watch yourself.â
âYouâre giving Monroe too much credit,â Jon said. âHeâs a beer short of a six-pack.â He pursed his lips. âMaybe two beers short of a six-pack.â
âHe may be, but heâs dangerous. You got him on a trafficking charge. But heâs worked his way out of numerous other charges including one daylight robbery. That one was committed as a juvyââ which meant a juvenile offender ââand he only drew a few days in detention before he turned eighteen.â
âYes, he managed to get first offender status and kept his nose clean until his record was wiped,â Jon said. âBut he was twenty-five when he was accused the next time, and he got a good attorney, courtesy of his boss, Hank Sanders, the racketeer brother of Senator Will Sanders whoâs up on murder charges.â He smiled. âHank turned out to be a good guy. He saved my brotherâs butt in the standoff with Jay Copper, just after Mac and Winnie came back from their honeymoon.â
âSome honeymoon, trying to convince Senator Will Sandersâs wife, Pat, to tell what she knew about the murder of Kilravenâs wife and little girl,â Marquez amended.
âWhich she did, but Copper ordered the murder of Macâs wife,â Jon said somberly. âHe said that the perp,the late Dan Jones, wasnât ordered to kill Melly, Macâs little girl, but I never believed him. One of his idiot goons turned stateâs evidence and verified that Copper told Jones to get both the wife and child. Heâll pay for Mellyâs death, and Monicaâs. The D.A. has asked for the death penalty.â
âGood luck to him,â the other man said cynically. âJuries donât like to order it.â
Jon nodded. âI had to sit in a death-penalty case once. You think, this guy should die for the crime he committed. But when you put your vote to it, and realize that youâre ordering the guyâs death, well thatâs a whole other thing.â
âA matter of personal conscience,â Marquez agreed. âA very hard decision to make, for any human being.â He studied Jon. âBut itâs you Iâm worried about. Monroe may be an idiot, but he has an uncle whoâs knee-deep in the local mob, Jay Copper, and a brother-in-law whoâs been in and out of prison for years, Bart Hancock. Hancock walked on accessory charges linked to Jay Copperâs arrest, because the tape Winnie got of Copper telling the story of the murders went mysteriously missing. Hancock has been implicated in two murder-for-hire plots and never got much past arraignment. He makes sure there are no witnesses.â
âThereâs something in the back of my mind about Hancock. Wait! Now I remember,â Jon said. âJoceline dug up some information on him that was supposedly classified. Donât askââ he held up a hand ââshe has sources.Anyway, Hancock was in spec ops in Iraq during the 2003 invasion.â
âThatâs right. He worked with a private contractor. There was a big stink about civilian casualties, and Hancock was in it up to his neck. His buddy was an officer in the private corporation that ran the coverts, and he cleaned up Hancockâs record so he wasnât prosecuted.â He sighed heavily. âThey say he killed children and enjoyed it.â
Jonâs jaw set. âWhat a sweetheart.â
âIsnât he, though?â
âYes.â
Jonâs mind was busy. The man who died linked to Mellyâs murder, Dan Jones, was a bit of a mystery. Jon had always wondered if the man was really going to confess that heâd done it. He didnât seem the sort to kill children. But Jay Copperâs spec ops nephew, he had been friends with the perp, and the accomplice whoâd gone with the perp to commit the murders was never found. What ifâ¦?
âYouâve remembered
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