Both Ends Burning (Whistleblower Trilogy Book 3)

BOOK: Both Ends Burning (Whistleblower Trilogy Book 3)
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Contents

Copyright

Story Note

CHAPTER ONE

CHAPTER TWO

CHAPTER THREE

CHAPTER FOUR

CHAPTER FIVE

CHAPTER SIX

CHAPTER SEVEN

CHAPTER EIGHT

CHAPTER NINE

CHAPTER TEN

CHAPTER ELEVEN

CHAPTER TWELVE

CHAPTER THIRTEEN

CHAPTER FOURTEEN

CHAPTER FIFTEEN

CHAPTER SIXTEEN

CHAPTER SEVENTEEN

CHAPTER EIGHTEEN

CHAPTER NINETEEN

CHAPTER TWENTY

CHAPTER TWENTY-ONE

CHAPTER TWENTY-TWO

CHAPTER TWENTY-THREE

EPILOGUE

Note to Readers

Dedication

Afterword

About the Author

 

 

BOTH ENDS BURNING

By

Jim Heskett

 

All material copyright 2015 by
Jim Heskett
. No part of this work may be reproduced without permission.

 

Published by Royal Arch Books

Cover design by Kit Foster

 

Www.RoyalArchBooks.com

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Wait!

If you haven’t read books 1 and 2 of the Whistleblower Trilogy, start
here with Wounded Animals
. These three books tell one big story, so be sure to read them in order.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

CHAPTER ONE

 

 

The water burst from the shower head, at first icy cold, then blindingly hot. I had a feeling it was going to be one of
those
showers; never at the right temperature, always one notch too far in either direction. I’d have to make the best of it, because I was in a strange shower in a strange fabricated apartment in the back of some strange building in Brownsville, Texas. It was an office or some place of business.

I remembered only pieces of how I got here and the events that led to it.

I knew there had been death.

An inch away from Mexico. An inch away from freedom for Omar Qureshi, except he’d been granted no freedom. He’d died because of my failings, and now his death and his brother Kareem’s deaths were both on my hands.

I lathered while the too-hot water steamed the tiny plastic enclosure and blurred my eyes. Cream walls tainted beige with soap scum and rust. Little cutouts in the plastic walls formed cubbies for soap and shampoo bottles.

My head throbbed, probably because IntelliCraft’s thug Glenning had kicked me in the temple. Twice. I could move my jaw, so it wasn’t broken, but the dull thudding revolution of pain cycled through each time I blinked.

The birdshot peppering my shoulder ached as the water ran over it and a diluted stream of blood cascaded down my arm. I’d have to get some bandages. At least the cut on my lower back had healed. How long had it been since Glenning and Thomason had forced me into that car and taken me to the top of Eldorado Canyon? Three weeks? Four?

I finished my shower as my head was starting to shed the cloud, and memories blinked into existence. Running through the cornfield in South Point, trying to escape the redneck Jed and Glenning and failing. Glenning circling Jed and then killing him. Madly running for the border. Omar floating in the Rio Grande. Snapping Glenning’s neck. My half-sister Susan coming to rescue me and bring me to this strange hidden place.

And most of all, my dad, a man who was supposed to have died from a stroke, appearing out of a back room. Making me think he’d been dead for two weeks and then materializing from around the corner.

I slipped out of the shower and left the water running. Dipped into my pants and stole the prepaid cell phone out of a pocket. The first part of Grace’s phone number was still typed into the keypad, since I hadn’t been able to complete the call because of the thug who’d barged into the shack Omar and I were trying to use as shelter.

I finished typing the number into the sticky plastic keys and she picked up on the second ring.

“Baby, it’s me.”

She sighed on the other end of the line. “I’ve been so worried about you. Is everything okay?”

“Yes and no. I’m safe. I have so much to tell you and I don’t even know where to start. I’m sorry I haven’t checked in for so long.”

“Did you get him across the border?”

My lips curled into a frown. “I can’t… maybe I shouldn’t talk about things on the phone. But nothing went as I planned. I can tell you that much.”

Her breath caught. “If you’re safe, that’s all that matters to me. When are you coming home?”

“Now. Everything else that’s going on here, I don’t care about it anymore. I just want to see you and be done with it all. I’ll be on the next flight I can possibly get.”

“I love you.”

“I love you too. I’ll be home in a few hours.”

I didn’t want to hang up. I wanted to stay on the phone with her forever, listen to her breathe and talk and tell me I wasn’t worthless. To lie to me that all these failures were somehow not my fault.

I turned off the shower and dressed quickly. My body felt battered and bruised again, and the ache in my head had centralized where my jaw met my temple. Opening and closing my mouth felt like moving an unhinged joint.

When I rejoined Dad and Susan in the living room, they hushed their conversation. My father, with his surgically altered face, the man I hadn’t seen in two decades, was still sitting on the coffee table.

“Are you ready to talk now?” Dad said.

“No, I’m not. To tell you the truth, I’m not sure if I care about you, or IntelliCraft, or any of this anymore. I feel like I used to be able to trust people, but all of you have ruined that forever. I don’t give a shit about this anymore. I’m tired of failing and everything I do ending in ruin.”

Dad shook his head. “Not everything is in ruin. I’m sorry about Omar, but you’re still alive. That’s what counts.”

“I just want to go home and be with my wife, because I’m going to be a dad soon. I can’t put myself in danger like this anymore.”

He looked me up and down. “Is that my shirt you’re wearing?”

I nodded. “I lost all my clothes. Since you were dead, I didn’t think you’d mind.”

“Am I really about to become a grandfather?” he said. “I’ve always wondered what that would feel like.”

“It’s none of your business, that’s what it’s going to feel like. I’m guessing that with the whole faking-your-death and erasing-your-past business, you’re not going to be popping by anytime soon to babysit.”

“I understand,” Dad said. “But you should know this: everything I did, I did to keep all of us safe. Kareem was not the pure man you think he was. Neither was his brother. What they wanted to do… it would have ruined many lives. Trusting them almost got you killed, and what do you have to show for it?”

Given the choice between trusting my dad, and trusting in the things magical mystery man Kareem had told me, the path seemed obvious.

“I don’t know if I believe you. About anything,” I said. Then I asked Susan, “can you take me to the nearest airport, please?”

 

***

 

Susan pulled into the short-term parking at Brownsville/South Padre airport. As I reached out to grab the door handle, she put a hand on my arm.

“I’m sorry about all this,” she said. “I know you’ve been through a lot. You should never have been involved in the first place.”

I looked her straight in the eye. “What was on the memory card Dad smashed?”

She pursed her lips. “If you knew the truth, it would only get worse for you.”

“Fine. What happens next?”

“Go home and be with your wife. Maybe think about taking her on a long vacation, the kind where you don’t tell anyone where you’re going. Forget about us, and let us deal with it. We’re taking steps here, and it’s best if you stay out of it.”

“I can do that. I didn’t ask for any of this, and I don’t know why I keep involving myself in it.”

She patted my arm, and I left her there. Left her and Heath Candle in Brownsville, where I hoped I’d never see or hear from either of them ever again.

After buying my plane ticket, I had no choice but to sit and wait for the red-eye with no internet to entertain me, since my laptop and my phone were left behind at the house in Three Rivers, where the bodies of Vanessa and Carl were probably still bleeding. Maybe it wouldn’t look so good for my possessions to be found there when the cops eventually came looking for them. Or would they even come?

When I was hiding out in the shack, Jed had told Glenning that he was a sheriff. If he’d told the truth about that, then my laptop and cell phone being at the scene of two murders could land me in a serious amount of trouble.

I had an urge to get a rental car and drive back up there, but what if the place was already crawling with cops? A little late for second-guessing now.

I had two hours to kill before my flight, so I tried to nap. Didn’t work. Instead, I let my brain run wild for a bit, attempting to process everything that had happened. My dad and Kareem had founded IntelliCraft over twenty years ago, and then they’d had a falling out. A war between them, for some reason. Kareem had wanted to do
something
that my dad had been trying to stop him from doing. Dad had said there were four people who’d founded the company. Who were the other two?

I reminded myself that I didn’t care about this stuff anymore. I just wanted to go home. But, if that were true, why couldn’t I stop thinking about it? Maybe I should have taken the chance to get answers from my dad while I still could.

But, then again, how could I trust anything that man told me?

No. Not my problem. Not my circus, not my monkeys.

When I was finally able to board the flight, I’d been hovering on the edge of sleep, my eyelids as weighty as garage doors. I went through the boarding process in a half-dream state, showing ID, scanning my ticket, waiting in one line, then another, then finally getting the window seat above the wing of the plane. Picked up the in-flight magazine and flipped a couple pages, started to read something about the best sushi restaurants in Jacksonville.

I blinked, fell in and out of sleep as the plane started to fill around me. A parade of teenagers in identical soccer uniforms made up about half the passengers. Then a woman with thick glasses sat in the aisle in my row, but the middle seat next to me stayed unoccupied as the rest of the seats went from empty to occupied.

Would I get a little extra legroom? Hope welled up inside me at the idea of such a small victory. Seemed like something I deserved after everything I’d been through.

My head felt heavy and my eyes rolled back in my head. I slipped on my seatbelt, then let my eyes close as my head lolled forward, then to the side. Passenger conversations around me blurred into background noise.

When I woke, someone was sitting down in the middle seat next to me. Damn, just my luck. As he got situated, I peeked, but a baseball cap obscured my view.

With a groan, he settled into his seat, then turned to me and smiled.

Thomason, IntelliCraft’s Director of Sales.

“Hey there, Candle. Long time, no see.”

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

CHAPTER TWO

 

 

The man who, along with now-dead Glenning, had kidnapped me and taken me to the top of a mountain in Eldorado Canyon just a few weeks ago, was sitting next to me on the plane. Frank Thomason, IntelliCraft’s Director of Sales.

My hand shot to my seatbelt buckle, and Thomason grabbed my arm. “Easy there, Candle. The doors to the plane are closed. Neither one of us is leaving, so let’s not do anything stupid.”

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