US soldiers. He would not let a fifth die today. Jarvis took a deep breath and ran, zig-zag, across the street toward the open doorway. No one shot at him.

He reached the door where Brin had been taken and put his back against the adobe wall next to it. The accumulated heat from the day transferred from the wall to his shoulders. Jarvis quickly poked his head around to the open doorway and pulled back, less to get a look and more to create a target and see if anyone took a shot. Silence. He spun through the door, M-16 pointed forward and sweeping the room. It was empty, except for spent shells on the floor. There were few windows and the transition from bright sunlight to the shaded interior made everything seem shadowy and dangerous. It was. Jarvis saw the one opening to his left and ran quickly across the room. This time he didn’t bother to sneak a look. He passed through what may have been an abandoned shop and then out a back door into an alley. A movement to his right and he whipped around, finger on the trigger. A child stood in a doorway twenty feet down, large brown eyes not judging the soldier. Jarvis held the gun tightly. He’d seen children approach US Army vehicles, hands out begging for scraps of food, grenades hidden beneath their ragged clothes. The boy held his stare, then raised a hand. He pointed in the other direction. Solemn, silent. Jarvis turned and ran that way.

The sound of the ambulance was getting louder and the thump of the helicopter was persistent, but both became muted as he followed the winding path of the alley away from the street. He passed under a colonnade and instead of shouldering along a narrow walkway he was suddenly in an open space, dozens of people milling about. They were talking, some still engaged in commerce and ignoring the explosions they’d heard from the street a hundred yards away. Inured to bedlam, their lives continued. Others huddled and pointed at the sky where the helicopter was visible but distant and smoke drifted in several directions. Fewer people than Jarvis would have expected stopped to look at the armed soldier bursting into the bazaar.

Jarvis looked around, taking in every group, trying to read body language and intent. No sign of the men who had taken Brin just moments earlier. Jarvis suddenly felt alone, vulnerable. Not everyone in the country hated the Americans, but none embraced another invader. The smart thing to do would be to wait for the squad that was ten minutes away. Jarvis ran across the open space, deeper into the crowd. He looked at each corner of the bazaar, trying to read every face, interpret the dust swirling at every entryway or door. Nothing spoke to him. He looked up, searching the second floor of the building encircling the plaza. As he turned around, the panicked shouts of dozens of voices rang out just as a searing pain hit his right shoulder. The sound of the rifle shot followed. Jarvis spun from the force and almost dropped his gun. Instinct shifted it to his left hand and as he completed his turn he dropped into a crouch and raised the rifle. It was set to semi-automatic and the first two shots hit brick and window but the next four struck the gunman on the balcony. Jarvis looked down and caught the eye of one of the people whose heads he had just fired over, inches separating them from the bullets that found their mark. Blood poured from his right shoulder and he took a quick glance before running across the courtyard to the building where the shot had come from. There was an exit wound – the bullet had passed through.

Jarvis skirted the hunched men and women who tried to take cover from the impending firefight. No more bullets flew. He rushed through the open doorway, gun arcing back and forth. He expected half a dozen men, a grenade launcher, perhaps a tank. Nothing. Stairs to his left led to the man he’d shot. No one came racing down to shoot at him. One foot on the bottom step, Jarvis stopped. Except for the cries from the courtyard, there was silence. No footsteps running above him. No shouts of warning or cries of courage. But not complete silence. There was a buzzing noise. A hum. Jarvis looked around the room. It was a living room, someone’s home. Carpet, a couple chairs. One painting on a wall. A small closet covered by a long blanket. And a heavy door at the back of the room. The humming came from behind the blanket.

Jarvis crossed the room and pushed aside the blanket. On the floor sat a squat, shiny new machine, buzzing like a beehive. A generator. In the back of the tiny closet, a hole had been drilled and a power cord ran from the generator into the gap. The cord angled down, not up. There was a basement.

Jarvis backed out of the small space and looked at the heavy door to his left. He gently tried the latch. It gave easily, quietly. Wincing from the pain, he kept the rifle in his left hand and forced his right to slowly pull back the door. Steps led down into the dark, turning to one side just before the light gave way to shadow. Jarvis stepped in and carefully pulled the door almost shut behind him. In the silence, he could begin to make out voices. They were urgent, angry, but controlled. Jarvis took a few steps down, gun pointing forward. With each step the voices got louder. Just before the turn in the stone stairway, he could make out a few words. They were in Arabic and he strained to remember any of his six weeks of language training a dozen years earlier before his first deployment in the Gulf.

There was a loud clicking noise and the murky shadow ahead of him was instantly illuminated as though a bright light had been lit. Jarvis pulled back instinctively but he was still out of sight. His eyes adjusted once again and Jarvis moved forward to the edge of the light and crouched on the stair just before the bend where he would be able to see into whatever was below – and they would see him. A few words now emerged out of the stream of increasingly agitated language. One voice rose above the others, defiant and confident. Jarvis made out a phrase he’d learned and heard many times: God is great. And he recognized a few others that were less encouraging: American pig, which sounded almost eloquent in Farsi. Invader, killer, children – these were words he’d heard thrown at him not just in the classroom but occasionally in the street. The tone of the speaker’s voice became more emotional, strident, like a rising crescendo reaching for a final note. Jarvis poked his head around the corner and pulled it back almost before his eyes could focus. It took him a moment to interpret the image that burned onto his eyes like a horrible photograph. On the opposite wall a large gray sheet hung like in a photographer’s studio. A bright light shone against the image in front of the tarp – a man in traditional Afghan garb holding a medium sized sabre. He was looking toward the light, which blinded him from seeing Jarvis’ brief peering around the corner. But he wasn’t looking into the light – he was looking at a camera on a tripod, a ridiculously small video camera. And the camera was taking in the scene, of the man holding the sabre in one hand and a tightly bound but conscious Brin in the other. Four other men, their backs to the staircase, operated the camera and lights, shouting encouragement to their comrade. Over the din, Jarvis heard one voice that he did not have to interpret.

“Fuck you, asshole.” Brin.

The Afghan man’s voice continued to rise and Jarvis could feel the fury, the exultant victory the man felt. The cheers of the others were those of a mob watching the guillotine in 18th century France. They were calling for death, for vengeance, for a good old-fashioned beheading. Jarvis flicked the setting to single shot on his rifle. He took a deep breath, slowing his racing heart and ignoring the light-headedness that tried to embrace his brain from blood loss. He stood and turned the corner, aiming more from memory than the sight of what was before him. As he pulled the trigger the first time, he took in the movement of the man’s arm as it began to pull across Brin’s throat. It would take several strokes, more of a sawing motion, to complete the act. But the first slide of the blade would sever Brin’s carotid artery and seal his fate before the horror of the beheading could be complete. Jarvis’ shot found its mark with almost comical accuracy. The man’s forehead seemed to cave in slightly. The momentum of the movement of the sword across Brin’s throat was inevitable and unstoppable, but the backward force from the shot lessened the pressure. Blood seeped but did not gush.

Hoping more than assuming his shot had been accurate, Jarvis flicked the gun into semi-automatic. The other men in the room were stunned for only an instant and turned toward the stairs. Each held a gun. Jarvis strafed the men hitting three almost instantly. Two died before they could point their weapons at Jarvis but the third was mortally wounded and bent on killing Jarvis as his final act. Jarvis pulled the trigger again and the man’s torso ripped open and his gun flew out of his hand. Jarvis turned to the one man he had not hit and saw the muzzle of a Russian rifle flash. The wall next to him splintered and the next sound was of the Afghan’s weapon being switched to automatic. Jarvis pulled his own trigger and nothing happened – he’d spent his final rounds. He dropped the M-16 and reached for his sidearm but it was too late. The Afghan raised his gun and uttered a final expletive. He pulled the trigger as Jarvis raised his gun, knowing it would not matter but unwilling to give up. The spray of bullets, though, missed Jarvis wide to the left as the man flew forward in an explosive rush as though hit by a truck. Brin, launching himself like a torpedo, bleeding, bound, and beaten, landed on top of the Afghan. He began to bang his head against the man who struggled and tried to turn to push Brin off. The American smashed his forehead against the man’s neck and ear, then against his nose and mouth as his former captor squirmed around to face him. The gun was still in the Afghani’s hand and he brought it up to shoot Brin whose arms were uselessly tied to his side. One shot rang out and the man laid still. Brin looked up into the barrel of Jarvis’ service revolver. Still on top of the dead Afghan, Brin smiled.

“Hey, thanks, man. Tried to stay calm, but guess I sorta lost my head.”

Jarvis’ heart raced and he began to feel faint. He smiled, or thought he did, and as he crumpled to the ground and almost onto Brin, he heard shouts – American voices – and feet running across the floor above. The voices got louder and as he passed out he looked down again and the grin of the bleeding soldier grew larger and broader until it filled his vision like the Cheshire cat.

 

Chapter Two

Present Day, Los Angeles

 

Jarvis sat loosely in the driver’s seat, the radio filling the car with low sounds of a KCRW late-night talk show. The topic was troop withdrawals from one of the countries where America was at war. He fiddled with the controls on the steering wheel and took it down to a murmur. Nothing was open at 2:15 a.m. so the flashlight beam playing back and forth in the alley ahead and to his left screamed for attention. The main street where he’d parked more than seven hours ago was deserted. The strip mall abutting the alley contained a Quizno’s, a check cashing place, a liquor store masquerading as a convenience market, and a small pharmacy. It was the last that held Jarvis’ attention.

The door of the BMW was virtually silent as it opened and Jarvis slid out. No oncoming traffic threatened and he stepped quickly and quietly to the curb. The eighteen-inch section of pine 2-by-four was almost invisible as he held it to his side. He reached the alley just as the beam from the flashlight widened, signaling its owner was nearing the mouth and about to reach the sidewalk. Jarvis paused for a moment and a dark shadow emerged from the alley and turned to its right, away from Jarvis and toward the banged up mini Toyota truck a hundred feet up the street. Jarvis resumed his walk, just a few steps behind the figure, unnoticed. Five steps and Jarvis was immediately behind. Hooded sweatshirt, baggy pants, and a large green Hefty bag slung over the figure’s shoulder. Without breaking stride, Jarvis swung the makeshift club up with a turn of his hips. The force caught the burglar precisely as aimed, almost dislocating his shoulder and forcing the bag to drop. A grunt flew from the man’s mouth and before his body could hit the brick wall, Jarvis hit him again – not as hard, just a stunning jolt, on the side of the head. The man bounced off the wall and was on the ground, too confused to know whether to grab his shoulder or his ear where a lump was already forming.

Jarvis made the decision for him, grabbing his collar and dragging the man backwards in the direction they’d both just come. Still no one in sight. The captive moaned and then started to complain as the discomfort of being slid along a cement sidewalk pierced his shock and surprise.

“Who the…what the hell are you doin’, man? Get the hell offa me!”

He struggled as if getting away from Jarvis were an option. Jarvis shifted his grip and gave him a tap on the other ear with the club and the complaining was replaced by a yelp of pain.

They reached the car and Jarvis opened the back door, half picking up the man and shoving him in.

“Don’t bleed on the seat.” He shut the door and used the remote entry key to lock the doors. Without looking back, he returned to the spot where the trash bag had fallen. Its contents had started to spill out. He spun the bag with one hand while holding it in the air with the other, then tossed it over his shoulder like a knapsack and headed back to the car. Unlocking with a press of the key, he opened the front passenger door and tossed the bag on the seat. The protestations from the guy in the back were starting to become more coherent and easily drowned out the radio. Jarvis closed the passenger door and opened the back door. The guy scrambled further back into the seat, but still mouthed off.

“I’m gonna kill you, man, you know who you’re messin’ with?” The threat was softened by the guy’s back pressing up against the opposite door as if that would spring it open.

Jarvis pulled a plastic handcuff from his back pocket and dragged the man closer to him by the ankle.

“Yeah, I know who I’m messing with.” He jerked the guy’s hands together and looped one end of the plastic through the locking mechanism on the other. Cheap, short-term, effective.

“Goddammit, this is kidnapping you prick! You better…” He stopped when Jarvis showed him the piece of 2-by-4.

In a pocket in the back seat, a roll of duct tape created a circular impression. Jarvis pulled it out and the man’s eyes grew wide. He pulled off an eight-inch strip and tore a few millimeters with his teeth and ripped the rest. Jarvis grabbed the guy by the hair and pulled him close, pressing the duct tape over his mouth and sliding his hand back and forth to make sure there was a tight seal. Any objections were muffled.

The guy’s eyes widened further, comically, as he looked down and noticed the plastic on the floor and dark towel on the seat. Jarvis followed his look and shook his head.

“Nope, you’re doing all the bleeding you’re going to do. That’s just to keep it clean.” He waited. “Unless you keep squirming.” The man settled down.

Jarvis shut the door and climbed in the driver’s seat. With the press of a button, the engine started. He looked both ways before pulling into the empty street and didn’t turn around as he spoke to the space in front of him.

“Let’s go have a chat with your father.”

 

Chapter Three

Jarvis pulled into the driveway on a tree-lined street in Brentwood. The house was dark, mimicking all the others. Motion-activated floodlights flicked on as he stopped at the front door halfway around the circular drive. Jarvis cut the engine and pressed a button on his phone. The ringing reverberated over the car’s speakers. Half a dozen times before a groggy male voice replaced the ringing.

“What? Yes, hello? Who is this?”

“It’s Jarvis. I’m out front.” The sound of sheets rustling came over the line, then an incoherent woman’s voice mumbling something.

“Nothing, shhh, dear. Go back to sleep,” in a whisper.

Jarvis disconnected just as the young man in the back started to moan in emotional agony. Jarvis ignored him and waited. The front door opened as a hallway light clicked on behind the figure. Robe open, large belly protruding, the man was almost as wide as he was tall. Olive skin absorbed the light from the outside lamps. He gestured quickly, angrily, furtively toward the car. Jarvis got out and opened the back door, pulling his passenger out with a handful of shirt. The only sounds the previously obstreperous young man made was a snort that hovered between contempt and fear.

One hand on his charge, the other carrying the twisted bag filled with pharmaceuticals, Jarvis dragged both to the front door. The father opened it wide and ushered them in. The look on his face was of fury waiting to be unleashed. His mouth trembled and he was unable to speak. He pointed to the living room off to the right, enveloped in darkness. The size of the house from the outside promised rooms further back from which sounds would not escape. Jarvis pushed the son in that direction but did not follow. The son was breathing heavily now, dried blood on his face. Shame and indignation battled; the former won. The father looked ready to explode and in the momentary silence that balanced the three men, he gave in to his rage and slapped his son hard and solidly across the face. The retort was like a shot and the son was surprised and broken.

Jarvis watched without reaction. “Here. It’s mostly narcotics. Some meth makings.” He tossed the bag onto the floor between the father and son. “Don’t rough him up too much. He wasn’t born an asshole.”

It was the father’s turn to register indignation. Jarvis ignored it. “I used about $3500 of the retainer. I’ll send you a bill for the balance.”

Jarvis left through the front door, his walk to the car triggering the outside floodlights again. He heard the urgent, hushed tirade begin as the door closed off the sounds from the house. With his back to his client, his mind was on home and an hour of sleep before starting again.

 

Chapter Four

The open window sent a cooling breeze through the room. Ocean sounds buffeted the darkness. Jarvis flipped on the bedside lamp, a low-watt bulb giving just enough light to read by and leaving the rest of the bedroom shrouded in black. He propped a pillow against the headboard and picked up the leather journal. Lying on his back, he opened to the page about a quarter from the end, held by an old laundry ticket he’d used for years as a bookmark. He didn’t need to look at the clock to know it was within a couple minutes of 3:15 a.m., his internal circadian keeping eternal synch with the hour. The last entry was the previous night’s, identified only by time, not day or year. He scribbled 3:15 a.m. below it and began to chew on the end of the pen. Events of the day and evening ran through his mind, some parts at high speed like the fast-forward button on the DVD player, others almost comically slow. He scratched out a few lines, hesitating only occasionally.

 

The hand of the father

Falls heavily on the shoulder of the son.

It is a burden, a gift, a curse.

And it is there long after he is gone.

 

Jarvis closed the book without reading what he’d written. Tossing it onto the nightstand along with the pen, he killed the light and rolled onto his stomach. A flickering image of his father, decades old, flitted across the palette of his closed eyes before he fell into an immediate, deep sleep.

The clock showed 4:18 a.m. when Jarvis quickly, steadily emerged to consciousness. A few rays of pre-dawn light bent around the house and snuck into the bedroom. Refreshed, fully alert, he rolled out of bed and headed to the garage. Ten minutes later he was hitting the heavy bag and sweating freely, cobwebs gone, another full day ahead. After forty-five minutes of punching, his breathing heavy and rasping, he stopped just as the cell phone perched on one of the shelves lining the garage vibrated violently. Wiping his hands against the only dry spot on his sweatpants, he picked it up. He recognized the digits as those commonly used in movies where they never gave a real phone number– 555.555.5555. Only one person he knew punched that into their cell so it displayed when they made a call. Someone who cracked open a new cell phone burner every week and reached out to Jarvis sometimes just as often, and sometimes not for six months or longer. Brin.

Jarvis answered. “Hey.”

The voice that responded wasn’t Brin. And there were sirens in the background.

Continued….

Click on the title below to download the entire book and keep reading Steve Winshel’s Dead East>>>>

Terrorism Doesn’t Just Happen in Faraway Places…. Dead East by Steve Winshel **Special Pricing in Honor of Independence Day!**

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Dead East

by Steve Winshel

4.3 stars – 3 Reviews
Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled
Here’s the set-up:

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Terrorism doesn’t just happen in faraway places. Someone is killing innocent Americans and no one knows it is part of an intricate plot involving unseen forces. Jarvis is a private detective who knows what war looks like the way a firefighter knows the heat of a blaze; he has lived it, survived it, and come home to a world he thought would be safer. When his best friend, a skilled army sniper who has found a way to employ his talents during times of peace, is found poisoned and near death, Jarvis sets his sights on the assassin. He discovers far more than a single act of unexplained violence. What unravels is a dirty, dangerous, and shocking threat that takes him around the world and back home again as he tries to stop an act of calculated and unforgivable terror.

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Lunch Time Reading! FREE Excerpt Featuring John Garrison’s Fast-Paced Supernatural Thriller On Sanctified Ground (The Jesus Catechism 2)

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Now we’re back to offer our weekly free Thriller excerpt:

4.7 stars – 3 Reviews
Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled
Here’s the set-up:
Ominous forces are gathering to destroy the Gospel of Jesus scrolls, a recently revealed divine revelation that could bring new faith and hope to a world that is slowly sliding into darkness. A handful of brave souls are fighting to preserve that precious document, but they are being overwhelmed by the sheer magnitude of the forces arraigned against them.
As this valiant group resists the forces coming against them, the apocalypse draws closer as war breaks out in the Middle East and fire rains down on Israel. Terrorists have also started a campaign of death and destruction in America. Millions are at risk.
A great satanic evil has also arisen in the city of Gulfview that seeks Arrowsmith’s death and the destruction of the New Christian Movement. Arrowsmith is now the face of the New Christian Movement which has grown out of the Gospel of Jesus. The Darkness must destroy the New Christian Movement or lose its dominance of the world.

And here, for your reading pleasure, is our free excerpt:

Chapter 1

 

John Arrowsmith tossed and turned in his sleep. A heavy weight seemed to press down on his chest. He began to sweat as his body seemed to tense in his sleep.

He stood before towering bronze double gates that were shut tight. The gates were so massive he could not see the walls that must hold the gates. On the gates themselves were hundreds of massive iron rings.

He glanced around him. Hundreds of men and women stood beside him, pulling on the iron rings and straining with all their strength to open the huge gates. John found his own hands on a large iron ring along with the others, pulling to open the massive gates.

He looked behind him and saw people in their thousands stretching out of sight, marching over a large sandy plain toward him, all shouting with joy and praising God. Their shouting sounded like some massive roaring sound coming from a river tumbling over a water fall.

Behind them, in the distance, coming slowly into view was a massive red bird of some kind that was too far away to identify.

John turned back to the iron ring his hand was wrapped around and continued to pull with all of his might. The gates were stubborn and would not open. But with every minute that passed, new hands reached for more iron rings and pulled with John and the others. All of those men and women behind him were coming to help open the gates.

John knew that all the people around him were Christians, and they were here for only one purpose–to open the gates.

John heard a distant trumpet sound behind him. He turned again to stare at the many Christians behind him, only now there was a black swarm of creatures in the distance coming rapidly down the hillside and into the valley behind the Christians. The creatures were black from head to toe carrying something in their hands that reflected the sun brightly.

As that red creature in the sky drew closer, John could now make it out, and that creature was no bird. John could not believe his eyes. A massive red dragon hovered over the valley, breathing fire and creating panic and death all around it. And the black swarm of creatures that came behind the dragon were black clad soldiers carrying large swords that glinted in the noon day sun.

With renewed urgency, John and the others pulled even harder on the iron rings. Slowly, by inches, the gates began to move. A crack appeared between the gates and a fierce bright light shot out, lighting up everything around John. He could hear angelic voices singing beyond the gates.

But he also heard a loud roaring coming from the rear as of thunder coming from the red dragon as it grew closer with its dark army. John knew in his heart that if he could not open the gates in time, the dragon and his legions would destroy everyone.

But where the brilliant light from between the gates struck, the black clad soldiers screamed and fell. Even the red dragon avoided the bright laser of light from the gates. The light was the answer.

John strained with all his strength. They had to get the gates open, or they were all doomed. Then he woke up.

John Arrowsmith lay in a pool of sweat. His breathing was heavy. He swung his legs over the side of the bed and sat there for a moment, trying to make sense of the dream, or was it a dream? This had more of the feel of a revelation, as if God was trying to tell him something, but what?

John shook his head and rose to his feet. His pajamas were soaked. He needed a shower.

He saw an April sun rising through the window of his bedroom. It was dawn. Perhaps a sail over the waters of the Gulf of Mexico would calm his spirit and give him time to make sense out of the dream.

One thing he knew for certain. Something terrible and evil was coming his way.

 

 

 

Chapter 2

Sebastian Black stood on the wooden dock watching the sailboats in the bay of the city of Gulfview. He stood straight and tall with his shoulder length black hair blowing gently in the cool breeze coming off the bay. His six foot, two inch frame easily stood out over the few people around him. His small black mustache looked almost out of place on his long, narrow face. A face marred only by a thin jagged scar that ran the length of the right side of his face, near his ear.

All in all, he was a handsome man though a chill might run through someone that looked at that face too closely. There was a sense of danger about the man, something that said watch your step.

His dark eyes followed one particular small sailboat. The occupant seemed to be enjoying himself immensely, completely unaware of Black standing on the dock.

Black unconsciously rubbed the long jagged scar near his right ear. The scar was a souvenir from a past accident that had claimed his wife and left him with a badly injured leg until Arrowsmith had healed that leg. The healed leg was a reminder that there was a God, not that he wanted to admit that to himself.

Black still carried his brass handle cane out of habit, but no longer needed it. He waited patiently for Arrowsmith to come in from sailing, looking out of place on the old wooden dock in his thousand dollar gray striped suit and silk white shirt.

As he waited, Black wondered what had happened to him. When Arrowsmith healed him, changes began to occur in him, subtle things that were hard to pinpoint but real nevertheless. The cold detachment that had always been his trademark began to melt away.

He was the Order’s troubleshooter, the man who cleaned up the messes, who carried out the important missions, who never let himself become personally involved. Last year, he had been sent by the Order to steal the Gospel of Jesus so the Order could destroy that manuscript, but he had failed and now the world marveled at the words contained in the Gospel of Jesus.

But that man who had sought the destruction of the Gospel of Jesus was dying, and a new man was emerging. The man he had been when his wife had been alive. When he cared about someone and could laugh and be happy. That man was returning from where he had been hidden away for so long under a weight of rage and guilt.

Black had blamed God for his wife’s death, and he had also blamed himself for surviving the accident. He could never understand why he had been spared and a lovely Christian woman had been taken. It made no sense to him so he directed his anger and rage at God. He had done terrible things in the name of that rage. Things he wasn’t proud of and wanted to forget.

But then John healed his leg and everything changed. Not obvious at first, but now all too apparent.

Maybe that was one reason he was here, Black thought, redemption–a simple word that carried so much meaning. That spiritual power that had healed his leg had reached deep inside of him and began to heal his spirit and soul. That terrible feeling of guilt and anger was slowly disappearing, vanishing little by little each day.

That change had caught Black by surprise because it had been so subtle, so gradual. Slowly, through the following days and weeks after his healing, he began to see himself in a new light. He began to measure himself against what he had been and what he was becoming.

It was then Black had looked around at his station in life, at what he was doing in the Order, with a clearer vision than he had ever had before and came to a quick conclusion: this was wrong, the Order was wrong, and he no longer wanted any part of such an organization.

But one didn’t just up and leave the Order, not and live. He had to develop an exit strategy so he had taken some time off. He told the Order that he was going on a vacation. He needed to figure some things out.

Then he had heard about someone being targeted by the Order for an assassination in Gulfview, someone involved with the Gospel of Jesus. Arrowsmith had come immediately to his mind. He had probed further, but could learn nothing more.

So he had come to Gulfview to warn Arrowsmith and help protect him from what might be coming his way.

 

 

 

Chapter 3

John Arrowsmith saw Sebastian Black standing on the dock as his small sail boat headed in from a morning of sailing. The tall, imposing man with long dark hair and a small black mustache had not changed in the year since he had seen him. He stood tall and patient on the dock, slightly leaning on his cane with a grim smile on his lips, waiting for John to arrive.

John had no idea why Black was here.They were enemies in every sense of the word. Nothing had changed. One of his subordinates had shot Rebecca when she was attempting to deliver the Gospel of Jesus.

John had tried to forgive Black for that shooting, but now that Black was here, old resentments and anger were rising to the surface. Apparently, his attempt at forgiveness had not worked as well as he had hoped.

He had never expected to see Black again, yet here he was, standing on the wooden dock as John maneuvered into his boot slip and jumped off the sailboat. He tied up the boat and walked over to Sebastian.

Arrowsmith was shorter than Black, standing only six feet. His sandy colored hair was in sharp contrast to Black’s coal black hair. His blue eyes studied Black for a moment before he spoke.

“What brings you here?” John asked sharply, a frown on his lips.

“The settling of an old debt.” Sebastian touched his right leg, the one that John had healed last year.

“You owe me nothing,” John insisted.

“I think otherwise. In any event, I am here to balance accounts.” Sebastian paused a moment, then said, “You are in grave danger, John. The Order believes you are a threat to them.”

John stepped back, shock on his face, “The Order? The people you work for? ”

“The people I used to work for. I have quit. They just don’t know it yet.”

“Obviously, you think they will do something drastic if you are here,” John said, looking worried.

“Indeed I do. I believe an assassin is coming to kill you.”

“Are you sure?”

“No, and that is the dilemma. All I have are rumors and innuendos, nothing concrete, but something is happening. Your name has been mentioned more than once.”

“What can I do?” John asked, frowning, trying to digest this sudden, upsetting news.

“Run,” Black said.

John slowly shook his head. “I was never much good at running. It’s the cop in me. I may be retired, but I am still too stubborn to retreat. How long before we know for sure if the Order is out to kill me?”

“When you are dead,” Black replied with a small grin. “Or if a month passes and nothing happens, then we will know I was wrong.”

“A month can be a long time.”

“I will be around to keep an eye on you,” Black said, patting John on the back gently.

“Why? And don’t tell me it’s because I healed your leg.”

“Let’s just say that I have gained a new perspective on life. When you healed my leg, I began to see my life with new eyes.”

“I didn’t heal you, God did,” John said.

“You know I don’t believe in miracles, John. Still, something miraculous did happen. I would like to figure out what. Maybe hanging around you will give me a clue.”

“It isn’t hard, Sebastian. It is all about Jesus.”

“Yeah, you would say that. In any case, I have warned you, and I will try to keep an eye on you. Be careful.” Black walked away with a wave of the cane he always carried.

John stood alone on the dock. His mind was swirling with questions and fears, wondering how this could happen to him. Then there was Black. Why was he really here?

Was what Black said even true? How could he trust Black? For all he knew, Black was sent to kill him, but that didn’t make sense. Why warn him if that were true? Could he actually believe that Black had changed? Had he really left the Order? He had no answers to those questions.

Finally, he shook his head and started walking. There was nothing he could do anyway, but pray and trust in the Lord.

 

 

 

 

Chapter 4

CIA agent Mack Mackay stood on the airport asphalt at six in the morning and listened to the whine of a jet engine powering up, waiting to board a private jet bound for Tel Aviv. He had been rousted out of bed a few hours ago and told to be here. He had no idea why.

A gentle wind blew his curly brown hair into his steel gray eyes. He brushed the offending strands back out of his eyes. Mackay was of medium height and well conditioned with years of experience as a CIA field agent.

A few minutes later, a long black limousine pulled up beside him, and Alfred, one of the CIA director’s many assistants, jumped out with an envelop in hand, shoving it toward Mackay as he approached.

Mackay took the bulky envelop and opened it. There was money and instructions inside. He didn’t bother pulling the instructions out; he could read them later on the plane.

“So what’s up?” Mackay asked, putting the envelope away in his jacket pocket.

“We picked up some intelligence last night,” Alfred said, dropping his voice as he looked around to see if anyone was close. “Iran is going after the Gospel of Jesus scrolls.”

The Gospel of Jesus scrolls were purported to be written by Jesus himself and now circulated world wide in paperback format. The ultimate source and authority for the Gospel of Jesus were the ten ancient scrolls housed in a warehouse owned by Isaac Stein located near Jerusalem.

“What? Are you kidding? That’s nuts,” Mackay said, amazed at this revelation.

“Who said the Iranian regime was sane? The ayatollahs don’t think like we do. Apparently, infidels possessing the Gospel of Jesus is simply too much for them plus it would be a great propaganda coup for them.”

“You think that is the real reason?” Mackay asked, still astounded that Iran would risk war with Israel over some ancient scrolls. The Stein compound where the Gospel of Jesus was located was too close to Israel for the Israelis to ignore an Iranian attack. There would be trouble.

“Who knows?”

“Why me?” Mackay asked.

“Logical choice since you know Simon Stein. You are going to need leverage to make Isaac Stein move those scrolls. I understand he has become quite attached to them.”

“You haven’t answered the real question. Why does the CIA care about the Gospel of Jesus scrolls located in a stuffy warehouse miles from anywhere.”

“Let’s say we would like to poke Iran in the eye a little and prevent them from destroying the scrolls,” Alfred said with a small smile.

“For them to attack and fail would be a huge loss of face,” Mackay admitted.

“Exactly. We need to keep Iran on a tight leash. Too many Moslem countries are beginning to lean in her direction. A loss of face might slow that lean.”

“How is the attack coming?” Mackay asked.

“We think planes, maybe fighters. Don’t know for sure. Our agent’s informant couldn’t verify the type of attack, only that one was to be launched in four days from now, on Friday morning.”

“Doesn’t give me much time. What am I suppose to do?”

“Talk Isaac Stein into moving his scrolls to a London museum. We have already made arrangements. It is the same museum he chose for the Bartholomew scrolls.”

“That will take some convincing,” Mackay said.

“Not if he wants those scrolls to survive,” Alfred said.

“By the time I arrive in Tel Aviv, I will have a little over three days left. That’s not much time.”

“Couldn’t be helped. A C-130 cargo plane will arrive on Wednesday afternoon to pick you and the scrolls up. You need to be out of there by Thursday. That gives you an extra day for a safety margin.”

“And if the attack arrives first?”

Alfred shrugged and said, “Nothing we can do about the time table. It is what it is. However, I do have some good news. We have arranged for an AWACS to be in the area, code name Overlord.” Alfred handed Mackay a satellite phone. “You can reach them on this. It is all set up. Just press the button and talk. With luck, the AWACS might be able to give you an early warning, time to get out if things get close.”

“I don’t like this. It’s too hurried, too unorganized,” Mackay complained.

“If you don’t like that, you will hate this. We aren’t telling the Israelis anything about this.”

“They are going to suspect something when things start exploding,” Mackay said, concerned about the lack of Israeli support.

“Yes, but they might not do anything if the Iranians are gone before they can react. If they knew the Iranians were coming in, they would scramble to meet them. Planes would explode, and pilots would die. A big Mideast Crisis could result. We must avoid that at all costs.”

“They have to know the C-130 is coming in to pick up something from the Stein warehouse. How did you explain that?”

“We told the truth. Isaac Stein is moving some cargo out, and we are assisting. We filed the flight plan a few hours ago,” Alfred said.

“And they didn’t ask any questions?” Mackay said, incredulous that the Israelis would just let a C-130 fly through their airspace without a thorough investigation.

“We have an understanding with the Israelis. They owe us big time. I won’t go into any details.” Alfred looked Mackay hard in the eyes. “This is going to be dicey at best. The director wishes you good luck. He knows it is a tough assignment.”

Mackay just stood there, shaking his head, not knowing what to say.

“Looks like your plane is ready,” Alfred said, nodding toward the plane.

Mackay glanced at the plane, then sighed and started walking, wondering if he could pull this mission off. An awfully lot of things had to go just right for success to happen. It had been his experience that was a rare occurrence. Something always went wrong.

 

 

 

Chapter 5

Two senior members of the Order stood in a luxurious room with a thick white carpet on the floor and long silk drapes hanging from tall, rectangular windows. The Order was the invisible hand that sought to steer the world’s course. They influenced thousands of national leaders and bureaucrats all over the world. Gently leading them in the direction the Order thought best.

The Order had been around over a thousand years, held together by a single idea: to form a world order based on unity and reason with war no longer an option. While the goal was lofty and perhaps noble, the methods they chose were often ruthless and dictatorial. Any means to achieve the ends was acceptable to them.

“You are sure you heard correctly? Assassins are being sent to kill John Arrowsmith?” Sarine, one of the oldest members of the Order council, said.

Daric nodded and said, “Straight from the Chairman. A kill team was dispatched a few days ago. Their orders are to make his death look like an accident.”

“Damn, but this is dangerous. John Arrowsmith is well known now. He has been on all the talk shows and in the news media. The world knows Arrowsmith. If this goes south and the Order is implicated…”

“My thoughts exactly. We should have left well enough alone, but that isn’t the worst of the news.”

“What could be worst?”

“Our chairman has been talking to Iran about the scrolls of Jesus,” Daric said.

The Gospel of Jesus scrolls were at the center of a running controversy. Many said that Jesus wrote the scrolls and were his personal gospel to the world. Others said the scrolls were a fake sent to destroy the Christian religion.

Unfortunately for the western nations, the Moslems believed the scrolls were genuine and that it was sacrilege for a non-Moslem to handle such religious scrolls. Consequently, the entire Middle East was in an uproar over the scrolls being in the possession of the Stein family who were Christians.

Continuing, Daric said, “He has convinced our friends in Iran to take out the scrolls at Stein’s warehouse.”

“Sweet Mother of…” Sarine couldn’t finish, but sat down on a nearby couch and shook her head. Then she looked up and asked, “How?”

“Fighter jets. They will target the Stein warehouse and blow it to smithereens.”

“How stupid can the Chairman be? The Israelis will see them coming and track those planes right back to Iran. And what the Israelis know, the Americans will know. The military intelligences of both countries will go after this incident like rabid dogs. They could trace this back to us. Couldn’t you convince the Chairman to wait? This is far too drastic,” Sarine said angrily, fuming over the foolishness of such an attack.

Daric shook his head and walked over to an open window. A cool spring breeze blew in through the open space.

“He had his mind made up before I even talked to him. The wheels were already in motion. I doubt the Chairman could stop the launch of Iranian jets now anyway. The ayatollahs were already leaning in this direction. It didn’t take much of a push to get them involved,” Daric said as he looked out of the window.

“Then you don’t think it would do any good for me to talk to him?” Sarine asked.

Daric turned back toward Sarine and said, “None whatsoever. Like I said, he already had his mind made up. He is determined to destroy the scrolls of Jesus. He sees them as a threat to the Order’s goals.”

Sarine knew that copies of the Gospel of Jesus scrolls had already gone viral around the world. Paperback copies of the ancient scrolls were everywhere. She and the Order feared the damage this Gospel of Jesus could do to their plans to rule the world.

The Gospel of Jesus contained the ideas and preachings of Jesus, direct from his hand and written over two thousand years ago. The religious work was already creating divisions within the Christian world and beginning to have political ramifications as well.

“Destroying the scrolls now is pointless,” Sarine said in frustration.

“Some think that if the scrolls are destroyed, there will be no way to authenticate the Gospel of Jesus. They could claim the Gospel of Jesus is pure fiction,” Daric said.

“I disagree. People will believe what they want to believe, even if the scrolls are destroyed,” Sarine said.

“Perhaps, but in any case it doesn’t matter. Iran is bent on pulling off this attack to prove that the ayatollahs in Iran are best suited to lead the Moslem world. What better way to drive the point home than to destroy the scrolls and the infidels who possess them,” Daric said.

“Yes, I know. Jesus is considered a Moslem prophet of God, and in their one sided view, he and anything he wrote belongs only to them. To let an infidel handle such a religious relic is a great offense,” Sarine said.

Sarine stood up and studied Daric for a moment, then said, “Well, there is nothing we can do now. Perhaps it is time to plan for a new Chairman.”

“My thoughts exactly, but first we have to survive this disaster.”

They both nodded agreement and began planning their next moves.

 

 

 

 

Chapter 6

John Arrowsmith entered Pastor Phillips’ church study, knocking on the door frame as he stepped inside the cozy room. He had decided to see his pastor at Ocean Front Church. He had questions on his mind that he needed answered.

“John, I didn’t expect to see you this morning,” Phillips said with a broad smile on his face, standing up from his desk chair and walking around his desk to meet John.

Pastor Phillips was still spry for a man in his mid-sixties. His gray hair was in sharp contrast to the alert and intelligent brown eyes gazing at him now through black rimmed glasses.

“I’m not interrupting, am I?”

“I always have time for you,” Phillips said.

They shook hands, then John sat down in a chair across from the pastor’s desk. Phillips retreated back behind his desk and sat down.

“I need some guidance, Michael. I have been having visions again. I don’t understand them, but they feel so real. Then, of course, there is this healing ability I have that seems to work intermittently. I don’t understand what is happening to me?”

“I once said, John, that it will take time to understand the path that God has set you on. At first, I thought you were a healer, sent to heal and help God’s people. Now, I think you are more than that, much more.”

“What do you mean?” John asked, curiosity lighting his eyes.

“I think you might just be a prophet of God,” Michael said, studying John’s reaction.

“A prophet? First, you thought I was a healer, now a prophet? That seems so for fetched.”

“I admit that I saw you only as a spiritual healer for a long time. But the visions and this soul glaze you told me about earlier, those indicate a greater calling. I said prophet because I could think of no greater calling, but you are right, I am not sure where God is leading you,” Pastor Phillips said.

“Prophets in the old testament parted seas and resurrected the dead. That certainly isn’t me!” John said emphatically.

“Isn’t it? Some would say Rebecca was dead when she was shot outside of the university conference center last year when she was delivering the Gospel of Jesus. You brought her back.”

John’s mouth fell open in surprise. He had forgotten about that terrible ordeal. Rebecca had been dodging Black’s men and Homeland Security agents, trying to deliver a copy of the Gospel of Jesus to the Christian Discovery Conference so the spiritual work could be authenticated when she was shot by one of Black’s men.

Rebecca’s life had drained from her as John held her in his arms and prayed for her life. He knew that for a few seconds Rebecca had actually died, but prayer and God’s mercy had spared her and restored her to life.

“That…that was different,” John finally replied, not really believing his own words.

“Is it? Let’s examine the facts. You heal people, not consistently, but you do heal, you have visions, and you have brought someone back from death. I think the parting of the Red Sea may not be too far away,” Michael said with a smile, teasing John.

“You can make a joke about this, but I am scared to death. I don’t know where God is taking me,” John said, anger beginning to edge into his tone of voice.

“Then you should just relax and enjoy the ride. Times are changing. I can feel ominous things coming, and I think you were put here by God to meet them.”

“Me? I’m just an ex-cop trying to find a job,” John replied defensively, letting his anger slide away from him to be replaced by frustration at not finding a job.

“Speaking of which, I believe I have a position for you. The job doesn’t pay much, but you do get a small office.”

John’s eyes narrowed suspiciously. “What sort of job?”

“Pastor in charge of healing and prayers,” Michael replied.

“You just made that job up,” John accused Michael.

“John, you have to admit that things happen when you pray. I think my church needs a man like that on staff to help us grow spiritually as a church. Want the job?” Pastor Phillips leaned forward over his desk, eager for John’s agreement.

“I can’t exactly be choosy, can I? I don’t have a job at the moment.”

Michael smiled and leaned back, relief spreading across his face. “Then you will take the job?”

“Yes, I suppose, but I haven’t the slightest idea what my duties would be.”

“I’ll let God lead you in that matter. Let me show you to your new office.”

“You already have an office for me?” John asked, surprised that things were moving so fast.

“John, I have been planning this for months. I was just waiting for the right moment. I was afraid you would turn me down.”

“Maybe you should change my church title to prophet in waiting,” John chuckled for the first time, making a small joke.

“My thoughts exactly,” Michael replied, only he wasn’t joking.

 

 

 

Chapter 7

Detective Sergeant Bret Walker was short and lean with red hair, and he wasn’t happy. Another suicide had occurred on his watch. He glanced at his young partner, Detective Rachel Park, and wondered how something like this would effect her. Park’s hair was short and brown with matching brown eyes. She was taller than him which annoyed him a little. He disliked having to look up at her. She aught to be at the beach doing something fun. A young woman in her early twenties didn’t need to be neck deep in death.

He took a deep breath and reminded himself that she had asked to be assigned to the homicide division and so far had performed well, though she was a bit brash at times. He knew that she would get better with experience. He would also have to get use to looking up at her. She was his partner.

“I don’t like this one little bit, Rachel. I know Darken is responsible somehow for what is happening. I just can’t prove it.”

“If we could get a warrant for that satanic church of his…”

“Been there, tried that. It’s the religious freedom thing. No judge will issue a search warrant unless I can directly tie the church to public endangerment or menace. Darken has been careful so far to avoid any obvious ties to these suicides.”

Walker was very familiar with Darken’s satanic church, the Church of the Dark as Darken called it. There weren’t many members, thank God, but the ones that did belong seemed to be fanatics. Deacon Darken ruled them with an iron hand. Walker suspected more than a few crimes could be laid at the door of that church.

“What’s the coroner say?” Rachel asked.

“Same as last time. Overdose of sleeping pills,” Walker said.

“Strange that the other suicides were overdoses too,” Rachel replied.

“Yeah, and the pill bottles have no identification on them. Just like the pill bottles we found at the other suicides,” Detective Sergeant Walker said. “It’s all a little too pat. Repeating patterns like this usually mean a serial killer.”

“Then you don’t buy the suicide angle?” Park said.

“No, my gut tells me murder, but the drugs are the mystery. Where did they come from?”

“Street drugs?”

Walker shrugged and said, “Who knows where Brook got her drugs. This whole thing bothers me to no end.”

With a heavy sigh, Walker looked around the shabby one bedroom apartment where Brook had lived until her suicide—or murder. The apartment was located on the south side of town, peeling paint and torn carpet, but at least she had a place to live. Others were not so lucky. Too many people were living on the streets in these desperate economic times.

Everything on the south side of Gulfview was run down. It was where the homeless and the hopeless settled because no one cared what happened here, except for a few church missions and soup kitchens–and the police.

It was also where the Church of the Dark was located, preying on the people that society had rejected and enticing them to join a Satanic church that promised food and shelter.

This recession had only made a bad situation worse. More people were losing their jobs everyday, and now the homeless were beginning to overflow into the more prosperous areas of town, angering many store and property owners. His fellow officers were constantly arresting trespassers and panhandlers. The police department was being stretched to the limit. They weren’t set up to deal with the economic disaster that was looming over them.

Walker nabbed the coroner as he was leaving. “Anything?”

“No, fairly simple. Overdose just like the others. There were no pills left in the pill bottle. Same as the first suicide over on Sunset. I’ll run a blood analysis, but if the results are the same as last time, I would guess some form of barbiturate. It’s still the drug of choice for suicides.”

“Suicide note?” Detective Park asked.

“No, nothing. She also had an upside-down cross around her neck just like the other two.” The coroner paused a moment, then added, “There’s something strange going on here. Unlike the first suicide, you remember there was a single pill left in the bottle at the second suicide.”

“The one over on Fifth Avenue last week?”

“Yes. I was able to run an analysis on that pill. Got the result back this morning. That pill registered five times the strength I would expect. A couple of pills at that strength would be more than enough to kill a woman. In the first suicide, I assumed she had taken the entire bottle since the bottle was empty, but if those pills were of this same strength…”

“Then only a few pills would be needed to kill someone.”

He nodded and said, “But who would make pills so powerful and dangerous? It makes no sense.”

“Murder never does,” Walker said.

“You think someone deliberately gave these women pills strong enough to kill them?” the coroner asked, disbelief showing in his eyes.

“It’s the only thing that makes any sense. Suppose someone made up a strong batch of these barbiturate pills, then told the victim to take a couple to sleep or feel better. The victim wouldn’t suspect anything, and the death would look like suicide.”

“Which is what we have seen in the last three deaths,” the coroner said, nodding in agreement.

“The tip-off is the unmarked bottle,” Detective Park interrupted.

Walker glanced at her and smiled. The kid was sharp. “Yes, that bothered me from the beginning. There are a ton of pharmaceuticals floating around on the streets. All you need is a prescription, and there are a lot of fake prescriptions out there. So why make a special batch of pills with an unmarked bottle when pills are already available on the street?”

“It wouldn’t make sense unless you were making a murder weapon,” Park said.

“All of these murdered women belonged to Darken’s church. So why were they killed?” Walker questioned.

“Darken’s church?” the coroner asked.

“The upside-down cross is a symbol of the Church of the Dark as Darken likes to call his church. The upside-down cross is a way for anti-Christians to show their disdain for Christians by taking the cross that Jesus died on and turning it upside down. Darken’s members are the only ones that would wear something like that.”

“I wouldn’t know about that–your department. I will have a full report for you in a couple of days if I’m lucky. Probably more likely I won’t have the full results until the end of the week. State cutbacks have really slowed down forensics.”

Walker nodded. So now they knew for sure: murder. Next stop would be Darken.

 

 

 

 

Chapter 8

Ocean Front Church was quiet. It was early Monday morning. John had come into the main sanctuary to pray after his talk with Pastor Phillips. He had a lot to pray about.

John knelt at the prayer rail which was located in front of and below the church stage where the choir loft and pulpit were located. The church stage itself was three feet off the ground. In the front center of the stage stood the lectern where the pastor gave his sermons. Dominating everything was a floor-to-ceiling cross anchored to the back wall.

After a few minutes of prayer, a peace descended on John, washing his fears and apprehensions away. God would provide. If an assassin was coming, God and he would meet that threat together. And if he was turning into some sort of prophet, then God would see him through that as well.

John heard a noise behind him. He turned, and his eyes met a young woman who was carefully making her way up the red carpeted church aisle toward him, dragging her left foot behind her. She moved slowly, stopping after each step, to bring her left foot up even with her right, then she repeated the process. It was painful to watch.

Her eyes were fixed on him. He knew why she was here. The same reason they all sought him out–healing.He was slowly coming to terms with the healing abilitythat he seemed to have. He didn’t know why sometimes it worked, sometimes it didn’t. He had struggled with that inconsistency, and finally decided to leave the matter in God’s hands. He would pray with anyone who requested healing, and he would deal with their disappointment and anger when that healing did not come.

He gave the woman a small welcoming smile. She seemed to draw encouragement from that smile. Her eyes were clear and focused, determined.

She finally stopped in front of him and said, “My name is Brenda. Can you help me?”

“How long have you been like this?”

“Since birth. I…I wasn’t suppose to come. My parents said you were a disciple of the Devil, that you supported a false gospel, but I have heard you speak on the radio, and I attended one of your revivals. I don’t think you serve the Devil.”

Her words gladdened his heart. So many hated him these days for his support of the Gospel of Jesus. Wherever he spoke, there were demonstrations and hecklers, but there also were large numbers of people eager to hear the words of Jesus.

“Brenda, can you kneel down with me at the prayer rail? Is that too difficult for you?”

“Nothing is too difficult if it means my leg can be healed,” Brenda said, hope shining in her eyes.

Awkwardly, and with help from John, she kneeled at the prayer rail. John kneeled beside her, putting his arm around her shoulders.

“Do you believe in God and Jesus as your Savior?” John asked, his eyes meeting hers.

She nodded.

John began to pray. The words came slowly at first, then faster, with more precision from somewhere deep inside of himself, somewhere not completely under his control. He felt a warmth began to rise within him, and a peace descend on him. Slowly that warmth spread out from his inner being to his arms and legs, to his fingertips. There it stopped.

“Believe, Brenda. Forgive anyone you have a grudge against, rebuke any hate, think only of the love of Jesus.”

John continued to pray, but the warmth advanced no further.

“I know it is hard, but you must seek forgiveness, Brenda. You must harbor no bitterness or hatred. You must let go of any negative emotions and let Jesus deal with them.”

Again, John bowed his head and continued to pray. Minutes passed, then slowly the warmth began to move from his fingertips into the young woman, flowing through her in ever increasing quantities. There was something about twisted nerves and dead pathways, bits and pieces of images flashed through his mind. Then suddenly, everything stopped. The healing warmth ceased as if someone had flipped a switch.

John opened his eyes and glanced at Brenda. She slowly opened her eyes. Fearing that nothing had happened, yet hoping that she was healed. Together they stood up, his arm still around her shoulder. She struggled to stand even with John’s help.

“I…I feel so strange, so at peace,” Brenda said.

“God heard you.”

“Am I healed?”

“Why don’t you take a step and see,” John said with a happy grin.

With John’s support Brenda took a short step and stumbled. John grabbed her and held her upright. Fear of failure flashed through her eyes.

“Your leg may still show signs of weakness, but strength is returning. Have faith.”

Brenda nodded and said, “My leg does feel stronger.”

“Try again.”

She nodded and took another step. This time, she did not stumble. She turned and smiled in triumph at John. Then she took another step and another. By the time she was halfway down the aisle, she was walking normally. She gave out a loud yell of joy and ran back to John. She hugged him fiercely.

“Thank you, thank you! My parents will never believe this,” she said enthusiastically.

“Thank God. He healed you.”

“Him most of all.”

She walked away with a smile on her lips, tossing him a hand wave as she walked out of the church.

John felt good about what happened. His spirit had been lifted up and refreshed by the healing power that had flowed through him, washing him clean of any anger or fear, renewing his faith. John felt that cleansing joy in every healing that occurred. It was a small gift God gave him as a reward, a renewing of his spirit.

John smiled. This time he had not failed.

 

 

 

Chapter 9

John heard a loud clapping of hands in the back of the church. He spied a short young woman dressed in a shabby long black dress with shoulder-length dark hair spilling down her back. There was a spiteful look in her eyes, one of intense dislike, yet he had never met this woman before.

She walked no further into the church, staying close to the doors of the church as if she might flee at any moment.

“An excellent performance, Healer,” the young woman scornfully said as she continued to clap. “Are all of your healings so artfully done? What is the trick?”

“No trick, just God at work.”

She stopped clapping and hissed, “So easy to say, but hard to prove.”

“Perhaps, Jesus then.”

“Don’t speak that name to me,” she shouted angrily.

“Who are you?”

“Your enemy,” she replied.

“How can that be? I don’t even know you,” John said as he started walking down the aisle toward her.

“Stop,” she shrieked. “Come no closer. He said you would try to approach me, even lay hands on me. I can not permit that.”

“Who is he?”

“The deacon of my church,” she replied firmly.

“What church is that?” John inquired as he stopped halfway down the aisle, studying her. There was something peculiar about the woman, but he couldn’t quite put his finger on it. She sounded odd, as if her words weren’t quite her own and out of sync with her lip movements.

“The Church of the Dark, the only true church.”

“You worship Satan?” John said, not believing what he had heard. Who in their right mind would worship Satan–the avowed destroyer of mankind?

“The only true god.”

“Satan is a false god; an angelic being cast down from heaven,” John said.

“Lies. I do not believe your Bible. It is full of lies,” she smirked.

“Again, why are you here?”

“Deacon Darken sent me. You may have heard of him.”

“Can’t say that I have, but then I don’t travel in your circles.”

“I am here to warn you. You are upsetting the balance. You must leave and never darken the door of a church again. Perhaps then, you will be spared.”

“What balance?”

“The balance between my god and yours. Darken says your one of the First Ones that was foretold. You will not succeed in opening the Gates of Heaven.”

“Gates of Heaven?”

“Have you not read your own Bible? Your own Gospel of the Hated One? They both talk of God descending upon Jerusalem and a new age beginning, a new earth and a new heaven. The Gates of Heaven must be opened before God and his heavenly host can descend upon the earth. That was always the plan.”

“The plan?”

She gave him a wicked grin. “I suppose you don’t even know about the Day of the Red Dragon when Satan will rule the world? It is coming, very soon.”

“I don’t understand any of this,” John said quietly. “But what I do understand is that Satan lies and deceives mankind so that he may control them, just as he is controlling you now. Repent of this wickedness and be free.”

“Never!” she screamed.

“Jesus Christ is the answer. Salvation can be yours if you repent.”

“Lies, all lies. Once we serve Satan there can be no salvation. Our souls are his.”

“That is what he wants you to believe, but it is a lie straight from hell. Jesus can save you, but only if you will it.”

“I don’t so will it,” she spit the words out. Then suddenly laughed. “Trying to convert me? Don’t waste your time. You have little of it left.”

“What does that mean?”

“You are doomed. Deacon Darken is coming for you.”

“What is your name?”

“Why do you want to know my name?”

“Afraid?”
“Of course not. My name is Bane.”

“Is that your real name?”

“It is the name that Darken gave me so it is my name now. All I was before is dead.”

“Bane, God can help you. You can throw off this web of lies and deception. Embrace Jesus and be saved.”

She laughed. “Always preaching salvation, you Christians. Where were you when I was starving in the streets? Only the Church of the Dark gave me food and a place to live.”

“At the cost of your immortal soul!” John shouted, trying to break through to the young woman.

“My soul is just fine, Healer,” she shouted back

“Don’t you see that only hell awaits you?” John said in a calmer voice, restraining his emotions that kept threatening to break out at any moment. How could he reach this woman who was enslaved by Satan?

“I eagerly await that destination for that is where my master dwells.”

“Don’t say that,” John said, horrified by her words.

“Do you grow irritated with me? How wonderful to irritate a servant of God.”

“God will not be mocked,” John said as he once more advanced.

“Stop!” she shouted, fear in her voice.

“If your god is so powerful, why are you afraid? Is it that Satan fears God? Your lies betray you. It is you who is afraid? Do I bother you that much or perhaps it is this church that bothers you. You are standing on sanctified ground.”

“To stand upon sanctified ground is to burn with pain,” she said, fear touching her voice for the first time.

“You burn because churches are holy and holiness cannot abide evil. Evil must flee or parish.”

She laughed, ”Fool. Not all churches are holy, only a few. We have seen to that. You Christians are so easy to lull to sleep, and you are so obedient to the laws that Satan has passed, restricting the worship of God. It is almost laughable.”

“Then why do you burn here in this church?”

“This church is filled with the power of God that flows through you. That power fills the walls, the floor, the pews, the very air you breathe. Most churches have little of the power of God in them. A state we find most enjoyable, at least until this New Christian Movement started. They are trying to stir up the world, to evangelize everyone. That will not be tolerated.”

“Because if the world were truly saved by the grace and power of God, then all of the earth would be sanctified ground. You would burn with pain everywhere upon the face of the earth. There would be no place for you and your kind or the evil that you serve. Isn’t that what you really fear?” John said, righteous anger filling his voice.

“That will never happen! We will see to that, Healer.”

“You are in pain now because evil can not stand before God. Renounce your evil ways and know the joy of salvation.”

She laughed again, “Still trying to convert me? I am long past any salvation you might offer. Now leave as I have warned you or suffer the consequences.”

“I think not. Evil must be confronted and destroyed so let me warn you, as you have warned me. There is no place for your kind in this town.”

John moved closer. The woman screamed an obscenity at him and fled. She was through the door and gone in an instant.

John shook his head, trying to remember everything that had been said. There was so much. What did she mean by First One? And what was this balance she referred to?

But what she said about the Gates of Heaven bothered him most of all because those words reminded him of his vision. It was too much of a coincidence.

He needed to study the Gospel of Jesus in more detail. He needed an explanation for what had just happened.

 

 

 

Chapter 10

John knocked on the pastor’s door and then entered the study. Pastor Michael Phillips looked up from some papers he was reading, surprised to see John back so soon.

“Sorry to bother you, Pastor, but something just happened that I need advise on.”

“Please, come in, John. You know that you are welcome anytime. How do you like that new office of yours?”

John sat down and said, “I really haven’t spent any time there. Something unusual just happened to me. I just encountered someone from the Church of the Dark.”

Pastor Phillips leaned slowly back in his chair. His expression growing concerned. “Here, in this church?” Surprise was in his voice.

“Yes. What exactly is this Church of the Dark and who is Deacon Darken?” John asked.

“You have probably guessed that the Church of the Dark is an imitation of the Christian church dedicated to Satan, and Darken is Satan’s servant. I would advise staying as far away from both as possible.”

“You have encountered this Darken before?”

“Only briefly. He sent chills up my spine. Evil radiated in waves from the man. Never have I felt Satan so close as the day I met that man. He came to stand at the door of my church. I rebuked him and told him to leave.”

“Darken actually set foot in this church?”

“No, I met him outside, on the church steps. I still can’t believe the gall of the man, to attempt to enter a holy church.”

“Why did he come?”

“In a word? Intimidation. Darken is all about intimidation, forcing his will on others. The evil that surrounds him and his satanic church wants to control this town. My church and others like it, prevent that from happening.”

“The woman that came into the church said that I upset the balance and must leave. What do you think she meant?”

Pastor Phillips shook his head and let out a deep breath. After a moment, he said, “I am sorry to say there are those that believe that a balance has been struck between Satan and God, an understanding if you will, that each side will abide by an unwritten rule not to interfere with the other. Sort of a truce. Such people claim that evil and good must exist side by side. That good can not be understood unless evil is also encountered. They claim that such balance is the natural order of things. That there can be no black without white, that both always must exist. At times, one side or the other may gain ascendancy, throwing everything out of balance. When evil is too strong, we have wars, recessions, hunger, plagues, and other terrible atrocities, but when good triumphs, we have peace, prosperity, health, and plenty. Duality, these small minds shout must always exist and balance.”

Pastor Phillips stopped for a moment, rubbing his brow with his right hand, and said, “Mind you, I don’t subscribe to that theory. I think that is an idea straight from a devil that is trying to limit the power of God, but far too many that should know better do believe in this duality.”

“So this woman thought that I and the New Christian Movement would upset the status quo,” John said, puzzling over the statement that Pastor Phillips had just made.

“Apparently there is a growing fear in those that follow Darken that you might upset things and put Satan and his evil bunch on the defensive. If that is the case, then John, I say go to it.”

“Do you know anything about the Gates of Heaven?”

“Gates of Heaven?”

“Yes,” John said.

Pastor Phillips thought a moment, then shook his head. “No, never heard the term.”

“This woman claimed that the Gates of Heaven must be opened before God can descend upon the earth and establish a new Jerusalem.”

“You are talking End Times?”

“It would seem,” John replied.

“Revelation does talk about a new heaven and a new earth, of a new Jerusalem, but I have never heard the term ‘Gates of Heaven’.”

“Neither have I. She also spoke about the reign of the Red Dragon.”

“Which can only mean Satan,” Pastor Phillips said. “Some think Satan has already began his rule with all the evil and war on the earth.”

“You think that the time of the Red Dragon, Satan, is already here?”

“No, not in the sense this woman thinks. A time when Satan has utter control of the earth would see unimaginable evil spread everywhere. We don’t have that, at least not yet.”

John nodded in agreement. “This woman, Bane, didn’t say that the reign of the Red Dragon was here, but that it was coming, and somehow I was standing in the way of that coming reign.”

“Well, thank God for that,” Pastor Phillips said with a smile. “We need Christians standing in the way of Satan.”

“I agree, but I think there was something more in her statement, something in particular about me being a hindrance and needing to be dealt with quickly.”

“That doesn’t sound good, John.”

“You think Darken and Bane would resort to violence?” John asked.

“I think Darken and his crowd are capable of anything. Be careful, John.”

“You are talking to an ex-cop, Michael. I can handle myself.”

Pastor Phillips frowned, then said, “John, you have never fought anything like this. Pure evil is a supernatural force of devastating strength. Normal human tactics and methods won’t work against such onslaughts. You are talking about spiritual warfare.”

“What exactly is spiritual warfare?” John asked, curious about the expression. He had heard the term before on several occasions but had never understood the term.

“That’s when you fight with spiritual weapons–God’s word and the Bible. Your material weapons do not work in the realm of the spirit.”

“Like my dream of the red lion and my dagger with the name of Jesus inscribed on it,” John said, remembering that dream vividly even after a year.

“Exactly. The battle can be fought in dreams, visions, and even real life. Be on guard.”

“Doesn’t sound like anything I need to be involved in,” John said, feeling a little anxious.

“We all become involved to some degree. Simply praying against evil and malignant events is a form of spiritual warfare. Every time you pray that the plans of Satan will be defeated, you are engaging in spiritual warfare.”

“But you are talking about spiritual warfare at a higher level, aren’t you?” John said.

“Indeed, I am, and I hope you are never exposed to that kind of attack, but then again a prophet of God may not be able to avoid such an encounter,” Pastor Phillips said with a small smile, making John feel a little uncomfortable. He didn’t think he was a prophet of God.

John looked away for a moment, then back at his pastor, a serious expression on his face and said, “I will do whatever God commands me to do.”

“As will we all. Now, let’s say no more about it. Perhaps this was a one time event.”

“I hope you are right, but I have a feeling that trouble is coming my way.”

“Then you had best do some hard praying so you will be ready for it,” Pastor Phillips said.

John nodded and stood up to leave.

“John, if you need to talk again, don’t hesitate to see me. You are not alone.”

“Thanks, I will remember that,” he said as he walked out of the pastor’s study.

 

 

 

Chapter 11

The Church of the Dark was a building painted black with red stained windows. A gloomy, evil looking place that depressed the human spirit as it was meant to do.

Walker could feel the heavy weight of evil pressing down on him as he walked into the evil stained building. Some would say that feeling was his imagination, but Walker knew better. He couldn’t begin to imagine the evil that must be performed in this church, all in the name of the Devil.

Darken stood at the front of his little church facing Walker, behind him, nailed to the back wall was an upside down cross. On each side of Darken, stood an athletic, well muscled tall looking man: his body guards. He never went anywhere without them.

“Good afternoon, Walker,” Darken said in a pleasant voice.

“That’s Detective Sergeant Walker to you,” Walker said with barely controlled anger in his voice. He detested Darken and this church.

“So formal today. Ah, I see you have brought the delightful Detective Park with you. Welcome to my church.”

“You know why I’m here?” Walker said.

“Has there been another death?” Darken said, his fake sounding surprise irritated Walker. “This is getting to be rather monotonous, isn’t it? After every suicide you seek me out. Let me repeat what I have said numerous times before to you: I had nothing to do with any suicides.”

“I know you are involved in this somehow,” Walker said.

“That would require proof, my dear detective,” Darken replied with a knowing smirk.

That smirk on Darken’s face told Walker that Deacon had murdered the women and was daring him to prove it. Overconfidence, that would be Darken’s downfall. But at the moment, Walker had no proof.

Walker had come here to confront Darken and see how he reacted to his accusations. He read body language fairly well. Every good detective did, and Darken’s body language said he was guilty as hell.

“I believe Miss Brook went to your church. When was the last time you saw her?” Walker asked.

“It must have been all of two days ago, Saturday night I believe, when we held our church services. It was a wonderful service.” His oily smile and smug expression made Walker want to grab him and wring his neck. He kept reminding himself that he was a police officer first and held to a higher standard of conduct.

“You wouldn’t happen to know where she got the drugs to commit suicide?” Walker asked. He had decided not to mention murder yet. Let Darken think that the police still thought the deaths were suicides. Darken might get careless.

“I have no idea,” Darken replied.

“I thought you used drugs in your so-called worship services,” Walker pressed.

“Sometimes, but I assure you, nothing harmful,” Darken replied. “Now, I have answered your questions and been most cooperative. Get out.” There was a hard note to his voice mixed with scorn.

“Not yet. I thought I might have a look around.”

“This is private property. You need a warrant to search this church.”

“Yet here I am,” Walker said as he walked toward Darken’s office.

One of Darken’s bodyguards moved to stop him, but Darken waved him off. Too bad, if the bodyguard had tried to stop him, he could have nailed them all for obstruction of justice and dragged Darken and his bodyguards in for questioning, but Darken was too smart for that.

“Look for anything in plain sight that might help us. Don’t open any drawers,” Walker cautioned Park as he entered Darken’s office.

Walker knew that if he found anything incriminating, he could not legally use it in a court of law, but he was desperate and needed a lead, something to assist his investigation, but he found nothing after a general search. Walker and Park were careful not to open drawers, looking for anything in plain sight. They might get away with evidence found in plain sight in a court of law, if there had been something to find. With a deep sigh of regret, Walker left Darken’s office.

Walker still had nothing on Darken. He could run him in and interrogate him at the police station for a while, but his lawyer would have him out within a few hours–a waste of everyone’s time. But he was tempted. Finally, he turned away and walked out with Park following behind him.

“Leaving so soon?” Darken said, arrogance in every syllable he uttered.

Walker ignored him.

“Why don’t we arrest him just for the fun of it? We might be able to sweat the truth out of him,” Detective Park said, anger in her voice.

Walker shook his head as he exited the Church of the Dark. He was glad to be out of that   wicked place.

“No use wasting our time, at least not yet. Arresting him now with no evidence could lead to charges of harassment and lawsuits. Darken always has a lawyer at hand. I think he is sued on a regular basis for one thing or another, none of the lawsuits ever stick though. He is a slippery customer.”

“You know he had something to do with the suicides, probably supplied the drugs,” Park said, frustration evident in her voice.

“Yes, but we can’t prove that.”

“So now what?” Park asked, disgusted with the situation.

“We keep digging and hope for a break.”

 

 

 

Chapter 12

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“At least it’s spring. The weather is not too bad in the spring. On the other hand, the summers are brutal,” Charlie said, looking up at Tony.

Charlie was only five feet, seven inches tall and foun

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And here, for your reading pleasure, is our free excerpt:

CHAPTER 1

Porn king Tony Costa had been dead for a while now, murdered on that fateful night by his nemesis, the deranged John Kane, but Tony didn’t run the family business alone and above him was his infamous older brother Jimmy. Even though Tony (God rest his soul) used to be a real hard man in his day and had personally put quite a few people in the ground, Jimmy made Tony look like Mary Poppins in comparison as he was the real psycho of the family. Abandoned by their Italian father at a young age, they were brought up by their domineering, aggressive and sometimes violent mother, and Jimmy and Tony had decided early on that no one was going to look after them and so they would have to take what they could get on the streets and look after themselves.

Armed with this self-seeking survivalist mentality, they became a law unto themselves. Jimmy was thirteen when he committed his first murder. He did it by taking a screwdriver from the tool box in his garden shed. The next day he took it to school, and while the ten-year-old Tony held his victim down, Jimmy pushed the long, thin steel shaft of the screwdriver through the throat of the school bully. Jimmy and Tony were both sent to the notorious Borstal prison in Rochester, where they spent the next three years being groomed and indoctrinated into the fine art of the violent criminal, and this was where they began to learn the profession of sadism which Jimmy seemed to excel in.

After their release, Jimmy had progressed from hand tools and for his next murder his name would become legendary. At the age of nineteen he captured a local drug dealer who thought that he could operate independently on his manor. Jimmy decided to send out a message to all other would-be transgressors to dissuade anyone with similar thoughts. Jimmy had taken the drug dealer back to his lock up garage, tied him to a chair and proceeded to slice the man in two from head to groin with a chainsaw.

His name and reputation grew steadily with his penchant for this type of extreme violence, and he was soon becoming a much feared and respected individual. By the age of twenty-five the very mention of his name, or that of his brother, would send a shiver down the spine of even the most callous of the gangster fraternity.

Jimmy had quickly moved on from getting his hands dirty on the murky little sordid vice-ridden streets of North London, and left the sleazy side of the business to his brother, who seemed to revel in it. Jimmy’s strategy, like all good strategies, was simple and he just simply tortured and murdered anyone who got in his way. However, the trademark murders were of a particularly nasty and unpleasant nature and involved the use of industrial tools. He had of late acquired a particular fondness for the use of power drills. With the implementation of such tactics, the message soon got around and he was quickly crowned the youngest king to ascend the throne of Britain’s underworld.

And so over the years Jimmy Costa had been busy, and had managed to merge all factions of the underworld unto him. Now he had a vast international multi-faceted drug distribution empire in operation, interwoven with a net of fear that was cast far and wide. But, for the first time in his reign as king of the underworld, doubt had been cast upon him.

He was very much concerned by the attack at the Vamps night club and the subsequent murder of his younger brother. The thing that bothered him most was the rumour of it being a possible take-over bid by a rival gang. The part of it that was puzzling was the fact that he was sure he would have heard a whisper about anyone having such designs on his realm, given the countless numbers of eyes and ears he had out there on the streets. But there was nothing, not before the murder or after, and for the moment there was no indication of who the perpetrators were. There was no clue and so the whole thing was a complete and utter mystery. However, after twenty-five years of rule there was one thing that he was sure of, and that was that someone somewhere knew something. He knew that if he did enough asking/interrogating, it wouldn’t be long before a few arses started twitching and a few tongues would start to wag, and someone would eventually be spilling their guts.

To him it was all about saving face, and in this precarious game you couldn’t be seen to be taking a backward step; you could only go forward. Jimmy now felt in the strongest terms possible that he had to regain the respect he considered he’d lost with the attack on his brother’s domain. In the culture of the gangster, respect was the most important element and it simply had to be upheld, and he was prepared to do almost anything to uphold it.

There were some very serious repercussions brewing from the destruction of brother Tony’s domain; the loss of the influence that he held over all of those judges, MPs and high ranking police officers was now gone, due to their exposure in the newspapers. His most prized possession, ‘reputation’, was now on the line and it was clearly getting to him. Paranoia, that dreaded dark slayer of rational thought, had crept inside Jimmy’s head. Paranoia is the worst thing that can happen to men who hold absolute power, and when they start to feel as if they’re losing their grip, all the other advantages that got them to the top start to slide as well.

Over the past six months he had become utterly obsessed with what had happened to his brother. He lived in fear of the thought that it may well happen to him, and that these unknown executioners of his own flesh and blood could be now secretly calculating his downfall as well. Who are they? Can they be some of my very own people? Who can I really trust? he kept saying to himself. To compound the issue, he’d heard on good authority that his name had been mentioned across the water. Whether it was true or not it didn’t matter; it’s like that with paranoia, everything gets blown out of proportion and an innocuous off-the-cuff remark can sometimes develop into a gigantic conspiracy.

Jimmy had decided to summon all of his captains for an important meeting, and had prepared a magnificent four-course dinner at his superlative headquarters, a private hotel in the wilds of the Essex countryside. This ten-bedroom hotel was set within a beautiful, stunning location, with one long straight road in and one long straight road out. The solid rectangular sandstone building stood alone amidst green fields and rolling hills, the spectacular views occasionally interrupted by groves of colossal oak trees. Amongst their unyielding branches were the ever-present mobs of bickering crows. Aside from their peculiar disjointed haunting cries, it was always unnervingly quiet out there and the place was almost church-like in its construction and aura, and that’s why he liked it.

Jimmy had once stayed at the hotel many years ago and had liked the place so much that he immediately made the owner an offer. Even though it wasn’t up for sale, he was sure he could persuade the owner to come around to his way of thinking. Basically, the message was, either lose your hotel or lose your life, and he got it across by nailing the poor chap’s feet to the floor, where he was left to contemplate the issue. He decided on the lesser of the two evils. The place became the hub of Jimmy’s operations as it was here that he felt safe, and so it was the perfect venue for this unpleasant gathering.

The guest list read like the cast of a horror film, and first to enter the ominous gloomy banqueting hall was the Glasgow pyromaniac, Rubber Legs Jim, and his associate, Robert the Juice, so named for his expertise with the use of electricity when torturing. The hunched-over skulking figure of the north-eastern assassin, One-Eyed Jack the Crippler slipped in next. The vile Avonmouth Axe-man strolled in a moment later, and looked very much at home within the medieval surroundings of the hall. He was followed by Ahmed Ali, the Butcher of Bradford, who actually was a real butcher, amongst other things. He and the Axe-man never saw eye to eye, and so Jimmy had to have them at opposite ends of the table to avoid an unscheduled bloodbath.

Last to enter the smoke-filled, alcohol-fumed hall were the scourges of the south: Derek the Devil, Billy ‘Potty’ Brooks of Brentford, and Johnnie the Ice-Man Carter, so called because of his fondness for freezing his victims prior to their disposal, and his pal Pete the Pill. These four were Jimmy’s drug distribution and extortion racket specialists.

The handles that these gentlemen had acquired may sound a little quirky to some, or they may even seem to evoke a kind of roguish old world charm. You may even find that their monikers have a slightly amusing air to them. There was absolutely nothing remotely quaint or amusing about these people, they were the most sadistic band of killers to have been assembled under one roof since Hitler’s henchmen were put on trial in Nuremburg. They were just as scary and as ruthless as their aforementioned counterparts, and collectively were responsible for the murder, torture and blackmail of thousands of innocent law-abiding hard-working citizens.

After the main course had been devoured, Jimmy rose slowly from his chair. He removed his black dinner jacket and hung it on the back of his chair; he then unpinned his diamond studded cufflinks, and rolled up the sleeves of his silk shirt which revealed his powerhouse forearms. He was a big, good looking man with the kind of face that would turn a women’s head whenever he walked past. Sadly, for them, he’d never been interested in the female form.

Jimmy always kept himself in good shape and trained every day in his purpose-built gymnasium in the basement of his hotel. Jimmy was wide shouldered and slim-waisted, and his tailored white silk dress shirt accentuated his robust upper body musculature. With his slicked-back black hair and olive skin and lantern jaw he looked like something out of a 1940s gangster movie, which was exactly how he saw himself. He stood still for a moment with his hands on his hips, and glanced around the table at each of his guests. Then he lightly tapped the side of his crystal champagne flute with the blade of his knife. The din dissipated to a soft murmur as he began to speak.

“OK, lads, I’m going to start by asking you all to join me in a toast,” he said, and as he raised his glass out in front of him they all stood up. “Here’s to old friends and to friends and family who are sadly no longer with us.” He paused as he surveyed the faces around the table. “I’d like to make another toast, here’s to loyalty.”

He then took a small sip of champagne and peeked over the rim of his glass, his black eyes swivelling from side to side as he scrutinised each of their faces as they all followed suit.

“Now, I suppose you’re all wondering why I’ve called this unprecedented little gathering.” He paused once more and studied them again for a moment before continuing. “OK, I’ll now put you out of your misery. This meeting was called in order to establish a few things. It’s cards on the fucking table time, lads, and I’m gonna ask you all a very important question which I want you to seriously think about. What I want to know is, are you all happy with your present situations?”

The question completely flummoxed them, and the room became deathly quiet. Jimmy gave them a few seconds for the gravity of the question to sink in and then spoke up once more.

“OK, so no one seems to have an answer, so from that I can assume then that you are all happy in your work and no one has any delusions of grandeur or ambition, then?”

He then began to swagger around the table, pausing here and there, but all the time continuing with his speech. He started to talk about his brother’s murder and then dropped the bombshell that he thought that there may be a traitor amongst the ranks. He deliberately timed the proclamation to coincide with his arrival behind Pete the Pill’s chair and, as he stopped the temperature in the room seemed to plummet. His olive-skinned face suddenly turned pale and twisted into a grotesque mask beset with two small black diamonds for eyes as he produced a club hammer from behind his back.

The hammer was swiftly brought down onto the top of Pete’s skull with a powerful, sickening crack that echoed around the room. The skull was virtually split in two from the blow, and part of Pete’s brain was now made clearly visible to all. Jimmy quickly and aggressively wedged Pete’s limp body against the edge of the table with the chair, and then began to smash the lifeless head into an unrecognisable, stomach-turning, oozing mush. With the last blow, Pete’s jaw shattered and a number of his teeth shot out in all directions. One flew up and plopped straight into Rubber Legs Jim’s whiskey. He calmly fished the offending article out and downed the scotch without another thought. By the time Jimmy had finished, Pete’s head had become flatter than the dinner plate he’d been eating from a few minutes beforehand.

After brutally battering Pete, Jimmy calmly turned and walked back to his chair, hammer in hand, and resumed his place at the head of the table. His white silk dress shirt was covered with blood splats and small blobs of red and white jelly from Pete’s brain. Despite his sickeningly cruel desecration of a human being, there was absolutely no traceable emotion on his face.

“Right then, anyone got anything they wanna fucking tell me? What about you, Bill? Pete was one of your crew, you got something you need to get off your chest?” he said, as all eyes in the room now suddenly focused on Billy.

“No, guvnor, not me,” Billy said nervously, and gazed at Pete’s sagging pathetic body as his blood and cerebral fluid trickled from the table top like extra thick treacle. Billy nervously turned and glanced over his shoulder at Johnnie Carter, his eyes boring into him, pleading for some form of assistance.

“Hey, Johnnie what about you? Anything you wanna say about Pete’s last supper? You two go ways back, so come on, speak up. Ice Man, you’re not usually lost for words, you got a problem with that?” challenged Costa derisively, and gestured toward Pete with the moist hammer head.

Pete and Johnnie were old pals. They’d grown up together and Johnnie’s heart burned with hatred toward Costa for what he’d just done, but he hid his true feelings well. He had no choice but to do so as he knew that he was being goaded and set up into making a move, and if he did he’d be next to get nailed. Billy was still eyeballing him, and Johnnie knew that if he gave Billy the nod he would go straight for Costa’s throat with the steak knife: he wasn’t called ‘potty’ for nothing. But the Ice Man nonchalantly sat back and shook his head, which sent two messages, one to Billy to relax, and one to Costa in answer to his question. Inside, though, he was just itching to reach down for the small Smith and Wesson Derringer pistol strapped to his ankle.

However, he knew it would have been a futile attempt, as at that moment out from the shadows at the back of the dimly lit hall the monstrous figure of Costa’s bodyguard presented itself. This was undefeated bare knuckle boxing champion, six-foot-two-inch, twenty-stone, scar-faced Frank ‘Iron Jaw’ McConnell. He ambled toward the table in a slow and deliberate manner, and was like some kind of deranged Frankensteinesque automaton as he came to a halt behind Costa. He stood still for a moment and then got everyone’s undivided attention with the swift click-clack of the forestock on the pump action shotgun as it loaded a buckshot shell into the chamber.

Costa raised his open hand and stood and glared at them all for a moment as he waited for the room to quieten. Standing there with the way he was dressed and with the manner of his pose, he really did look the part of the legend that was ‘psycho’ Jimmy Costa.

This illustrious horde of villainous murderers was spellbound and captivated, totally awestruck at the sudden explosion of extraordinary viciousness toward one of their own. Pete had done nothing wrong, and had only served as the sacrificial lamb to the slaughter in order to send a clear message to those doubters out there that Jimmy Costa was still as ruthless as ever, still the boss of bosses, still the absolute guvnor. For the next five minutes he went into a rant and was thumping the moist club hammer against the oak table top to emphasize each point, his face a deranged twisted mask of pure evil as he spat out his words of venom.

“Find the pieces of shit that killed my brother. I want you to flush them out and bring them back here to me, and I want them alive,” he said, and then sat down and calmly poured himself a glass of Dom Pérignon.

Everyone in the room was momentarily stunned into silence; mouths were agape, eyes were wide and brows were furrowed. They all just sat and looked at one another for answers.

“Well, what are you all fucking waiting for, or do you want me to draw you a picture?” Jimmy roared.

And at that point it was safe to say that dessert had been cancelled and the dinner was over.

“Hey, Billy you and John hang about, I need to have a word,” Costa said, as everyone else shuffled out of the room.

~~~

Billy Brooks and Johnnie Carter were silent for the majority of the journey, and Billy broke the silence first.

“Whadaya think then, John? About what Costa done to our Pete, I mean?”

“I don’t like liberty takers Bill and never have done, and that was a stone cold fucking liberty if I ever saw one.”

“Do you think Pete had anything to do with turning over Tony’s gaff, then?” Billy said.

“Fuck me, Bill, of course not, he was with me the night that shithole was turned over. He was just being used as a scapegoat and he was in the wrong place at the wrong time. Jimmy never liked Pete anyway. I think he came on to him once and Pete wasn’t having it, and that’s all it was and if Pete wasn’t there, it would have been some other poor bastard tonight. But when I say ‘liberty taker’, I meant about him telling us to get rid of the fucking body.”

At four a.m. the dark blue S-type Jaguar with Pete’s battered body trussed up in the boot purred through Richmond High Street, and headed up the hill toward the river.

“This was one of his favourite spots, wasn’t it, Johnnie?” Billy said, as the fat front tyre of the Jag thudded into the deep kerb and bounced up onto the pavement on the crest of the bridge.

“Get weaving Bill, we ain’t got all fucking night,” Johnnie said, as Bill hauled Pete’s body from the boot. They had prepared the body for disposal in their usual tried and tested manner, by firstly taking the body back to one of their lock up garages that they had dotted about the capital. Pete’s pathetic carcass was laid out on the floor, his legs were broken and trussed up behind him to shorten the bundle, and he was then bound in chicken wire and three twenty-pound weightlifting disks were secured to his ankles with a thick chain and a sturdy padlock.

This was the disposal method that they preferred; it was nice and clean for one thing and with no mess to clear up afterward. It was also preferable to freezing and then hacking the body into small chunks and as it was Pete, that just wasn’t on.

“What’s the delay, Bill? Just fucking sling him over the side will ya, before we get fucking nicked,” Johnnie Carter grumbled. As he checked the door mirror he could see that the road behind them was deserted for the moment. “Right, Bill, it’s all clear, do it now!” Johnnie said, as he revved the Jag’s engine.

It wasn’t the first time that they’d deposited something or somebody over the side of this particular bridge, and it probably wouldn’t be the last time, either. However, it was the first time they’d used it to dispose of one of their own crew and no matter what way they looked at it, it didn’t sit right and was something that was always going to stick in their craw. As Pete’s body hit the swirling water it hardly made a sound, and it was as if even in death he was still honouring the underworld code of silence. The body immediately submerged, and the unforgiving ancient waters enveloped it like a big cold black blanket for all eternity.

“What are we gonna do about this one, Johnnie?”

The Ice Man thought for a moment before offering a reply. “Well what do you think we should do, Bill?”

“I dunno, but I do know I don’t like it, he was one of our own, John. It’s not on.”

“I need a fucking drink,” Johnnie said as Bill nodded in agreement, he then hit the accelerator and within seconds the red tail lights of the dark blue Jaguar had merged into the darkness.

And so, with Costa’s message well and truly hammered home, his ‘dogs of war’ were let loose and would now engage all of the middle and lower elements of his federation of fear. An angry hornet’s nest of the most vile, vicious villains had been shaken up and had been rallied for a nation-wide underworld search to find the mastermind behind this treacherous take-over bid. Jimmy wanted revenge, had to have revenge, and would have revenge.

There was only one other thing left for Jimmy to do now, and that was to contact a man called Harold Harper.

In all walks of life you have amateurs and professionals, and you also have individuals who have outrivaled all others at a particular occupation or pastime. Like a chess player or a black belt in the martial art of karate, for example, their skills having been honed through decades of unrelenting dedication to eventually reach the highest levels humanly possible and to become grand masters of their craft.

Harold Harper was such a man, and his particular craft was assassination. To date there was none better in the land. He was at the very top of his game; a top drawer specialist of death, a consummate professional, and the most ruthlessly unrelenting executioner of the modern era.

To describe Harold was difficult, as he was an unassuming character, and yet at the same time there was something distinctly odd and memorable about him. It was more of a feeling that you got rather than the look of the man, because his outward appearance was rather ordinary. He was softly spoken and of average height and had a light physique, but at the same time was strong, quick and nimble. His face was unlined and his skin smooth, and some said that he was of middle age and others believed he was a little older, but the problem was no one had ever got a good enough look at him, so no one really knew.

It was a clever deception and it was no accident that he had acquired this type of secretive mysterious persona. It was a necessary and deliberate methodology, and something that persons employed in this cold, friendless and appalling line of work had to adopt if any longevity were to be attained.

And so Harold had chosen to lead a very cautious existence. He had a double life and no one really knew who he was or where he came from. He could be anybody. He was the kind of person you could pass on the street and you wouldn’t give him a second glance. By day, he could be the friendly postman with the pleasant smile as he bids you good morning, or the humble factory worker just going about his everyday business in an uncomplaining, quiet manner, or the man who sweeps the road outside your house.

Harold was very well suited to his line of work, and after years of killing he had become totally and utterly unfettered by emotion. He did have one or two quirks, and one was the fact that he was always extremely smartly turned out, and when working he would always wear the exact same outfit, of which he had several sets, all neatly hanging in a well-ordered row in his wardrobe. This apparel consisted of a long navy blue raincoat, a pair of navy blue trousers, a crisp white linen shirt, and a pair of brown brogues, all of which were always purchased from the same small tailor’s shop in Jermyn Street in London. The antiquated establishment was perfect for him, as it was devoid of any CCTV cameras, and the frail elderly eloquent man who ran the place was always very discreet. It was a refreshing delight for him to encounter such old world charm. The other reason why he’d also chosen this particular gentleman’s outfitters was simply because he liked the place; the Victorian décor and old ways appealed to him as Harold had adopted a mind-set that was in complete denial of the modern age.

Everything about Harold was clean, his white shirt was pristine and spotless, his dark blue trousers were clean and pressed with a military crease that you could cut your throat on, and his brown brogues were always immaculate. And like his outward appearance, his kills were fastidiously clean. Whenever possible he would make sure the location of the murder was clean and tidy afterwards, and he’d even straighten up the corpses and give the place the once over with a yellow duster which he always carried when working, and subsequently left at the scene. That’s why Jimmy gave him the nickname of Mr Sheen.

There were, however, some peculiar prerequisites when meeting with Mr Sheen, the most important stipulation being that he insisted upon the meeting taking place only after dark and in a room of semi-darkness. It must remain darkened for the duration of the meeting and also must stay that way until his departure from the building. Some years ago, there had been an unfortunate occurrence involving a small French firm in Paris. When this small outfit needed someone removed, they sent for the best in the business; the room was darkened on his arrival as per his instructions, but unfortunately as they concluded their business someone had inadvertently switched the lights on. Everyone saw his face quite clearly, which, sadly for them, was the last one they would ever set eyes on. Harold proceeded to kill every living thing in the room within a blink of an eye.

As the last delicate subtle quaint chimes from the antique French grandfather clock faded into the night, Jimmy’s phone buzzed with a message to say that the man he had been waiting for had arrived. A moment later there was a knock on Jimmy’s office door, and the room suddenly felt a degree or two cooler and the hairs on the back of Jimmy’s neck automatically stood endwise. Harold’s presence always left you feeling a little peculiar. No matter who you were.

“Good evening, Mr Costa,” Harold Harper said in a low, barely audible polite whisper, as he closed the heavy leather studded door to the plush darkened office at the very top of Jimmy’s hotel stronghold.

Continued….

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Nemesis crime thriller – John Kane’s Revenge.

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A New York psychiatrist’s life is turned upside down when an anonymous blog appears, documenting everything she does, revealing her most private secrets, and predicting murder.

Linda Garrett has it all: a successful husband, two great kids and a thriving psychiatry practice. It’s a happy life until a blog appears, documenting everything she does, and disclosing her most private secrets. This begins to fray the knitting that holds her family together, opening up things they’d hoped to leave in the past. But when the blog predicts their imminent deaths, Linda realizes what’s at stake and works frantically to find its creator.

And here, for your reading pleasure, is our free excerpt:

Chapter 1

 

The pair of eyes, closed and quivering, had a dash of green eyeliner Linda noted.

     “You can take as long as you need,” she told Gwen.

Gwen remained silent. Her plump hands were held together in her lap.

“There’s no hurry at all,” Linda told her.

Linda sat back in her own chair, satisfied that she had shown enough empathy. Not that she didn’t care. She cared a lot. But when your job was to care, it was pleasing sometimes to know that you looked like you did.

Her face pleasant and turned directly at the client, hands holding pen and pad, she waited. She didn’t mind waiting. She did so quite often. Waited and waited until whenever the client was ready.

She noticed that Gwen’s mouth, which was set a little to the left of the rest of her face, did not move at all. It seemed to be the focus of her concentration.

Gwen’s eyes were closed and tremulous, but her mouth was resolute.

Linda relaxed and looked around at her office. It was a little too large, she still felt three years on. The location and the rent had just been too good to pass up.

That’s the thing about New York. The rent decided everything for you.

Linda returned her thoughts to Gwen McConnell. She noted how the trembling eyes seemed to always be on the verge of opening. But they wouldn’t.

“If you don’t say it, we can’t really make much headway can we?” Linda asked. “Solving the problem starts with stating what it is, don’t you think?”

Still Gwen remained silent. Linda waited.

Seventeen years of a psychiatric practice had taught her the value of waiting. Arriving at something before the client was ready could sometimes be problematic. One had to wait and let the client lead the way to all the nooks and crannies of his or her life.

Linda Garrett was in her early forties. Her pantsuit and bundled hair, aiming for modesty, failed to downplay her extraordinary beauty.

She was gregarious, and found it easy to speak softly, thoughtfully, earnestly to her clients. She hoped it didn’t come across as too practiced.

Sometimes she pretended to stumble with her words, just so it wouldn’t sound too proficient, too glib.

Gwen was proving to be a challenge. She’d made three sessions and, for each one, had come in and sat and clammed up. For the whole hour. And so Linda waited. And waited.

Perhaps a little more prodding?

“Gwen, you made an appointment to come and sit here and talk to me. I think you did so for a reason.”

Still, Gwen said nothing.

An alarm beeped discreetly.

 

Chapter 2

 

Linda pressed the alarm off, then returned her attention to Gwen. But Gwen rose heavily.

“We don’t have to stop,” Linda offered. “I can stay, and it’s off the clock.”

She wanted to get to the bottom of this. Gwen stood still for a few moments, just staring at the floor.

“Three visits without saying anything… it’s not the way to solve your problems is it?”

Gwen continued appraising the floor.

“Okay. I won’t keep you if you wish to leave,” Linda told her.

Gwen seemed to step to the door with relief.

“Ahm… same time next week?” she asked in her childlike voice.

“Sure. We can meet, same time next week,” Linda told her.

Linda opened the door and walked Gwen out to the front office.

“Thank you,” Gwen said as she left.

“You’re always welcome,” Linda gave her standard goodbye, not certain exactly what she was being thanked for.

She closed the door after Gwen, turned and shrugged at Allison the receptionist. Allison shrugged back with a smile. Diminutive and perky, she was the office assistant and could always be counted on for moral support.

“Last one, yay!” Linda said just to make conversation.

“Yay,” Allison Jeni concurred.

Linda headed back to her office. Returning to her door, she found a post-it-note stuck right over the title PSYCHIATRIST.

“Need to talk,” it said.

Recognizing Kelly’s handwriting Linda walked across the small, cozy hallway to Kelly’s door. She knocked just above the bronze title KELLY GINSBERG, MARRIAGE COUNSELOR.

No answer.

She knocked again.

No answer, but she heard a thump and voices from Saul’s office down the hall.

That door, bearing the title SAUL GINSBERG, PSYCHIATRIST, flung open to reveal Kelly and Saul Ginsberg grappling with a large gray rug.

 

Chapter 3

 

“She’s taking my rug!” Saul cried out.

“It’s a horrid, smelly thing!” Kelly yelled and tugged hard to drag the rug out.

Moderately pretty and full of energy, Kelly was too thin – a result of keeping up with every new diet and exercise – to stand a chance.

Saul pulled and Kelly slipped and got dragged. Linda immediately waded in. She grabbed a piece of the rug right beside Kelly and pulled. Saul dug in but the two women were too much for him. His shoes slipped on the tile and he held onto the door.

Linda knew that he was serious. He wanted his rug.

Saul tended to dress as though he didn’t care about much. And he furnished his office in the same manner. That lack of concern, marked by the worn desk, the old shelves and this dirty, stained rug, meant a lot to him.

So he was quite earnest in his intention to keep the filthy rug. Yet, she couldn’t help noticing, his mouth still held a smile. Unshaven, he had a gruff, worldly charm about him that remained even when he was serious.

Nonetheless, the women managed to drag him and the rug out to the front office. Allison opened the front door as they succeeded in draging the rug through it.

Outside, the cool evening air hit them. But they wouldn’t be deterred. Mack, the elderly janitor, stared on. He’d been asked by Kelly to wait there. She had something for him, she’d said.

“To Goodwill, please!” she called out to him.

He stepped forward and dutifully took hold of the rug. And at that point Saul gave it up. He wouldn’t stop them from taking it any longer. To the trash yes, but to charity, no.

So he stood there and watched Mack drag it off to the alley.

“How dare you have your patients even look at that?” Kelly scolded him.

“I thought it was my office!” Saul said with mock outrage. “My office, my practice, my kingdom!”

“No husband of mine will have that in his office,” Kelly declared, but she was smiling. “It reflects poorly on me.”

“Oh. How rude of me to not be mindful of how my office rug reflects on my wife.”

With the same mock outrage Saul stormed past Kelly to get back into the office but was met by Linda, who air slapped him. He playfully snapped his head accordingly, then followed his wife back inside. Linda followed behind them both.

Back in her office she packed up for the day. She made quick notes of the last two sessions and checked her calendar to mentally prepare herself for the clients she would see the following day. Then she grabbed her oyster grey coat.

“Score one for the ladies,” Allison remarked as Linda walked out of the front office.

“I say score one for good taste,” Linda replied. “Did you need anything else?”

“Nope. Have a great evening,” Allison replied, as she also gathered her things.

“Goodnight,” Linda told her and stepped out.

 

Outside, Linda found Saul chatting with the two cab drivers. Linda walked down the building steps and approached Kelly.

“You wanted to talk?” Linda asked, remembering the note.

“Oh. Yeah. Let’s do it tomorrow,” Kelly said, lowering her voice.

Linda furrowed her brow. Something was wrong.

“We’ll talk about it tomorrow,” Kelly said.

Saul opened the door to the first cab and Kelly entered. Saul got in with her and shut the door.

“Thanks for the assist,” Kelly said, peeking out. “We’ve saved his patients a lot of mental anguish!”

“Which is bad business!” Saul yelled. “You want your patients anguished so they keep coming! This is why women will never rule the world. Goodbye, Linda!”

Then he looked toward his rug, which lay by the steps.

“Goodbye, dear rug! Wherever life takes you, just stay tough. Lay low; keep your head close to the ground. I’ll miss you dear rug!”

Their cab pulled away and Linda entered the second cab.


Chapter 4

 

Abdul beamed upon Linda’s entrance to the cab. An Egyptian immigrant in his late forties he was cleanly shaven and plump.

“Hey, Abdul,” Linda greeted him and struggled to not cough.   The air in the cab was thick with incense. She wished she hadn’t made the mistake of praising him for it once. It was out of politeness, because he appeared to want her approval of it. Now it seemed discourteous to ask him to stop.

“My Linda, my Linda,” Abdul Muktar said.

He turned and took a good look at her as though anxious to make sure she settled in without any problem. Then he changed gear and proceeded to drive.

“How is your day?” Linda asked him.

“Oh fine, fine.”

He stared in the rearview mirror, seemingly waiting for something. Linda pressed the window down a few inches, for air. She watched the rows of elegant brownstones passing by. The motion of the cab comforted her.

“Yesterday I make dinner for my wife,” Abdul volunteered.

“Oh you did?”

“Like you say,” he continued.

“And did it work?” she asked.

“She say never make dinner again.”

“Oh no.”

“Oh yes. She not like it.”

“I’m so sorry.”

“S’okay. S’okay.”

“Perhaps I shouldn’t have suggested it,” Linda continued.

“I think she not like anything.”

“Oh wow.”

“No no no,” Abdul said. “S’okay. Not your fault.”

*

     The subway train had its usual early evening crowd of commuters making their way home. Linda was fortunate to find a seat. She decided to catch up on news.

As the train rattled along, she looked up from her e-reader. She found an infant Hispanic boy staring at her. Playfully she stuck her tongue at him. The toddler gaped, not expecting this. Then he stuck his tongue at her. And they went back and forth.

Linda decided finally to let the boy win by having the last go. She turned and saw a very obese man in a low brim hat watching her. He stuck his tongue out too. He wanted in on the game. Linda smiled politely and returned to her e-reader.


Chapter 5

 

The Garretts lived in the Stony Brook hamlet of Brookhaven, on the north shore of Long Island. Their palazzo style colonial, with beige walls and elegantly detailed craftwork, told of a modest opulence. It was big but not too big, and evocative of warmth and comfort and the highly educated.

On this night, however, it had a certain peculiarity: at the highest point on its roof a medieval Knight was doing a handstand. This handstand was held for half a minute before the knight appeared to sway unsteadily. At that point he got down on his feet.

After a moment of preparing himself he slowly positioned his hands on the dark shingles and raised his legs, holding himself on his hands once again. He held the position, twitching only slightly to maintain his balance.

Linda pulled slowly up the stone driveway in her Acura. Her eyes were fixed on the pathway illuminated by her headlights. She was on the lookout for Gracie, their tabby cat, who was fond of outdoor jaunts.

Linda caught the glimmering protuberance on the roof and looked skyward. Peering as she drew closer, she realized what was going on and held her breath.

She parked in front of the garage and stepped out as calmly as she could manage. She looked up at the medieval Knight and spoke in that urgently quiet tone one uses when the intent is to alarm one particular person and not the neighborhood.

“Nicky,” she said.

“Yes, mom,” the Knight doing the handstand uttered. He spoke in a youthful but very labored voice.

“Get down from there right now,” Linda demanded.

“Yes, mother,” the Knight replied.

But then Linda realized what was likely to come next.

“Wait –” she exclaimed.

But Nicholas pushed off his hands and did several flips across the roof, leaping off the edge. He landed in a pile, feet first.

“Ouch, ouch, ouch, ouch, ouch,” he cried painfully and pulled back the visor on his helmet. “It’s my foot, it’s my foot. If you’re wondering.”

And he held his left foot as his mother looked on.

“My poor foot. My poor, poor foot. I promise to take care of you from here on out, little foot.”

Noting his mother’s silence he looked up. Even in the dark he knew the anger in her eyes.

“This is not appropriate behavior, yes,” he acknowledged. “And I ought to know better.”

He waited but she did not bother to reply.

“You wanna know how the play went?” he asked.

But Linda was too angry to speak. She just marched on into the house.

Nicholas remained in the grass, nursing his ankle. Smallish yet confident, he was a free spirit; a product of a doting upbringing. He had his mother’s long lashes and features that were generally regarded as pretty.

 

Chapter 6

 

Linda stepped into the foyer and took a deep breath, determined to not let Nicholas ruin her day.

She peered out at the living room and saw what she’d expected to find there.

Amidst the opulence – a cultured and tasteful opulence – Oliver was seated in his leather recliner watching TV. Although graying, his build suggested a muscular and athletic past and gave him a posture that exuded strength.

“Hi, hon,” Linda called out to Oliver, as Gracie snuggled up against her shin.

She knelt and grabbed the cat. She hugged and kissed the tabby, caressing the swirling grey and white stripes that coated her. Gracie acted nonchalant, as was her custom. Linda kissed her more.

“Hey, you pretty girl you. What’ve you been up to?”

As she doted on Gracie she noted the silence from Oliver.

“Hi, honey,” she called out again.

“Hi,” Oliver replied without turning from the TV.

Linda stared, puzzled. She was accustomed to a much more enthusiastic welcome.

“What’s my Marine want for dinner?” she asked.

“Jennifer’s making something already,” Oliver replied.

“Okay. Good,” Linda said. “You all right?”

“I’m fine.”

“Well I had an interesting day,” Linda said. “I had this patient again who doesn’t talk.”

“I know,” Oliver told her.

“I mean, she’s not mute, but she just doesn’t want to tell me anything about what’s going on –”

“I said I know.”

Linda was surprised. His tone was not very friendly.

“You know? How do you know?” Linda asked him.

Oliver smirked but didn’t explain. Like it ought to have been obvious.

“How do you know?” she asked again.


Chapter 7

 

“Look. If you don’t mind, I’m watching something,” Oliver said. “I don’t mean to be… you know; but if I can just watch what I’m watching, whatever the hell it is, without being interrupted. Is that okay?”

Linda furrowed her brow but started up the stairs anyway. This was completely out of left field. They hadn’t fought in at least two years. What could have gotten into him?

Linda walked into their bedroom and took off her coat. She closed the door, undressed completely and went into the bathroom. She got under the shower and tried to let the warm spray massage her.

This was her ritual, to wash away the outside world at the end of each day. This night, however, the water was not quite as soothing.

She thought about Oliver. What could be eating him? She hadn’t done anything that she knew of. She ran through the past week, her interactions with him.

Her mind wondered to Kelly’s note. Must have been pretty important for her to write a note and post it to the door. They talked all the time, why didn’t Kelly feel she could just pop in? And then what made her not want to discuss it when Linda asked?

Linda got out of the shower and toweled herself off. She got into her yellow bathrobe and walked into her closet to find something to wear. She heard the bedroom door open and Oliver appeared.

“Linda,” he began, which immediately distressed her. He only called her that when he was angry. “It’s not for me to tell you how to run your practice. Okay? We already know that. But when you start something like this, don’t you think you should let us know?”

“Start what?” Linda asked him.

“Your online stuff, whatever they call it.”

“My online stuff? What’re you talking about?”

“You didn’t think we’d find out?”

And with that he turned and stormed away.

Authority was not natural to Oliver. But he was a man who believed that it was expected, given the Marine Corps stint, a successful career, and his bulk. He had the outer shell, but not the tough inner mettle. And he was frustrated.

Linda continued the task at hand. She pulled out a green t-shirt and turned to the pants. She grabbed an old pair of jeans and proceeded to step into them.

She was buttoning up when Oliver returned and held up an Ipad.

“What?” Linda asked.

“You tell me,” Oliver told her.

Linda looked at the IPAD screen. On it was what appeared to be a Blog. The title was Lindagarrettblog.com.

Below this title was a wide bit of space, followed by some text. The font was Garamond, the letters wide, making it easy to read.  And so Linda proceeded to read.

 

“My name is Linda. I’m a

successful psychiatrist in

New York. A psychiatrist.

In New York. This is not the

beginning of a great knee

slapper. It’s a statement of

fact for me. What you’re

reading is the start of

an examination of my life.”

 

 

Chapter 8

 

The text was superimposed on a painting of a nude woman covering her privates. And this woman, Linda realized, bore a strong resemblance to her.

Linda furrowed her brow, puzzled. Then she chuckled in disbelief.

“You find this amusing?” Oliver asked her.

“No – well, I don’t know what the heck it is.”

They heard the clank of metal as Nicholas appeared behind them. His helmet was now off, and he held a large sword slung over his shoulder.

“Yes, I do find it quite amusing,” Linda now said to Oliver. “I find it quite hilarious. This is crazy. Whose idea was this?”

She turned and stared into the eyes of her husband and her son.

“You’re trying to say that it’s not yours,” Oliver said.

“Yes. Of course I am,” Linda said. “Because it’s not mine.”

Oliver shook his head, bewildered by her gall.

“Look, just because it has my name doesn’t mean it’s mine. Or that I created it. I’m telling you I have never seen this before. It’s not mine. It’s just not mine.”

“Not hers, she says,” Nicholas declared. “Not hers. Not hers. Not hers. Not hers?”

Raising his sword Nicholas gave his father a theatrically suspicious look, which Oliver ignored. Giving up the attempt at levity, Nicholas stared over his mother’s shoulder, his chin comfortably resting on her.

“It does look like you, mommy,” he told her.

“Yes, but, I mean it has to be some kind of joke.”

“Look, just admit – ” Oliver began.

“Will you stop?!” Linda snapped. “I don’t even know how to set up a blog!”

“Then who the hell – ” Oliver continued.

“Take it easy… father person,” Nicholas said, raising the sword.

Oliver gave him a look intended to show he was not in the mood. Nicholas noted his father’s angry look. But he continued nonetheless.

“Cool it, sperm provider figurehead. It’s not the end of the world. I promise. So, you know, chill out.”


Chapter 9

 

The family was in the kitchen. Oliver, Linda and Nicholas were seated as Jennifer portioned out Shepherd’s pie on their plates.

Jennifer was bookish and slightly plump. Yet she had a self confidence and poise that comes from having had a childhood spent being adored.

“So this is my second stab at this, so,” she declared. “It won’t, you know, taste like mom’s pie.”

“Did she just say mom’s pie? Mom’s pie?!” Nicholas said. “I will not have you talk of my mother like that.”

“Shut up,” Jennifer told him. “FYI, your jokes stopped being funny like when you started saying them.”

“Not funny?” Nicholas asked. “Not funny. Okay, perhaps. Perhaps not funny. Insightful and moderately interesting, definitely. Well, all right occasionally. Occasionally insightful and interesting at a moderate level. So I vote that I continue telling my jokes. A form of self expression, an exercise of my first amendment right, guaranteed under the etcetera etcetera…”

Choosing to ignore him, Jennifer turned to her mom.

“Did they tell you… that we know?” she asked.

“It’s already been discussed,” Oliver declared.

“And I missed it? Was there a fight?” Jennifer asked playfully. “Fight, fight, fight! You never fight anymore – I miss your fights. Now you’re just another boring husband and wife. What gives?”

“Be quiet,” Oliver told her, but he was half-joking.

“Yeah, do be quiet, sibling person,” Nicholas told her.

“So tell us about your blog,” Jennifer continued.

“It’s just some stupid joke,” Linda said. “And… I think I have an idea who’s behind it. I’ll see them tomorrow and have them stop. It actually gave me a scare when I saw it.”

They ate in silence for a minute.

“Love the shepherd’s pie, by the way, dear,” Oliver told Jennifer.

“Yeah,” Nicholas said. “And of course he’s not just saying that because he fathered you… and thus naively holds himself responsible for your self esteem. It’s not that at all.”

They ignored him and continued to eat.

Continued….

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