Jake's Burn Read online




  JAKE’S BURN

  by Randy Rawls

  Published by L&L Dreamspell

  London, Texas

  Visit us on the web at www.lldreamspell.com

  Copyright 2011 by Randy Rawls

  All Rights Reserved

  Cover and Interior Design by L & L Dreamspell

  No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form by means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise without the prior written permission of the copyright holder, except for brief quotations used in a review.

  This is a work of fiction, and is produced from the author’s imagination. Any resemblance to real people is a coincidence. Places and things mentioned in this novel are used in a fictional manner.

  ISBN- 978-1-60318-339-0

  Published by L & L Dreamspell

  Produced in the United States of America

  Visit us on the web at www.lldreamspell.com

  * * * *

  PROLOGUE

  He tore two matches loose. The small print below a local bar’s slogan said, Close Cover Before Striking. He complied.

  Standing in the entryway, the crystal chandelier reflected in his eyes as he scanned the area. He blinked, fighting tears and looked upward, up the winding staircase to the second floor balcony. He frowned, then allowed his attention to shift to the study. A deep sigh of sadness escaped.

  He stared at the matches. He knew it had to be done, had to be done now. But still he hesitated, studying the lines of dampness running into the study, up the stairs, and over the sofa and the drapes. His eyes watered from the gasoline fumes that filled the room. With a shrug and a half-grimace, he struck the matches and tossed them onto the wet Persian rug, an original.

  The whoosh and tongues of flame startled him as he stooped to pick up the cans. He spun, his heart racing. The flames leapt upward, grabbing at the furniture, the drapes, the walls, everything in its path.

  Spurred by the fierce heat, he ran from the house, intent only on escape. A tree root snaked upward in the darkness and tripped him, sending him into a sprawl, the cans flying in different directions.

  From somewhere inside the house, an explosion sounded, causing him to whirl toward the blazing inferno. The flames curled from the second floor windows, greedily reaching for the third. Glass tinkled to the ground from exploding windows. The shrubbery withered, then burst into flame. The fire appeared bright enough to alert all of Eastland County.

  Gotta get out of here. That primary thought dominated the top layer of his consciousness. Fear, fear of the fire and fear of retribution occupied the second level. There was no third.

  His pickup truck loomed before him, and he yanked open the door and jumped in. A second later, he sped from the inferno he’d created.

  Only when he reached the outskirts of Cisco did he relax and breathe normally. He slowed and looked over his shoulder. The glow from the burning house atop the distant hill filled his mind.

  ONE

  My ears screamed that a phone was ringing while my brain refused to acknowledge it. I turned my head and squinted at the clock. Right brain yelled, I don’t want to be called at three in the morning. I rolled toward the lamp but a heavy lump in the middle of my chest slowed me—Striker. Anytime I sleep on my back, he thinks I’m a kitty-bed.

  My ears alerted again and Striker hissed, plunging his claws through the blanket into my chest. That sped my waking process. Who could it be? And, where’s Sweeper? My mind cleared enough for me to curse and vow not to answer.

  On the next ring, other senses yelled at me to do something to stop that nerve-scraping sound. Was it my imagination or were the rings longer and louder? Although it could cost me, I decided to let the answering machine do its job. Most of my business calls came during the morning after the wife found lipstick on her husband’s collar.

  I grabbed my blanket and rolled to my right, away from the phone. That’s when I discovered Sweeper. How can a twelve-pound cat be so heavy and fill so much space when he’s asleep? One of those quirks of nature, I suppose. I gave up on the blanket and rolled without it. Striker rode with me and ended the move sitting on my side, firmly anchored to the bed covers.

  Finally, the fourth ring. Time for the answering machine. In spite of my desire to sleep, I wondered who it was. Figured I’d listen to see if he, or maybe she, left a message. Nope, not much chance of a she. I was between shes and didn’t know any who would call me any time. Well, maybe my ex-wife, but I didn’t need to hear from her.

  The answering machine kicked on with the cute message I’d recorded. It started with the theme from Dragnet.

  Dum, de dum, dum. Edwards here, Ace Edwards, Private Investigator. I can’t take your call right now. Give me your name, number and a message. I’ll get back to you because I’m Ace Edwards, Private Eye. Dum, de dum, dum.

  It seemed humorous when I recorded it, but at three in the morning, it only sounded stupid.

  “Arty, wake up. I know you’re there.”

  That woke me. Arty. Only one guy called me that, and he only did it to get my goat. I reached over, dislodging my cats, and switched on the bedside lamp.

  Striker complained, “Meow.”

  Sweeper woke and scowled at me as he stretched. I suppose his curiosity overcame his natural inclination to sleep through anything. Well, if curiosity killed cats, I’d have lost him long ago.

  “Okay, you’re ignoring me,” the speaker phone said. “Won’t work, I know you’re there. Here’s some blue grass for your machine.”

  Fiddle-sawing in an up-tempo number raked across my nerve endings. Sweeper and Striker jumped from the bed and ran from the room. They share my tastes in music, and that does not include fiddle mutilation.

  I snatched up the phone. “Jake, you son-of-a-bitch, what do you want?”

  “Why Arty, is that any way to talk to an old friend? I’m sitting here watching my house smoke and thought of you.”

  “Don’t call me Arty.” I was set to give him hell when I realized what he’d said. “What do you mean, watching your house smoke?”

  “Just what I said. I got a call from the Eastland County Sheriff’s office about two hours ago. Said my house was burning.” He hesitated, then continued in a softer voice. “By the time I got here, it was gone. Nothing left but the chimneys—and smoking ashes.”

  I heard passion in his voice and hoped he wouldn’t cry. That I could not handle at three in the morning.

  “Wait a minute. Are you telling me your house burned?”

  “That’s why I like you, Arty. You’re really quick.”

  I resisted the impulse to pull the cord from the wall and throw the phone across the room. “Jake,” I growled through clenched teeth, “it’s three o’clock. Start over and tell me what happened. And cut off that damn blue grass. It’s stunting my cats’ growth.”

  He started to say something, but I cut him off. “House? What house? Last I heard, you live in a penthouse in Fort Worth.”

  Jake let out a sound between a laugh and a sob, but the music stopped. “I’ll keep it simple. One, my house—the one Sheila took from me. Like I said, the sheriff’s department called and told me it was on fire. Two, I drove over here. Three, it’s gone. Four, I’m sitting here watching it smoke. Five, I need an investigator. Six, you have a license, and you’re hired. Is that simple enough?”

  “Yeah. What about Sheila? Is she okay?”

  “Don’t know, haven’t seen her, don’t give a damn. She’s probably out with her latest stud. Hell, she might have torched the place herself. But if you’re so hot to know, you can find out while you’re investigating.”

  Jake is one of my oldest friends, although friend might be too strong a word. We grew up in Cisco in differ
ent neighborhoods. You might even say, different sides of the tracks. Not that I grew up poor, his family was just so damned rich.

  We met in school, but became friends on the football field. He was the star quarterback, and I was a substitute running back. Glory washed over him while my body collected bruises on the back-up team in practice and splinters during games, except for a few carries coach gave me as an appeasement gesture.

  Jake contacted me three years ago, before he went to court for his divorce. He hired me to investigate Sheila, his ex-wife. What I found wasn’t pretty, and Jake’s lawyer used it. Based on her proven poor character, the judge cut her share to only forty percent of everything Jake had. Of course, that was enough to finance a coup in a small Third World country.

  That was the last time I talked to him, and now he was on the phone at three in the morning acting like we’d spoken yesterday.

  “Hey, Arty. You still there?”

  I snapped out of my reverie. “Yeah, I’m here. Just remembering when we were in high school, and how much I loved knocking you on your butt.”

  “Yeah, in your dreams.” Jake’s chuckle filled me with memories of his racing past as I snatched air.

  “What do you mean when I start my investigation?” The fog of sleep had almost lifted, and I didn’t know if I liked what he said.

  “Oh, I thought you understood, Arty. I hired you to find out who torched my house.”

  He said it as if he were talking about washing his car, not that he ever did. He had too much money to get wet himself.

  “Whoa, Jake. Hold on there. You’re galloping off like a half-broke mustang. First, don’t call me Arty. Second, you haven’t hired me. I might not want the job. Third, it’s not your house, it’s Sheila’s. You just get to pay for it. And fourth, what makes you think someone torched it? What makes you think I even want your case?”

  “Hmmm. Haven’t had a chance to think you might not take the case. Like I said, I’m watching ashes.” He paused. “Not take the case? Nah, you’re hired at twice your daily rate. I’m not going to let you out of it. No matter how hard I try to spend Dad’s money, it keeps multiplying. Hell, it almost recovered from the chunk Sheila took. You’re another tax dodge. A fresh one’s always nice.”

  I had no doubt he spoke the truth.

  “Now, what was second? Oh yes, the house.” Jake kept talking without breathing, or so it seemed. “It’ll always be my house. I was waiting to buy it back from Sheila. She’d have sold. Third, oh shit, what was third?”

  I don’t know if all rich guys are so blasé about money, but Jake had always been this way—not arrogant, mind you, just blasé. “Third was what makes you think someone torched your house?”

  “One of the firemen said arson. He’s coming back to investigate. I told him I knew the best, and I’d hire him.”

  “Oh, thanks a lot,” I said, picturing the greeting I’d get from the firemen.

  “They’re expecting you. Check in at the fire station, and they’ll bring you out to the house. You’d better get moving. They start early in the country. Is a thousand a day enough?”

  I almost choked. “A thou a day?” Five hundred a day was the best I’d ever made, and that was from Jake.

  Striker and Sweeper rushed into the room and stared at me, their green eyes slitted as if daring me to turn down the money.

  “Sorry, Arty, that’s probably not enough. I know you have other cases, but I need priority. Tell you what. Get on the phone and cancel your other commitments for the next two weeks.”

  I could do that with one phone call. On Friday, I had an appointment to have the oil changed in my Chrysler convertible. I didn’t tell Jake.

  He prattled on. “Let me see. I don’t want you losing money so I’ll go to fifteen hundred a day if you promise me exclusivity for at least two weeks.”

  At this point, my memory gets foggy. I don’t remember what I said but I hope it was something intelligent. I was too busy trying to digest fifteen hundred bucks a day to remember anything. Fifteen hundred times fourteen days was…was… Hell, it was too much for me to figure, although I remembered from some dark recess in my mind that fifteen squared was two-twenty-five. Did that mean Jake was talking about twenty thousand for two weeks’ work? I decided I’d put the math off until I found my calculator.

  Whatever I said attracted the cats’ attention. Both jumped onto my lap and stared into my face, pleading with me to accept Jake’s offer, or so it seemed.

  Sweeper rubbed his back underneath my chin with his purring volume cranked to about fifty decibels. Obviously, he thought the rate was adequate. I heard myself saying, “Yeah, fifteen will do it—plus expenses.”

  “Of course, Arty.”

  I skipped telling him not to call me Arty. “What happened to your house?”

  “Don’t know any more. I think somebody torched it, and Sam agrees. Said he’d be here at first light to get started. You’d better get some rest. You remember where the fire station is, don’t you?”

  “Yeah, Jake, I remember. You didn’t really tell them I’m an expert, did you? Who’s Sam?”

  “Sure did. Said you’re a high-priced private eye now, but you used to be the backbone of the Dallas Police Department. Sam’s looking forward to meeting you.”

  “I’ll just bet he is,” I said as he disconnected.

  I sat for a moment stroking the cats and staring into the mirror. The clock’s reflection read three-thirty. “Guess I’d better hit the shower, boys. Wanna join me?”

  “Meow.” Sweeper asked.

  “Meow.” Striker echoed.

  TWO

  Cisco is a small town about halfway between Fort Worth and Abilene. The population hasn’t changed in a long time, and not much of anything else has either. It has a varied history but is now simply one of the many rest stops along Interstate 20.

  I rolled into town at seven-fifteen and drove to the fire station. There’s only one in Cisco—only one needed. After parking, I crossed and walked through the big door. A young man wearing a dark blue T-shirt with Cisco Fire Department written over the left breast threw a bag into a four-by-four. He looked young, and I assumed he was a teenage volunteer. “Excuse me, young man.”

  He turned toward me, smiled, and walked in my direction. “Can I help you, sir?”

  I could have lived without the sir, a clear indicator of what he thought of my age. “This is a wonderful old building and I don’t think it’s changed a bit since I grew up here,” I said, looking around the area where I’d spent many hours as a kid.

  “Not sure about wonderful, but it does have character, although it could use some modernizing, especially the bathrooms.” He chuckled and pointed toward two doors that showed the ravages of age. “We could use new equipment, too. Are you in town for a visit?”

  “No,” I replied, “business. I’m looking for the arson investigator. Is he here?”

  He eyed me before saying, “Arson investigator? What’d you do, come in blindfolded? This burg can’t afford an arson investigator. Heck, we can’t even afford full-time firefighters.”

  That changed my approach. “How about the fire chief? Is he here?”

  That produced another suspicious look. “Why do you want to see him? Who are you?”

  I looked at him again and saw I had misjudged his age. He wasn’t a teenager, although he couldn’t have been out of his formative years for long. Helping me figure it out was the fact he was about six inches taller and forty pounds heavier than me. He looked about six-two and over two hundred pounds. He had to be around more than nineteen years to get that big.

  I stuck out my hand. “I’m Arthur Conan Edwards. My friends call me Ace.”

  Ignoring my offer to shake, he responded, “Whuy Mistah Edwards, mah name is Sam’ul Raleigh, and ah’m jist so impressed to meet'cha.”

  The change that came over him told me my guess about my reception had been correct. At least I’d learned who Sam was—and Sam wasn’t happy. Thanks a lot, Jake.

/>   “Ah’m the countr’ boy what runs this-here far station. Shucks, ah ain’t never worked in no big city. Ah been right here since I gratiated high school. Course ah been hangin’ ’round th’ station since I wuz fourteen. You kin call me Mustah Raleigh, Fire Chief.”

  He still hadn’t offered to shake hands, and I got the impression it was not an oversight. He walked away, then turned and said over his shoulder, “You kin jist follow me over heah. We’re gittin’ ready to go out to the house whut burnt last night.”

  Wow. I knew how a postman feels when he enters a strange yard and is attacked by the family pooch. I’d gotten off to such a bad start with Sam, I punched my humility button. “Hold it a minute, Mr. Raleigh. I don’t know what you’ve heard, but I’m not a hotshot arson investigator. It’s true Jake Adams hired me, but he exaggerates. I’ll need your help all the way. Now, what say you knock off that country bumpkin accent, and let’s start over?” I stuck out my hand, offering again to shake.

  He slowly turned, facing me, no smile on his face.

  By now, I figured he knew my features well enough to paint me in oil. His attitude said he’d prefer to boil me in oil.

  “Okay. Maybe what I heard was Mr. Adams’ bluster.” He reached and shook my hand, squeezing hard. “But you can still call me Mr. Raleigh, or Chief.”

  I thought I saw a small grin after the last remark, but I couldn’t be sure. I was too busy pretending he hadn’t crushed my hand.

  A second fireman entered and spoke to Sam. “I’ll be ready as soon as I grab a doughnut.” He turned toward me. “Are you the hotshot they sent in to show us our job?”

  Sam answered before I could. “Yeah. Ace Edwards, P-I-E. That’s Private Investigator, Extraordinaire. Get your doughnut and let’s roll, we’re burning daylight.”

  While he spoke to the other fireman, I surreptitiously counted my fingers. Yeah, there were five, although two were numb.