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    Special Agent Tom Lange Box Set


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      SPECIAL AGENT TOM LANGE

      Books 1-3

      T.J. BREARTON

      CLICK ON THE BOOK YOU WANT TO GO TO:

      Book 1: DEAD GONE

      Book 2: TRUTH OR DEAD

      Book 3: DEAD OR ALIVE

      CONTENTS FOR ALL BOOKS

      BOOK 1: DEAD GONE

      Acronyms used in the book

      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

      CHAPTER TWENTY-FOUR

      CHAPTER TWENTY-FIVE

      CHAPTER TWENTY-SIX

      CHAPTER TWENTY-SEVEN

      CHAPTER TWENTY-EIGHT

      CHAPTER TWENTY-NINE

      CHAPTER THIRTY

      CHAPTER THIRTY-ONE

      CHAPTER THIRTY-TWO

      CHAPTER THIRTY-THREE

      CHAPTER THIRTY-FOUR

      CHAPTER THIRTY-FIVE

      CHAPTER THIRTY-SIX

      CHAPTER THIRTY-SEVEN

      CHAPTER THIRTY-EIGHT

      BOOK 2: TRUTH OR DEAD

      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

      CHAPTER TWENTY-FOUR

      CHAPTER TWENTY-FIVE

      CHAPTER TWENTY-SIX

      CHAPTER TWENTY-SEVEN

      CHAPTER TWENTY-EIGHT

      CHAPTER TWENTY-NINE

      CHAPTER THIRTY

      CHAPTER THIRTY-ONE

      CHAPTER THIRTY-TWO

      CHAPTER THIRTY-THREE

      CHAPTER THIRTY-FOUR

      CHAPTER THIRTY-FIVE

      CHAPTER THIRTY-SIX

      CHAPTER THIRTY-SEVEN

      CHAPTER THIRTY-EIGHT

      CHAPTER THIRTY-NINE

      CHAPTER FORTY

      CHAPTER FORTY-ONE

      CHAPTER FORTY-TWO

      Acknowledgments

      BOOK 3: DEAD OR ALIVE

      CHAPTER ONE: EYE OF THE STORM

      CHAPTER TWO: THREE DAYS LATER

      CHAPTER THREE: INTO THE BARGAIN

      CHAPTER FOUR: ON THE JOB

      CHAPTER FIVE: GIBSONTON

      CHAPTER SIX: PAIN BODY

      CHAPTER SEVEN: ELIMINATING POSSIBILITIES

      CHAPTER EIGHT: A HUNK OF BREAD IN A KOI POND

      CHAPTER NINE: ROTATING MUSCLE GROUPS

      CHAPTER TEN: JUST HAVING A LOOK

      CHAPTER ELEVEN: PANTHER COUNTRY

      CHAPTER TWELVE: HIDING PLACES

      CHAPTER THIRTEEN: PURE SPANISH HORSES

      CHAPTER FOURTEEN: THE GIRL

      CHAPTER FIFTEEN: CRUSHER

      CHAPTER SIXTEEN: CLOSING IN

      CHAPTER SEVENTEEN: THE BUS TO ABILENE

      CHAPTER EIGHTEEN: TAMPA

      CHAPTER NINETEEN: THE RIVER’S EDGE

      CHAPTER TWENTY: CAVES

      CHAPTER TWENTY-ONE: SECRETS

      CHAPTER TWENTY-TWO: REMEMBER THE MUSIC

      ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

      ALSO BY T.J. BREARTON

      FREE KINDLE BOOKS

      Glossary of Police Departments

      BOOK 1: DEAD GONE

      A gripping crime thriller full of twists

      T.J. BREARTON

      First published 2016

      Joffe Books, London

      This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, businesses, organizations, places and events are either the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, events or locales is entirely coincidental. The spelling used is American English except where fidelity to the author’s rendering of accent or dialect supersedes this. The author asserts their moral right to be identified as the author of this work.

      ©T.J. Brearton

      Please join our mailing list for free kindle crime thriller, detective, mystery, and romance books and new releases.

      www.joffebooks.com

      Acronyms used in the book

      Florida

      FDLE – Florida Department of Law Enforcement aka the “State Bureau”

      IFS – Investigations and Forensic Science (part of FDLE)

      Everglades County

      CID – Criminal Investigations Division

      CSB – Crime Scene Bureau (part of CID)

      VNB – Vice Narcotics Bureau (part of OCD – Organized Crime Division)

      General

      SOCE – State Officer Certification Exam

      ADA – Assistant District Attorney

      NamUs – National Missing and Unidentified Persons System

      Medical / Forensic

      LCN – Low Copy Number (type of DNA profiling)

      STR – Short Tandem Repeats (method for matching DNA samples)

      ABO – Blood-type groups

      CODIS – Combined DNA Index System

      TOD – Time of Death

      SAFE – Sexual Assault Forensic Evidence

      Also known as: SAEC – Sexual Assault Evidence Collection

      For Joy.

      CHAPTER ONE

      MONDAY

      Tom was awake when the alarm clock buzzed. He switched it off, stared up at the twirling ceiling fan a moment and then went downstairs.

      The sign hanging on the living room wall read: Congratulations, Tom!

      He collected a couple of empty beer bottles and stuck them in the recycling bin. The coffee was already brewing, the timer set for six.

      He stood in his sweatpants, watching the coffee drip into the pot, considering a half-remembered dream.

      Tommy . . . Tommy help me.

      His cell phone rang in the bedroom, snapping him out of it. He bounded back up the stairs and grabbed the phone.

      “Lange,” he answered.

      “Special Agent Lange. Good morning.” It was Director Turnbull.

      “What can I do for you, sir?”

      “Well, Lange, looks like day one for you is going to be a big one.”

      “Okay, sir. I’m ready.”

      “Are you familiar with Paddle Creek Tours?”

      “No . . .” Tom found his notebook next to his badge on the dresser and plucked a pen from the coin dish. He scribbled down Paddle Creek.

      “They do kayaking. Like canoeing, but one person per boat. You know where Rookery Bay is?”

      “Yes, sir.” Rookery Bay was a nature preserve, a large mangrove estuary fed by the Gulf of Mexico.

      “Okay, good,” Turnbull said. “Shell Island Road. You drive past the Research Reserve headquarters. Down a half mile on the right is where you want to be. Special Agent Blythe will meet you there.”

      “Blythe, sir?” He wrote that name down, too.

      “Yes. She’s who yo
    u’re sharing the field office with, you’ll be taking your cues from her.” Turnbull paused. Tom heard police radio chatter in the background. Whatever was going on, it sounded big. “A body was found in the bay. Everglades County Sheriff’s Office is already there. Check in with Blythe, I’ll speak to you later. Good luck.”

      Turnbull hung up before Tom could ask any more questions. A body in the bay. He shed his sweatpants and took a fast shower. He dressed in a gray suit, stood at the dresser and clipped his badge to his belt. He looked at the framed photograph while he straightened his collar. Him and Nick in the picture, just kids, many years before.

      Tom went to his nightstand and took out his service weapon, a Glock 37 Gen4. He ran through the safety procedure, then loaded a fresh mag and closed the action. He put on the belt holster, slipped the gun in and made sure the retention kept it in place.

      The condo was already getting warm as the Florida sun rose outside. He grabbed his keys off the kitchen counter and went into the adjoining garage where the old white Jeep Cherokee was sitting in the gloom. It would be his ride until he was issued a vehicle by the department.

      He jumped in and fired up the engine. When he hit the button clipped to his visor the garage door rolled open.

      He realized his hands were shaking as he gripped the steering wheel.

      Tom sat for a moment, eyes closed. He took a few deep breaths, inhaling through his nose, clearing his thoughts. Once he felt more settled and in control, he drove out into the sun-drenched morning.

      * * *

      The dirt road bisected tangles of brittle underbrush. The Jeep axles squealed and the frame rattled as Tom jounced over the potholes. He passed a speed limit sign — 10 mph — and realized he was going way too fast. He slowed, leaning over the steering wheel, peering out. The next sign was for the Rookery Bay National Estuarine Research Reserve and there was a small building tucked into the vegetation. The last sign along the road read Paddle Creek Tours. Tom could already see the flashing lights before he turned into the dirt parking area.

      Law enforcement was everywhere. Three Everglades County cruisers, several unmarked vehicles, and a truck embossed with the Reserve logo — a wading bird on stick legs. Tom found a place to park.

      As soon as his feet hit the mushy ground he realized he’d worn the wrong footwear. Dress shoes had no business in this place. The mosquitos whined past as he walked over to a tall, slender woman in her early fifties, with grayish blonde hair and angular cheekbones. At least she was wearing a suit, too. There was a badge clipped to her belt. Tom thought this must be Blythe.

      She turned to face him, holding a phone to her ear. He waited, noticing a uniformed deputy talking with a woman dressed in cargo shorts, an athletic top and wide sunhat. Tom bet the woman was a guide for Paddle Creek Tours. Beyond her, a middle-aged couple sat on a log beside the underbrush. They were wrapped in silvery emergency blankets and wore blank, shocked expressions.

      Blythe put away her phone. They stood facing the shallow water surrounded by twisty mangrove. Three kayaks were on the shore, the vessels brightly colored, top of the line. And there was a boat in the water, a flat-bottomed skiff with a small trolling motor on the back. People waded in, loading supplies in the boat. Getting ready to head out.

      “So you’re Lange.”

      “Yes, ma’am.”

      She looked at him out of the corner of her eye. “Turnbull says you got a perfect score on your SOCE.”

      Tom blushed. He didn’t like anyone talking about his certification test or his training. Turnbull also liked to call him a Boy Scout. You’re a real Boy Scout, huh, Lange? They all seemed eager to impart to Tom that the world out there was a lot different than it was in training. A lot darker. But Tom just kept silent, didn’t tell them he already knew that.

      “Nice to meet you, Special Agent Blythe.”

      She glanced down at his hand for a moment before she took it. Her grip was cool and dry, strong. She let go and pointed to another woman, short and stocky, dark hair pulled back. “That’s Detective Machado with County CID.” Machado was standing by the kayaks with a man in frumpy shorts and a dress shirt. He held a large duffel bag. “And that’s Dr. Ward, with the Medical Examiner’s Office.”

      Blythe pointed to the woman in the wide-brimmed hat. “That’s Susan Libby. She owns Paddle Creek Tours. She was taking those two . . .” And now Blythe nodded to the man and the woman seated on the log. “. . . out for a sunrise paddle. They’re the VanCotts. Libby only does the sunrise tour twice a week, Monday and Tuesday, they book well in advance.”

      “So what’s Florida Department of Law Enforcement doing here?”

      Blythe gave him a look, raising her thin eyebrows.

      He went on, “This is County jurisdiction, right? Their CID is here, they’ve got the manpower. How come we’re getting involved?”

      “Well, it’s within County boundaries, but Rookery Bay is a state-run preserve. Technically that water is state water, this reserve is partly state-funded.” She was matter-of-fact, her tone flat. “The Sheriff is working it all out with Turnbull. For now, we’re here and we’re observing.”

      Tom pulled his pad and pen from his suit coat and jotted some notes.

      Blythe said, “So, Susan Libby and the VanCotts are out for their morning paddle. There’s an osprey nest, you know, possibility of dolphin sightings. They stick pretty close to the mangrove most of the time, they go down this series of creeks . . . you’ll see.”

      The last words struck him. He’d see? Blythe was expecting him to go out with the body recovery team.

      Another vehicle pulled in, a County crime scene van, and the door slid open. Three people piled out, already dressed in wetsuits. They hauled the dive tanks and breathing regulators down to the small beach where they met with Ward and Machado. Tom watched as they spoke with one another and put on their gear.

      “Libby and the couple found the body about a quarter mile from here,” Blythe said. “They found it floating, sort of tangled up in the mangrove a bit. So we’re going to want to get it out of there, keep it as intact as possible.”

      “Man or woman?”

      Blythe looked at him directly for the first time. “Libby said there was a lot of hair floating. But we don’t know for sure yet if it’s a woman.” She turned away from him.

      “So they came back to shore and made the call?”

      “Susan Libby has a cell phone she keeps in a plastic baggie with her. Once she discovered the floater she dialed 911, who connected her with the Sheriff’s Office. That reminds me — whatever you take with you, bag it up.”

      “There’s cell coverage out here, wow.” He looked at the sky, pale blue in the morning light, a slight haze burning off. Another mosquito whined against his ear and he swatted at it. He was already feeling hot and wished he’d dressed differently.

      “There’s some coverage, yes. It’s spotty, but phones can work.” Blythe folded her arms, finished with the nickel tour and nodded to indicate Machado again.

      “Everglades County is covering the statements, including the two people over there. Getting their background, et cetera.”

      Tom gave the VanCotts one more glance. There was a hollow look in the man’s eyes. “And you want me to go out with the divers. And the medical examiner.”

      “Yes. You’re going out.” She stepped away and gave him a look up and down. “Not exactly the most appropriate outfit.”

      * * *

      Tom left his shoes and suit jacket in the Jeep and rolled his pants up around his ankles. His toes squished in the muck as he made his way down to the beach. Bottleflies skittered about in the wet, grainy sand, and he caught a fishy smell. Then he was in the water, which wasn’t much cooler than the air, like standing in warm milk.

      The divers were further out. One of them submerged, leaving a froth of bubbles, then resurfaced and gave a thumbs-up to another diver floating nearby. They both started toward the open water at the mouth of the bay.

      A conservation officer in a khaki uniform h
    eld out his hand and Tom grabbed it, then stepped aboard. The small boat was wobbly in the water and Tom quickly sat down on one of the benches. He gave the man a nod of thanks. “I’m Special Agent Lange, IFS.”

      “Randy Ramirez. Estuarine Reserve Officer. IFS . . . that’s part of the state bureau?”

      “That’s right. We handle violent crimes, among other things.” They shook hands and Tom twisted around to the other man seated near the front. “Dr. Ward? Nice to meet you.”

      Ward was lithe, somewhat effeminate, his handshake quick and light. His eyeglasses flashed in the sun as he placed a hat on his balding head. The large duffel bag was now at his feet. Beside him, a woman in an Everglades County crime lab T-shirt with a camera in her lap introduced herself as Katie Mills from the Everglades County crime scene bureau. The last person Tom met was Susan Libby, seated in the center of the boat, looking wary. Libby gave him a warm smile though, the same she probably offered her kayaking guests. Then she looked past Tom at the shore.

      Tom glanced at Blythe, standing amid the vehicles and the twirling lights of the County cruisers. There was something powerful in her posture.

      Ramirez gave the boat a shove to get it going then hopped in while Tom held on to keep his balance. He wasn’t used to boats. He didn’t grow up in Florida, on the water, or anything like this place.

      Ramirez started the small motor with the push of a button and the root-like tangles of mangrove began to slide past. Tom risked a look over the edge and saw the water rippling away from the aluminum boat.

      Blythe receded into the distance as they started on their way.

      His first day, his first case, and he got a dead body.

      CHAPTER TWO

      The sun beat down. Not quite eight o’clock in the morning and Tom could already feel its power, burning against his skin. He thought of all the crime scene workers who would be working the area for hours, examining ingresses and egresses, looking for any signs of passing, trace evidence. It would take days to cover the wetland area, and they could never really scour every inch of it. Hopefully they wouldn’t have to try, and the medical examiner would be able to ID the body.

     


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