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The Delta Project

Mark Earnest

 FormatISBN Price  
This Book is Available Paperback (6x9)9781425903725 £ 9.09  
About the Book

Doctor Simon Roth and General George Tinley have a common dream – to create the perfect soldier.  After the atrocities of September 11, 2001, their dream gets the funding to become a reality.

 

Detective Mike Reilly is a very unlikely hero.  After spending twenty years on the meanest streets of Chicago, he ‘retired’ and joined the force in Crystal Lake.  Twice divorced and burned out by the job, all Mike wants is freedom to chase women and drink whenever he likes.

 

But when dead bodies pop up, and then disappear, Reilly is pulled into a whirlpool of deception and conspiracy that challenges all his skills and experience.  Determined to track down the engineers of the madness he uncovers, the hunter becomes the hunted.

About the Author

Mark Earnest was born in Chicago and grew up on the north side.  He eventually moved to the suburbs, two blocks at a time.  Mark was educated at the University of Illinois (Champaign and Chicago), where he earned a Bachelors Degree – Economics, Major and History, Minor.  He was on the seven year plan and actually married his high school sweetheart two years before he finished college.  That marriage, which is still intact after 22 years, is probably the smartest thing Mark Earnest ever did.

 

Travel, jobs and business activities in commercial real estate, steel manufacturing and financial services have taught Mark a lot about life on this third rock from the Sun.  He tries to not take things too seriously, but usually does.

 

Mark lives with his wife and their three sons in the Chicago metro area.

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On this sultry summer night, as Jack Thompson worked his way down the stairs into the atrium of what was now known as Round House Plaza, the building was silent.  The retail shops were closed and it was too early for the cleaning crew.  It was a scene familiar to Jack but he never got comfortable with it.  The atrium was a cavernous space, dark and foreboding at night with no light from the stores or the sun to fight the gloom.  At night, the historical charm of the Round House, yielded to silence and shadows.  Jack paused, as he had on many occasions, to linger in the past.  He watched the old switches and signal lights, now just quaint ornaments, half expecting them to come alive.  When the winds were strong, the old roof timbers creaked and groaned.  It was as if the building wanted to share her secrets.  But not tonight.  There were no whispers from the past.  Only Jack’s footsteps echoed through the Plaza as he walked toward the South Entrance.

The South Entrance was really the back door.  The leasing agents and building management staff, in their never ending quest to lure tenants, had a collective annoying habit of applying verbal window dressing to even the most mundane of real estate features.  The south door opened onto a long narrow parking lot that was bordered by the bricks of the building and a railroad track that was still very much active.  Commuter rail traffic frequently rattled the coffee cups in the conference room at Black, Hillman.  New clients got rattled themselves the first time they felt the Round House fight the force of a freight train rumbling by less than sixty feet away.  All the tenants told their customers, and each other, it was just part of the Round House ambience.  The railroad and the Round House had a love-hate relationship.

The silence followed Jack outside.  The air was still and heavy.  He waited a few moments for his eyes to adjust to the darkness.  The lot was poorly lit.  The owner of the Plaza had given up replacing the lights that local high school kids made a game of breaking.  He didn’t like parking here but the lot on the other side of the building was twice as far from his office and when he was late for an appointment it made a difference.

Jack’s pickup truck was the only vehicle in sight.  There were no kids or bums hanging around and he breathed a little easier.  Crystal Lake, Illinois was not exactly a high crime area but having grown up in Chicago, Jack took nothing for granted.

Looking more down than up to avoid tripping in cracks and potholes in the pavement, Jack moved toward his vehicle.  The only sound came from his heels crunching the pebbles that had broken free of the worn asphalt.  When Jack was within fifteen feet of his truck, he pressed the un-lock button on his alarm control.  He heard the familiar click of the door locks releasing.  The interior cab light came on – a beacon in the night to guide him.  The light allowed him to look up from the ground.   Then Jack Thompson’s blood ran cold and he was quite sure his heart would burst.  There was a man sitting in the driver seat of his truck.

The mind and body can do strange things when a massive dose of adrenaline is released into the human physiological system.  But the reactions can be distilled down to fight or flight.  Psychiatrists and endocrinologists can debate ad nauseum about the reasons why, but the bottom line is that you find out what you are made of when it happens.

Jack Thompson froze like a statue.  And for what seemed like eternity, he stared at the truck and the man sitting where Jack was supposed to be.  Jack had backed into the parking space that morning and was now standing on the passenger side.  The man in the truck had his head turned slightly left as if he was watching or waiting for someone or something from the west end of the lot.

Is it possible that he doesn’t see me, Jack asked himself?  He remained still as stone.

The initial shock wave dissipated slightly and Jack’s mind raced for what to do next.  Was the guy trying to steal the truck?  And what the hell was he looking at?  But there was something else; something was not right.  The man behind the wheel had not moved – at all.

In the seconds that passed while Jack Thompson groped for answers and fought for control, the cab light went off.  This begged another question.  Why did the man in the truck not appear startled when the light went on?  More seconds; more silence.  Nothing.

Standing in the muggy darkness of the deserted parking lot, Jack began to wonder if he was just seeing things.  Had his eyes played tricks on him?  Did his imagination just work him over?  Was there really someone in the truck?  More seconds; more silence.  Jack came to the conclusion that he had only one choice.  He pressed the unlock button a second time.  The light went on as commanded and the man was still there - still not moving.

Feeling as if he had been in the parking lot for hours, fear gave way to curiosity and Jack moved around the front of the truck.  He watched for signs of movement.  Nothing.  Moving more quickly now, praying the light would not time out, Jack rounded the left headlight and stood face-to-face with his tormentor.  The tingling in Jack Thompson’s fingers and the pounding in his chest came back.  The man behind the wheel of his pickup truck was dead.

The light went out again but this time Jack was moving.  He ran for his life back to the South Entrance and tried, successfully, to squelch a scream that was rising from his bowels.  He never looked back.  Not even when he dropped his keys and fumbled with the lock.