Posts

Ghost Warrior IV - Shadow Mandate

I read somewhere, or heard it said, that if you are going to write series fiction, know what your last book will be, before you start your first one.  I am not that far advanced yet LOL... but i do try to always now what my next 1 - 3 will be, while writing on the current one.  My idea for Ghost Warrior 4 was definitely over half formed, and chapter 1 and 2 nearly fully developed in my head, before i started Ghost Warrior III.  So here is chapter 1 for Ghost Warrior 4.  For those who have been following my character, Tucker Nash, I appreciate your time and that you read about him.  This may be one of the better ones! Chapter 1 October 2009 The warehouse sat three miles off Route 60, down a cracked two-lane that narrowed by degrees until the road stopped pretending it belonged to anyone. Pines leaned in on both sides, their needles slick with night moisture, their trunks black where the darkness pooled. At 0130 hours in October, the world out here was reduced ...

Paper Cuts and Gun Metal - Chapter 5

  Chapter 5 I didn’t sleep.   Sleep is for men who believe tomorrow will look like today. By dawn the city was gray and honest in the way only a cold morning can be. I made coffee strong enough to strip paint and sat at my desk with the accident report spread out like a body on a slab. Daniel Mercer.   Private First Class. Vehicle left roadway. Impact with tree. No other vehicle involved. Signed: Gunnery Sergeant Michael McKenna. The words were neat. Official. Clean.   Too clean. I reached into the bottom drawer and pulled out the leather notebook I’d sworn I wouldn’t touch again. The cover was worn where my thumb had rested a hundred times in North Carolina heat. I flipped through pages filled with dates, coordinates, witness notes written in the clipped language of a man who’d been trained to keep emotion out of ink.   Mercer. I found the entry. Scene arrived 2315 hours. Heavy rain. Vehicle eastbound. Skid marks inconsistent with rep...

Chost Warrior III - Chapter 20

The Suburban sat in shadow beneath the I-610 overpass long before the reefer ever came into view. Tucker had positioned it where the sodium lights thinned out and the concrete pillars threw long, hard angles across the feeder road. From a distance, it looked like any other vehicle parked by someone waiting for a call or finishing paperwork before heading home. The black paint swallowed the weak glow of the overhead lamps. Nothing about it suggested intent. He checked the time again. 0618. The transfer at Southeastern Food Imports had ended twenty-nine minutes earlier. The smaller refrigerated box truck—new plates, new driver—had headed north before looping west. Tucker hadn’t followed directly. He had peeled off, circled wide, and reacquired it farther along the artery once he’d confirmed its likely route. LHF liked rhythm. They liked consistency. They liked believing that discipline insulated them from risk. He intended to test that belief. Traffic was light at this hour but building....

Paper Cuts and Gun Metal - Chapter 4

 Paper Cuts and Gun Metal Chapter 4 Donnelly didn’t meet me at his main office. He had me come through a side entrance off the alley behind the warehouse on 47th. No secretary. No framed photographs of ribbon cuttings. Just a steel door, a narrow stairwell, and a second-floor back office with a desk too large for the room and a single lamp burning low. Men choose rooms like that when they’re ready to stop pretending.  He was standing when I came in. Jacket off. Sleeves rolled. Tie loosened like he’d finally admitted he was human. “You said this couldn’t wait,” he said. “It can’t.” He shut the door himself and turned the lock.  That was new.  The room smelled of stale coffee and wet wool. Outside, trucks idled in the yard, their engines rumbling like distant thunder.  I didn’t sit. “Michael Ruiz,” I said. The name hung between us. Donnelly’s jaw tightened, but he didn’t look surprised. “You found the clipping,” he said quietly. “Yes.” “And you went to his mother....

Paper Cuts and Gun Metal - Chapter 3

The file drawer stuck halfway out like it didn’t want to give up what it held. Chicago Police Department kept its old missing persons cases in a room that smelled like dust and neglect. The records clerk was a woman in her fifties with spectacles perched low and a cigarette burning in a glass ashtray that hadn’t been emptied since Truman took office. “You sure you got the year right?” she asked, flipping through a ledger. “Nineteen thirty-six.” She let out a thin stream of smoke. “That’s a long way back.” “Some things don’t stay buried.” She looked at me for a second longer than necessary, then reached into the lower cabinet and pulled out a thin folder. Thin in the way a man’s patience gets thin. Not enough inside. “Ruiz,” she said, sliding it across. “Michael.” I took it to a scarred wooden table under a buzzing light and opened it. The first page was a typed intake form. Name. Age. Address. Last seen near St. Brigid’s Parish. Reporting party: Elena Ruiz, mother. No suspect listed. N...