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Doing the right thing…in the wrong moment…can destroy an empire…
Dividers by Travis Adams Irish

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Dividers

by Travis Adams Irish

Dividers
4.7 stars – 41 Reviews
On Sale! Everyday price: $3.99
Or FREE with Learn More
Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled
Here’s the set-up:

Enjoy Dividers this week for the special price of only $0.99. The regular price is $3.99. This novel is standalone and contains both parts of the story: Part I Dividers and Part II Thretch.Dividers is a story of betrayal, romance, tragedy, and the struggle against madness. The final pages have been described as lightning in a bottle with an adrenaline chaser.

Earl Calbraw is a wealthy man seeking redemption after 20 years of greed and hedonism. Meanwhile, his son Jacob is doing everything he can to destroy his father’s reputation and legacy. The young man is motivated by the mysterious disappearance of his mother when he was only ten years old. Twelve years later, the two juggernauts of industry have at one another and destroy innocent employees in their wake.

Though Jacob’s father is not his only problem. He must figure out the origins of his strange nocturnal activities. Why does his body hurt so much every morning? What is causing his thermostat to repeatedly drop to near-freezing temperatures? How does he manage to find himself waking up in the most dangerous parts of New York, exposed and often in danger?

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

I. Riding The Demon – Fingal’s Cave, Isle of Staffa, Scotland – March 27th, 1697 A.D.

 

“Lord have mercy; you say? If you have not tasted the wrath of your lord, then how can you beg for his mercy?” –Thretch.

 

The wretch sits atop his makeshift crow’s nest, staring through the dank blackness of the evening sea. On the deck of the ship below, the pirate William Kidd skulks about with wounded disdain. Never before had this crew been so bewitched in making the acquaintance of Tarron Nethersby; a scrawny and timid man, gone insane overnight on the open ocean. For three nights, the crew of twenty men had tried to subdue their mate, feeling ironic wrath delivered through the powerful fists of a madman. At only one hundred and sixty pounds, the lanky sailor had bested half the crew, fighting with his bare hands against the captain’s cutlass. The captain found himself the victim of a superior fighter, fast enough to strip him of his sword whilst breaking his fingers.

 

Captain William Kidd stands on the deck of his ship as the ocean heaves and gives beneath the ninety-two foot vessel, causing it to buck and yaw as if restrained. At age fifty-two, the ambitious Scotsman has never expressed such fear in his dark brown eyes; the hue of which matches his bronzed skin. This once charismatic leader is now shamed in the shadow of a braver and more ruthless soul. He knows that his massive biceps and fast reflexes were for naught against such an unnatural terror. His hands are wrapped in sackcloth, stained red from wounds that he received earlier at the pleasure of the undone sea dog. Kidd removes his black hat with stoic defeat, watching the entrance of Fingal’s Cave as if it is the cause of all his woes. The massive plateau sticks out of the sea like a prison built for Satan himself. Its entrance is darker still than the rest of the whole, showing not a hint of welcome to sea travelers.

 

Captain Kidd recalls his first venture into the abysmal cavern, when he was just a boy growing up in Scotland. He and a group of lads had taken a longboat into the majesty of the forbidden place; a formidable fortress of rock rising up out of the sea in defiance. Young William had been awestruck at the symmetrical pillars of black stone within the cave. The people of his village had issued a stern warning: that the stone pillars were the black souls of wicked men. Any trespass into the cavern would put a curse upon Scotland and its people.

 

As an exuberant youth, Kidd had scoffed at their superstitious notions, finding them humorous. When he tries to move his broken fingers, the defeated captain can feel only shame within, terrified of the scrawny sailor that hovers over his ship and crew. He looks up in earnest at the purveyor of this bold slight, confirming his notion that something inhuman lords over them. There is a fearless and ancient warrior, wrapped in the sinewy body of a twenty-two-year-old man.

 

Tarron Nethersby gazes with fascination at the deep darkness within the center of Fingal’s Cave. Despite his recent battle with the crew, his body feels vibrant and rejuvenated, having snuck in a few hours of rest amidst the heavy swaying of the crow’s nest. He knows they cannot venture much closer to the cavernous mass without risking the entire ship. Regardless, a mighty darkness within him admires the hulking rock formation. The young man laughs to himself as he glances down at the captain beneath his feet.

 

Never in his life had Tarron imagined having the power to strip a man of his sword, with only his bare hands. He had given ten men such a severe beating – that they dare not look in his direction. The bosun had mistook him as the ‘the wretch’ when Tarron was objecting to the actions of his new companion. This due to the portly fool being almost deaf from years of cannon fire. Anyone who was listening could have distinguished that the young man was crying ‘Thretch;’ the name of his newest friend, and the scalawag that had vexed the captain and crew.

 

Tarron runs his slender fingers through a mass of oily, blonde hair on his scalp, breathing as instructed by his new mentor, to quell the pain. His body is wrought with collateral damage, having beaten down most of the crew during their attempts to imprison or kill him. The young man recalls his first act of defiance, standing at the helm and changing their course by forty degrees starboard.

 

When the captain ordered them back to port, the ship became a scene of malicious defiance, and the brawling sailor shocked his shipmates with a primal display of force. It all had the earmarks of conventional madness, until Tarron snapped the bosun’s neck, and cast him overboard: the heavy man had flailed in the air like a dying fish. The crew stopped fighting to stare with their mouths agape, watching the lanky sailor grab another hefty pirate. He then used his face to break a section of railing, judiciously casting the man overboard.

 

Captain William Kidd emerged from the group of stunned men, cutlass in hand, and ready to delve out some mob justice. Tarron remembers that Thretch caused a smirk to form on his thin face, emboldening the captain in his efforts to seek vengeance. When the captain raised his cutlass with his right hand, the mighty demon used Tarron’s left hand to grapple Kidd’s throat, and stomped at his toes. He stepped into the blade before it could swing downward. While his left hand compressed the man’s windpipe, Tarron used his mighty grip to break the fingers of the captain’s free hand. The instant pain in his nerve endings caused William Kidd to cry out, and Thretch used the back of Tarron’s head to knock the cutlass from the captain’s hand. Thretch then contorted Tarron’s body, sending his right elbow into the captain’s chest, using his left hand to break the fingers of Kidd’s sword hand. With the captain disarmed, and both of his hands broken, Thretch delivered a mighty kick to the center of his chest. This assault forced the crew to catch their captain: thus preventing a nasty fall to the main deck.

 

Although the crew didn’t understand the newfound strength of their shipmate, they elected to follow his lead, changing their course for Scotland. During their journey to Fingal’s Cave, the men had made two more failed attempts to take down their unsavory mate. These attempts were met with further aggression, and two more large men cast overboard, along with severe injuries to other members of the crew. With only sixteen crew members remaining, the captain yielded to the vicious spider of the sea, warning the crew not to do him any harm. This accord allowed Tarron to take his leave in the crow’s nest.

 

Tarron caresses the back of his skull where the captain’s cutlass dug into his flesh, realizing that Thretch has no qualms about damaging his body. The young man detects hairline fractures throughout his thin frame, and his right hand has been swollen for days with two broken knuckles. He dares not offend Thretch, nor give any hint that he is a coward, fearing that the mysterious deity might cast him off the ship as unworthy. In their many ‘conversations,’ the young man has learned that the ancient presence within his body has been the subject of much suffering and betrayal. Thretch has given Tarron details from his six thousand years on earth, telling him things that would only be known to other men through songs and stories. Tarron has discovered that the creature died of plague eleven times before taking to the seas in avoidance of more agony. He knows that his new companion was a slave in Egypt, a warrior in Greece and a Viking chief. The world has subjected Thretch to almost every form of torture and pestilence that have petrified people for centuries. His role has been master and servant, fortunate and destitute. Through all this adversity, he has remained unyielding and fierce, reminding the world daily that he is a force of nature. Tarron shivers at the thought of dreaming another death suffered years ago by his companion. The creature has already shared with Tarron the worst of his own fears: enough to make a man vomit and cry just from the memories. They were harrowing experiences of drowning, suffocation, bludgeoning, burning, and even being eaten alive. These horrifying images cause Tarron to miss his old, pedestrian nightmares. He yearns for a time when his knowledge stretched only the course of his twenty-two years; rather than the vast corruption and raw reckoning of thousands of years in misery.

 

A noose dangles down from the mast, working its way over the top of Tarron’s blonde hair. In his state of reminiscence, the young man almost finds himself strung up by a boy of only eighteen. This brave, young adversary had climbed up the mast to join him atop the sails.

 

Tarron snaps back to reality, immediately emboldened by Thretch. He grips the noose before it can find a hold on his neck and pulls at it with volatile fury, staring at the teenage boy with homicidal tendencies. The familiar crack of a pistol breaks the tension, and Tarron notices a small hole in the bottom of his flimsy crow’s nest. He soon detects the heat of something unnatural cutting through his thigh and looks down to see his light brown britches saturated in blood. Tarron loses his footing and grips the rope of the noose to prevent a fall from the mast. He drops a few feet as his weight drags the rope down.

 

The eighteen-year-old feels instant burns from the rope as it slides through his hands, leaving patches of torn flesh from the sudden heat and friction. He loses his footing on the topsail yard, grabbing the rope in vain as his body sways fifty-three feet above the deck.

 

Tarron notices that the young man hasn’t bothered to tether the rope to anything, intending to use his upper body strength to hang the ferocious pirate. He glances up at the rope that is draped over the topsail yard, with both men hanging from either side. The young man’s fingers are bleeding, and he looks at Tarron as if to plead for his life. His grip slips, causing a perilous plunge to the deck nearly sixty feet below him.

 

Without any weight on the opposite end of the rope, it dangles in the air, allowing Tarron’s body to fall right behind the young man. During his final seconds of life, Tarron can hear Thretch laughing at the back of his mind with sadistic fervor. On his way to the solid planks, he takes one final look at the auspicious cave, admiring the wondrous solitude of the ancient formation. When Tarron’s body hits the deck, Thretch recognizes the sharp pain of ribs breaking through into organs, and the resounding shock of all limbs going numb. There isn’t time for a last breath, as his capacity to draw breath has been crushed. The creature stares at the blackened boards of the ship in the darkness, waiting for his host to die. Tarron’s passing allows his presence to transfer to another young man – somewhere on the earth.

II. Sin Screening – Dark Comforts

 

Jacob awakens to the horrid stench of cigarettes, combined with another smell that makes him gag. The granular filth of the cheap Spanish tiles on the bathroom floor beneath him feels sticky and littered with debris. He senses pain throughout his body, and pushes himself up from the floor to assess the damage. As he begins to rise, a shooting sensation snaps through his left arm, and he rolls over onto his back. The sharp throbbing in his forearm is not as raw as a fracture, so the young man assumes that his arm was sprained during the night. He breathes in; smelling the sour contents of many drunken stomachs having been recently emptied, inspiring him to vacate the area.

 

The young billionaire recalls his recent nightmare from the memories of Thretch; another horrible death at the hands of scorned men. He can almost smell the sea exactly as it had presented itself in the vision, and the lanky body of Tarron, plunging to his death on the large pirate ship. Jacob opens his eyes wide, wondering what events have led him to this place.

 

After a few seconds of trying to remember something about the previous night, he hears the squeaking sound of a door opening and closing in quick succession. Jacob blinks his eyes and immediately notices that his left eye is practically swollen shut. As he uses the fingers of his right hand to inspect his face for damage, the affluent entrepreneur hears footsteps approaching from the front.

 

“Are you still in there; you little bastard!?” The hostile voice of a woman calls out, expressing her disdain for Jacob with a Brooklyn accent. “My husband wants you out of this bar RIGHT NOW!” She orders in a self-righteous tone, trying to hide her fear as she speaks. “Do you hear me, psycho!?” The bar owner’s wife demands as she kicks the bottom of Jacob’s shoe. “We need you out of here!”

 

“I’m injured…” Jacob mutters, gazing with his right eye to see that he is lying on his back in a bathroom stall, and his feet are protruding underneath the door.

 

“Yeah, welcome to the club!” The woman exclaims with bitter sarcasm. “You have five minutes to get cleaned up and leave, or I’ll let these boys tear you apart!” She finishes in a threatening tone as the bathroom door opens and closes again.

 

Jacob sits up immediately, feeling a warming rush throughout his body; not the type of buzz one gets with alcohol, but something much stronger. The moment he moves his abdominal muscles, Jacob realizes that it is a mistake. He senses the entire surface of his stomach and chest reporting trauma, causing him to tremble. The young man peers down at his damaged arms, noticing several lacerations across his exposed skin. The thumbnail of his right hand is completely smashed and turning purple beneath the surface with compressed blood. Every muscle in his left arm seems to be shrieking discomfort, and he can sense bruising in the bones of the same. He is wearing a navy blue polo shirt, and a pair of black cargo pants. Beneath the stall door, he can see that his running sneakers are covered in: mud, tar, blood, dirt, and what looks like specs of asphalt. This vision comes as a surprise to the twenty-three-year-old since the shoes were like new just a day ago.

 

The foul odors that are wafting across the bathroom floor rise with the heat of the furnace, bringing some comfort into the dingy bathroom. Despite many injuries, Jacob manages to get to his feet, pushing himself up against the enclosure wall using his left arm. When he is standing upright, the young man notices a stinging sensation coming from both of his ankles. They exhibit an almost paralyzing tenderness that makes him wonder if he recently jumped from a two-story building.

 

After a full assessment of the damage to his body, Jacob shuffles to the black stall door and slides the lever clockwise to release the pin. The door opens with an odd squeak, and Jacob thrusts it out of his way as he half-stumbles to the sink for a bit of cleaning. When he reaches the white porcelain sink, Jacob is repulsed by the rancid smell of digestive fluids on the floor of this area. Both sinks are coated with a bit of cigarette ash, and he notices that they have been recently used to clean blood from someone’s body.

 

Jacob turns on the water, recalling the threat that the frightened woman issued just moments ago. He uses the surprisingly clean water to remove the blood and filth from his face, hands, and arms. The young man’s American-Irish features begin to show through, and his short brunette hair with blonde highlights is an oily mess. He minimizes his breathing to abstain from the smell of his unfortunate surroundings. Once his hands and face are clean, he is not surprised to see that there are no means to dry them. For the second time in the past few minutes, Jacob notices that he is feeling wonderful for someone who has been through so much pain. His body is warm all over, and although moving causes him a slight amount of agony, it is bearable.

 

He rubs his hands together, staring at the corroded sign that reads ‘Men’ on the door before him. The sign looks blurry through his left eye, and Jacob breathes in deeply, opening his eyelid as far as it will go in an attempt to correct his vision. His throat convulses a bit, and he feels stomach acid rising up to the back of his mouth, but he steadies himself and lets it flow immediately back down. After one last look around the lonely bathroom, Jacob pushes the door with his right hand. He then forces his body against it to help him exit the restroom quicker.

 

“Shh… Shh…guys, here he comes.” A man whispers from behind the bar to Jacob’s left, sounding cautious and focused as if a bomb were about to go off. “I know that we’re all hurtin’ here, but let’s not piss off the hurricane again. We don’t need any more fighting.”

 

Jacob takes a look around the bar, noticing that a considerable amount damage has been caused by what appears to be a recent brawl. There is a group of three large, Polynesian men standing off to his right, watching his every movement. One of them is leaning against the wall, nursing his bare stomach with a crude ice pack, fashioned from a white terrycloth, provided by the wait staff. He seems to be in agony, observing Jacob from a pair of deep, blue eyes nestled within his large, round face.

 

The other two Polynesian men are clad in red and yellow T-shirts, complimented by green denim shorts. Their genetics and clothing are similar, giving Jacob the impression that they are brothers. One of the men is holding a makeshift ice pack against the side of his head, gazing at Jacob with tears streaming from his right eye. His brother is pinching several napkins over a broken nose. From the amount blood seeping toward the large man’s fingers, Jacob surmises that it will soon be time for him to replace them.

 

“So ten thousand dollars each then?” The bartender asks with caution, gazing around the bar as if to appease his uneasy patrons, in an attempt to confirm a deal with Jacob. “You told me that you’ve got money, and we looked you up online. It’s gonna’ take ten thousand dollars to keep everyone here quiet.”

 

Jacob shuffles toward the bartender; not recalling having made this offer. He is grateful for the opportunity to avoid police questioning and the negative press. His short journey to the bar is akin to the haunted houses he used to visit as a child. Every man and woman that he walks past has injuries in various combinations of bruises, cuts, scratches, swollen eyes, and even broken fingers. They look like a group of people who just survived a fierce battle in a poverty-stricken nation, rather than customers at a local pub. Each of the bar patrons keeps his or her distance, watching Jacob with distrust and unmistakable fear.

 

When the entrepreneur is only three feet from the bar, an older woman withdraws from the group of wooden tables at his right, surrendering to the darkest corner of the room. Jacob observes the small, gloomy establishment with caution, not recalling at what point he decided to venture into this place. The lights are cheap and dim, hanging from the ceiling like a gallows of economic distress. Everything within the building screams desperation to Jacob. From the tacky, red polyester fabric that covers the small booths, to the unkempt wooden surfaces of the tables and chairs.

 

The young billionaire sneers at the leering faces of the bar patrons, noticing their cheap clothing and the hefty, bloated bodies before him. There are men with poorly groomed beards and mustaches, some of whose faces are soaked with blood. Many of the women are hanging out of their clothing all over, appearing to have wandered out of their homes without a shower.

 

Jacob places his hands atop the filthy bar surface, amused by how much this reminds him of movies that he has seen, featuring saloons from the 1800s.

 

“So…does your elbow hurt as much as my mouth?” The bartender asks in a pitiful attempt at humor, failing to sound friendly as his voice cracks mid-sentence.

 

The warmth inside Jacob’s body is remarkable, as though the greatest painkiller ever invented has been infused into him. Jacob observes the bartender for a moment, realizing that all eyes in the building are watching his every movement. The bartender seems gentle despite his ratty, gray hair and prematurely aged skin. As a man in his early fifties, the bar owner more resembles someone creeping into his seventies. His frame is lanky, and he is clad in faded blue jeans, along with a white T-shirt that covers his torso. The pocket of his T-shirt contains a pack of Marlboro Reds. Jacob assumes that the ignited cigarette in the cheap, jade ashtray behind the bartender used to be among them.

 

“So ten thousand dollars…and you make this all go away?” Jacob asks with growing paranoia, having not a clue as to which part of town he has embarked.

 

“Ten thousand dollars EACH!” The aged bartender states, trying to hide his fear long enough to ensure full payment. “You told us that every person here tonight who got injured would get ten thousand, and every witness would get two thousand.”

 

The young man breathes in through his nostrils, sucking in as much air as his lungs can contain. He then exhales, lowering his head and shoulders as the carbon dioxide exits his body into the atmosphere of the seedy bar. The crowd around him moves uncomfortably, and his frustration is felt through the place like a wave of pressure from a jet that has just broken the sound barrier. Some of the patrons shift from one foot to the other, while those with worse injuries make their way closer to the exits. The discomfort is growing like the splitting of atoms, rising with heat and energy at one thousand meters per second.

 

“That last part is bullshit, isn’t it?” Jacob asks, watching a bit of spittle fly from his lips and land on the bar as he speaks. “I’m a business guy, and I deal with liars all day long. Hell, I was raised by one of the biggest liars in the game. So tell me again what our deal was, and leave off that last bullshit about me paying each witness two grand!” He finishes with radiance and primitive flair, jutting his chin out at the barkeep with unholy disregard.

 

“Irene, do you have that list of injured people?” The bartender asks his younger wife, holding up his right hand as he turns to face his spouse.

 

A woman with thick, horn-rimmed eyeglasses is leaning against the counter where the liquor is stored. Her elbows are stretched defiantly backward, setting her body at an odd angle with her toes pointed toward the bar, and her feet pushed outward. She is smoking a cigarette and staring indignantly at Jacob, seeming to be the only person in the area that is not afraid of him. The woman shows signs of aging, looking to be in her early forties, and unlike most of the bar patrons, isn’t showing signs of injury. Her body is hidden by a pair of gray coveralls with a white T-shirt beneath them, making her breasts seem almost invisible. She takes a drag off the cigarette and daintily removes it from her mouth with her right hand, blowing a heavy wave of smoke in Jacob’s direction. The woman uses her left hand to ruffle her shoulder-length, curly brown hair, staring at the wounded entrepreneur with her light blue eyes.

 

“How does your arm feel?” The bartender’s wife asks, flicking her cigarette at Jacob as she snatches up a small, spiral notebook from the counter and steps over to the bar next to her husband. “Does it feel like someone caught you with a baseball bat? How about your eye?” She asks with further scorn, shifting her weight into a posture of disapproval and folding her arms across her coveralls. “Can you feel the sting; like someone clipped you with a Louisville Slugger?”

 

Jacob remains unflinching and stares at the woman evenly, unresponsive to her words and the fiery ashes of the cigarette that dropped to the floor near him. His eyelids flutter a bit under the pale lighting, and he looks toward the back counter, seeing a somewhat bloody, broken baseball bat atop the prep station.

 

“I ain’t never seen that before ‘n my life.” The woman announces, shaking her head as she gives the small notebook to her husband. “You snapped my baseball bat in half with your left arm – splinters and all. Then you just kept goin’ like some kinda’ runaway train. Are you on medication – escape the nuthouse? High on drugs, maybe? Shoot, it don’t matter; nobody here is gonna’ say a word…as long as you pay up.”

 

“We had to rush four men and two women to the hospital.” The bartender reads from the notepad, glancing up at Jacob with disdain. “They…had some injuries to their insides. Why did you have to hit ‘em so hard, son? I mean, Jesus, I’ve seen bar fights; broken up plenty in my twenty-some-odd years, but what happened tonight…Jesus!” He sighs with frustration, turning away for a moment and placing his left hand on his hip. “All in all, you injured twenty-seven people up in my bar; not to mention the damage.”

 

“How did it start?” Jacob prompts with sincere curiosity, letting his guard down for a half-second.

 

“It started like a goddamn fire!” The bartender answers with a shocked expression, having a fit of anxiety and distrust at the advent of Jacob’s poor memory. “You’re about two shots short of a Long Island Iced Tea; aren’t you, boy? It’s stupid for me to even ask…“ The man says with regret, tossing the notebook on the bar before him.

 

“I know; why would ya’ bother?” His wife interrupts with passion, shaking her head at Jacob. “I’ve never seen someone cut through a crowd – just whoopin’ on everyone without any reason. You’re lucky nobody died, because money or no money; your ass would be in jail!” She finishes with bold reverence, providing the crowd with a teaspoon of justice, despite their desire for buckets more. “Prison!” The woman exclaims with subtle insecurity. “I mean your ass would be in prison!”

 

“So I owe you two hundred and seventy grand?” Jacob ascertains in a cold fashion, starting to realize that what took place this evening was due to a much darker influence. “Whom should I make the check out to?” He quips with an electric stare, watching the bartender’s face transform to deeper shades of disgust and betrayal.

 

“That ain’t funny, dude! You hurt a lot of people tonight! …And scared even more.” The bartender raises his voice, heaving his chest in panicked fervor as he eyes Jacob with ravenous instability.

 

“Yeah, no shit!” His wife adds with bitter regret for their bartered hospitality. “Why don’t you spend the next five to ten years in prison to think about how you should treat people?” As she speaks, the woman snatches a cordless phone from under the bar and begins to dial.

 

“Relax!” Jacob orders, realizing that he can’t slide out of this situation, especially with almost two dozen angry people ready to stampede him at any moment. “Do you have a checking account?”

 

“Yeah,” the bartender’s wife says, showing respect for the first time as she hangs up the cordless phone. “How are you gonna’ deposit a check at this hour? It’s almost midnight.”

 

“I’ll do a wire transfer.” Jacob concedes with a bit of frustration, comparing this experience to doing business with natives who are seeing gunpowder explode for the first time.

 

“How will you get the bank to transfer the money?” The bartender inquires in a sarcastic manner. “There’s nobody to complete the transaction.”

 

“The bank manager will take my call; just give me the phone.” Jacob insists, holding out his right hand with the fingers outstretched.

 

“Why would he help you with a transfer in the middle of the night?” The bartender’s wife conveys with mistrust, smiling from the right side of her mouth as though she knows that Jacob is trying to play them.

 

“Because he works for me.” Jacob evokes with elitist confidence. “It’s my family’s bank, Calbraw Atlantic. Now give me the phone!” The young billionaire states with haste, snapping his fingers as if preparing a meal for a group of eager children.

 

The bartender’s wife passes the phone to Jacob, handing it to him like a precious, newborn baby.

 

“Write down your routing and account numbers on that notepad.” The young man orders with a nod as he dials a number on the keypad of the phone. “Ben, this is Jacob…doing fine. No…listen, I’m in a bad situation, and I need to do a transfer.” Jacob raises his eyes to the bar where the woman has turned the notepad around so that he can relay the numbers to his banker. “Yes, I need to do the transfer right now! Well, whatever then, I’ll just pull all of our money out. Why don’t we plan to withdraw everything in the next forty-eight hours? Yeah…yeah, I know you’re tired. That’s okay… Are you gonna’ take care of me then? Good man… Sure, no problem; go turn on your computer, and I’ll wait.” After a long, uncomfortable silence, the entrepreneur leans forward and reads the numbers twice to his banker for confirmation. “Yep, that’s right. I need you to transfer two hundred and seventy thousand dollars into that account. Yes, that’s what I want! Yes, I can confirm… No, I’m not drunk or under duress… My PIN number? Jesus, Ben, it’s 0825… Okay…okay, thanks, ‘bye.” Jacob sets the cheap, white cordless phone atop the bar with pride, as though having just scored a touchdown. “Call your bank.” He instructs the couple from across the bar with condescending malice. “Check your balance.”

 

The bartender’s wife snatches the phone off of the counter with festering impatience and dials the toll-free number to her local bank. The entire room is filled with greedy anticipation as the woman navigates through the automated menus to get her balance information. After punching in her account number, zip code, and PIN number, she turns on the speakerphone for everyone to hear. ‘Your balance as of February 7th, 2025 is $272,474.37.’

 

The dingy serving area of the bar is ablaze with gratuitous cheers, and Jacob feels two hands pat him subsequently on the back and right shoulder. He turns with surprise to see dozens of battered faces alive with the knowledge that the money they sought, and the pleasure it buys, are within their reach. The billionaire turns back to the bar with a sharp sneer, and his face transforms into a wicked smile.

 

“It’s all yours now!” Jacob broadcasts from his dry throat to the entire room, gesturing with his right hand toward the bar owners. “Keep it all for yourselves, or share it with your customers. I don’t care either way. But it’s all yours.” He repeats with a short wave of his right hand as he walks toward the front door. “And I’m free and clear. Good night!”

 

“You better give us our share of that money, Lyle!” An older man shouts from the center of the crowd, growling at the bar owner with distrust.

 

“Yeah, give us our money, Lyle!” A woman concurs with fiery indignation, stomping on the floor as she locks eyes with the aged bar owners.

 

‘You sonofabitch.’ The bar owner’s wife mouths to Jacob, glaring at him through her glasses. Jacob winks with his right eye at the small business owners, as a flood of questions come flowing from their patrons in the serving area. He glances at the bartender, who is shaking his head in disgust, and departs into the frigid night air with a grin.

 

Jacob steps out into the modern ruins of what looks like a poor Brooklyn, New York neighborhood, wondering how he got this far from his Park Avenue penthouse. As he walks to the street corner under a solitary streetlight, his hands immediately begin to shiver from the cold. There is an odd chill in the air beneath the pale lighting. He can see masses of frost that are hugging the sidewalk, wrapping around the aged concrete in a marriage of elemental bonding.

 

His thoughts are interrupted by a brief, mental vision. Jacob sees the flash of a little blonde girl screaming as someone forces her into a locked container beneath the surface of the earth. Once she is secured in her subterranean prison, its steel surface is covered with over a foot of gravel. Blood begins to rush into his brain with mortal consequences as Jacob reconstructs the events of the past few hours. He sees himself buying a few doses of heroin from a drug dealer just ten miles from where he is now standing. Jacob then recalls snapping some rubber tubing around his arm and injecting his body with the drug.

 

Under the sporadic hum of the poorly maintained streetlights, Jacob remembers his journey on foot to the bar, and the unprovoked attack that led to an all-out brawl. His internal visions lead him to the moment where he snapped the baseball bat in half, damaging his left arm – after the bartender’s wife used it to strike him near his left eye. This incident was the final act, inspired by nearly thirty minutes of fierce brawling. After which, he stumbled into the bathroom and passed out in the stall.

 

Jacob sucks air into his lungs with remorse and terror, realizing that it was he who imprisoned the little girl underground. ‘She’s going to suffocate!’ He thinks to himself, feeling perspiration coming forth from his underarms and forehead with the onset of panic. ‘What the hell is wrong with me?’ He wonders, searching his cargo pants for a cell phone, and determining that he has only his wallet.

 

The young billionaire begins to convulse with immediate despair, realizing that he has no idea how much time has passed. His only conscious memories are from daylight hours. He can’t recall the size of the container that he used to entomb the little girl – or whether he marked the spot of her burial. Jacob grabs the back of his head in feverish horror, trying to work through the cloud of heroin-laced thoughts and logically map out a way to rescue his quarry. ‘Where the hell did I get her!? Why did I take her!?’ Jacob demands of himself with a queasiness that he has never before felt.

 

“Celeste is right; I’m losing my mind!” He says aloud, trying harder to figure out in which direction he should travel to find his prisoner.

 

Jacob turns at the sound of soft footsteps maneuvering in his direction, surprised to see a man in a black turban approaching from the south. As the man gets closer to the light, his Israeli features are shown in clear splendor. He appears to be fit and strong, running with militant force as he hefts his way across the pavement. The man has a long beard and dark skin from many years spent in the desert. His eyeglasses and the slight patches of gray in his facial hair, make him appear wise and foreboding. The powerful Israeli looks to be in his mid-forties, having aged well.

 

Thretch awakens from his slumber within Jacob and immediately sees the Jewish man running toward him. The man stares through his glasses at Jacob with a guise of ownership and hatred. Under the wintry sky, he conveys a righteous and ancient vendetta through labored breaths and deliberate movements.

 

‘NICODEMUS!’ Thretch shouts from within his host’s mind, willing him to start sprinting; almost tearing his Achilles’ tendon.

 

Jacob feels his body moving faster than he has ever experienced, propelled by the terror of a man known to be nothing but fearless. He is almost struck by a car as Thretch forces him onto a reckless path of frozen streets and unknown dangers. Jacob can hear the accelerated footsteps of Nicodemus behind him, and he is awestruck by the speed that the middle-aged man is exhibiting. He urges his body forward as the mysterious Israeli gains on him, one inch at a time, refusing to back off. Jacob hears the sound of a knife snatched from its scabbard, inspiring him to run with the passion of a world-class Olympian.

 

After running for less than a block, Jacob concedes that several nights without sleep, a strenuous bar brawl, and being high on heroin – are limiting his movements. The young entrepreneur knows that if he doesn’t act soon, the knife that is trailing only a few feet behind him, in the capable hands of Nicodemus, will soon be his demise.

Continued….

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Dividers

FREE Excerpt from KND Thriller of The Week: Dividers by Travis Adams Irish

On Friday we announced that Dividers by Travis Adams Irish 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:

Dividers

by Travis Adams Irish

Dividers
4.8 stars – 40 Reviews
On Sale! Everyday price: $3.99
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Enjoy Dividers this week for the special price of only $0.99. The regular price is $3.99. This novel is standalone and contains both parts of the story: Part I Dividers and Part II Thretch.Dividers is a story of betrayal, romance, tragedy, and the struggle against madness. The final pages have been described as lightning in a bottle with an adrenaline chaser.

Earl Calbraw is a wealthy man seeking redemption after 20 years of greed and hedonism. Meanwhile, his son Jacob is doing everything he can to destroy his father’s reputation and legacy. The young man is motivated by the mysterious disappearance of his mother when he was only ten years old. Twelve years later, the two juggernauts of industry have at one another and destroy innocent employees in their wake.

Though Jacob’s father is not his only problem. He must figure out the origins of his strange nocturnal activities. Why does his body hurt so much every morning? What is causing his thermostat to repeatedly drop to near-freezing temperatures? How does he manage to find himself waking up in the most dangerous parts of New York, exposed and often in danger?

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

I. Riding The Demon – Fingal’s Cave, Isle of Staffa, Scotland – March 27th, 1697 A.D.

 

“Lord have mercy; you say? If you have not tasted the wrath of your lord, then how can you beg for his mercy?” –Thretch.

 

The wretch sits atop his makeshift crow’s nest, staring through the dank blackness of the evening sea. On the deck of the ship below, the pirate William Kidd skulks about with wounded disdain. Never before had this crew been so bewitched in making the acquaintance of Tarron Nethersby; a scrawny and timid man, gone insane overnight on the open ocean. For three nights, the crew of twenty men had tried to subdue their mate, feeling ironic wrath delivered through the powerful fists of a madman. At only one hundred and sixty pounds, the lanky sailor had bested half the crew, fighting with his bare hands against the captain’s cutlass. The captain found himself the victim of a superior fighter, fast enough to strip him of his sword whilst breaking his fingers.

 

Captain William Kidd stands on the deck of his ship as the ocean heaves and gives beneath the ninety-two foot vessel, causing it to buck and yaw as if restrained. At age fifty-two, the ambitious Scotsman has never expressed such fear in his dark brown eyes; the hue of which matches his bronzed skin. This once charismatic leader is now shamed in the shadow of a braver and more ruthless soul. He knows that his massive biceps and fast reflexes were for naught against such an unnatural terror. His hands are wrapped in sackcloth, stained red from wounds that he received earlier at the pleasure of the undone sea dog. Kidd removes his black hat with stoic defeat, watching the entrance of Fingal’s Cave as if it is the cause of all his woes. The massive plateau sticks out of the sea like a prison built for Satan himself. Its entrance is darker still than the rest of the whole, showing not a hint of welcome to sea travelers.

 

Captain Kidd recalls his first venture into the abysmal cavern, when he was just a boy growing up in Scotland. He and a group of lads had taken a longboat into the majesty of the forbidden place; a formidable fortress of rock rising up out of the sea in defiance. Young William had been awestruck at the symmetrical pillars of black stone within the cave. The people of his village had issued a stern warning: that the stone pillars were the black souls of wicked men. Any trespass into the cavern would put a curse upon Scotland and its people.

 

As an exuberant youth, Kidd had scoffed at their superstitious notions, finding them humorous. When he tries to move his broken fingers, the defeated captain can feel only shame within, terrified of the scrawny sailor that hovers over his ship and crew. He looks up in earnest at the purveyor of this bold slight, confirming his notion that something inhuman lords over them. There is a fearless and ancient warrior, wrapped in the sinewy body of a twenty-two-year-old man.

 

Tarron Nethersby gazes with fascination at the deep darkness within the center of Fingal’s Cave. Despite his recent battle with the crew, his body feels vibrant and rejuvenated, having snuck in a few hours of rest amidst the heavy swaying of the crow’s nest. He knows they cannot venture much closer to the cavernous mass without risking the entire ship. Regardless, a mighty darkness within him admires the hulking rock formation. The young man laughs to himself as he glances down at the captain beneath his feet.

 

Never in his life had Tarron imagined having the power to strip a man of his sword, with only his bare hands. He had given ten men such a severe beating – that they dare not look in his direction. The bosun had mistook him as the ‘the wretch’ when Tarron was objecting to the actions of his new companion. This due to the portly fool being almost deaf from years of cannon fire. Anyone who was listening could have distinguished that the young man was crying ‘Thretch;’ the name of his newest friend, and the scalawag that had vexed the captain and crew.

 

Tarron runs his slender fingers through a mass of oily, blonde hair on his scalp, breathing as instructed by his new mentor, to quell the pain. His body is wrought with collateral damage, having beaten down most of the crew during their attempts to imprison or kill him. The young man recalls his first act of defiance, standing at the helm and changing their course by forty degrees starboard.

 

When the captain ordered them back to port, the ship became a scene of malicious defiance, and the brawling sailor shocked his shipmates with a primal display of force. It all had the earmarks of conventional madness, until Tarron snapped the bosun’s neck, and cast him overboard: the heavy man had flailed in the air like a dying fish. The crew stopped fighting to stare with their mouths agape, watching the lanky sailor grab another hefty pirate. He then used his face to break a section of railing, judiciously casting the man overboard.

 

Captain William Kidd emerged from the group of stunned men, cutlass in hand, and ready to delve out some mob justice. Tarron remembers that Thretch caused a smirk to form on his thin face, emboldening the captain in his efforts to seek vengeance. When the captain raised his cutlass with his right hand, the mighty demon used Tarron’s left hand to grapple Kidd’s throat, and stomped at his toes. He stepped into the blade before it could swing downward. While his left hand compressed the man’s windpipe, Tarron used his mighty grip to break the fingers of the captain’s free hand. The instant pain in his nerve endings caused William Kidd to cry out, and Thretch used the back of Tarron’s head to knock the cutlass from the captain’s hand. Thretch then contorted Tarron’s body, sending his right elbow into the captain’s chest, using his left hand to break the fingers of Kidd’s sword hand. With the captain disarmed, and both of his hands broken, Thretch delivered a mighty kick to the center of his chest. This assault forced the crew to catch their captain: thus preventing a nasty fall to the main deck.

 

Although the crew didn’t understand the newfound strength of their shipmate, they elected to follow his lead, changing their course for Scotland. During their journey to Fingal’s Cave, the men had made two more failed attempts to take down their unsavory mate. These attempts were met with further aggression, and two more large men cast overboard, along with severe injuries to other members of the crew. With only sixteen crew members remaining, the captain yielded to the vicious spider of the sea, warning the crew not to do him any harm. This accord allowed Tarron to take his leave in the crow’s nest.

 

Tarron caresses the back of his skull where the captain’s cutlass dug into his flesh, realizing that Thretch has no qualms about damaging his body. The young man detects hairline fractures throughout his thin frame, and his right hand has been swollen for days with two broken knuckles. He dares not offend Thretch, nor give any hint that he is a coward, fearing that the mysterious deity might cast him off the ship as unworthy. In their many ‘conversations,’ the young man has learned that the ancient presence within his body has been the subject of much suffering and betrayal. Thretch has given Tarron details from his six thousand years on earth, telling him things that would only be known to other men through songs and stories. Tarron has discovered that the creature died of plague eleven times before taking to the seas in avoidance of more agony. He knows that his new companion was a slave in Egypt, a warrior in Greece and a Viking chief. The world has subjected Thretch to almost every form of torture and pestilence that have petrified people for centuries. His role has been master and servant, fortunate and destitute. Through all this adversity, he has remained unyielding and fierce, reminding the world daily that he is a force of nature. Tarron shivers at the thought of dreaming another death suffered years ago by his companion. The creature has already shared with Tarron the worst of his own fears: enough to make a man vomit and cry just from the memories. They were harrowing experiences of drowning, suffocation, bludgeoning, burning, and even being eaten alive. These horrifying images cause Tarron to miss his old, pedestrian nightmares. He yearns for a time when his knowledge stretched only the course of his twenty-two years; rather than the vast corruption and raw reckoning of thousands of years in misery.

 

A noose dangles down from the mast, working its way over the top of Tarron’s blonde hair. In his state of reminiscence, the young man almost finds himself strung up by a boy of only eighteen. This brave, young adversary had climbed up the mast to join him atop the sails.

 

Tarron snaps back to reality, immediately emboldened by Thretch. He grips the noose before it can find a hold on his neck and pulls at it with volatile fury, staring at the teenage boy with homicidal tendencies. The familiar crack of a pistol breaks the tension, and Tarron notices a small hole in the bottom of his flimsy crow’s nest. He soon detects the heat of something unnatural cutting through his thigh and looks down to see his light brown britches saturated in blood. Tarron loses his footing and grips the rope of the noose to prevent a fall from the mast. He drops a few feet as his weight drags the rope down.

 

The eighteen-year-old feels instant burns from the rope as it slides through his hands, leaving patches of torn flesh from the sudden heat and friction. He loses his footing on the topsail yard, grabbing the rope in vain as his body sways fifty-three feet above the deck.

 

Tarron notices that the young man hasn’t bothered to tether the rope to anything, intending to use his upper body strength to hang the ferocious pirate. He glances up at the rope that is draped over the topsail yard, with both men hanging from either side. The young man’s fingers are bleeding, and he looks at Tarron as if to plead for his life. His grip slips, causing a perilous plunge to the deck nearly sixty feet below him.

 

Without any weight on the opposite end of the rope, it dangles in the air, allowing Tarron’s body to fall right behind the young man. During his final seconds of life, Tarron can hear Thretch laughing at the back of his mind with sadistic fervor. On his way to the solid planks, he takes one final look at the auspicious cave, admiring the wondrous solitude of the ancient formation. When Tarron’s body hits the deck, Thretch recognizes the sharp pain of ribs breaking through into organs, and the resounding shock of all limbs going numb. There isn’t time for a last breath, as his capacity to draw breath has been crushed. The creature stares at the blackened boards of the ship in the darkness, waiting for his host to die. Tarron’s passing allows his presence to transfer to another young man – somewhere on the earth.


II. Sin Screening – Dark Comforts

 

Jacob awakens to the horrid stench of cigarettes, combined with another smell that makes him gag. The granular filth of the cheap Spanish tiles on the bathroom floor beneath him feels sticky and littered with debris. He senses pain throughout his body, and pushes himself up from the floor to assess the damage. As he begins to rise, a shooting sensation snaps through his left arm, and he rolls over onto his back. The sharp throbbing in his forearm is not as raw as a fracture, so the young man assumes that his arm was sprained during the night. He breathes in; smelling the sour contents of many drunken stomachs having been recently emptied, inspiring him to vacate the area.

 

The young billionaire recalls his recent nightmare from the memories of Thretch; another horrible death at the hands of scorned men. He can almost smell the sea exactly as it had presented itself in the vision, and the lanky body of Tarron, plunging to his death on the large pirate ship. Jacob opens his eyes wide, wondering what events have led him to this place.

 

After a few seconds of trying to remember something about the previous night, he hears the squeaking sound of a door opening and closing in quick succession. Jacob blinks his eyes and immediately notices that his left eye is practically swollen shut. As he uses the fingers of his right hand to inspect his face for damage, the affluent entrepreneur hears footsteps approaching from the front.

 

“Are you still in there; you little bastard!?” The hostile voice of a woman calls out, expressing her disdain for Jacob with a Brooklyn accent. “My husband wants you out of this bar RIGHT NOW!” She orders in a self-righteous tone, trying to hide her fear as she speaks. “Do you hear me, psycho!?” The bar owner’s wife demands as she kicks the bottom of Jacob’s shoe. “We need you out of here!”

 

“I’m injured…” Jacob mutters, gazing with his right eye to see that he is lying on his back in a bathroom stall, and his feet are protruding underneath the door.

 

“Yeah, welcome to the club!” The woman exclaims with bitter sarcasm. “You have five minutes to get cleaned up and leave, or I’ll let these boys tear you apart!” She finishes in a threatening tone as the bathroom door opens and closes again.

 

Jacob sits up immediately, feeling a warming rush throughout his body; not the type of buzz one gets with alcohol, but something much stronger. The moment he moves his abdominal muscles, Jacob realizes that it is a mistake. He senses the entire surface of his stomach and chest reporting trauma, causing him to tremble. The young man peers down at his damaged arms, noticing several lacerations across his exposed skin. The thumbnail of his right hand is completely smashed and turning purple beneath the surface with compressed blood. Every muscle in his left arm seems to be shrieking discomfort, and he can sense bruising in the bones of the same. He is wearing a navy blue polo shirt, and a pair of black cargo pants. Beneath the stall door, he can see that his running sneakers are covered in: mud, tar, blood, dirt, and what looks like specs of asphalt. This vision comes as a surprise to the twenty-three-year-old since the shoes were like new just a day ago.

 

The foul odors that are wafting across the bathroom floor rise with the heat of the furnace, bringing some comfort into the dingy bathroom. Despite many injuries, Jacob manages to get to his feet, pushing himself up against the enclosure wall using his left arm. When he is standing upright, the young man notices a stinging sensation coming from both of his ankles. They exhibit an almost paralyzing tenderness that makes him wonder if he recently jumped from a two-story building.

 

After a full assessment of the damage to his body, Jacob shuffles to the black stall door and slides the lever clockwise to release the pin. The door opens with an odd squeak, and Jacob thrusts it out of his way as he half-stumbles to the sink for a bit of cleaning. When he reaches the white porcelain sink, Jacob is repulsed by the rancid smell of digestive fluids on the floor of this area. Both sinks are coated with a bit of cigarette ash, and he notices that they have been recently used to clean blood from someone’s body.

 

Jacob turns on the water, recalling the threat that the frightened woman issued just moments ago. He uses the surprisingly clean water to remove the blood and filth from his face, hands, and arms. The young man’s American-Irish features begin to show through, and his short brunette hair with blonde highlights is an oily mess. He minimizes his breathing to abstain from the smell of his unfortunate surroundings. Once his hands and face are clean, he is not surprised to see that there are no means to dry them. For the second time in the past few minutes, Jacob notices that he is feeling wonderful for someone who has been through so much pain. His body is warm all over, and although moving causes him a slight amount of agony, it is bearable.

 

He rubs his hands together, staring at the corroded sign that reads ‘Men’ on the door before him. The sign looks blurry through his left eye, and Jacob breathes in deeply, opening his eyelid as far as it will go in an attempt to correct his vision. His throat convulses a bit, and he feels stomach acid rising up to the back of his mouth, but he steadies himself and lets it flow immediately back down. After one last look around the lonely bathroom, Jacob pushes the door with his right hand. He then forces his body against it to help him exit the restroom quicker.

 

“Shh… Shh…guys, here he comes.” A man whispers from behind the bar to Jacob’s left, sounding cautious and focused as if a bomb were about to go off. “I know that we’re all hurtin’ here, but let’s not piss off the hurricane again. We don’t need any more fighting.”

 

Jacob takes a look around the bar, noticing that a considerable amount damage has been caused by what appears to be a recent brawl. There is a group of three large, Polynesian men standing off to his right, watching his every movement. One of them is leaning against the wall, nursing his bare stomach with a crude ice pack, fashioned from a white terrycloth, provided by the wait staff. He seems to be in agony, observing Jacob from a pair of deep, blue eyes nestled within his large, round face.

 

The other two Polynesian men are clad in red and yellow T-shirts, complimented by green denim shorts. Their genetics and clothing are similar, giving Jacob the impression that they are brothers. One of the men is holding a makeshift ice pack against the side of his head, gazing at Jacob with tears streaming from his right eye. His brother is pinching several napkins over a broken nose. From the amount blood seeping toward the large man’s fingers, Jacob surmises that it will soon be time for him to replace them.

 

“So ten thousand dollars each then?” The bartender asks with caution, gazing around the bar as if to appease his uneasy patrons, in an attempt to confirm a deal with Jacob. “You told me that you’ve got money, and we looked you up online. It’s gonna’ take ten thousand dollars to keep everyone here quiet.”

 

Jacob shuffles toward the bartender; not recalling having made this offer. He is grateful for the opportunity to avoid police questioning and the negative press. His short journey to the bar is akin to the haunted houses he used to visit as a child. Every man and woman that he walks past has injuries in various combinations of bruises, cuts, scratches, swollen eyes, and even broken fingers. They look like a group of people who just survived a fierce battle in a poverty-stricken nation, rather than customers at a local pub. Each of the bar patrons keeps his or her distance, watching Jacob with distrust and unmistakable fear.

 

When the entrepreneur is only three feet from the bar, an older woman withdraws from the group of wooden tables at his right, surrendering to the darkest corner of the room. Jacob observes the small, gloomy establishment with caution, not recalling at what point he decided to venture into this place. The lights are cheap and dim, hanging from the ceiling like a gallows of economic distress. Everything within the building screams desperation to Jacob. From the tacky, red polyester fabric that covers the small booths, to the unkempt wooden surfaces of the tables and chairs.

 

The young billionaire sneers at the leering faces of the bar patrons, noticing their cheap clothing and the hefty, bloated bodies before him. There are men with poorly groomed beards and mustaches, some of whose faces are soaked with blood. Many of the women are hanging out of their clothing all over, appearing to have wandered out of their homes without a shower.

 

Jacob places his hands atop the filthy bar surface, amused by how much this reminds him of movies that he has seen, featuring saloons from the 1800s.

 

“So…does your elbow hurt as much as my mouth?” The bartender asks in a pitiful attempt at humor, failing to sound friendly as his voice cracks mid-sentence.

 

The warmth inside Jacob’s body is remarkable, as though the greatest painkiller ever invented has been infused into him. Jacob observes the bartender for a moment, realizing that all eyes in the building are watching his every movement. The bartender seems gentle despite his ratty, gray hair and prematurely aged skin. As a man in his early fifties, the bar owner more resembles someone creeping into his seventies. His frame is lanky, and he is clad in faded blue jeans, along with a white T-shirt that covers his torso. The pocket of his T-shirt contains a pack of Marlboro Reds. Jacob assumes that the ignited cigarette in the cheap, jade ashtray behind the bartender used to be among them.

 

“So ten thousand dollars…and you make this all go away?” Jacob asks with growing paranoia, having not a clue as to which part of town he has embarked.

 

“Ten thousand dollars EACH!” The aged bartender states, trying to hide his fear long enough to ensure full payment. “You told us that every person here tonight who got injured would get ten thousand, and every witness would get two thousand.”

 

The young man breathes in through his nostrils, sucking in as much air as his lungs can contain. He then exhales, lowering his head and shoulders as the carbon dioxide exits his body into the atmosphere of the seedy bar. The crowd around him moves uncomfortably, and his frustration is felt through the place like a wave of pressure from a jet that has just broken the sound barrier. Some of the patrons shift from one foot to the other, while those with worse injuries make their way closer to the exits. The discomfort is growing like the splitting of atoms, rising with heat and energy at one thousand meters per second.

 

“That last part is bullshit, isn’t it?” Jacob asks, watching a bit of spittle fly from his lips and land on the bar as he speaks. “I’m a business guy, and I deal with liars all day long. Hell, I was raised by one of the biggest liars in the game. So tell me again what our deal was, and leave off that last bullshit about me paying each witness two grand!” He finishes with radiance and primitive flair, jutting his chin out at the barkeep with unholy disregard.

 

“Irene, do you have that list of injured people?” The bartender asks his younger wife, holding up his right hand as he turns to face his spouse.

 

A woman with thick, horn-rimmed eyeglasses is leaning against the counter where the liquor is stored. Her elbows are stretched defiantly backward, setting her body at an odd angle with her toes pointed toward the bar, and her feet pushed outward. She is smoking a cigarette and staring indignantly at Jacob, seeming to be the only person in the area that is not afraid of him. The woman shows signs of aging, looking to be in her early forties, and unlike most of the bar patrons, isn’t showing signs of injury. Her body is hidden by a pair of gray coveralls with a white T-shirt beneath them, making her breasts seem almost invisible. She takes a drag off the cigarette and daintily removes it from her mouth with her right hand, blowing a heavy wave of smoke in Jacob’s direction. The woman uses her left hand to ruffle her shoulder-length, curly brown hair, staring at the wounded entrepreneur with her light blue eyes.

 

“How does your arm feel?” The bartender’s wife asks, flicking her cigarette at Jacob as she snatches up a small, spiral notebook from the counter and steps over to the bar next to her husband. “Does it feel like someone caught you with a baseball bat? How about your eye?” She asks with further scorn, shifting her weight into a posture of disapproval and folding her arms across her coveralls. “Can you feel the sting; like someone clipped you with a Louisville Slugger?”

 

Jacob remains unflinching and stares at the woman evenly, unresponsive to her words and the fiery ashes of the cigarette that dropped to the floor near him. His eyelids flutter a bit under the pale lighting, and he looks toward the back counter, seeing a somewhat bloody, broken baseball bat atop the prep station.

 

“I ain’t never seen that before ‘n my life.” The woman announces, shaking her head as she gives the small notebook to her husband. “You snapped my baseball bat in half with your left arm – splinters and all. Then you just kept goin’ like some kinda’ runaway train. Are you on medication – escape the nuthouse? High on drugs, maybe? Shoot, it don’t matter; nobody here is gonna’ say a word…as long as you pay up.”

 

“We had to rush four men and two women to the hospital.” The bartender reads from the notepad, glancing up at Jacob with disdain. “They…had some injuries to their insides. Why did you have to hit ‘em so hard, son? I mean, Jesus, I’ve seen bar fights; broken up plenty in my twenty-some-odd years, but what happened tonight…Jesus!” He sighs with frustration, turning away for a moment and placing his left hand on his hip. “All in all, you injured twenty-seven people up in my bar; not to mention the damage.”

 

“How did it start?” Jacob prompts with sincere curiosity, letting his guard down for a half-second.

 

“It started like a goddamn fire!” The bartender answers with a shocked expression, having a fit of anxiety and distrust at the advent of Jacob’s poor memory. “You’re about two shots short of a Long Island Iced Tea; aren’t you, boy? It’s stupid for me to even ask…“ The man says with regret, tossing the notebook on the bar before him.

 

“I know; why would ya’ bother?” His wife interrupts with passion, shaking her head at Jacob. “I’ve never seen someone cut through a crowd – just whoopin’ on everyone without any reason. You’re lucky nobody died, because money or no money; your ass would be in jail!” She finishes with bold reverence, providing the crowd with a teaspoon of justice, despite their desire for buckets more. “Prison!” The woman exclaims with subtle insecurity. “I mean your ass would be in prison!”

 

“So I owe you two hundred and seventy grand?” Jacob ascertains in a cold fashion, starting to realize that what took place this evening was due to a much darker influence. “Whom should I make the check out to?” He quips with an electric stare, watching the bartender’s face transform to deeper shades of disgust and betrayal.

 

“That ain’t funny, dude! You hurt a lot of people tonight! …And scared even more.” The bartender raises his voice, heaving his chest in panicked fervor as he eyes Jacob with ravenous instability.

 

“Yeah, no shit!” His wife adds with bitter regret for their bartered hospitality. “Why don’t you spend the next five to ten years in prison to think about how you should treat people?” As she speaks, the woman snatches a cordless phone from under the bar and begins to dial.

 

“Relax!” Jacob orders, realizing that he can’t slide out of this situation, especially with almost two dozen angry people ready to stampede him at any moment. “Do you have a checking account?”

 

“Yeah,” the bartender’s wife says, showing respect for the first time as she hangs up the cordless phone. “How are you gonna’ deposit a check at this hour? It’s almost midnight.”

 

“I’ll do a wire transfer.” Jacob concedes with a bit of frustration, comparing this experience to doing business with natives who are seeing gunpowder explode for the first time.

 

“How will you get the bank to transfer the money?” The bartender inquires in a sarcastic manner. “There’s nobody to complete the transaction.”

 

“The bank manager will take my call; just give me the phone.” Jacob insists, holding out his right hand with the fingers outstretched.

 

“Why would he help you with a transfer in the middle of the night?” The bartender’s wife conveys with mistrust, smiling from the right side of her mouth as though she knows that Jacob is trying to play them.

 

“Because he works for me.” Jacob evokes with elitist confidence. “It’s my family’s bank, Calbraw Atlantic. Now give me the phone!” The young billionaire states with haste, snapping his fingers as if preparing a meal for a group of eager children.

 

The bartender’s wife passes the phone to Jacob, handing it to him like a precious, newborn baby.

 

“Write down your routing and account numbers on that notepad.” The young man orders with a nod as he dials a number on the keypad of the phone. “Ben, this is Jacob…doing fine. No…listen, I’m in a bad situation, and I need to do a transfer.” Jacob raises his eyes to the bar where the woman has turned the notepad around so that he can relay the numbers to his banker. “Yes, I need to do the transfer right now! Well, whatever then, I’ll just pull all of our money out. Why don’t we plan to withdraw everything in the next forty-eight hours? Yeah…yeah, I know you’re tired. That’s okay… Are you gonna’ take care of me then? Good man… Sure, no problem; go turn on your computer, and I’ll wait.” After a long, uncomfortable silence, the entrepreneur leans forward and reads the numbers twice to his banker for confirmation. “Yep, that’s right. I need you to transfer two hundred and seventy thousand dollars into that account. Yes, that’s what I want! Yes, I can confirm… No, I’m not drunk or under duress… My PIN number? Jesus, Ben, it’s 0825… Okay…okay, thanks, ‘bye.” Jacob sets the cheap, white cordless phone atop the bar with pride, as though having just scored a touchdown. “Call your bank.” He instructs the couple from across the bar with condescending malice. “Check your balance.”

 

The bartender’s wife snatches the phone off of the counter with festering impatience and dials the toll-free number to her local bank. The entire room is filled with greedy anticipation as the woman navigates through the automated menus to get her balance information. After punching in her account number, zip code, and PIN number, she turns on the speakerphone for everyone to hear. ‘Your balance as of February 7th, 2025 is $272,474.37.’

 

The dingy serving area of the bar is ablaze with gratuitous cheers, and Jacob feels two hands pat him subsequently on the back and right shoulder. He turns with surprise to see dozens of battered faces alive with the knowledge that the money they sought, and the pleasure it buys, are within their reach. The billionaire turns back to the bar with a sharp sneer, and his face transforms into a wicked smile.

 

“It’s all yours now!” Jacob broadcasts from his dry throat to the entire room, gesturing with his right hand toward the bar owners. “Keep it all for yourselves, or share it with your customers. I don’t care either way. But it’s all yours.” He repeats with a short wave of his right hand as he walks toward the front door. “And I’m free and clear. Good night!”

 

“You better give us our share of that money, Lyle!” An older man shouts from the center of the crowd, growling at the bar owner with distrust.

 

“Yeah, give us our money, Lyle!” A woman concurs with fiery indignation, stomping on the floor as she locks eyes with the aged bar owners.

 

‘You sonofabitch.’ The bar owner’s wife mouths to Jacob, glaring at him through her glasses. Jacob winks with his right eye at the small business owners, as a flood of questions come flowing from their patrons in the serving area. He glances at the bartender, who is shaking his head in disgust, and departs into the frigid night air with a grin.

 

Jacob steps out into the modern ruins of what looks like a poor Brooklyn, New York neighborhood, wondering how he got this far from his Park Avenue penthouse. As he walks to the street corner under a solitary streetlight, his hands immediately begin to shiver from the cold. There is an odd chill in the air beneath the pale lighting. He can see masses of frost that are hugging the sidewalk, wrapping around the aged concrete in a marriage of elemental bonding.

 

His thoughts are interrupted by a brief, mental vision. Jacob sees the flash of a little blonde girl screaming as someone forces her into a locked container beneath the surface of the earth. Once she is secured in her subterranean prison, its steel surface is covered with over a foot of gravel. Blood begins to rush into his brain with mortal consequences as Jacob reconstructs the events of the past few hours. He sees himself buying a few doses of heroin from a drug dealer just ten miles from where he is now standing. Jacob then recalls snapping some rubber tubing around his arm and injecting his body with the drug.

 

Under the sporadic hum of the poorly maintained streetlights, Jacob remembers his journey on foot to the bar, and the unprovoked attack that led to an all-out brawl. His internal visions lead him to the moment where he snapped the baseball bat in half, damaging his left arm – after the bartender’s wife used it to strike him near his left eye. This incident was the final act, inspired by nearly thirty minutes of fierce brawling. After which, he stumbled into the bathroom and passed out in the stall.

 

Jacob sucks air into his lungs with remorse and terror, realizing that it was he who imprisoned the little girl underground. ‘She’s going to suffocate!’ He thinks to himself, feeling perspiration coming forth from his underarms and forehead with the onset of panic. ‘What the hell is wrong with me?’ He wonders, searching his cargo pants for a cell phone, and determining that he has only his wallet.

 

The young billionaire begins to convulse with immediate despair, realizing that he has no idea how much time has passed. His only conscious memories are from daylight hours. He can’t recall the size of the container that he used to entomb the little girl – or whether he marked the spot of her burial. Jacob grabs the back of his head in feverish horror, trying to work through the cloud of heroin-laced thoughts and logically map out a way to rescue his quarry. ‘Where the hell did I get her!? Why did I take her!?’ Jacob demands of himself with a queasiness that he has never before felt.

 

“Celeste is right; I’m losing my mind!” He says aloud, trying harder to figure out in which direction he should travel to find his prisoner.

 

Jacob turns at the sound of soft footsteps maneuvering in his direction, surprised to see a man in a black turban approaching from the south. As the man gets closer to the light, his Israeli features are shown in clear splendor. He appears to be fit and strong, running with militant force as he hefts his way across the pavement. The man has a long beard and dark skin from many years spent in the desert. His eyeglasses and the slight patches of gray in his facial hair, make him appear wise and foreboding. The powerful Israeli looks to be in his mid-forties, having aged well.

 

Thretch awakens from his slumber within Jacob and immediately sees the Jewish man running toward him. The man stares through his glasses at Jacob with a guise of ownership and hatred. Under the wintry sky, he conveys a righteous and ancient vendetta through labored breaths and deliberate movements.

 

‘NICODEMUS!’ Thretch shouts from within his host’s mind, willing him to start sprinting; almost tearing his Achilles’ tendon.

 

Jacob feels his body moving faster than he has ever experienced, propelled by the terror of a man known to be nothing but fearless. He is almost struck by a car as Thretch forces him onto a reckless path of frozen streets and unknown dangers. Jacob can hear the accelerated footsteps of Nicodemus behind him, and he is awestruck by the speed that the middle-aged man is exhibiting. He urges his body forward as the mysterious Israeli gains on him, one inch at a time, refusing to back off. Jacob hears the sound of a knife snatched from its scabbard, inspiring him to run with the passion of a world-class Olympian.

 

After running for less than a block, Jacob concedes that several nights without sleep, a strenuous bar brawl, and being high on heroin – are limiting his movements. The young entrepreneur knows that if he doesn’t act soon, the knife that is trailing only a few feet behind him, in the capable hands of Nicodemus, will soon be his demise.

Continued….

Click on the title below to download the entire book and keep reading

Dividers

Ready for lightning in a bottle with an adrenaline chaser?
KND Brand New Thriller of The Week: Dividers by Travis Adams Irish

How many Kindle thrillers do you read in the course of a month? It could get expensive were it not for magical search tools like these:

And for the next week all of these great reading choices are brought to you by our brand new Thriller of the Week, Dividers by Travis Adams Irish. Please check it out!

Dividers

by Travis Adams Irish

Dividers
4.8 stars – 35 Reviews
On Sale! Everyday price: $3.99
Or FREE with Learn More
Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled

Here’s the set-up:

Enjoy Dividers this week for the special price of only $0.99. The regular price is $3.99. This novel is standalone and contains both parts of the story: Part I Dividers and Part II Thretch.

Dividers is a story of betrayal, romance, tragedy, and the struggle against madness. The final pages have been described as lightning in a bottle with an adrenaline chaser.

Earl Calbraw is a wealthy man seeking redemption after 20 years of greed and hedonism. Meanwhile, his son Jacob is doing everything he can to destroy his father’s reputation and legacy. The young man is motivated by the mysterious disappearance of his mother when he was only ten years old. Twelve years later, the two juggernauts of industry have at one another and destroy innocent employees in their wake.

Though Jacob’s father is not his only problem. He must figure out the origins of his strange nocturnal activities. Why does his body hurt so much every morning? What is causing his thermostat to repeatedly drop to near-freezing temperatures? How does he manage to find himself waking up in the most dangerous parts of New York, exposed and often in danger?

5-star Amazon reviews:

“I highly recommend this to anyone looking for a surprising and gut-wrenching read…”

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“…compelling read!”

Click here to visit Travis Adams Irish’s Amazon author page

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Last Call for Thriller of The Week!
Robert Lane delivers a tour de force of suspense, intrigue, and humor: Cooler Than Blood

Last call for KND Free Thriller excerpt:

Cooler Than Blood

by Robert Lane

Cooler Than Blood
4.0 stars – 1 Review
Or FREE with Learn More
Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled
Here’s the set-up:

Jenny Spencer is missing after a violent encounter on a beach. Her aunt, Susan Blake, asks wisecracking PI Jake Travis to intervene. Susan and Jake spent only one dinner together and both felt an instant attraction. Jake walked away. He was, and is, committed to Kathleen.

As Jake and his partner, Garrett Demarcus, close the circle on finding Jenny, they discover that Kathleen’s past ties to organized crime and Jenny’s life are strangely entwined. They fight a two-front battle to find Jenny and to protect Kathleen.

But by protecting Kathleen, will Jake become the type of man that she could never love? Does he have a choice?

Robert Lane’s second stand-alone Jake Travis novel delivers a tour de force of suspense, intrigue, and humor, deftly wrapped in Lane’s trademark literary overtones.

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

Chapter 1

Billy Ray Coleman had never fucked a girl in Florida, and that was going to end tonight.

In Kentucky, he had lured one behind a Stuckey’s, and things had gotten a little dicey, the little Asian bitch clawing like a feral cat until he finally shut her down. In Tennessee, he pulled off at Jellico just over the state line and befriended the redhead at the Arby’s not more than a few blocks from the interstate. It was okay, but it wasn’t the rush he’d gotten from his final act on Sally Wong, as he affectionately called the Stuckey’s girl.

In Georgia, he started to panic when he was running out of boiled peanut signs without having met his objective. What a long-ass state, he thought. Didn’t some bumfuck burn it during that war? What was his name? Whatever. Didn’t do a very good job, did he? He pulled his 2000 two-door Honda Accord with $284,000 stuffed in the trunk off at the West Hill Avenue exit in Valdosta. He knew that if he went any farther, he’d have to do a U-turn and suffer the whole damn state again. He sure as hell wasn’t going to do that. He found her at a fast-food joint less than a mile from the interchange. She said no. He dragged her behind some self-storage units, although he had to work hard to find an area that wasn’t covered by security lights. When he pulled out, a pothole the size of a West Virginia strip mine nearly claimed the front end of the Honda.

Billy Ray figured that his brothers, once they saw that Junior and the cash were gone, would hightail it after him. He also knew he’d head for Fort Myers Beach, same haunt they’d always gone to. No big deal. By the time they arrived, his grand slam would be over, and he planned to floor it out of the state. Might even take a Florida girl with him. There’s a thought. I’ll get me a Florida girl. Like you see in those magazines. Billy Ray was torqued. Nail me a magazine girl.

His right hand came up and rubbed his temple, and he shook his head as if he were trying to get water out of his ears. Billy Ray’s head was like a radio station in which the DJ had taken a long piss break, and two car ads were running over a song.

Just north of Sarasota, he pulled in for gas. He spotted a blonde with wide white sunglasses. Her breasts, like horizontal tent poles, pushed her thin tank top out so far that the bottom of it hung around her waist without touching her stomach. Billy Ray swore he saw the fabric move in the breeze that lifted off the hot blacktop, as if a stovetop burner had been left on. He hesitated. He rubbed his head. His hand came away covered with sweat. No way, José. I’m hittin’ the beach. Get a plan—work the plan. Yes, sirree. Pity. Sunglasses will never know what she missed—a real national tragedy.

Ninety minutes later, he crested the Matanzas Bridge to Fort Myers Beach and took a hard right. Billy Ray checked into the same motel he and his brothers had always used, but he didn’t go to his room. He tossed his shirt into the Honda and set out to hike the seven-mile beach. The sun fried his Irish-white skin as if he were a solitary egg in a black iron skillet suspended over a bonfire.

He spotted the girl from a good hundred feet away. She had straight brown hair and a brilliant blue bathing suit with sparkles. She looked better with every step. The woman by her side, in a white two-piece, was up for consideration as well but was probably knocking on forty. Billy Ray stopped and chatted with them. Introduced himself—super proud about that. It wasn’t easy with Tom Petty beating the living shit out of his head. “Jenny Spencer,” Sparkles replied. The older one didn’t give her name, just gave him that look he was accustomed to receiving. Screw that. He moved on.

Jenny Spencer, Billy Ray thought. Now there’s a fine name for my first Florida fling. And that smile. That’s magazine material. Oh, my head. My goddamned screaming head. He slapped his head. He downed a couple of beers at a beach bar, where the bartender gave him some lotion and advised him to stay clear of the sun. He emptied the remains of the bottle into both hands and slopped it over his body. He kept his eyes on the girls on the beach. When they got up to leave, he stayed well behind.

They walked a few blocks, and Billy Ray noted the house they entered. He knew he had a few hours until dark, so he trudged back up the beach. At sunset, he drove his Honda down Estero Boulevard and parked in a public lot large enough to accommodate only a few cars. He watched the house. Billy Ray planned to wait until total darkness to yank magazine girl out. He wasn’t sure what his plans were for the older girl, nor did it matter, for Jenny emerged on her own. She headed toward the beach. Billy Ray followed.

They met at an edge of mangroves just beyond where an inlet forced walkers to forgo the coastline and track on higher land. She wasn’t difficult to follow, as she carried a small flashlight.

Jenny stepped hesitantly onto the sand. She picked her way through the mangrove roots that poked through the mashed-potato surface and threatened to impale her feet. Stray sticks littered the ground. She came upon a deserted orange towel and figured someone had either forgotten it or had discarded it for a nighttime stroll. She reached a clearing and spotted Billy Ray as he waded out of a tidal puddle.

“Hey, there. Remember me?” he said.

“No, I’m new…Oh, yeah, sure, from this afternoon. Billy…Billy…”

“Ray.”

“That’s right.”

“Nice out here at night, isn’t it, Jenny?” They stood within four feet of each other.

“Can you believe how warm it still is? Is it like this in Georgia?” She felt an odd twinge, like low volts going through her, over his casual mention of her name.

“Georgia?”

“Isn’t that where you said you were from?”

“Oh, yeah. It can be hot up there. Sherman! Yeah, that’s his name.”

“Who?”

“Nothin’. What are you doing?”

“Looking for turtles. My aunt says they come up this far.” Jenny shone the light around the sand.

“That was your aunt? Whoa, she’s hot too.” Billy Ray slapped his head.

She’s hot too? Jenny thought. Did he just slap his head? Her body stiffened. She flashed her light into his face and took a step back. His red hair was dull compared to his blazed skin. Lotion smeared his face. And his eyes—they looked like he had no idea where he was.

“Ooooh, girl. Get that light out of my eyes.”

“My aunt’s a little behind me,” Jenny said, but it came out in a different voice.

“No, she ain’t, magazine girl. I saw her drive away earlier.”

Jenny hesitated. He watched us? Should I run? But what she would have eventually decided to do was of no consequence, as he was upon her and tugging at her cheer shirt.

Jenny screamed. Billy Ray threw a roundhouse that deadened her. He stripped off his shirt and shorts and shredded her shorts and panties. His hands groped her left breast, and his mouth found her right breast. He bit hard. She shrieked.

“Don’t make a ruckus, or I’ll do it again. You understand? We’re going to have us a good time. I got enough cash in my car to last us years. Just a block away is two hundred eighty-four thousand big ones, baby. Ain’t nothing wrong with us doing a little traveling, is there? Ooooh…what a fine trophy. They never going to believe I got me something like this.”

Jenny frantically tried to fight back into the game. She attempted to roll over, but Billy Ray’s left fist found her forehead and knocked her mind half out of her head. Jenny felt herself shut down and ignored her body like a rock ignores a crashing wave. He can’t hurt me.

Billy Ray pushed himself up with his hands, his knees digging into the sand between Jenny’s parted legs. “Hell-ooo, Flor-ee-da. Uncle Billy finally enters the Sunshine—”

Jenny reached out. Her hand found a stick.

 

Chapter 2

 

I was flat on my back on the deck of my boat, Impulse, when my phone, as if it were in the final scene of Don Giovanni, rang and vibrated. I was replacing a boat speaker and realized the guys who do it for a living are underpaid. The previous speaker had taken a bullet. Better it than me.

“Piece of shit,” I muttered for the forty-second time that morning as I stretched in vain to find the wire coming from the radio box. And I’d been doing so well. My New Year’s resolution was to drink expensive wine, eat more fatty foods—they really do taste better—and reduce my profanity. Six months into the year, and I was slipping. But what the hey? Two out of three ain’t bad.

The phone stopped its obnoxious buzz on the fiberglass deck. I leaned back, relaxed, and took in a gulp of air so humid that it counted as a drink. Enough for one day. Tomorrow I’d let my neighbor Morgan give it a go; his arms make fish lines look like telephone poles.

“Jake, you look like you sweated away the Gulf.” Kathleen stood on the dock and peered down at me. She, being the smart girl she is, had sat under the shade of the canvas while she sipped her morning coffee, spotted dolphins, and read a book. Why can’t I do that? Kathleen ran in the mornings, but only in October through April. In the summer, she switched to beach yoga. She claimed the rotation gave her balance. I find that obsessions leave no room for balance.

“Speaker’s been out a year, and I could have done this in January, but no, not me.” I started to rise up but bonked my head hard on the aluminum underside of the center seat and went down for the count.

“Golly gee willikers,” I said.

“See, you can do it. ‘Oopsy daisies’ is another one that’s vastly underutilized. But if I were keeping track, I’m afraid you’d be failing miserably.”

“No. I’m failing gloriously. There’s a difference.”

“Not everybody needs to dig bullets out of boat speakers.”

“Pity them. Most men do lead lives of quiet desperation.”

“And go to the grave with the song still in them, or something like that.”

I cautiously rose, and my phone started to do the floor jig again. I grabbed the bottom of my T-shirt and wiped it over my forehead, but it was a wasted effort. I hoisted myself over the side and landed on my composite dock. Kathleen took a step back. I got it; I was a sweaty mess.

“That’s exactly it,” I said. “How’s the book?”

“You going to answer it?”

“It’s not you.”

“Not bad.”

“Worth the dough?”

That didn’t warrant a verbal reply but a right jab to my shoulder. Kathleen favored hardback books, and a first edition of Somerset Maugham’s The Razor’s Edge rested on my bench. A “Hooked on Books” bookmark protruded out of the first third. It cost her a factor of a hundred compared to an e-book. She also favored physical replies over verbal.

“Well worth the dough. And it’s wonderful reading it out here—where you read and the conditions that surround you affect your experience. Why don’t you answer your phone?”

“I don’t recognize the number.” I lied; it was Susan Blake’s number. She had called earlier while I was running and had left a voice mail. No way was I going to explain to Kathleen my relationship with Susan. I wasn’t too sure of it myself.

The phone, like a dead moth, finally surrendered. Ziggy Marley came through the good speakers. The osprey that likes to crap on my boat’s hardtop watched from atop Morgan’s lift piling. It let out its distinctive series of screeches in the event that I’d forgotten about him. Feathery little prick.

“I think I’ll use that in my class this fall.” Kathleen taught English literature at the local college.

“My phone?”

“No, silly.”

“Maugham?”

She sucked in her left cheek between her teeth, a primitive sign of deep thinking. She favored that side. Chewed on that side. Stuck her tongue into her port cheek when she thought no one saw her. “No.” She strung the word out. “The reading experience. Where one reads being instrumental in forming one’s opinion of the work. I’ll divide the class into two groups, have them read the same book but in controlled environments, and then have them rate the work. Are you listening?”

I looked up from my toolbox, where I’d unsuccessfully fumbled around for needle-nose pliers. Morgan. I think he borrowed them. “Not in the least. But I was pretending to. Any points for that?”

“Half the class will read the book under Spanish moss in the shade of a tree. Maybe in Straub Park in downtown St. Pete. The other half will read the same work in short intervals, several times a day, in windowless air-conditioned rooms, and in different locations.”

“Have we ever done it with Spanish moss waving above us?”

She tossed me a quick smile. Kathleen smiled every day, every hour, every few moments. She smiled like other people breathed. She ignored my Spanish moss inquiry and instead said, “I’m leaving. My best to Morgan.”

She stayed a safe distance, landed a kiss on my cheek, and took off down my dock with a mug in one hand and Maugham in the other. I gathered my tools and went into my 1957 blockhouse on the bay. I was famished. I’d run five miles in the Florida sauna before I’d sweated away in the boat—the heck was I thinking? I took some of last night’s trout Morgan and I had caught off my dock, cut it into pieces, and sautéed it in olive oil with chopped chives. I whipped up three eggs and scrambled them in a separate skillet. At the last moment, I added chunks of sharp cheddar cheese. Eat more fatty foods.

I always operate best when I possess clear goals.

I took my breakfast out to the screen porch and lowered the sunshade. I lived on an island, off another island, and my bungalow faced the morning sun. The beach was a half-mile from my front door, and the pink hotel, built on the sands of the Gulf of Mexico, was another half mile beyond that. I was especially fond of the hotel and, in particular, its beachside bar, where several bartenders depended on me for their livelihood. It was my contribution to trickle-down economics. We do what we can.

I finished breakfast and was stymied in my effort to get cold water out of the outdoor shower at the side of the house. I put on a clean-dirty T-shirt; it was pockmarked with permanent olive oil stains, fish residue, and every chemical I’d ever rubbed on Impulse in vain attempts to combat the sun and salt air. I remembered I’d left my phone recovering from a seizure on the deck of my boat, and that I had lied—it sounds worse than it was—to Kathleen about not recognizing the number.

Susan Blake.

I’d spent a single two-hour dinner with Susan, yet every minute, every look, and every touch of that evening lingered with me. I tried to wash her away, but like a well-waxed surface of a car, my feelings for her were protected and harbored from any attempt to erase, alter, or expunge. That was more than a year ago. I drove away that night vowing to never cross her path again. I was just starting to wonder if Kathleen was the mythical one for me, and Susan Blake, in many ways the opposite of Kathleen, was kick-ass competition. I didn’t need or want that.

Susan had put herself through college then realized her brain wasn’t wired for her ass to be in a chair all day. She took a job pouring liquid dreams, enlightened the bars’ absentee owners on how to run a profitable operation, and subsequently became part owner of three watering holes in Fort Myers Beach. I couldn’t imagine why she was calling me.

Nor could I imagine why she was now sitting at the end of my dock.

 

Chapter 3

 

She must have arrived when I was showering. That would have been a close brush—too close—with Kathleen. I headed down my hundred-foot dock and broke back into a sweat halfway there. I picked up the pace. I’d forgotten to put shoes on. Walking on coals would have been cooler. I sat next to her—not too close, not too far.

“Hey, Susan. How are you?”

“Hey, Susan. How are you?” Good grief, man—that’s the sum of your parts? I whip off The New York Times

“Didn’t you get my messages?” she demanded.

“No. I didn’t recog—”

“I need your help.” Her interruption saved me from a second lie in one day over the same phone number. She turned to me, her dark eyes trapped under her bangs. The one evening we’d spent together flooded over me like a tsunami.

By the end of our leisurely dinner, my schoolboy heart had been radioactive, and no, it wasn’t just the grapes. We had faced each other in the parking lot on a Florida night so thick you needed a snowplow to walk down the street. Susan was close to a foot shorter than me, but in no manner did that diminish her stature. I had just rejected her invitation to stroll on the beach and look for sea turtles.

“Has the bar business robbed me of my vanishing youth?” she’d asked.

“You haven’t been robbed of a thing. Her name is Kathleen, and she makes me the luckiest guy in the world, but it’s a close call with the runner-up.”

“I’ll take it. Who is he?”

“Whoever takes that walk on the beach with you.”

That was after two glasses of wine and a beer. Impressive, right? Call me Mr. Monogamy, but if you don’t know what the hell an anchor is for, you’d better get your ass off the water.

When I took her home, she’d given me a light kiss on the cheek then left the truck without a word. I had not walked her to the door. Susan Blake wasn’t the type of woman to ask just any guy to take a walk on the beach unless both sides felt that once-in-a-lifetime tug. But there can only be one once-in-a-lifetime tug.

Sometimes I say that three times in row.

“Tell me…” I shook off the memory and pivoted on the bench so I could face her. I tensed up, which I thought was totally ridiculous. “What brings you north?”

She fidgeted with her fingers. “Nice place.” She gave me a quick glance then dropped her eyes. Maybe she felt she was coming on a little strong.

“It’ll do,” I said.

She paused as if summoning her strength. “I…I need your help.” She looked right into me. “She’s missing.” It came out fast, like water tumbling over falls.

“Who’s—”

“She’s been gone two days. There’s no way she wouldn’t tell me.”

“Slow down. Take it from the top.”

Susan blew out her breath and folded her hands tightly on her lap. “My niece. Came down to live with me, and I haven’t seen her since Wednesday. That was a day after the police said she killed some guy on the—”

“The police think she killed someone?”

“She did kill him, practically gutted him like a deer…Oh, I shouldn’t say that.” Her speech started to gear down as she apparently realized there was nothing I could do in the next few seconds.

“Can they prove—?”

“I just told you. She killed him. Told me. Told the police. That’s not the problem.” She uncrossed her hands and ran her left hand down the top of her thigh then back up again.

“They got new beach laws down there?” I asked her.

“Self-defense, and they think she did the world a favor. The guy might have killed a girl up in Georgia and maybe another they’re still investigating.” She placed one hand on each side and nudged herself up. She crossed her legs. I looked away. I didn’t want to look at those legs, those eyes, that body. I felt guilty having her there, but what choice did I have? A yellow cruiser with a tuna tower plowed by, and a dolphin jumped its massive wake. We watched as it passed, and then rows of its swelling wake were soon beneath us. They crashed into the seawall like liquid thunder and rolled down the wall.

“How well do you know her?” I said, but I was thinking, How well do I know you? Sounded like her niece had hit the road and was on the lam. Maybe Susan was blind to the obvious, but I didn’t want to ride her too hard.

“She came to live with me less than a week ago. Just graduated from high school.”

I turned back to her. “She from close by?”

“Ohio.”

“How well do you know her?” I asked again.

“Listen, we’ve spent some time together over the years, but that’s not the point. I know her. I know her very well. She wouldn’t run.”

“We all misjudge. It’s hard to know people, especially—”

“How much time did we spend together, Jake?”

Women.

They can sucker-punch you with the flutter of their eyes. Do they even know that? Susan and I had dinner and nothing else. But she was right. We connected so fast that it threw the tides. If it’s ever happened to you, you know what I’m talking about. If not, welcome to Thoreau’s desperation club and take your song to your grave.

“Fair enough,” I said in response to her question.

“You told me you located stolen boats, right? And when we met, you were looking for a couple of guys.”

“Correct.” I saw where this was going and thought of how to extract myself.

“She’s in danger, and I know it. You need to find her. The police say since she’s eighteen, she can go as she pleases.”

“You tried her cell, her—”

“She left her cell behind. You know that’s not right. I covered everything. Called my sister…She had to hear from a friend that her daughter had moved in with me. Her friends, her…She didn’t have anybody.”

“When was the last time—?”

“Are you going to get into that black beast and come help me or not?”

What was on my calendar for the next few days? Work out in the mornings until I nearly collapsed—I just loved that part of the day—fish, read, and after my Tinker Bell alarm clock went off at five, drink. The days I puttered around the house, Tinker Bell—I picked her up at a garage sale—kept me honest in the event I felt like opening something too early. I’d follow all that with a simple gourmet meal I’d prepare for Kathleen and whoever else dropped by. Sleep. Repeat.

My schedule was packed. Might even need to take one of those time management courses.

“Jake?” Softer now. Pleading, as much as someone like Susan would ever plead, as she sensed my hesitation. What kind of person says no?

“I’ll leave as—”

She uncrossed her legs. “I’ll have pictures and arrange for the detective to bring you up to speed.” No gushing thank-you, just straight to the next item. “I need to go.” She stood up. “You remember where I live?”

“I do. One more thing.”

“What?”

“Her name?”

“Jenny Spencer.”

Continued….

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Cooler Than Blood

Free Excerpt from KND Thriller of The Week! Discover Robert Lane’s Cooler Than Blood

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Cooler Than Blood

by Robert Lane

Cooler Than Blood
4.0 stars – 1 Review
Or FREE with Learn More
Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled
Here’s the set-up:

Jenny Spencer is missing after a violent encounter on a beach. Her aunt, Susan Blake, asks wisecracking PI Jake Travis to intervene. Susan and Jake spent only one dinner together and both felt an instant attraction. Jake walked away. He was, and is, committed to Kathleen.

As Jake and his partner, Garrett Demarcus, close the circle on finding Jenny, they discover that Kathleen’s past ties to organized crime and Jenny’s life are strangely entwined. They fight a two-front battle to find Jenny and to protect Kathleen.

But by protecting Kathleen, will Jake become the type of man that she could never love? Does he have a choice?

Robert Lane’s second stand-alone Jake Travis novel delivers a tour de force of suspense, intrigue, and humor, deftly wrapped in Lane’s trademark literary overtones.

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

Chapter 1

 

 

 

Billy Ray Coleman had never fucked a girl in Florida, and that was going to end tonight.

In Kentucky, he had lured one behind a Stuckey’s, and things had gotten a little dicey, the little Asian bitch clawing like a feral cat until he finally shut her down. In Tennessee, he pulled off at Jellico just over the state line and befriended the redhead at the Arby’s not more than a few blocks from the interstate. It was okay, but it wasn’t the rush he’d gotten from his final act on Sally Wong, as he affectionately called the Stuckey’s girl.

In Georgia, he started to panic when he was running out of boiled peanut signs without having met his objective. What a long-ass state, he thought. Didn’t some bumfuck burn it during that war? What was his name? Whatever. Didn’t do a very good job, did he? He pulled his 2000 two-door Honda Accord with $284,000 stuffed in the trunk off at the West Hill Avenue exit in Valdosta. He knew that if he went any farther, he’d have to do a U-turn and suffer the whole damn state again. He sure as hell wasn’t going to do that. He found her at a fast-food joint less than a mile from the interchange. She said no. He dragged her behind some self-storage units, although he had to work hard to find an area that wasn’t covered by security lights. When he pulled out, a pothole the size of a West Virginia strip mine nearly claimed the front end of the Honda.

Billy Ray figured that his brothers, once they saw that Junior and the cash were gone, would hightail it after him. He also knew he’d head for Fort Myers Beach, same haunt they’d always gone to. No big deal. By the time they arrived, his grand slam would be over, and he planned to floor it out of the state. Might even take a Florida girl with him. There’s a thought. I’ll get me a Florida girl. Like you see in those magazines. Billy Ray was torqued. Nail me a magazine girl.

His right hand came up and rubbed his temple, and he shook his head as if he were trying to get water out of his ears. Billy Ray’s head was like a radio station in which the DJ had taken a long piss break, and two car ads were running over a song.

Just north of Sarasota, he pulled in for gas. He spotted a blonde with wide white sunglasses. Her breasts, like horizontal tent poles, pushed her thin tank top out so far that the bottom of it hung around her waist without touching her stomach. Billy Ray swore he saw the fabric move in the breeze that lifted off the hot blacktop, as if a stovetop burner had been left on. He hesitated. He rubbed his head. His hand came away covered with sweat. No way, José. I’m hittin’ the beach. Get a plan—work the plan. Yes, sirree. Pity. Sunglasses will never know what she missed—a real national tragedy.

Ninety minutes later, he crested the Matanzas Bridge to Fort Myers Beach and took a hard right. Billy Ray checked into the same motel he and his brothers had always used, but he didn’t go to his room. He tossed his shirt into the Honda and set out to hike the seven-mile beach. The sun fried his Irish-white skin as if he were a solitary egg in a black iron skillet suspended over a bonfire.

He spotted the girl from a good hundred feet away. She had straight brown hair and a brilliant blue bathing suit with sparkles. She looked better with every step. The woman by her side, in a white two-piece, was up for consideration as well but was probably knocking on forty. Billy Ray stopped and chatted with them. Introduced himself—super proud about that. It wasn’t easy with Tom Petty beating the living shit out of his head. “Jenny Spencer,” Sparkles replied. The older one didn’t give her name, just gave him that look he was accustomed to receiving. Screw that. He moved on.

Jenny Spencer, Billy Ray thought. Now there’s a fine name for my first Florida fling. And that smile. That’s magazine material. Oh, my head. My goddamned screaming head. He slapped his head. He downed a couple of beers at a beach bar, where the bartender gave him some lotion and advised him to stay clear of the sun. He emptied the remains of the bottle into both hands and slopped it over his body. He kept his eyes on the girls on the beach. When they got up to leave, he stayed well behind.

They walked a few blocks, and Billy Ray noted the house they entered. He knew he had a few hours until dark, so he trudged back up the beach. At sunset, he drove his Honda down Estero Boulevard and parked in a public lot large enough to accommodate only a few cars. He watched the house. Billy Ray planned to wait until total darkness to yank magazine girl out. He wasn’t sure what his plans were for the older girl, nor did it matter, for Jenny emerged on her own. She headed toward the beach. Billy Ray followed.

They met at an edge of mangroves just beyond where an inlet forced walkers to forgo the coastline and track on higher land. She wasn’t difficult to follow, as she carried a small flashlight.

Jenny stepped hesitantly onto the sand. She picked her way through the mangrove roots that poked through the mashed-potato surface and threatened to impale her feet. Stray sticks littered the ground. She came upon a deserted orange towel and figured someone had either forgotten it or had discarded it for a nighttime stroll. She reached a clearing and spotted Billy Ray as he waded out of a tidal puddle.

“Hey, there. Remember me?” he said.

“No, I’m new…Oh, yeah, sure, from this afternoon. Billy…Billy…”

“Ray.”

“That’s right.”

“Nice out here at night, isn’t it, Jenny?” They stood within four feet of each other.

“Can you believe how warm it still is? Is it like this in Georgia?” She felt an odd twinge, like low volts going through her, over his casual mention of her name.

“Georgia?”

“Isn’t that where you said you were from?”

“Oh, yeah. It can be hot up there. Sherman! Yeah, that’s his name.”

“Who?”

“Nothin’. What are you doing?”

“Looking for turtles. My aunt says they come up this far.” Jenny shone the light around the sand.

“That was your aunt? Whoa, she’s hot too.” Billy Ray slapped his head.

She’s hot too? Jenny thought. Did he just slap his head? Her body stiffened. She flashed her light into his face and took a step back. His red hair was dull compared to his blazed skin. Lotion smeared his face. And his eyes—they looked like he had no idea where he was.

“Ooooh, girl. Get that light out of my eyes.”

“My aunt’s a little behind me,” Jenny said, but it came out in a different voice.

“No, she ain’t, magazine girl. I saw her drive away earlier.”

Jenny hesitated. He watched us? Should I run? But what she would have eventually decided to do was of no consequence, as he was upon her and tugging at her cheer shirt.

Jenny screamed. Billy Ray threw a roundhouse that deadened her. He stripped off his shirt and shorts and shredded her shorts and panties. His hands groped her left breast, and his mouth found her right breast. He bit hard. She shrieked.

“Don’t make a ruckus, or I’ll do it again. You understand? We’re going to have us a good time. I got enough cash in my car to last us years. Just a block away is two hundred eighty-four thousand big ones, baby. Ain’t nothing wrong with us doing a little traveling, is there? Ooooh…what a fine trophy. They never going to believe I got me something like this.”

Jenny frantically tried to fight back into the game. She attempted to roll over, but Billy Ray’s left fist found her forehead and knocked her mind half out of her head. Jenny felt herself shut down and ignored her body like a rock ignores a crashing wave. He can’t hurt me.

Billy Ray pushed himself up with his hands, his knees digging into the sand between Jenny’s parted legs. “Hell-ooo, Flor-ee-da. Uncle Billy finally enters the Sunshine—”

Jenny reached out. Her hand found a stick.

 

Chapter 2

 

I was flat on my back on the deck of my boat, Impulse, when my phone, as if it were in the final scene of Don Giovanni, rang and vibrated. I was replacing a boat speaker and realized the guys who do it for a living are underpaid. The previous speaker had taken a bullet. Better it than me.

“Piece of shit,” I muttered for the forty-second time that morning as I stretched in vain to find the wire coming from the radio box. And I’d been doing so well. My New Year’s resolution was to drink expensive wine, eat more fatty foods—they really do taste better—and reduce my profanity. Six months into the year, and I was slipping. But what the hey? Two out of three ain’t bad.

The phone stopped its obnoxious buzz on the fiberglass deck. I leaned back, relaxed, and took in a gulp of air so humid that it counted as a drink. Enough for one day. Tomorrow I’d let my neighbor Morgan give it a go; his arms make fish lines look like telephone poles.

“Jake, you look like you sweated away the Gulf.” Kathleen stood on the dock and peered down at me. She, being the smart girl she is, had sat under the shade of the canvas while she sipped her morning coffee, spotted dolphins, and read a book. Why can’t I do that? Kathleen ran in the mornings, but only in October through April. In the summer, she switched to beach yoga. She claimed the rotation gave her balance. I find that obsessions leave no room for balance.

“Speaker’s been out a year, and I could have done this in January, but no, not me.” I started to rise up but bonked my head hard on the aluminum underside of the center seat and went down for the count.

“Golly gee willikers,” I said.

“See, you can do it. ‘Oopsy daisies’ is another one that’s vastly underutilized. But if I were keeping track, I’m afraid you’d be failing miserably.”

“No. I’m failing gloriously. There’s a difference.”

“Not everybody needs to dig bullets out of boat speakers.”

“Pity them. Most men do lead lives of quiet desperation.”

“And go to the grave with the song still in them, or something like that.”

I cautiously rose, and my phone started to do the floor jig again. I grabbed the bottom of my T-shirt and wiped it over my forehead, but it was a wasted effort. I hoisted myself over the side and landed on my composite dock. Kathleen took a step back. I got it; I was a sweaty mess.

“That’s exactly it,” I said. “How’s the book?”

“You going to answer it?”

“It’s not you.”

“Not bad.”

“Worth the dough?”

That didn’t warrant a verbal reply but a right jab to my shoulder. Kathleen favored hardback books, and a first edition of Somerset Maugham’s The Razor’s Edge rested on my bench. A “Hooked on Books” bookmark protruded out of the first third. It cost her a factor of a hundred compared to an e-book. She also favored physical replies over verbal.

“Well worth the dough. And it’s wonderful reading it out here—where you read and the conditions that surround you affect your experience. Why don’t you answer your phone?”

“I don’t recognize the number.” I lied; it was Susan Blake’s number. She had called earlier while I was running and had left a voice mail. No way was I going to explain to Kathleen my relationship with Susan. I wasn’t too sure of it myself.

The phone, like a dead moth, finally surrendered. Ziggy Marley came through the good speakers. The osprey that likes to crap on my boat’s hardtop watched from atop Morgan’s lift piling. It let out its distinctive series of screeches in the event that I’d forgotten about him. Feathery little prick.

“I think I’ll use that in my class this fall.” Kathleen taught English literature at the local college.

“My phone?”

“No, silly.”

“Maugham?”

She sucked in her left cheek between her teeth, a primitive sign of deep thinking. She favored that side. Chewed on that side. Stuck her tongue into her port cheek when she thought no one saw her. “No.” She strung the word out. “The reading experience. Where one reads being instrumental in forming one’s opinion of the work. I’ll divide the class into two groups, have them read the same book but in controlled environments, and then have them rate the work. Are you listening?”

I looked up from my toolbox, where I’d unsuccessfully fumbled around for needle-nose pliers. Morgan. I think he borrowed them. “Not in the least. But I was pretending to. Any points for that?”

“Half the class will read the book under Spanish moss in the shade of a tree. Maybe in Straub Park in downtown St. Pete. The other half will read the same work in short intervals, several times a day, in windowless air-conditioned rooms, and in different locations.”

“Have we ever done it with Spanish moss waving above us?”

She tossed me a quick smile. Kathleen smiled every day, every hour, every few moments. She smiled like other people breathed. She ignored my Spanish moss inquiry and instead said, “I’m leaving. My best to Morgan.”

She stayed a safe distance, landed a kiss on my cheek, and took off down my dock with a mug in one hand and Maugham in the other. I gathered my tools and went into my 1957 blockhouse on the bay. I was famished. I’d run five miles in the Florida sauna before I’d sweated away in the boat—the heck was I thinking? I took some of last night’s trout Morgan and I had caught off my dock, cut it into pieces, and sautéed it in olive oil with chopped chives. I whipped up three eggs and scrambled them in a separate skillet. At the last moment, I added chunks of sharp cheddar cheese. Eat more fatty foods.

I always operate best when I possess clear goals.

I took my breakfast out to the screen porch and lowered the sunshade. I lived on an island, off another island, and my bungalow faced the morning sun. The beach was a half-mile from my front door, and the pink hotel, built on the sands of the Gulf of Mexico, was another half mile beyond that. I was especially fond of the hotel and, in particular, its beachside bar, where several bartenders depended on me for their livelihood. It was my contribution to trickle-down economics. We do what we can.

I finished breakfast and was stymied in my effort to get cold water out of the outdoor shower at the side of the house. I put on a clean-dirty T-shirt; it was pockmarked with permanent olive oil stains, fish residue, and every chemical I’d ever rubbed on Impulse in vain attempts to combat the sun and salt air. I remembered I’d left my phone recovering from a seizure on the deck of my boat, and that I had lied—it sounds worse than it was—to Kathleen about not recognizing the number.

Susan Blake.

I’d spent a single two-hour dinner with Susan, yet every minute, every look, and every touch of that evening lingered with me. I tried to wash her away, but like a well-waxed surface of a car, my feelings for her were protected and harbored from any attempt to erase, alter, or expunge. That was more than a year ago. I drove away that night vowing to never cross her path again. I was just starting to wonder if Kathleen was the mythical one for me, and Susan Blake, in many ways the opposite of Kathleen, was kick-ass competition. I didn’t need or want that.

Susan had put herself through college then realized her brain wasn’t wired for her ass to be in a chair all day. She took a job pouring liquid dreams, enlightened the bars’ absentee owners on how to run a profitable operation, and subsequently became part owner of three watering holes in Fort Myers Beach. I couldn’t imagine why she was calling me.

Nor could I imagine why she was now sitting at the end of my dock.

 

Chapter 3

 

She must have arrived when I was showering. That would have been a close brush—too close—with Kathleen. I headed down my hundred-foot dock and broke back into a sweat halfway there. I picked up the pace. I’d forgotten to put shoes on. Walking on coals would have been cooler. I sat next to her—not too close, not too far.

“Hey, Susan. How are you?”

“Hey, Susan. How are you?” Good grief, man—that’s the sum of your parts? I whip off The New York Times

“Didn’t you get my messages?” she demanded.

“No. I didn’t recog—”

“I need your help.” Her interruption saved me from a second lie in one day over the same phone number. She turned to me, her dark eyes trapped under her bangs. The one evening we’d spent together flooded over me like a tsunami.

By the end of our leisurely dinner, my schoolboy heart had been radioactive, and no, it wasn’t just the grapes. We had faced each other in the parking lot on a Florida night so thick you needed a snowplow to walk down the street. Susan was close to a foot shorter than me, but in no manner did that diminish her stature. I had just rejected her invitation to stroll on the beach and look for sea turtles.

“Has the bar business robbed me of my vanishing youth?” she’d asked.

“You haven’t been robbed of a thing. Her name is Kathleen, and she makes me the luckiest guy in the world, but it’s a close call with the runner-up.”

“I’ll take it. Who is he?”

“Whoever takes that walk on the beach with you.”

That was after two glasses of wine and a beer. Impressive, right? Call me Mr. Monogamy, but if you don’t know what the hell an anchor is for, you’d better get your ass off the water.

When I took her home, she’d given me a light kiss on the cheek then left the truck without a word. I had not walked her to the door. Susan Blake wasn’t the type of woman to ask just any guy to take a walk on the beach unless both sides felt that once-in-a-lifetime tug. But there can only be one once-in-a-lifetime tug.

Sometimes I say that three times in row.

“Tell me…” I shook off the memory and pivoted on the bench so I could face her. I tensed up, which I thought was totally ridiculous. “What brings you north?”

She fidgeted with her fingers. “Nice place.” She gave me a quick glance then dropped her eyes. Maybe she felt she was coming on a little strong.

“It’ll do,” I said.

She paused as if summoning her strength. “I…I need your help.” She looked right into me. “She’s missing.” It came out fast, like water tumbling over falls.

“Who’s—”

“She’s been gone two days. There’s no way she wouldn’t tell me.”

“Slow down. Take it from the top.”

Susan blew out her breath and folded her hands tightly on her lap. “My niece. Came down to live with me, and I haven’t seen her since Wednesday. That was a day after the police said she killed some guy on the—”

“The police think she killed someone?”

“She did kill him, practically gutted him like a deer…Oh, I shouldn’t say that.” Her speech started to gear down as she apparently realized there was nothing I could do in the next few seconds.

“Can they prove—?”

“I just told you. She killed him. Told me. Told the police. That’s not the problem.” She uncrossed her hands and ran her left hand down the top of her thigh then back up again.

“They got new beach laws down there?” I asked her.

“Self-defense, and they think she did the world a favor. The guy might have killed a girl up in Georgia and maybe another they’re still investigating.” She placed one hand on each side and nudged herself up. She crossed her legs. I looked away. I didn’t want to look at those legs, those eyes, that body. I felt guilty having her there, but what choice did I have? A yellow cruiser with a tuna tower plowed by, and a dolphin jumped its massive wake. We watched as it passed, and then rows of its swelling wake were soon beneath us. They crashed into the seawall like liquid thunder and rolled down the wall.

“How well do you know her?” I said, but I was thinking, How well do I know you? Sounded like her niece had hit the road and was on the lam. Maybe Susan was blind to the obvious, but I didn’t want to ride her too hard.

“She came to live with me less than a week ago. Just graduated from high school.”

I turned back to her. “She from close by?”

“Ohio.”

“How well do you know her?” I asked again.

“Listen, we’ve spent some time together over the years, but that’s not the point. I know her. I know her very well. She wouldn’t run.”

“We all misjudge. It’s hard to know people, especially—”

“How much time did we spend together, Jake?”

Women.

They can sucker-punch you with the flutter of their eyes. Do they even know that? Susan and I had dinner and nothing else. But she was right. We connected so fast that it threw the tides. If it’s ever happened to you, you know what I’m talking about. If not, welcome to Thoreau’s desperation club and take your song to your grave.

“Fair enough,” I said in response to her question.

“You told me you located stolen boats, right? And when we met, you were looking for a couple of guys.”

“Correct.” I saw where this was going and thought of how to extract myself.

“She’s in danger, and I know it. You need to find her. The police say since she’s eighteen, she can go as she pleases.”

“You tried her cell, her—”

“She left her cell behind. You know that’s not right. I covered everything. Called my sister…She had to hear from a friend that her daughter had moved in with me. Her friends, her…She didn’t have anybody.”

“When was the last time—?”

“Are you going to get into that black beast and come help me or not?”

What was on my calendar for the next few days? Work out in the mornings until I nearly collapsed—I just loved that part of the day—fish, read, and after my Tinker Bell alarm clock went off at five, drink. The days I puttered around the house, Tinker Bell—I picked her up at a garage sale—kept me honest in the event I felt like opening something too early. I’d follow all that with a simple gourmet meal I’d prepare for Kathleen and whoever else dropped by. Sleep. Repeat.

My schedule was packed. Might even need to take one of those time management courses.

“Jake?” Softer now. Pleading, as much as someone like Susan would ever plead, as she sensed my hesitation. What kind of person says no?

“I’ll leave as—”

She uncrossed her legs. “I’ll have pictures and arrange for the detective to bring you up to speed.” No gushing thank-you, just straight to the next item. “I need to go.” She stood up. “You remember where I live?”

“I do. One more thing.”

“What?”

“Her name?”

“Jenny Spencer.”

Continued….

Click on the title below to download the entire book and keep reading

Cooler Than Blood

Robert Lane delivers a tour de force of suspense, intrigue, and humor: Cooler Than Blood

How many Kindle thrillers do you read in the course of a month? It could get expensive were it not for magical search tools like these:

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Cooler Than Blood

by Robert Lane

Cooler Than Blood
Or FREE with Learn More
Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled

Here’s the set-up:

Jenny Spencer is missing after a violent encounter on a beach. Her aunt, Susan Blake, asks wisecracking PI Jake Travis to intervene. Susan and Jake spent only one dinner together and both felt an instant attraction. Jake walked away. He was, and is, committed to Kathleen.

As Jake and his partner, Garrett Demarcus, close the circle on finding Jenny, they discover that Kathleen’s past ties to organized crime and Jenny’s life are strangely entwined. They fight a two-front battle to find Jenny and to protect Kathleen.

But by protecting Kathleen, will Jake become the type of man that she could never love? Does he have a choice?

Robert Lane’s second stand-alone Jake Travis novel delivers a tour de force of suspense, intrigue, and humor, deftly wrapped in Lane’s trademark literary overtones.

Reviews: “…gripping and highly enjoyable…Jake is at once a classic noir character…a fascinating protagonist.” ForeWord Clarion Reviews     

“Lane delivers a confident, engaging Florida tale with a cast of intriguing characters. A solid, entertaining mystery.” Kirkus Reviews


Click here to visit Robert Lane’s Amazon author page

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★★★★★5 Star Romantic Thriller! Free Sample of Paul Kyriazi’s McKnight’s Memory

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McKnight’s Memory

by Paul Kyriazi

McKnight
5.0 stars – 11 Reviews
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Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled

Here’s the set-up:

CIA agent James McKnight has three problems…amnesia…the Mafia …and his addiction to the ultimate woman. Can he trust her?

Includes a free link to download the 3.7 hr. audio-book narrated by Frank Sinatra Jr. Performed by Robert Culp, Nancy Kwan, David Hedison, Henry Silva Alan Young, Gary Lockwood, Edd Byrnes, Don Stroud, H.M. Wynant & Barbara Leigh.

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

5 – CARLA

“It’s looking good, Mr. McKnight. How’re the headaches?”

“Just mild ones, Doc,” McKnight answered, sitting in Dr. Tolliver’s office. “Not bad, I guess, considering.”

“Good. And how’s the memory?” Tolliver asked. “Anything?”

“No, nothing. Not a God-damned thing. I remember general facts, TV commercials, historical dates, stuff like that. But nothing about my life, nothing about myself.”

“I’m sure it’s only temporary. Give it a few more days, a week maximum. The memories will start, one by one. Slowly, and then increasing quickly….like popcorn.”

“Yeah,” McKnight breathed out a chuckle. “Popcorn….terrific.”

“Like I’ve explained to Mr. Bishop, you have psychogenic amnesia which means that except for your past, your mind is fully functional, so that it will be just a matter of re-introducing yourself to your life.”

“How would I do that?”

“It’s not as difficult as you might think. Friends, photos, work records, and other documents would fill in the blanks nicely.”

“It sounds good, doctor. “I hope so.”

“Mr. Bishop is signing you out now, so you can leave with him with none of the usual discharge hassles.”

“Good. And thank you.”

“Let’s see what happens in a few days and then I’ll check you over again.”

“Right.”

Bishop was there to meet McKnight as he stepped out of the elevator into the hospital lobby. “Here we go Jimbo,” Bishop said, as he guided McKnight to the front exit. “A few more steps and you’re outta here.”

“Yeah and none too soon for me. Enough of this hospital.”

“Front door’s right over here. I’ll walk you out and let you go on your own from there.”

“Whoa! Wait a minute. Let me go where? Haven’t you forgotten something? Not remembering who I am is only one of my problems. I don’t know where I live. I don’t know this city, or how to get around.”

“Not to worry. That’s all been taken care of.”

“Then what’s the plan? Do I get a couple of days of freedom and then get creamed by the director of the CIA, whoever he is?”

“Hey, don’t worry about that now. It’s not going to be as bad as you think. He’ll ask you a few questions, you give him a few answers, and that should take care of it….hopefully.”

“What if I don’t know the answers by then? What if he thinks my memory loss is a lie? Just something I’m using as an excuse to cover up my mistake in Columbia.”

“Look, you may have exceeded your authority slightly. But you didn’t break any laws, so he can’t take your pension away from you. Perhaps he could pressure you to retire, but you’ve been talking about retiring for a while, so what the hell, it’s no big deal. Take the pension and run. But your memory will probably be coming back in the next couple of days, like the Doc said, so don’t sweat it.”

“Until it does come back, I am sweating it.”

“Okay, here we go, back into the real world.”

Once outside Bishop pointed ahead and asked, “Well, how do you like her?”

“Who? What are you talking about?” McKnight said, looking around.

“Look over there.”

“The limousine?”

“Yeah. It’s all yours for the rest of the day.”

“It’s nice, but to tell you the truth, for the last few days I was hoping for something….a little more feminine.”

“Ah, so you do remember something. You forgot everything but your woman. Is that it?

“I remember the photo in my wallet, and that’s all. And since she hasn’t visited me here or even phoned, I was hoping she’d meet me here.”

“Well, just keep your eyes on the limo, pal.”

McKnight saw the limo driver open the passenger door. A female figure stepped out. She had black hair framing a flawless Asian face that was sensual beyond any description McKnight could think of. Seeing McKnight, she smiled and waved. Bishop eyed McKnight, watching him take in a large breath of air.

“So how about it? Remember her?”

“She’s beautiful.”

“And she’s all yours. You take it from here, buddy. I’ll call you later.”

“Right. Thanks.”

Bishop gave Carla a quick wave and then turned and went back into the hospital.

McKnight wasn’t sure of what to do, but didn’t have to do anything as Carla ran up to him and threw her arms around his neck. “I’m so glad to see you, Jim,” she said hugging him tightly. “Are you all right?”

“Yes, I’m fine. Pretty good. How are you doing?”

“I’m just happy to see you, that’s all. But this hospital thing had me worried,” she said releasing her grip on him and standing back.

“What did they tell you?”

“Nothing, as usual,” she shrugged. “When you didn’t return on Friday, like you said, I called your office. They said that you would be spending a couple of days in the hospital for a checkup. That’s all. I called the hospital, but you weren’t registered, so I just waited. Then Bishop called today and said a limousine would pick me up and take me to you.”

McKnight tried hard not to stare at this stranger that was more beautiful than the photo in his wallet. “I wondered why you didn’t call.”

“I wondered the same thing about you. Come on,” she said taking his hand. “Let’s get you back home.”

They began walking towards the limo. “So you don’t know anything about what happened?” he asked her.

“Just that you were going out of town for a couple of days, like you told me. What did happen?”

The limo driver had the door open for them. “Well….get in. I’ll tell you what I know……which isn’t much.”

Carla slid into the limo seat making room for McKnight. “What’s this on the side of your head?” she said, gesturing to his bandage.

“A slight wound, or so they tell me. I picked it up in Columbia.”

“Is it okay to talk about where you’ve been? You never used to talk about your job.”

“I don’t know. I wasn’t told not to. But since it’s the only thing in my life right now that I do remember, I’ll talk about it with you. Maybe you can fill me in on some things.”

The limo driver got behind the wheel. “Where to, sir?”

“Ah….oh I don’t know,” McKnight said.

“Take us back home,” Carla said with authority. “And give us some privacy please.”

“Yes ma’am,” the driver said hitting the button to roll up the window that separated him from the passenger area.

As the car pulled out into traffic Carla turned in her seat to face McKnight. “Is there a problem, Jim?” she asked with great concern in her voice. “You seem unsure of yourself and your voice is a little hoarse. But there’s something else. Are you in trouble?”

“I am unsure of myself,” he answered quietly. “And my voice probably sounds hoarse because of all the dust I ate overseas. Is that window sound proof?”

“Yeah, pretty much. You can talk.”

“Well, there does seem to be a slight problem. But it’s difficult…..difficult…,” he said as his voice trailed off.

“You don’t have to talk about it now, whenever you’re ready.”

“It’s not that,” he said, turning more to face her. “I mean it’s difficult to explain, because I don’t understand it myself. But I’ll make it short and simple, which is what my memory is now, short and simple.”

“Go on. You know you can trust me.”

“Do I?”

“What do you mean, Jim?”

“Do I know you, is the question, because here it is.” He took a breath, thought a second and then said, “I was on a job out of the country, in Columbia in fact. I got grazed in the head by a bullet, which caused this wound, but that’s healing, so no problem. But the thing is this; right now I have a personal life history of one day in Columbia and two nights in the hospital.”

“What do you mean?” she asked shaking her head slightly.

“Meaning, I lost my memory. I can’t remember my past, I can’t remember my job. I can’t remember anything.”

“What about me? You do remember me don’t you?”

“I want to remember you, believe me. I’m trying hard right this instant to remember you. But I can’t. That’s the worst of it. I don’t remember you.”

“That explains the worried expression on your face. I’ve never seen that expression. What did the doctors tell you?”

“Not much, except I should be fine in a few days. You know, once I get around familiar things.”

“Good. Let’s believe that the doctors know what they’re talking about. We’ll be home soon. We’ll relax and I’ll nurse you back to health.”

“That sounds good,” he said in a more positive tone. “Just remember that I don’t remember you at all, so I’m a little….uncomfortable.”

“That’s nice actually,” Carla smiled sweetly. “Kind of like a first date.”

“That’s a good way to put it. What was our first date, by the way?”

“Your condominium for three days.”

“Oh, sorry.”

“I wasn’t….and neither were you.”

 

6 – THE NEANDERTHAL MAN

“Well here it is,” Carla said, as she and McKnight entered his condo. “Welcome back.”

“I live here?” McKnight asked looking around at the plush furnishings.

“Sure. Does it look familiar?”

“No, I’m sorry to say.” McKnight walked through the living room to the large window. “But it looks expensive.”

“You can afford it.”

“Am I renting or do I own it.”

“You said you own it, so I guess you do.”

“That’s sounds just fine, because I like it, and what a view. That’s the Washington Monument over there.”

“Well at least you remember something.”

“Everyone knows the monuments.” McKnight turned and looked at Carla. He tried to remember her. She seemed familiar, but no recognition came. Her beauty held his gaze fixed.

“You’re staring at me,” she said, but not really minding.

“Oh, I’m sorry. Was I? I didn’t realize it.”

“Yes, you were, but I rather liked it,” she smiled. “You haven’t looked at me like that for a long time.”

“What’s a long time?”

“A month or so,” she said approaching him.

“Oh, that is long,” he said, unknowingly taking a step back.

“You make love to me all the time, but it’s been that long since you really looked at me.”

“Make love….Yeah….Well, this knowing you, but yet not knowing you, has got me feeling really weird.” He stepped over to the black leather sofa and sat down. “I was hoping that you and this place would bring it all back to me, but I think it’s going to take more than that. Some kind of image my mind remembers.”

“You know, I just had a thought,” she said pointing to him. “I think I can give you that image….images.”

“Oh…really?”

“Yes, just a minute,” she said, turning and heading over to a closet. “Let me get something.”

“What is it? Do you want me to put on some of my other clothes?”

“No, better than that.” Carla said, opening the door of the closet and bending down. “Here, I’ve got it. It’s all right here inside this envelope.”

“What is?”

Carla sat down on the sofa next to McKnight. “Your past history. Well actually, our history.”

“Say, speaking of history, how long have we been together?”

“About three months,” she said opening the large envelope. “Okay, let’s take a look. We took these photos on our trip to Florida two months ago.”

McKnight took some of the photos from her. “Hmm. Who took all of these?”

“We did. And some strangers took some of us together. So how about it? Do you remember Florida?”

“Only that it was discovered by Ponce de Leon when he was searching for the fountain of youth. A quest I wouldn’t mind going on, by the way.”

“Why’s that?” Carla chuckled.

“I woke up a few days ago for what felt like the first time and I was already fifty-six years old.”

“You never minded your age before,” she said sincerely.

“That’s probably because I had a past behind me. Now I have no history except the past two days. It doesn’t seem fair, you know?”

“Well, I’m about fifteen years behind you, and I don’t like my age any more than you.”

“Well you shouldn’t mind it…,” McKnight said looking into her dark eyes. “.…being that you look about thirty to me.”

“Thank you,” she said softly, then changed her tone back to the matter at hand. “So how about these photos? Do anything for you?”

“Only that I look a little different than what I see in the mirror.”

“Of course. You were relaxed down there. You’re all tensed up now and need a shave.”

“Oh…..well….ah….” He took his eyes off of her and looked down at the photos in his hand. “You know it gives me a weird feeling to see photos of myself at places I’ve been, but with no memory whatsoever connected to them.”

“I think you should just relax and forget all that for now.” She took the photos from him, put them back in the envelope and stood up. “Are you hungry?”

“No, I’m fine. Are you?”

“No. But I didn’t get much sleep, waiting for you. How about a shave, a bath and a nap?”

“Ah….yeah. I hardly slept at all in the hospital,” he said feeling his two day beard. “That might be a good idea.”

“Good. You clean up, I’ll make a couple of phone calls and join you soon, huh?”

“Okay.”

In the bedroom, after a shave and shower, McKnight’s naked body was greeted by cool white satin sheets, a far cry from the rough textured cotton sheets that the hospital had to offer. That was his last thought when sleep overtook him.

The sound and motion of the bed covers woke him. A hint of perfume as well as the sound of skin sliding on satin filled the air.

“Still sleepy?” Carla whispered, sliding her body behind him.

McKnight rolled to his back to face her. “No. I’m awake.”

“Good. I was hoping you were.” Carla put her arm over his chest. “It’s been over a week and I’ve missed you.”

“If I could remember you, I’m sure that I would have missed you, too.”

“Well, let’s not worry about that now.” Carla positioned herself to face him. “Let’s just believe that after a few days you’ll be all right. We’re here….and that’s all that matters.”

“Yes, I guess so.”

“Kiss me now, remember me later.”

McKnight became lost in the satin sheets and Carla’s satin skin. The hypnotic sound of Carla’s breathing, moaning, and whispered endearments filled his ears.

Was it after thirty minutes, or an hour, or two hours later when Carla cried out and went limp in his arms? He couldn’t tell. She had moved him into a timeless state for a dreamlike period of time. And then, as he held her he quickly followed her to sleep.

With his conscious mind at bay, McKnight’s subconscious brought him another dream. He found himself sitting at a kitchen table in a home he didn’t recognize. A woman put down a plate of bacon and eggs in front of him. It wasn’t Carla. And it wasn’t anyone he recognized. She looked to be about fifty and someone who had been at least cute looking in the past, but had obviously stopped caring about what she looked like years ago.

He was in the middle of a conversation with her, one that McKnight didn’t know how to respond to. But dreams have a way of pushing you into the situation, and this dream was no exception.

“While you’re eating,” the woman said standing over him with the frying pan, “maybe you can explain why we’re not going on vacation this year, as if it matters anymore.”

“It’s just that I have other plans,” McKnight heard the words coming out of his mouth. “Plans that are important to my job.”

“Job?” she repeated with disgust. “I don’t call that your job. I call that your problem.”

McKnight stared at the eggs on his plate. “Do we have to go through this same old song and dance every time I sit down to eat?”

“Song and dance is about all we have left,” she said setting the frying pan back on the stove. “I mean, if we don’t even take vacations anymore, then what’s the use? This isn’t living. This is you working and me as a house keeper.”

“I know. But just see me through this time, and things will change, I promise. This is an important time for me.”

“And what about for me?” she asked moving to the front of the table to look McKnight in the eye. “When’s my important time? When do I get something out of life? I’m just on a merry-go-round of dishes, cleaning, shopping, cooking, and more cleaning. I’d be doing better by working at a hotel or restaurant. I mean, I might as well get paid for this”.

As she talked McKnight turned and looked at the kitchen door, just as the three bandits from Columbia walked in, their wounds still bleeding.

Morales was the first to speak. “Hey Señor. Do you want us to help her shut the hell up? I mean, you must be sick of this shit, no?”

“Yeah,” Jose agreed. “Let’s pull out our cannons and shoot the bitch.”

Edwardo was all for it. ”Si, como no?”

“What the hell?” McKnight said, still seated. “Hey, aren’t you guys dead?”

Si, jefe,” Morales answered with a shrug of his shoulders. “Your friend in the helicopter killed us pretty good. But that was not fair, a rifle from out of the sky. Hijo, I thought God was killing us.”

“Well, you had it coming don’t you think?” McKnight said. “So why don’t you hombres turn around and get the hell out of here.”

The woman looked around the room in bewilderment. “Who are you talking to?”

“You don’t see these guys?’

“You’re the one that’s seeing things,” she said. “Now what’s going on with you? Are you going crazy, because that’s all that’s left for you.? Go crazy and give up on the real world.”

“Hey, jefe,” Morales groaned. “Tell her to shut the hell up or we will.”

“Stay out of it,” McKnight ordered.

“What? Stay out of what?” she asked in frustration. “You know you’re not making any sense.”

Hijo, enough of this shit,” Morales yelled. “I can’t stand it. I don’t know how you can.”

The three bandits pulled out their weapons, aimed them at the woman and fired. The woman took all three bullets simultaneously sending her flying across the kitchen, up onto the sink, where she crashed into a pile of dishes and then bounced to the floor dead.

Santa Lucia,” Morales laughed. “She really puts on a show.” The other two bandits joined in on the joke.

“Sorry,” Morales said, turning to the still seated McKnight. “But now it’s your turn, jefe.”

“Wait a minute,” McKnight said, standing up. “You guys aren’t real. You’re dead. This is a dream, isn’t it?”

“For us it is,” Morales said, woefully. “For you, it’s a nightmare.”

The bandits turned their weapons on McKnight. They fired.

“Oh…Jesus…” McKnight managed.

The feel of satin, the smell of perfume and the sound of Carla breathing next to his face told him that he had awakened, and none too soon at that.

He now had no intention of going back to sleep until he put some distance between him and that nightmare. The clock on the night stand read 2:17.

“Coffee, that’s the ticket,” McKnight whispered to himself. He felt his way to the bedroom door, not bothering to search for his clothes, and headed down the hallway to the kitchen. There was just enough ambient light coming through the window for him to see.

Not wanting to sting his eyes with a blast of strong light, he decided to brew his coffee in the relaxing atmosphere of the semi-darkness. But before beginning the task his nude body felt a cool breeze suddenly hit him as if a door or window had just been opened. Perhaps Carla had gotten up. He looked into the living room and saw the curtain covering the sliding glass door that led to the terrace, blowing, pushed by a breeze coming from the outside.

He had just passed through the living room on the way to the kitchen and nothing had been moving, not the curtain, not anything. And he hadn’t felt any kind of breeze at all.

Then he saw it, the shiny black double barrel of a shotgun protruding under the curtain. The gun barrel began to slowly lift the curtain, as someone began to enter.

McKnight’s mind started racing. Am I dreaming? The answer came back, no. Is there any chance that this is a mistake and not a dangerous intruder? The answer came back; Shotgun? Balcony? Two a.m.? No, not a mistake, a real intruder, a home invasion. He knew for sure that this was a life or death situation. And not just his life, like it had been on that dirt road in Columbia, it was also Carla’s life as well.

McKnight knew he had to kill or be killed. The intruder had a shotgun, no chance to subdue him. His only chance to survive was to kill him quickly, before the shotgun could come into play. His best defense would be surprise, but that opportunity would be gone in seconds.

Adrenaline pumped through his heart. I can do it he convinced himself. I’m James McKnight. Time to put my CIA training to work, even though I can’t remember it. But it has to come back to me in this situation.

He grabbed the frying pan from the stove and a carving knife from its holder on the drain. He quickly moved into the living room stalking his prey like a naked Neanderthal, teflon coated club in hand, ready to protect his mate’s cave.

Just as the enemy stuck his head under the curtain, McKnight swung his arm with all of his strength in an upward back-handed motion, catching the large man in the face with the edge of the frying pan, shattering his nose. The man dropped the shotgun as if it were on fire.

McKnight followed through with the carving knife that struck dead center into the man’s solar plexus. The man fell out onto the terrace, bumping into another man. McKnight heard the second man groan as the first man hit him. McKnight dropped the frying pan and scooped up the dropped double barrel shotgun. He inserted two fingers into the trigger guard as he held the gun at hip level and aimed at the shadow behind the blowing curtain. He pulled both triggers at once. The second man went flying back onto the balcony where he stopped, wedged between two struts of the terrace guard railing. The white curtain stuck to the man’s body and started turning red.

McKnight turned the spent shotgun around and gripped it with both hands like a club. He crept closer to the balcony making sure the second man was spent as well.

Carla had woken up when she heard the first sounds of the altercation. Now in the silence, she slowly moved down the hall too terrified to think about clothing. She reached the living room and turned on the light. What she saw made her stomach sick. But then a warm feeling started building just below there, and moved down to her thighs. She basked in the raw power of seeing her naked lover spayed with blood and standing victoriously over his slaughtered enemies, club in hand.

McKnight turned to look at Carla and sensed what was happening to her. He let the primal energy well up in him.

These are the times, times of terror, and all out victory, that brings the flood of memory flowing back into amnesia victims minds. McKnight could feel that this might be the moment for him. As he waited for the memory of his life to come back to him, he took a deep breath and looked at his vanquished would-be assassins. He then turned his gaze back over to his naked mate that he had so valiantly protected. And now for the first time since he had awakened in Columbia, he felt alive, really alive. But his past was still a blank. And his mate’s face that was now perspiring with violent eroticism was still a mystery.

 

7 – WALKING ON GLASS

“A shotgun with a backup man,” Bishop said, looking down at the bodies. He and Lyedecker had arrived forty-five minutes after McKnight called him. “A professional hit.”

“A professional attempt you mean,” Lyedecker corrected him. He turned to McKnight and Carla who were now dressed in street clothes. “Looks like you turned your apartment into your own personal slaughterhouse, McKnight.”

“Well, Agent Lyedecker, like you told me on the jet, I just did what was necessary.”

“You sure the hell did,” Bishop said, as the broken glass crunched beneath his shoes. “What did you do to that one? We’re going to have to pry him out of the railing with a crowbar.”

McKnight shrugged his shoulders. “Shotgun blast, I guess.”

“You guess?” Lyedecker smirked. “You’re the one that did all this.”

“What the hell did you expect him to do?” Carla asked, annoyed. “They’re the ones that broke in here.”

Bishop took a closer look at the man on the balcony. “This other one’s got a broken nose.”

“I hit him with that frying pan before I stabbed him,” McKnight said, matter-of-factly.

Bishop turned to face McKnight. “Stabbed him? Frying pan? Where’s your field piece?”

“If you’re talking about my pistol, I guess it’s still back in Columbia lying on the road.”

Bishop walked over to McKnight. “You’ve got a backup piece, don’t you?”

“I don’t know,” McKnight said.

“He’s got a pistol in the dresser,” Carla offered.

“Oh, good. Could you get it for us, Carla?”

“Sure,” she said and headed to the bedroom.

“Better for him to have used a pistol than a frying pan,” he told her as he watched her walk away. “A bullet hurts a lot less.”

McKnight, finished with his nonchalant act, asked Bishop seriously, “Who the hell are these guys anyway, breaking in here like that? If I hadn’t woken up, I’d be dead now, and probably Carla, too.”

“Yeah,” Bishop said softly, “her too, maybe.” Bishop walked back over to the two dead men. Lyedecker was now checking their pockets looking for identification. “They look to be, and probably will turn out to be, freelance hit men, hired by the Franco Masenetti crime organization.” Bishop looked back at McKnight, “Does that name ring a bell?”

“No, no bell. Nothing rings bells for me, yet. Should I know that name?”

“I’ll say you should,” Bishop said. “They’ve been after you for the last six months or so. There’s a contract out on you because of all the heat you and the agency have been putting on them these last two years.” Bishop walked back over to McKnight. “When you couldn’t connect Masenetti himself with the several murders that he ordered, you crossed the line into D.E.A. territory and tried to get him for drug trafficking. That was part of the reason you were in Columbia. And to make matters worse, you were able to get Masenetti’s son convicted of selling drugs. He’s in prison now, so I guess Masenetti figures it’s payback time.”

Carla returned from the bedroom with a pistol in a shoulder holster. “Here it is. It’s already loaded, I think.”

Bishop took it from Carla. “Thanks,” and then handed it to McKnight. “Here you go, Jimbo. You’d better keep this with you.”

“Why? I seem to be doing all right with kitchen utensils,” McKnight bragged to further impress Carla.

Bishop gave him only a slight chuckle. “You’ll save the next guys a lot of pain if you just shoot them.”

“You think there’s going to be more ‘guys’?”

“Probably not, but you know the saying about better to have a gun and not need it, than to need a gun and not have it.”

“I don’t know the saying, but I’ve found out it’s true.”

“Okay,” Bishop said sharply to make Lyedecker snap to attention, “the next order of business is to get you two out of here and into a hotel for safety.”

McKnight nodded in agreement. “I was thinking the same thing.”

“Lyedecker,” Bishop said, “Would you drive the two of them to some out-of-the-way hotel?”

“I guess I can handle that.”

“Well….,” McKnight said, “I think I’d like to do that myself. Just to be sure, no one knows where we are. And I mean nobody.”

“You can trust me, McKnight,” Lyedecker said. “We’re on the same team, or haven’t you noticed?”

“I know that, Agent Lyedecker, but I’d feel better doing it alone, just me and Carla.”

“Which way do you want it, Bishop?” Lyedecker asked his boss.

“Yeah…okay….sure, Jimbo. You and Carla can take off by yourself. And get a room without a balcony.”

“I’m way ahead of you.”

“Okay, good enough. But call me after you check in. And don’t use a credit card, use cash, and another name.”

“Don’t worry. I’m starting to get the hang of this.”

“I bet you are, Jimbo. I just bet you are.”

McKnight and Carla checked into a Sheraton Hotel. Carla slept, but McKnight couldn’t. He had phoned Bishop when they checked in. Bishop had assured him that he would start solving problems, too many for Bishop to explain to him at that time. But he promised to call back in the morning for a status report.

At eight A.M. the phone rang. McKnight grabbed the phone quickly, sat up and move to the edge of the bed. “Hello, George Custer here.”

“Hey, Jimbo,” came Bishop’s voice. “You figure on making a last stand at the Little Big Sheraton?”

“You know your history all right,” McKnight said.

“How are the two of you managing?”

“Television, room service, and sleep, you’ve got me leading a first class life.”

“Look Jim, we’ve identified those two hitters that paid you a visit last night. They were definitely from the Masenetti organization.”

“Do you think they’ll send more?”

“Well, maybe. But you’ll be safe where you are now.”

“I can’t stay in this hotel room prison all my life, can I?”

“You won’t have to,” Bishop assured him. “We’re working on something now.”

“And that would be?”

“We’re talking a possible deal with Masenetti, maybe negotiating a truce.”

“How are you planning to manage that?”

“Well, it won’t be easy. But we can offer him some money, immunity for past crimes, something like that. And also, he’ll do anything to get his son released from prison.”

“The CIA would do that for me?”

“Since you are CIA, it’s possible. We’d have to call in a few favors, but you’ve got friends upstairs, Jim.”

“Even after I bungled that mission in Columbia?”

“Hey, don’t worry about that. I think the director will go easy on you. Just answer his questions truthfully and you’ll do all right.”

“And what if I don’t remember the answers?”

“Oh yeah,” Bishop said, his voice going into a whisper. “How’s that going?”

“I still can’t remember a blessed thing, and I don’t think I ever will. I can’t even remember Carla.”

“And how is it going with her?”

“Ah….she’s sticking with me. And I’m trying to adjust to her as a stranger.”

“Well, just enjoy the adjustment and hang in there a while longer,” Bishop encouraged. “We’ll talk as soon as we can make some progress.”

“Right,” McKnight said frustrated, but added, “Thanks.”

“Take care,” Bishop said and then hung up.

McKnight hung up the phone and turned back to the bed where he saw that Carla had awakened and had been listening. “What did he have to say?” she asked.

“He’s working on some sort of plan to get Masenetti to call off his dogs.”

“Good,” she said and leaned back onto the pillow. “Maybe you can get him to replace the balcony door before we return.”

“Good idea.”

“You didn’t get enough sleep, Jim. Neither did I, for that matter. Come back to bed.”

“Yeah, maybe I can sleep.” McKnight moved back into the bed.

“How are you feeling?” Carla asked moving the covers back over him.

“The same.”

“Still can’t remember anything?”

“Regular stuff, but no personal stuff.”

“How about me?” she said moving closer to him.

“Some kind of distant memory, but all in all you’re still a stranger.”

She put her arm around him. “And…..Are you enjoying sleeping with a stranger?”

“It’s heaven. Makes all of this other craziness, almost worthwhile.”

“Almost worth worthwhile?” she whispered sweetly.

“I didn’t mean that you aren’t worth this. You are.”

“Move closer.”

McKnight did.

“Now try to make it all worthwhile.”

 

8 – CABIN FEVER

McKnight and Carla slept until noon. When they awoke they ordered room service. Soon after eating, McKnight started pacing the floor like the hunted animal he was.

“I think the hotel is going to charge us for the rut you’re wearing in the carpet.” Carla mused.

McKnight stopped and faced her. “What? Oh….sorry.”

Just then the phone rang. “Good news, I hope,” Carla said.

McKnight moved to the phone. “Yes, maybe it is.” He picked it up. “General Custer.”

“Hey, Jimbo,” came Bishop’s voice. “Are you okay?”

“Sure. Everything’s fine,” McKnight said. “I got some sleep. What’s up?”

“Look, we contacted Masenetti. He’s been living in a suite at Caesars Palace in Atlantic City for the last few weeks. It’s his alibi while this contract is out on you. But anyway, after talking with him, he’s called a temporary cease fire, as it were, until we can negotiate a truce.”

“Sounds good.”

“Yes, it looks promising. Just hold on for another couple of days and I think we can bring you home.”

“I’m looking forward to it,” McKnight said. “I’m becoming a little stir crazy.”

“Cabin fever has got you only after just one night?”

“Sure has.”

“Even with your playmate there?”

“Yes, even so.”

After a long pause, Bishop said, “You know, there’s a large shopping mall just a few blocks from where you are. I guess it would be all right if you walked around there for a while, go shopping, grab an Orange Julius, you know. It’s called the Eastmont Mall.”

“That would be great. Are you sure it’s safe.”

“Sure, no problem, ”Bishop said. “Nobody knows you’re there anyway, and like I said there’s a cease fire. And besides, we’re going to straighten out everything with Masenetti for sure.”

“Are you going to release his son from prison?”

“I don’t think it will have to come to that, but it’ll be something like a reduced sentence and special treatment. You know, make his cell look like the Holiday Inn, or something. That should satisfy Masenetti. His son would be home in a couple of years.”

“Sounds good.” McKnight looked at Carla as he told Bishop, “We might just go out and celebrate, Orange Julius and all.”

“Good. Have a good time,” Bishop said. “Talk to you soon.”

“Right.” McKnight hung up the phone and looked at Carla who had been listening intently. ”Well, things are moving forward.”

“It sounded like good news,” pouring herself another cup of coffee.

“Yes, Masentti’s called off the contract while they negotiate an early release for his son. We can return home in a day or two.”

“And what about the balcony door?” she asked out of the blue.

McKnight chuckled. “Are you serious?”

“I am,” she said with a smile, but a serious tone. “ When we get home, I don’t want to be stepping over broken glass, blood, and chalk marks.”

“I’ll be sure to mention it in the next phone call,” McKnight assured her with a grin. “So what do you say? Shall we walk around the mall? Go shopping for some celebration gift for you?”

“Better get a celebration gift for Bishop, Carla said half-seriously. “I didn’t do anything but keep you company.”

McKnight made sure his tone was serious. “The best company I ever had.”

“The feeling’s mutual.”

“So let’s hit the mall, shall we?”

Carla hesitated, and then touched the side of her forehead with her fingertips. “I think I’d like to stay here. I’ve acquired a slight headache, watching you pacing for the last hour.”

“Oh…I’m sorry.”

“Not your fault really,” she said giving a half-smile. “Anyway, I just want to take a long bubble bath and let it disappear.”

“Do you want me to bring you something for it? Aspirin or Tylenol?”

“No. I’m not one for medicine. A bath should do the trick. It usually does.”

“Okay, we’ll just relax here.”

“No….it’s okay,” she said slowly. “You take a walk. Stretch your legs….go window shopping….maybe find a good book. I’ll expect you back in a couple of hours.”

“Well, if you think that’s okay, maybe just an hour.”

“Sure, relax….unwind. I’ll be fine when you get back.”

“Uh” McKnight glanced over at the pistol and shoulder holster on the lamp table. “I suppose I should take the pistol and shoulder holster.”

Carla shook her head as she thought about it and then said, “You think you should? I mean if Bishop said it was safe. Maybe guns and amnesia doesn’t mix.”

“Well….have a gun and not need it is best, you know…..so….”

“….Okay. Maybe it’s a good idea.”

“Sure,” McKnight said grabbing the shoulder holster and pistol. “I’ll be back before you know it.”

“Just make some noise when you come in, so you don’t startle me in the bathtub.”

“What if I intend to startle you in the tub?” he said putting on the shoulder holster.

“That’ll be just fine. Just see that you make some noise first before you come anywhere near the bathtub,” she smiled.

McKnight chuckled as he headed to the door. “Right you are. Can I pick anything up for you?”

“Sure. You can bring me back a surprise.”

McKnight stopped and turned back to her. “What sort of surprise?”

“If I knew, then it wouldn’t be a surprise would it? Beside little girls like it when their fathers return and the anticipation of what they might bring them.”

“Oh? Am I a father figure for you?”

“Maybe, in part. Anyway, I do feel protected with you.”

“I’m glad you feel that way. I like protecting you.” He turned and opened the door. “Well…..see you soon.”

Continued….

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McKnight’s Memory: A Romantic Thriller