Barry Rivers Crove his first rig when he was ten years old. Then life took him far from his Cajun roots and his dad's trucking business. A war, a busted marriage, a twilight hitch in Washington—and suddenly the ex-Special Forces hero was back in Louisiana to take on his father's worst enemies. Rivers won the war, but lost the last battle, when the only woman he had everBarry Rivers drove his first rig when he was ten years old. Then life took him far from his Cajun roots and his dad's trucking business. A war, a busted marriage, a twilight hitch in Washington—and suddenly the ex-Special Forces hero was back in Louisiana to take on his father's worst enemies. Rivers won the war, but lost the last battle, when the only woman he had ever loved was killed by a bomb blast meant for him. Now Rivers is alive in a hospital, but his identity has been destroyed and all he has left is his rage and his dog named "Dog." That makes him the perfect man to become the perfect secret warrior, chosen by the U.S. President himself. Climbing up into his Kenworth, he points the big rig toward Kentucky mining country, where a depraved family is raping, killing, and stealing everything in sight. For Rivers, the mission is clear: be judge, jury, and executioner. But if he takes one step over the line, he'll be dead.
Live Free. Read Hard.
Release date:
April 28, 2020
Publisher:
Pinnacle Books
Print pages:
204
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His natural birth came in a New Orleans hospital. He was the son of a truck driver and a housewife. He was named Barry. His mother died when he was just a boy. He could but barely remember her. He was Irish on his mother’s side, Cajun French from his father.
Barry Rivers could drive an eighteen-wheeler by the time he was ten.
He graduated from high school at sixteen, went to college for a couple of years, and then, bored by it all, went into the army. He spent his time in Vietnam as captain of an A-Team, Special Forces. When he left active duty, he stayed in the Reserves while finishing his education and driving a rig part-time for his father. He got married, fathered two kids, and then was divorced, his wife taking the children and cloaking herself behind a wall of old Eastern money. By then, Barry was president of a consulting firm — civilian weapons expert for the Defense Department — and making a lot of money. No serious relationships since his ugly divorce; he didn’t have time
Then he decided to go home, back to New Orleans, to take a short vacation and see his father, Big Joe Rivers.
But he found his father in all sorts of trouble: mob trouble, so it first appeared. Turned out the two men behind it all were Barry’s brother and Barry’s own partner in business.
His brother eventually went insane. Barry, months later killed his partner, Jack Morris.
After he arrived in New Orleans, Barry took a leave of absence from his company and took over Rivers Trucking. He didn’t know that agents from the Treasury and Justice departments were setting him up for a fall.
But he’d survived bad falls before.
Barry had slipped back into trucking with ease. Then he met Kate Sherman. Tiny, blond, very pretty. One hell of a truck driver. Barry and Kate would marry.
Then a bomb planted in Barry’s pickup truck, intended to kill him, killed Kate instead. The blast landed Barry in a hospital in New York State. He would lie in a coma for months. When he came out of it, he would learn he had been reborn.
Barry Rivers was officially listed as dead.
He had undergone many operations and much intensive therapy, mentally and physically. One side of his face had been completely reworked, altering his appearance. His smashed nose had been rebuilt and reshaped. The bomb had not killed him, but it had come close.
Barry learned that he was dead, buried beside his wife, Kate, in a New Orleans cemetery.
“You’re dead, Mister Rivers,” he was informed. “Your package has been pulled by Central Records. Your social security number retired. Your life insurance paid off. You no longer exist.”
That took some getting used to. But Barry knew why it was happening to him.
He had met the President of the United States. Man was just as tough as he looked. “Country has gone to hell, Barry,” the Man told him. “The creeps and punks are winning the fight. Sorry for the blunt talk, but that’s the way I feel about it.”
“Me, too, Mister President.”
The Man had smiled. “Yeah, I know. You want to help wipe the puke off the Constitution and the flag of the United States?”
“Do I have a choice?”
“Sure. But hear me out first.”
“Go ahead.”
“If you don’t want the job, you’re suddenly located in a hospital where you’ve been in a coma for months. You’re back to life.”
“If I decide to do this … I’m a one-man wrecking crew?”
“Anywhere you can take an eighteen-wheeler.”
“And I will be hauling real loads?”
“Most of the time.”
He had lost everything. His wife, his business … he didn’t even look like the same person. “I suppose the boys in the three-piece suits have a fancy code name all picked out for me?”
“Several have been suggested.”
“Call me Dog.”
“I like it. Any particular reason for that name?”
“I read a book once about a dog team. The government was supposed to have a kill team that was called the Dog Team.”
“We did, before the liberals started stomping on honkies and the press decided they wanted to run the country.”
Barry laughed aloud. This old boy had his finger on the problem all right. “I put the shots where I think they should go?”
“That’s it in a nutshell. You’ll be judge, jury, and executioner. But if you get out of control, you’ll be dead within twenty-four hours. Do you understand that?”
“Perfectly clear. What happens when you leave office? This is your last term.”
“Everything is set up. Doesn’t make any difference who sits in the Oval Office. They can’t stop you.” He smiled. “They won’t know anything about you.”
“How does it work?”
“You really want to know, Dog?”
Barry gave that some thought. He finally concluded that the less he knew, the better off he’d be. “Forget I asked.”
“Fine. After this meeting, we will never again meet. Your contact will be either Jackson or Weston. You remember them?”
Barry nodded.
The Man said, “I do not know you. I have never heard of you. I never want to hear from you.”
“Fine with me.”
“Anywhere there is trouble, is where you’ll go. You might be sent there. You might decide to go on your own. Most of the time, you’ll make you own decisions.”
“Good.”
“I thought you’d like that.”
“Weapons and high-tech backup equipment?”
“Anything the government has — short of nuclear weapons — can and will be provided for you. All you have to do is ask.”
“I’m liking it more and more.”
“You’ll be contracted to the government. You’ll be ramroding an SST.”
“I figured as much.”
“You won’t reconsider and have a partner?”
“I have a partner.”
“Who?”
“My dog. Dog.”
“Lone wolf all the way, huh?”
“I like it that way.”
“You might be asked to give up your life. Do you fully understand that?”
“Yes. If that happens, I want Dog cared for.”
“I’ll make sure that all concerned understand that.”
Barry and Dog walked out of the hospital and toward a midnight-blue Kenworth parked across from the hospital grounds.
Barry made a visual inspection of the rig.
Midnight blue conventional with silver pinstriping. Smoked windows — legal. The best sound system on the market. Twin airhorns and twin remote-controlled spots. Forty-channel CB that with a switch could be boosted up enough to talk coast to coast … almost. Steer Safe stabilizers. Quartz halogen driving lights. Airglide 100 suspension. Alcoa aluminum 10-hole Budd wheels. Fuller Roadranger 13-speed transmission. The differentials were 3.73 Rockwells SQHP. Fontaine fifth wheel. Michelin steel-belt tires, 1100 by 24.5 tubeless. Air dryer for air brake. The mill was a 350 Cummins with Horton fan clutch. Jake brake. The sleeper was a VIP walk-in, robin’s-egg-blue interior. The bunk was Electro-warmth mattress with mirrors and 12-volt TV.
Dog ran around in circles, eager to be on the road once more.
And the memories came flooding almost painfully back to Barry …
The dog sat by the Kenworth as if it had found a home. But he did not wag his tail at their approach.
“Oh, Barry!” Kate said. “Look!” she pointed.
The animal was a husky, with perhaps some Siberian and malamute mixed in. The eyes were wolf-yellow, and mean-looking.
Kate knelt down and held out her hands. “Come on, boy,” she urged.
The animal came to her, allowing the pretty lady to pet him.
“What’s that on his collar?” Barry asked.
Kate loosened the wire that held the worn piece of paper. “A note.” She read it aloud. “Goddamn dog bites. You find him, you keep him. He’s two years old. Shots are due this fall. I named him Dog.”
Barry tried very hard not to think about Kate. He was not very successful at it. He missed her terribly. And knew he always would, to one degree or another.
Barry helped the husky in and closed the door, settling down behind the wheel. He picked up the package lying on the floorboards.
He hesitated only briefly before opening the package. His new life was contained within the thick package. It was a beginning.
He carefully opened the packet. New York State driver’s license. Barry Rivera. He had been told it was a real address. He had never been there.
The Kenworth was his home. From now on. Forever. Until he died — or was killed. There was no retirement plan for Barry Rivera or Dog.
And not much of a choice for either man or animal.
He checked the credit cards. Dozens of them. More than a hundred. Cards for stores he’d never heard of. Chains in every state of the Union. He would never want for anything. The bills would be spread out over dozens of federal agencies. If he needed cash, he could use one of the many bank cards available. No credit limit on any card.
Barry looked older than his years. Something during his coma, gray had crept into his hair, which was salt and pepper now. The operations had changed his looks forever. Even Dog had changed. He was no longer the playful animal Kate had found in that truck stop parking lot. Dog looked savage, and could be just that.
“Going to be interesting, Dog.”
Dog growled, rumbling deep in his throat.
Sitting in the Kenworth, Barry looked at Dog. Dog spoke to him in that funny-odd husky way. Doggy talk, Kate had called it.
Barry pushed Kate from his mind. “You ready to roll, Dog?”
Dog was ready.
Whoever had placed the packet in the cab had cranked the big diesel, warming it up for Barry. Barry checked his gauges and slipped the rig into gear.
Dog and Dog pulled out.
He had been on the road for two months. No action yet. He had driven to Louisiana and seen his brother. His brother was a ranting, raving loony … and would be that way until the day he died. Barry had iced his ex-partner and for weeks had been working the roads in his SST. Safe Secure Transport. His first destination had been St. Louis. But he was paged in a truck stop and found out it was just a normal routine run, carrying some mysterious government cargo.
Now he was sitting in a truck stop just outside St. Louis, drinking coffee and listening to the other drivers talk.
He listened to them talk about what coops were open and which ones were closed. Listened to them jaw about the new 65-mph speed limit, and how they could pick up another hundred miles a day with it … maybe then they’d break even.
Barry felt eyes on him and lifted his own, meeting the gaze of the man across the U-shaped counter.
“Howdy,” the man said.
Had to come sooner or later, Barry. Running into someone he’d known, back in his other life. Barry nodded his head in acknowledgment.
“I seen you pull in. That’s a damn nice rig.”
“If you’re gonna go broke, might as well do it first class,” Barry said with a smile.
“Ain’t that the truth! I didn’t mean to stare. It’s just that you remind me of a fellow I used to know.”
And I know you, too, Beer-Butt. “Oh?”
“Yeah. Fellow name of Barry Rivers.”
“Didn’t I read something about him; hear it on the TV? Something about his truck blew up or something like that. Some time back.”
“Yeah. Up in Virginia. His wife’s name was Kate. Sweetest little girl you ever did see.”
“Shut your damn mouth about Kate!” another trucker said. “I knew her, too. Poor little thing. Let the dead lie.” He shook his head and grimaced, then smiled at Beer-Butt. “Sorry, Buddy. Forget it. Kate was special to a lot of us.”
But more to me, Barry thought. So much, much more to me.
Kate had been loved and cherished by truckers from coast to coast, border to border. But touch her, brother, and either you were stomped to death by other drivers, or you wished you were dead.
The driver who had spoken sharply tossed some money on the counter, picked up his check, and walked away.
Beer-Butt was again looking at him. “You got a name?”
“Rivera.”
Beer-Butt cocked his head from side to side, studying Barry. “Rivera. What’s your handle? Mine’s Beer-Butt.” He laughed and patted his big belly. As good-humored as ever.
Barry’s mind was racing. No point in lying about it. When he spoke, it was very soft. “Dog.”
Beer-Butt spilled hot coffee all over his big hands.
The waitress came over, mopped up the mess, poured Beer-Butt another cup, and told him this time, try to hit his mouth. Beer-Butt picked up the cup and moved around the counter, sitting down beside Barry, staring at him closely. His big, broad face was pale under his tan.
“It’s eerie, man. You even look sorta like him.” He shook his head. “But … no. I went to his and Kate’s funeral.”
“What are you talking about?”
“Even the voice is the same. Mister, where you been runnin’ the last couple of years?”
“Alaska. Pay’s good, but I got tired of that shit.”
“I heard that. But you do look like Big Joe’s son.”
“This fellow who got killed — he must have been quite a guy.”
“Oh, yeah, man. He sure as hell was that, and more.”
Felt very odd, having someone discuss you in the past tense.
“Big Joe never really got over it. He died two months ago.”
That shook Barry right down to his cowboy boots. Somebody should have told him. Goddammit, they should have told him.
When he could once more trust himself to speak, Barry said, “This Big Joe, he owned a trucking company?”
“Rivers Trucking. We still carry it under his name. Probably always will. All us truckers went together and bought it. It was odd … lawyers said there was no way the government was gonna loan us that money. But you know, that loan application was approved and back in one week! You ever heard of such a thing in all your born days?”
It always helps to have somebody in your corner, Barry thought. Like the President of the United States, the Treasury, and the FBI. “That’s odd, all right. No other family around, huh?”
“Huh? Oh, Rivers, you mean. Yeah … a daughter over in Texas. But she didn’t want any part of it. We bought it from her.”
At least he had some family left. “This Kate y’all were speaking of … she must have been really something.”
Beer-Butt smiled gently. “That she was, my boy. An angel with a gutter mouth. Man, she could cuss!”
Barry remembered that vividly. Then he made a great show of checking his watch. “Well, I got to roll.”
“Yeah, me, too. Headin’ to the house.”
“Where’s home?”
“New Orleans. Where’s your home?”
“That rig out yonder in the lot.”
“I know the feelin’. Hey, you know what? You oughta get you a dog. They’re good company.”
Barry smiled. “I might just do that.” He picked up his check. “See you around.”
There was a man waiting in the shadows by Barry’s rig. Barry slowed his step. But Dog was not barking or growling. And Dog was not friendly toward strangers.
“You stay in the shadows, and I’ll do the same,” the man spoke, just audibly over the rumble of many diesels.
“All right.”
“That was a close one in there, with Beer-Butt.”
“Yeah, but it’s all right.”
“It’s never all right. He’s the type who’ll think on it hard. Then he’ll confide in some of his co-workers. But that’s not too bad. Not the way I see it; not the way Weston sees it …”
This then was Jackson. Barry finally made him out.
“We’ve discussed the possibilities of this happening.”
“And?”
“They’d help you. They owe us. Uncle Sam giveth, Uncle Sam can taketh away.”
“Their trucking company?”
“You got it.”
“I don’t think you’d have to go that far with those guys.”
“Neither do I. Damn, but they’re a randy bunch.”
“Why in the fuck didn’t you tell me my old man was dead?”
“Because we didn’t want you screwing up and trying to attend the funeral. Think about it, and you’ll see the reasoning.”
He thought about it. Jackson was right. Barry had worked for the Agency; he knew how cold it had to be at times. “All right.”
Jackson patted the fender of the Kenworth. “Always wanted to drive one of these. Never did learn how.”
“Stick to super-spooking, Jackson. It pays more, and it’s a hell of a lot safer, believe me.”
Jackson laughed softly. “For some strange reason, I believe you.”
“You’re not here to engage in idle chitchat. What’s on your mind?”
Jackson laid a newspaper on the fender of the Kenworth. “Dane County is a cesspool. See what you think about it.”
Then he walked off into the darkness, vanishing amid the mass of parked rigs.
Barry picked up the newspaper and unlocked his door. He let Dog out to do his business and waited until the animal returned. He climbed into the tractor, made sure the doors were secure, and stepped into his sleeper, stretching out and clicking on the bedlamp.
It didn’t take him long to agree with Jackson. Dane County was, indeed, a reeking cesspool. Jackson had written: Maybe someone ought to drain it?
He rolled across southern Illinois and stayed with Interstate 64 through Louisville and Lexington before angling off. Just after leaving the Interstate, he pulled off into a truck stop. He let Dog out, keeping an eye on the animal so he wouldn’t lap up any spilled antifreeze from overheated engines. Ethylene glycol was toxic, and there was usually plenty of it around fuel stops. For some strange reason, dogs liked the taste of it.
He ordered lunch at the counter and ate while listening to other drivers jaw about this and that. Then he heard what he had hoped to hear.
“Anybody here goin’ into Dane County?”
The U-shaped counter filled with tr. . .
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