Read No Time To Run (Legal Thriller Featuring Michael Collins, Book 1) Online
Authors: J.D. Trafford
NO TIME TO RUN
A Legal Thriller
Featuring Michael Collins
J.D. TRAFFORD
Books By J.D. Trafford
No Time To Hide (coming this winter)
"No Time To Run" Is An Amazon Kindle Top 20 Legal Thriller
WINNER OF THE NATIONAL LEGAL FICTION WRITING AWARD FOR LAWYERS
FIVE STARS
"
Michael Collins is hot, and Kermit Guillardo is a riot!"
FIVE STARS
"I stumbled onto "No Time to Run." ... It was fast paced, the characters had real depth (I agree with the other review on those points), and I didn't see the end coming. Simply, I just loved it. Thank you Amazon -- yet again you provide me content that comes out of nowhere and surprises the hell out of me."
FIVE STARS
"Fun, well-paced, and with the feel of a style that might include future books at some point, this is a great one to own."
Amazon Edition Copyright Notes and License Notes
Copyright © 2011 by J.D. Trafford
This ebook is licensed to you for your personal enjoyment only. This ebook cannot be re-sold or given away to other people. If you would like to share this book with another person, please purchase an additional copy for each person for each recipient. Thank you for respecting the work of this author.
A FORWARD FROM THE AUTHOR ABOUT THE NEW EDITION
This new edition of "No Time To Run" is dedicated to the seventy thousand people who have downloaded this book since it was initially released in the fall of 2011. I appreciate every one of you. It all started late one night as an experiment, and it turned into an Amazon bestseller. Before releasing the sequel to this book, I worked hard on this new edition. Although all of the twists and turns are still there, I wanted to make sure that it was as good as it could possibly be. I cleaned it up, and I think that I made it even better. Thank you for your support. It was the least that I could do, and I hope you enjoy it.
--J.D.
CHAPTER ONE
Inches away, Kermit Guillardo’s breakfast of hard-boiled eggs, marijuana, and salsa rode heavy on his breath.
“
Rough night?” A small piece of egg dangled from Kermit’s nest of a beard.
“
Can you give me a minute here?” Michael pushed the empty Corona bottles away from his body, closed his eyes, and laid his head back onto the sand. It was a temporary respite from the Caribbean sun and a world-class hangover.
“
Tin bird leaves in just a few ticks of the clock,
mi amigo
.” Kermit’s head bobbled. His swaying gray dreadlocks mirrored the thoughts kicking around inside. “Next flight won’t be ‘til late, so you better rise and shine, maybe fetch yourself a clean shirt.”
Michael didn’t respond. His mouth was dry, and a dozen tiny screws were inching their way into the deeper portions of his brain.
“
Andie called again.” Kermit put his hands on his hips. “She’s freaked out, man, very freaked out. Cops, like, won’t talk to her, so she’s just stirring in jail wondering what’s goin’ on an’ all.”
“
What’d you tell her?”
“
Told her you were flying out first thing. Didn’t tell her you were passed out on the beach, though.”
“
I appreciate that.” Michael sat up.
“
No problemo,
mi amigo
.” Kermit brushed away the compliment. “I’ve found that ignorance is often the key ingredient of a well-settled mind.” He nodded, agreeing with himself, then his expression turned serious. “You really a lawyer? I know you said you were and all, but … people say a whole lot of things down here.”
“
I was.” Michael touched the small scar on his cheek. “And, I guess I still am.”
Kermit nodded as his mind worked through the information. Finally, he said, “You don’t look like a lawyer.”
“
Well I clean up pretty good. You’d be surprised.”
With that, Kermit smiled wide.
“
I bet you do.” He leaned over and offered Michael his hand. Michael took it. “You know Andie’s like a sister to me.” Kermit pulled Michael to his feet.
“
I know.”
“
Tendin’ bar here and taking care of this little resort is the only job I’ve ever managed to keep, not that Andie couldn’t have fired my ass, like, a million times by now …” Kermit’s voice drifted away with the thought, and then circled back. “She didn’t do what they say she did, man. Not my Andie.”
“
I know she didn’t.”
“
You gonna straighten it out?”
Michael started to answer, and then stopped. He had only been a lawyer six years before the incident that caused his premature retirement from the practice of law, but he had been asked that qu
estion hundreds of times by clients. Usually the answer was a hedge. He knew not to commit ― the cops won, even when they shouldn’t, and there were some problems that even the best lawyer in the world couldn’t fix ― but, this time was different. It wasn’t
a client. It was Andie, a woman who had stopped him just short of the edge. A woman he loved.
“
I’m going to bring her back.” Michael looked Kermit in the eye. His voice was steady, although everything else inside churned. “Whatever it takes.”
CHAPTER TWO
He had sworn that he would never practice law again. Michael John Collins had quit his job. His Brooks Brothers’ suits and silly striped ties were burned in a glorious back-alley bonfire, and he had given away just about everything else he owned. He had dropped out, and remained dropped out, living in the beautiful mess of shacks and huts, about an hour south of Cancun, that comprised the Sunset Resort & Hostel.
Listed in The Lonely Planet guidebook under “budget accommodations,” the Sunset promised and delivered: "An eclectic clientele of backpackers, hippies, and retirees that is a little more than a half-mile down the road from the big chains, but a million miles away in every other sense."
It was just what Michael had needed. He couldn’t really say whether he had fallen in love with Andie first, and then signed the overpriced lease agreement, or vice versa. But, either way, he had been an easy mark. Hut No. 7 at the Sunset Resort & Hostel had become his home, more than any place else he had ever lived.
As Michael finished gathering his toiletries and a change of clothes, he picked up the framed picture of his namesake. Growing up, his mother had hung three photographs above the dining room table in their small Boston apartment. The first picture was of Pope John Paul II. Next to it, there was a picture of President John F. Kennedy. And, the third, and most important, was a black and white photograph of the Irish revolutionary, Michael John Collins.
Michael had been named after him, and, when he was little, he would pretend that the revolutionary leader was his real father. The photograph was taken shortly before the Easter Rebellion against the British in 1916. The revolutionary was young at the time, in his mid-twenties, but the look on his face was hard and determined, with a glint of mischief.
Michael didn’t believe in politicians. And his belief in religion came and went depending on the day, but the Irish revolutionary was a constant. He had kept the photograph after his mother had died of lung cancer during his senior year of high school. The picture gave him comfort, a thin tether to the past and loose guide for the future.
He wrapped the photograph in a few shirts and placed it in his bag, ready to do battle once again.
They were getting close, Michael thought. His two worlds, past and present, were coming together. Andie was somehow caught between. As he closed his knapsack, Michael looked around Hut No. 7 and wondered whether he would ever be back.
“
You coming?” Kermit stuck his head through the open door. “We gotta shake a leg and head toward the mighty coastal metropolis of Cancun, my man. Tick-tock, tick-tock, tickity-tickity-tock.”
Michael turned toward Kermit. “I’m coming.”
He threw his knapsack over his shoulder, and took a last look at his sparse living quarters before walking out the door.
“
You seem a little gray, dude, like a long piece of putty brought to life by a bolt of lightning and a crazy-daisy scientist or two.”
Kermit reached into his pocket and removed a small plastic bag. As they walked past the Sunset’s communal bathrooms, he held the baggie in front of Michael’s face.
“
Methinks you need a little somethin’ somethin’ to soothe your troubled mind.”
Michael looked at the bag filled with a cocktail of recreational drugs, and then pushed it away. “You a dealer now?”
“
No, man,” Kermit said. “Dealers sell. I, on the other hand, give.”
“
That’s deep.” Michael walked past the Sunset’s cantina and main office, and then to Kermit’s rusted cherry El Camino. He placed his knapsack in the back, and began to open the passenger side door.
“
Hold on there, young man.” Kermit grabbed hold of Michael's shirt. “The doctor does not simply dismiss patients without providing some care.” He retrieved two light blue pills from his baggie, and stuffed them into the front pocket of Michael’s rumpled shirt. “Dos magic pills.”
Michael looked down at his pocket and wondered what the jail sentence was for possession of two Valium without a prescription. Then, he got in and closed the door as Kermit walked around the front to the driver’s side.
“
Senor Collins. Senor Collins.”
Michael looked and saw two young boys running toward them as the half
-
car/half-truck roared to life. Their names were Raul and Pace, the star midfielder and the star striker for the school soccer team. Michael was their coach.
“
Senor Collins, wait.”
“
We have to go,
mi amigo
.” Kermit shifted the El Camino into gear. “Time’s wasting.”
Michael raised his hand.
“
Hold on a minute.” He rolled down the window, and leaned outside. “Aren’t you two supposed to be in school?”
The boys stopped short of the passenger side door.
“
Heard you were leaving,” Raul avoided the question.
“
Wanted to say good-bye,” Pace said.
“
I’ll be back.” Michael tried to sound convincing.
“
You are going to help Senorita Larone?”
“
I hope so.” Michael reached into his back pocket and removed his wallet. “I’m not sure how long I’m going to be gone, but I need to hire you two for a very important job.”
The boys looked at each other. The smiles were gone. It was all business.
“
This fellow over here,” Michael nodded toward Kermit, “is going to need a little help running this place. Do you think you two can come over here after school and do what needs to be done?”
Raul and Pace nodded without hesitation.
“
But you have to go to school and study hard. If I learn that you’ve been skipping again, then that’s it. No second chances. Agreed?”
They nodded.
“
All right.” Michael handed the boys a small stack of pesos. “Be good.” Michael turned toward Kermit and tapped the dashboard. “Let’s go.”
CHAPTER THREE