The Book Store

 

THE FLYCATCHER

F. Eugene Barber

 FormatISBN Price  
This Book is Available Electronic Book (E-book Instructions)9781425961152 $ 4.95  
This Book is Available Paperback (5x8)9781425955335 $ 9.99  
About the Book

The story revolves around wealthy New England family members living near the seashore. There are strange break-in attempts, noises, a murder, a suspected murder, and a frantic fleeing to Brazil.

The story has a short historical sequence setting the lifestyle of the family going back before the American Revolution.

Also has an interesting turn in the somewhat dubious rehabilitation of a prisoner who had been given a life sentence, but an unexpected turn of events and a new Judge, places him back into the world on parole. He is somewhat re-deemed.

There is a bit of romance and a success of sorts.

About the Author

F. Eugene Barber was born on a sharecrop farm in the Midwest at the start of the Great Depression and attended a rural school with ten other students ranging from the first to the eighth grades. He worked on farms and ranches until joining the Air Force just after graduating from high school.

During the Korean War, he was a B-36 engine mechanic and Crew Chief. He later earned an AS, a BA, and an MBA, using the GI Bill. He has worked in the Aerospace industry most of his adult life and now consults on FAA and DOD projects. Mr. Barber’s most recent project was two years at the Birk Flight Test Center on Edwards AFB. He also holds a Broker/Salesman Real Estate License. He and his wife reside in Nevada.

Mr. Barber has worked and traveled around the world—North and South America, UK, Europe, Polynesia, Russia, Siberia, Finland, South Africa, the Orient, Australia, Turkey, and the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia.

Free Preview

Addison! Come here!” She was pointing at the corner of the concrete near the end of the second slider track for the door, “You should call the police.”

He grabbed his coffee cup and stepped outside, there was a small pry bar, one end was sharp and chisel shaped, and the other had a notch for pulling nails. The end of the door slider was bent. Someone had tried to pry up the stop and slide the door open.

“There is not much of a police force here, just two officers and the Chief. I hate to bother them with this. Maybe the three of them together could give a drunk ‘the bums rush’ or maybe not; they would probably need help,” he laughed lightly.

“Doesn’t this place have an alarm system? I seem to remember one when your dad lived here.”

“Yeah! However, I never use it unless I am going to be gone for a few months. I have a flat in New York—remember.”

“Hmmm. I think you better start,” she stepped off the patio onto the pebbles scattered about and looked at the darker planting soil around the shrubs.

“Christiana, I wonder why the perimeter lights didn’t come on?”

She was about to answer when two small birds fluttered out of the bushes, “Whoa! They startled me. What are they?”

“Flycatchers. They should be on their way to Brazil by now. Winter is almost here.”

“Here is a fresh footprint and it’s not yours. Now you better call the police.”

Addison looked at a placard held by a magnetic frog on the stove exhaust hood near the phone in the kitchen and dialed the village police station. After talking a moment, he pushed the button on the phone marked GATE.

Twelve minutes later, a lightly freckled, red-haired girl in her late twenties noisily showed up, riding an older Italian scooter. Addison thought it was a Vespa. The emblem was obscured by mud. It had rained along the coast last night. There was a red light and also a spotlight clamped to the handlebars.

She wore an unbuttoned, police styled jacket with a badge pinned over the left pocket. There was a 9 mm Walther stuffed into a holster on her left hip and was mounted gun butt forward. It sagged—with a full clip it weighed two pounds. Underneath the jacket was a dark gray vest-sweater—below were a pair of designer jeans with long legs. She was tall.

She introduced herself as Officer Renee Callahan, “I’m the one you talked to on the phone.” Addison thought he had been talking to a desk clerk. He felt a little twinge of guilt. He had not expected a female police officer.

Renee just smiled and pulled a notebook from the metal saddlebag over the back wheel and started asking him questions. She moved around to the sliding doors and looked at the pry tool and the footprint, “You got any plastic-wrap?”


Your Voice in Print