by Jude Hardin
“What do you think I’m going to say?”
“That I disobeyed a direct order, and that more people ended up getting killed because of it. I’m ready to accept whatever punishment you feel is appropriate.”
The Director opened the paper file folder that was lying on the desk in front of him.
“First of all, yes, you did disobey a direct order,” he said. “And there will be repercussions. Maybe not as severe as you might think, though, because as it happened, everything turned out okay. Rae Derlin survived the knife wound. She’s in the hospital right now, under close watch by a team of federal corrections officers, and she has been cooperating with a team of FBI agents in exchange for leniency on her sentencing.”
“I’m glad she’s going to be okay,” Diana said. “I had a feeling that she was just a girl from the wrong side of the tracks who got mixed up with the wrong kind of people.”
“The FBI is still sorting everything out, but it seems that Derlin and a few of the other employees there at Wakeman’s were using part of the plant to manufacture a very high grade of synthetic heroin.”
“How could they possibly have kept something like that hidden?” Diana said.
“Parts of the factory date back to the first world war. It was a secret place back then, run by the military. They were experimenting with chemical weapons. No telling what else. Some of the paperwork has been missing for decades. Intentionally misplaced or destroyed, I would imagine. Anyway, the underground areas they were using were sealed off back in the fifties, and the property was auctioned to the highest bidder. Since then it has been sold several times, most recently to Mr. Wakeman, who was able to implement plans to expand his peppermint tea business.”
“So Wakeman was in on the drug operation?”
“We don’t think so. According to Derlin, Ryan Casibler discovered a hatch behind an old coal bin one evening when he was taking some trash down to one of the incinerators. A few days later, he used a welding torch to melt the seal, and then he crawled in and found a nice big underground room.”
“Which eventually was converted into a heroin lab,” Diana said.
“Right. Normally, you couldn’t operate a lab like that anywhere near a populated area, because of the smell. But Ryan and his crew were able to splice into the main smokestacks, where the acrid stench of high-grade dope was covered by the sweet and pleasant aroma of high-grade peppermint. There’s no telling how long they could have maintained the operation if it hadn’t been for the man posing as Jack Reacher. We still don’t know his true identity, by the way, only that he had been using several aliases for the past ten years or so.”
“Incredible,” Diana said. “The phony Jack Reacher was inadvertently responsible for exposing a major conspiracy, sort of like the real Jack Reacher might do through an act of vigilantism.”
“Only the phony Jack Reacher ended up dead,” The Director said. “And the real Jack Reacher is still out there.”
“As far as we know.”
“Right. Which brings me to the repercussions I mentioned earlier.”
The Director opened a drawer and pulled out another file folder. He sat there and thumbed through the pages, skimming over some over the highlighted sentences while Diana stood across from him and waited.
And waited.
It was suddenly very hot in the office.
A bead of sweat trickled down Diana’s back.
“Sir, I realize that I was out of line, but—”
“A man fitting Reacher’s description was seen in Paris, France yesterday. I want you to fly over there and keep an eye on him for a few days. I’ll expect a full report when you get back.”
“That’s my punishment?”
“Yes,” The Director said. “And I want you to understand that I’m just doing my job. It’s nothing personal.”
Diana smiled. She thanked The Director and turned and walked out of his office, already thinking about the disguise she was going to wear for this assignment.
New hair, new clothes, new shoes, everything fabulously expensive and fashionable this time.
She was going to Paris, after all.
Espionage 101, Lesson One: Blend in.
Thanks so much for reading THE GIRL FROM THE WRONG SIDE OF CORDIAL!
Other books in THE JACK REACHER FILES thriller series include CHOKE, HOSTAGE, and VELOCITY.
My Nicholas Colt thriller series includes nine full-length novels: COLT, LADY 52, POCKET-47, CROSSCUT, SNUFF TAG 9, KEY DEATH, BLOOD TATTOO, SYCAMORE BLUFF, and THE JACK REACHER FILES: FUGITIVE (Previously Published as ANNEX 1).
All of my books are lendable, so feel free to share them with a friend at no additional cost.
All reviews are much appreciated!
If you would like to read an excerpt from my novel COLT, please turn the page.
PROLOGUE
A few days after everything went down, one of the county deputies filled me in on some of the details over a beer at Kelly’s Pool Hall. He said that after several hours of interrogation at the hospital, the detectives working the case had finally managed to get a written confession. It went something like this:
I didn’t really want to do it. It was like I had to, you know? Especially after I drove down there and nabbed her. I didn’t have much of a choice after that. I couldn’t just let her go. She begged me, and she promised not to tell anyone, but you can’t trust someone under those circumstances. She would have said anything to save her own skin.
Anyway, I’d been following her around for a while, and I waited for the right time to drop something into her drink at a bar. It was a couple of Rohypnol tablets, what they call roofies. You know, the date rape drug. Not that I planned on having sex with her or anything like that. I don’t roll that way. It was just to knock her out for a while, make her helpless until I could tie her up and put her in the trunk of the car I’d rented. Once I had her in the car, it was just a matter of working up the nerve. And it wasn’t easy, I can tell you that. Like I said, I really didn’t want to do it. But I had to.
I wanted it to be something pretty dramatic, so it would make the papers and all. I bought a nice sturdy length of rope, took it to my room and learned how to tie a noose. I looked it up on the Internet. It took me a while to learn, but I finally got the hang of it (no pun intended). I’d been looking around for the perfect place, and I finally came across those train trestles. It was secluded, pretty much out in the middle of nowhere, but I knew a train would come by eventually, and I knew that the conductor—or whoever’s job it is to watch the tracks—would see her and report it to the police.
I drove out there and lifted her out of the car. Luckily, she was kind of petite. She probably only weighed a hundred pounds or so. If she’d been a big girl, the trestles wouldn’t have worked, because I had to carry her up a steep hill. It almost killed me as it was. If she had weighed much more, I couldn’t have done it. Anyway, I lifted her out of the car and carried her up the hill and set her on the tracks. I had some duct tape over her mouth, but she was crying and making frantic noises down in her throat and begging me with her eyes.
The eyes were the worst. If I could do it over again, I would put some tape over those eyes. I still have dreams about them sometimes.
So I tied one end of the rope around the steel part of the railroad track, and I slipped the noose over her head and tightened it around her neck. Then it was just a matter of rolling her off the bridge.
It was really quiet out there. I heard her neck snap when the rope went taut, and that was it. I climbed back down to where my car was, got in and drove away.
I drained the last of my beer, ordered another round. One for me, and one for the deputy.
Of course I didn’t know any of those details on October 21.
On October 21, I was drunk and I didn’t know much of anything.
CHAPTER ONE
When you’re thirty thousand feet in the air, and the pilot says we’re losing engine number two, you start thinking about w
hat’s really important in your life.
First, you think about your kid. Her name is Harmony, and she’s only four months old. You’ve known her since the day she was born. Before that, actually, because you talked to her while she was still in the womb. You watched her being delivered. You cut the cord. You cried. She’s here beside you now, in her mother’s arms, resting quietly, even as the airplane plummets from the sky.
You think about your beautiful wife, Susan. About the day you met her at the show in Kingston, Jamaica, and about all the good times you’ve had with her since then. About the times you and she were on the covers of magazines, dressed as bride and groom.
You think about the guys in the band. You’ve known them since Jr. High. They’re like brothers. They struggled all the way up with you, and now they’re living the dream with you.
And dying with you.
The pilot aims for an open field, but comes up short. For an instant, you hear the tree branches scraping the bottom of the fuselage. Like fingernails on a chalkboard. Then you’re on the ground and it’s smoky and hot and you can’t see.
You can’t breathe.
You crawl from the wreckage. Dazed, bleeding, tears and snot dripping from your swollen face. You start searching for your loved ones, frantically shouting their names, but as the fumes from the empty fuel tanks explode skyward in a massive black and orange fireball, you realize they didn’t make it out.
You realize they didn’t make it out…
Those were my thoughts when October 21 rolled around again. Another year gone by, fourteen in all, and the crash still seemed like yesterday.
I sat at the cramped little galley table of my 1964 Airstream Safari travel trailer with a bottle of Old Fitzgerald and a glass, wondering why I was the only one fortunate enough to walk away. It’s not fair. They were all better than me. But here I am. The lucky one, if you can call it that. I do the same thing every year. I get drunk and I think about them. And I wonder. And I cry. It’s a tradition.
There were a dozen or so of my business cards stacked neatly and incongruously on the table by the salt and pepper shakers. I picked one up and looked at it: Nicholas Colt, Private Investigator. Lot 27, Joe’s Fish Camp, Lake Barkley. Hallows Cove, Florida. There was a phone number, but it wasn’t in service at the moment.
Along with everything else, I wondered how I ever got to here from there.
I looked at my watch. 3:37. I knew it was p.m. because it was still light outside. I figured I would pass out around six, and tomorrow would be another day.
I was pouring myself another shot from the bottle when someone started banging on the hatch. I got up and looked out the window. There was a mirror mounted to the side of the camper, angled so I could see visitors when they came up to the door. Identification, Friend or Foe. The low tech version. This particular visitor was a man in his late teens or early twenties. He wore khaki shorts and a black polo, and there was a cell phone clipped to his belt. I figured he was about six feet tall, give or take. Medium build, dark brown hair, sunglasses. The air conditioner in my camper was a little noisy, so I hadn’t heard him drive up in the fancy new car.
He was very young, and he was obviously from an affluent family. Not my typical client. In fact, he probably wasn’t a client at all. He probably wanted to ask about renting a boat or something. People come to me when they can’t find Joe Crawford, the man who owns the property. Joe is my landlord, and he also happens to be my best friend. I help him with security around the place, and with other little things from time to time, and he gives me a break on the rent. It’s a nice arrangement, except on October twenty-first, when I’m three sheets to the wind at 3:37 in the afternoon.
I tried to ignore the young man at the door, but he kept banging. I forced myself off the bench and opened the hatch.
“Can I help you?” I said.
He looked at me. He was slow to answer.
“I’m sorry,” he said. “I must have the wrong address.”
“Who were you looking for?”
“A guy named Nicholas Colt. He’s supposed to be some kind of private eye or something.”
I wasn’t in the mood for any of this.
“That’s me,” I said. “I’m a guy named Nicholas Colt, and I am some kind of private eye or something. What happened? Someone steal your skateboard?”
He smiled. Sort of. I could tell he wasn’t very impressed with me, and I can’t say that I blamed him. I was shirtless. My cutoff army fatigue pants were stained with fish blood, and I hadn’t trimmed my hair or beard in about six months. My eyes were probably bloodshot, and I couldn’t remember if I’d taken a shower that morning. Some kind of private eye indeed. I probably looked more like a gutter bum.
Despite my unprofessional appearance, he politely extended his arm and shook my hand.
“Everett Harbaugh,” he said. “I’m trying to find someone. I thought you might be able to help me.”
“You thought wrong. I’m not open for business. Not today.”
“A man named Winston Fell told my—”
“You know Winston?” I said.
“My parents do. Mr. Fell told them about you, said you’d probably be home today. I tried your phone, but I couldn’t get through.”
Winston Fell is a retired police officer, a dear old friend of mine. I call him Papa. We drink beer and go fishing sometimes. He would do anything for me, and I would do anything for him. I was a little surprised he hadn’t told me about the referral, but maybe he’d tried. My cell phone had been off all day.
“What was your name again?” I said.
“Everett Harbaugh.”
“All right. Come on in.”
He stepped up and over the threshold, out of the hot sunshine and into the cool dimness. I motioned toward the galley table, and he slid into the seat furthest from the whiskey bottle.
“Can I get you something to drink?” I said. “Are you old enough to drink?”
“I’ll be twenty in three days,” he said.
“Twenty sucks. You’re not a teenager anymore, but you’re still not allowed to drink alcohol. Not that it stops anyone, of course. You want a soda?”
“Sure.”
I poured him some semi-flat Sprite from a two-liter in the refrigerator, sat across from him and lifted my glass of bourbon.
“Cheers,” I said. “So tell me about who you’re trying to find.”
“I’m trying to find my father.”
Join the club, I thought. Mine had been missing in action since I was three. Not that I ever spent any time searching for him. He was still alive, last I heard. Maybe I would look him up sometime and see what kinds of medical conditions I needed to worry about as I rounded forty-two and headed for fifty. Then again, maybe not. Rule #8 in Nicholas Colt’s Philosophy of Life: Worrying about how long you’re going to live will kill you faster than anything.
I lit a cigarette.
“What happened to your dad?” I said.
“My dad’s fine. He was the one who told me.”
I was confused. “What are you talking about?” I said.
“I’m looking for a sperm donor,” he said. “Wait, that didn’t come out right. Let me start over. Last Friday, I drove home for the weekend—”
“Drove home from where?”
“Gainesville. UF. I’m a student there.”
It took me a second to remember what day of the week it was.
“Today’s Tuesday,” I said. “Why aren’t you at school?”
“I only have one class and a lab on Tuesdays. I’m done by eleven o’clock in the morning.”
“Okay. Go ahead.”
“So last Friday I drove home, and Dad sat me down and told me that my whole life has been a lie. He didn’t use those words, but that’s what it amounted to. Apparently he had testicular cancer when he was younger, and the radiation treatments made him sterile. Neither he nor my mom wanted kids when they first got married, but then they changed their minds. So twenty years and nine mont
hs ago, my mother climbed onto an examination table in a doctor’s office and spread her legs. The doctor did his trick with a turkey baster or whatever, and the result was me.”
I flicked an ash into the ashtray.
“And you want to find the donor?” I said.
“Yes.”
“Why?”
“I think everybody has a right to know where they came from,” he said. “Plus, I would like to know if I have any brothers or sisters out there. You know, half-siblings. I was raised an only child, but I’ve always felt like there are others. It’s hard to explain.”
“Do you know the name of the clinic where your mother was inseminated?”
“Yes,” he said. “Klein Fertility in Orange Park. It’s still there.”
“And do you know the donor number?”
“One seventy-three.”
I stubbed my cigarette out and took a drink of bourbon.
“There’s a website called the Sibling Boards,” I said. “Started back in two thousand and one, I think. All you have to do is—”
“I tried that,” Everett said. “There weren’t any matches. I went ahead and registered, in case something comes up, but some of those people have been waiting for years. I want to know now.”
“That’s a tough nut to crack. If a donor doesn’t want to be found, then it’s going to be really hard to find him. That’s pretty much the arrangement, you know? The donor goes into a room by himself and looks at a dirty magazine for a while, comes out and hands a specimen cup to a nurse. He gets paid for his troubles, and that’s it. All the paperwork promises anonymity.”
“I know all that. But there must be a way.”
“Not really,” I said. “Not legally, anyway.”
“My parents are very wealthy, Mr. Colt. And they’re supporting my decision to do this. I’ll pay you for your time. I’ll pay double your normal rate.”
That made my ears perk up. I was behind on everything, and the 750ml bottle of Old Fitzgerald in front of me wasn’t going to last forever.