T. Lynn Ocean - Jersey Barnes 03 - Southern Peril Read online




  SOUTHERN PERIL

  PREVIOUS WORKS BY T. LYNN OCEAN

  Fool Me Once

  Sweet Home Carolina

  Jersey Barnes Series

  Southern Fatality

  Southern Poison

  SOUTHERN PERIL

  A Jersey Barnes Mystery

  T. LYNN OCEAN

  MINOTAUR BOOKS NEW YORK

  This is a work of fiction. All of the characters, organizations, and events portrayed in this novel are either products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously.

  A THOMAS DUNNE BOOK FOR MINOTAUR BOOKS.

  An imprint of St. Martin’s Publishing Group.

  SOUTHERN PERIL. Copyright © 2009 by T. Lynn Ocean. All rights reserved. Printed in the United States of America. For information, address St. Martin’s Press, 175 Fifth Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10010.

  www.thomasdunnebooks.com

  www.minotaurbooks.com

  ISBN-13: 978-0-312-38347-3

  ISBN-10: 0-312-38347-9

  First Edition: July 2009

  10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1

  SOUTHERN PERIL

  PROLOGUE

  March, twenty-one years ago

  Near the campus of Duke University

  Durham, North Carolina

  Will was unanimously designated as the driver since he had drunk only Dr Pepper, and he tried to remain a good sport about it despite John’s and Mike’s obnoxious behavior. After all, every med student had to cut loose once in a while, especially after grueling midterm exams. He and his frat brothers were invited to another party tomorrow night, where he’d be the designated drinker. Somebody else could drive.

  “Guys, cut it out already, would you?” His friends playfully slapped each other on the backs of their heads, and John, the front-seat passenger, rolled into Will’s lap each time he reached over the headrest to retaliate. “I’m trying to drive here.”

  They were only about ten miles from the apartment the trio shared, but Will had taken an unfamiliar shortcut through the wooded back roads. It neared two o’clock in the morning, and the only other cars on the main roads at this time of day would likely be cops. Even though he hadn’t been drinking, Will knew it was best to avoid a confrontation with the law. They loved to give college kids a rough time, especially frat boys, and especially in the middle of the night. He couldn’t wait to get home and crawl into bed. He was tired.

  Overhead, low-hanging clouds began spitting mist, and on the ground, a set of blinding high-beam headlights flew at the boys from the oncoming lane. The other driver either didn’t care or didn’t notice when Will flashed his lights in protest. He depressed the windshield washer button, hoping that clean glass would cut the glare, but the fluid container was empty. Moving wipers smeared a fine layer of mist and bird droppings across the windshield. Squinting, Will slowed and concentrated on the serpentine road, trying not to look into the other car’s headlights.

  “Heeeeeere’s Johnny!” Mike leaned in from the backseat, trying to get a clean shot at John’s face. Will was about to yell at them to stop when somebody fell across his right arm and the steering wheel jerked to the right. The front tire wrenched off the pavement and spun in loose gravel as the inside of the tread scraped the road’s edge.

  Will yanked the wheel hard to the left. “Dammit!”

  The boys’ car overcorrected and fishtailed across the center line. The oncoming vehicle swerved to avoid a head-on crash with them and went airborne over a water-filled ditch. It clipped something and flipped onto its roof, spun in a 360 as it continued toward a clump of trees, and rotated back upright before slamming to a stop against the trunk of a thick oak with an earthshaking boom.

  Panicked, his heart revving, Will stomped the brake pedal and they squealed to a stop. If the other car hadn’t reacted so quickly, he realized, he and John would have gone through the windshield. Maybe even Mike, too, from the backseat. They all could have been killed.

  Forcing a deep breath into his lungs, Will made a U-turn and drove the hundred yards back to the wreck, his mind recalling emergency response procedures for accident victims. All three boys ran to the damaged car—one of its wheels jutted out, still spinning—and Will yanked open the driver’s door to see two men. The one in the passenger’s seat moaned. The driver, his face bloodied, pointed a gun at them. “You tell Denny he can go to hell,” the man snarled.

  Stunned, Will froze, but only for a split second. He grabbed the driver’s wrist and fought to get the weapon pointed in any direction other than at him and his friends. The pistol went off with a sharp pop that sent a jab of pain through his eardrums. A spray of blood and pulp coated the crumpled car’s interior as the bullet punched a hole through the passenger’s skull. Will felt some stray bits sting his face.

  “You made me shoot him, you bastard,” the driver growled. Will stopped grappling with the stranger when he realized the gun’s muzzle was now pressed directly into his stomach. It felt hot. “You still ain’t getting the money.”

  The driver spat out a mouthful of blood and teeth. Illuminated by the car’s yellowish dome light, his face looked like one of those gory rubber Halloween masks that cover the entire head. But this man was not a ghoulish prankster. The coppery smell of blood was real, and the metal of the gun pressing into his skin was real. Will’s body went numb. He would probably die. It all happened so fast. One minute, he’s driving his friends home from a frat party. And a minute later—not even a full sixty seconds later—he witnesses a shooting. And it looked as if he could very well be next.

  He struggled to remember the prayer he’d learned during Sunday school classes at church. Growing up, he hated getting up early for church. His mother always made him, up until he reached sixteen and told her he believed in science—not God. The prayer was something about darkness. Or was it light? He wondered if he’d go to heaven, even though he hadn’t seen the inside of a church in years. He wondered if he’d feel pain as the bullet ripped through his midsection. He didn’t want to die. He wanted to finish school. He’d wanted to be a doctor ever since the third grade, when he went to the emergency room with his parents after his sister jumped on top of a glass coffee table. He couldn’t recall the prayer. Sweat beads popped through the skin all over his body. A wall-mounted epidermis chart flashed through his mind. That had been a test question at some point in his life, the one about the skin being the largest organ. Most people didn’t think of their skin as an organ, just like the heart or the liver, but it was. Will couldn’t remember the prayer. He wondered if the man was truly going to shoot him. He debated as to whether he’d die instantly or lie in the grass slowly bleeding to death, like in the old westerns. He wondered if he’d ever be able to watch a movie again. He loved movies.

  “We don’t know anybody named Denny, I swear,” Will heard himself say. The man’s fingers were now curled around his shirt collar. “Me and my friends don’t even know you. We only stopped to help.”

  The driver gurgled out a laugh and pulled the trigger. The revolver misfired. When he hesitated for a split second to look at the malfunctioning gun, Will slammed his forehead into the other man’s. A shot violated Will’s eardrums for the second time, and pain exploded in the center of his head. He sucked in a breath and opened his eyes to find the shooter slumped over the steering wheel.

  Will had been next to corpses only in a sparkling clean and brightly lit laboratory, and then they’d been laid out on stainless-steel tables. But he knew without checking for a pulse that the driver was dead. The man had mistakenly shot himself in the head, just like he’d accidentally shot his passenger. The driver was a really bad shot. The scene mi
ght somehow be funny, Will thought, if he were watching it at the movies. Or maybe not. It might just be gruesome.

  “Crap, crap, crap,” one of his buddies screamed behind him. “Who are these guys?”

  Will disentangled himself from the dead man’s grip and backed away from the car. He moved his arms and legs and felt his stomach to make sure he wasn’t wounded and then took inventory of his friends. Both were standing, unharmed. John bent over to heave up some of the vodka punch he’d drunk at the party.

  “I don’t know who they are.” Will’s ears hurt, and his voice sounded like it was echoing in the distance. “He tried to shoot me. He thought somebody named Denny sent us. He thought we were after their money.”

  John wiped vomit from his chin with a shirtsleeve. “What money?”

  “Who cares what money?” Mike said. “We’ve got to go get help.”

  Will’s entire body was shaking. He spread his stance to balance jerky legs. Adrenaline, he thought. Just like the textbooks said. “They don’t need help now. They’re both dead.”

  The three boys stared at the lifeless strangers. Noticing something wedged behind the driver’s seat back, Mike cocked his head. It was a large canvas duffel bag with thick leather straps.

  “See what’s in it,” Mike said.

  John giggled. “You see what’s in it.”

  “Shut up!” Will screamed. “Shut up! Shut up, both of you! Two men are dead. This is serious.”

  “We didn’t kill them,” John said. “Did we?”

  Will told his friends to shut up again. He needed to think. Using his shirttail to open the back car door, he worked the duffel bag loose. It was heavy, like a laundry bag of folded clothes, but much more dense. He slung the leather straps over a shoulder and moved to the rear of the car. The trunk lid was half-open, ripped off at one hinge, and displayed an empty cargo area, except for a pair of boots and a small ditty bag. If the men had more luggage, it must have flown out during the wreck. A warped New Jersey license plate hung by a single screw from one corner. He was debating whether or not to search the men’s pockets for driver’s licenses when fat drops of rain started to pelt his face. He looked around and saw faint pinpoints of distant headlights filtering through the darkness. Somebody was coming. Self-preservation instincts overrode his need to learn more about the man who’d just tried to kill him. “Let’s get out of here.”

  He herded his subdued friends back to their car just as the drizzle escalated to a downpour. Good, Will thought, driving to their apartment. The rain will wash away any signs that we were ever there. The approaching vehicle never caught up with them, and Will figured its driver must have spotted the accident and stopped to help. The police would be summoned. Would they think the bizarre scene to be an accident? With gunshot wounds, probably not. Maybe it would be ruled a murder-suicide. Or maybe a double murder. But then, the car had swerved off the road and crashed. Would police think the passenger shot the driver, causing the car to flip? A flood of possible scenarios rushed through Will’s head. None seemed fully plausible.

  When they were safely ensconced inside their small rental apartment, Will locked himself and the duffel bag in the bathroom. He stripped and showered, scrubbing the specks of dried matter from his face until the water went cold. When he toweled off and unzipped the heavy duffel, he saw more money than he’d ever seen at once. Even in the movies. Bundles of twenty-, fifty-, and hundred-dollar bills, held together with rubber bands.

  He instantly remembered the forgotten prayer. Yea, though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death…

  ONE

  Present Day

  It might never happen. My early retirement that keeps evading me like a crisp dollar bill in a windy parking lot.

  I retired from SWEET after I lost my feeling of invincibility and realized the next bullet speeding my way at five hundred meters per second might manage to hit its intended target. SWEET is the government agency that plucked me from MP duty when I was a young marine, eager to help further their mission of thwarting terrorism. That’s not the real name, of course. Just an acronym the field agents like to use, which stands for Special Worldwide Unit for Entertaining and Exterminating Terrorists. It might sound strange, but part of my job as an undercover agent was to entertain the bad guys—even though the bosses called it infiltration. That’s why my handler signed Uncle Sam’s name to pay the tab for a few cosmetic enhancements, including a breast enlargement. Of course, I got to keep my round size D’s when I left the government, and I’ve grown quite fond of them. Unfortunately, I haven’t yet had a chance to show them off in retirement, even though I bought fabulous new clothes without concern about concealing my .45-caliber handgun or my cleavage. Especially the cleavage.

  I have been having something near panic attacks at the concept of leaving home without a weapon strapped to my body. Other retirees downsize homes. I could always downsize handguns, from the .45 to my new 9mm. A Ruger SR9, it’s slim and sexy and has a mag capacity of seventeen rounds. A lot of people, especially men, think they have to go for the largest-caliber weapon they can accurately handle. But Hydra-Shok ammo has stopping power at any caliber. Staring at the judge who’d come to meet me for lunch, I decided that the Ruger would be perfect for conceal carry in retirement. That mental hurdle crossed, I wondered exactly what it was that my judge friend wanted me to do. She knew I’d quit working. Or was trying to, anyway.

  My most recent exodus was from my personal security business, the Barnes Agency, many of whose jobs are contracted by the government. Fortunately, my partners, Rita and JJ, have proved quite capable of handling things without me. I’d done okay with the government, and the small security agency is my retirement nest egg. Best of all, I am alive and have all my body parts—plus a few. I deserved to call it quits. Play on my boat. Take up golf or tennis. Do some traveling without carrying a dossier on a bad guy. Get a tan and slurp frozen banana drinks with a blissfully blank and worry-free mind-set.

  The judge and I were perched on bar stools at the Block, staring at the Cape Fear River through a wide-open industrial-size garage door. At first, I thought she simply wanted to enjoy lunch with me. Laugh about old times and catch up on current news. Boy, was I wrong. She wanted a favor.

  I tilted my head back and drank a third of my beer with two swallows. “You do know that I’m retired, right, Judge? There was a party with a cake and everything. Champagne toasts. Lots of witnesses. I’m pretty sure you got an invitation.” The Block is a restaurant and pub situated smack dab in the middle of downtown Wilmington, right on the bank of the river. I bought the historic building when I first moved to North Carolina, and the upstairs apartment is where I live. My best friend, Ox, is co-owner and manager of the bar, but like the Barnes Agency, it pretty much runs itself. Every once in a while, it even surprises us by showing a small profit.

  The judge laughed, deep and throaty. “The day Jersey Barnes retires will be the day hell freezes over.”

  Hauling building supplies, a flatbed barge glided by on the glistening strip of water outside. “Why does everybody keep saying that?”

  A streak of sunlight moved across her cheek, casting a golden glow on cocoa-colored skin. She smiled. “Sometimes the truth is obvious to everybody except the one closest to it.”

  I took another swig of beer, reminding myself to sip instead of chug. I’m trying to cut down. “What’s so wrong with wanting to relax and enjoy life?”

  “You’re too young and too good at what you do to retire.” She bit a hush puppy in half and spread butter on the remaining piece. “Besides, you owe me a favor.”

  “I thought you owed me a favor, after I broke into your private chambers to give you a wake-up call.”

  She nodded, brown black eyes blinking in slow motion. “You’ll be happy to know the monster who was after me is back behind bars, where he’ll stay for life.”

  “That’s good to hear.” Cracker ambled up to nuzzle my ankles. A solid white and very spoiled Labrador retr
iever, he wanted a dry-roasted peanut. I shelled one and gave him the two encapsulated morsels one at a time. He took them softly by sticking out the tip of his tongue.

  “That favor made us even, to keep the record straight,” the judge said.

  “Great, then I don’t owe you. My retirement is intact.” I shot her my government-learned bimbette look and stuck out my chest. “I can go hit an all-inclusive club in Cancún and see what transpires when I stuff these babies into a coconut-shell bikini top.” One of my weaknesses is designer lingerie. I’m hooked on the stuff and like to wear it beneath everything—even frayed blue jeans and T-shirts. But I’ve never owned a coconut-shell bikini top. It could be fun.

  The judge smiled, but her tone was serious. “This is my family, Jersey. I don’t know who else to turn to. Besides, you help me out with this, I’ll owe you a favor. Never know when you might need a state supreme court judge on the other end of that speed dial.”

  Even though she lives in South Carolina and I live in North Carolina, she was right. State supreme court judges have a lot of clout, regardless of where they oversee justice. I finished my Amstel Light, deciding it’s impossible to sip beer. Stupid idea. I’ve never mastered the art of sipping anything. “Okay, Judge. I’ll do what I can. Lay it on me.”

  She petted Cracker’s snout, and he instantly angled his wide head so the judge’s hand was rubbing his neck. “Morgan is seven years younger than me. My only brother.”

  I motioned the bartender with my empty bottle and she replaced it with a fresh, frost-covered one. “Any sisters?”

  The judge shook her head. “Just me and Morgan. We used to be really tight, when he lived in Columbia. We were twenty minutes apart and got together every week for dinner. When he moved to Dallas, Texas, for a better job, we stayed in touch by e-mail and Christmas cards.”