Chronic Fear

Chronic Fear by Scott Nicholson

Book: Chronic Fear by Scott Nicholson Read Free Book Online
Authors: Scott Nicholson
about twenty more feet, almost taunting its attacker, and then vanished in a thick tangle of laurels.
    Roland gave chase for about fifty yards, lost from Gundersson’s view but traceable by the commotion. Roland apparently gave up at that point and returned to the clearing, where he brushed twigs and leaves from his feet.
    You have to admire the little critter. Even in danger, it still takes the time to double back and trick out its scent so it can’t be followed.
    That was probably a good lesson for federal intel agents as well. Gundersson wondered if he’d been diligent in covering his trek from the tree to his camp, as well as a couple of other reconnaissance points he’d established—a massive tumble of granite slabs on the south side of the cabin and a dense thicket of rhododendron near the chicken shed.
    But he was more of a desk jockey than anything, a little out of shape, with curly, unkempt hair that didn’t fit the ramrod stereotype, and a freckled complexion. Nobody would mistake him for a secret agent of any kind, and someone spying him in the tree would have taken him for a redneck poacher. Hell, he’d barely even made it up the tree, skinning his elbow in the process.
    He probably had been a little less careful than he would have been on a real assignment, checking up on an alleged KKK militant or scouting transfer students from the Middle East. And mistakes like that could get you killed. Mistakes like that were why the clandestine service was needed in the first place.
    “Did you get it?” Wendy asked from the porch.
    “No,” Roland called back, irritated.
    Roland bent and stirred around in the leaves a little, plucking something from the ground where the fox had been. Still clutching the pistol, but relaxed now, he headed back to the cabin.
    When he reached the porch, Gundersson raised the glasses. He could see the feathers in Roland’s hand as Wendy reached for them.
    Fox must have been raiding the henhouse.
    The couple went back inside the cabin. It was time for breakfast. Gundersson was hungry himself. Eggs sounded real good.
    But he’d be eating out of a can instead.
    He made his way down the tree and, taking a hint from the fox, he navigated a new route back to his camp so that he wouldn’t create a trail that Roland might follow.
    Sly as a fox. I hope I’m quick enough to dodge four bullets when my time comes .

CHAPTER TEN
     
    “Morgan!”
    Mark snapped alert. His Basic Law Enforcement Training instructor was in his ear, leaning into the sedan.
    “Yes?” Mark asked, avoiding the automatic “sir” he was compelled to add. While most of the students were in their early twenties, Mark was close to the same age as Derrick Frady, a former sheriff’s deputy who’d lost his job during a political housecleaning. Frady, who made up for his diminutive stature with a militaristic zeal, was of course nicknamed “Frady Cat” by the students, but none of them dared call him that to his square, flinty face.
    “The suspect just ran another car off the road during the chase. It looks like a probable PI. What do you do?”
    “PI” was the police code for “personal injury.” Mark was faced with the choice of continuing his pursuit of the suspect or serving the public he was sworn to protect.
    Well, I haven’t sworn anything yet. I still have another two hundred hours of training to go.
    Mark figured that a real cop faced with such a dilemma would punch the accelerator and indulge in the adrenaline rush of a high-speed chase. Because that was Mark’s first impulse, he figured it was probably the wrong one.
    “What’s the Ten-Twenty of my backup?” Mark asked. He was in the back parking lot of Durham Tech, behind the wheel of a dummied-up police cruiser. The car sported a two-way radio, siren, bar lights, and all the accessories of a real cop car. It even had the black-and-white, two-toned paint job, although it bore no emblem or insignia of any kind.
    “Half a mile behind, but the

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