A Season of Reckoning
by
Book Details
About the Book
The light plane loaded with two million dollars worth of cocaine drifted through the night sky over the Chihuahuan desert searching for a lighted strip in the mountains near the Texas border. The pilot spotted the strip lined with crude lights. He made a low pass over the area, set the plane down and taxied to the end of the strip where two vans were located. He killed the engine and stepped out of the plane. Two men stood near his door. He saw the two men fall to the ground and then he fell to the ground - all three very dead. Several armed men dressed in black rushed the two vans. Within seconds, several men, again dressed in black, rushed the plane and removed the cocaine from the cargo area. Another man slid into the pilot’s seat, fired the engine up and flew the plane into Texas.
Others in the dope cartel had been killed or captured in the little village of Santa Rosa on the Rio Grande, 18 miles south of the strip. These actions had been practiced many times. It was near the end of a carefully planned exercise to rid the village of the deadly cartel forever. It went like clockwork. The bad guys lose and the good guys win.
Sam DeLeon had planned this, with a few of his friends from the agency they worked for, and the men of the village. Sam was retired from a big city P.D. in Texas and had fallen in love with a woman that lived in the village. The cartel people were very cruel to the villagers. Sam and his people put a stop to their activities in Santa Rosa.
Further investigation revealed that there was more than dope on that plane, much more.
About the Author
Jack, a life-long Texan, is an honorably retired Sergeant of Police from one of the largest cities in Texas. Most of his 20+ year career was spent in the Vice Squad, dealing with pimps, whores, bookmakers, bootleggers and the like. Narcotics violations played a part in most vice investigations. The latter days of his police career were spent in the Criminal Intelligence Division, where Jack and his squad kept tabs on major criminals and organized crime figures. Jack's squad worked closely with the Texas Rangers, FBI, Secret Service, ATF, DEA and other Federal Agencies. After retirement, he worked for the Texas Department of Criminal Justice, Institutional Division, as a Lieutenant in the Internal Affairs Division.
Jack was raised in the city where he served, just one generation out of the Cotton Patch of East Texas. Jack is a mixed blood Cherokee and has traced his family's Texas history back 174 years. He was a teenage dad, and in his youth worked in the steel fabrication industry in his growing city. The demands on the life of a police officer are great and therefore, hard on family life. Through his long career, there were multiple divorces and four sons and two daughters. Jack has two sons that are police officers in his old department.
Jack and his wife Mary live in a small mountain town in the Chihuahuan Desert. They keep honey bees, have a fruit orchard and raise a vegetable garden. They enjoy watching the rises of the Sun and Moon and gazing at the Stars from their deck and porch. Jack's doctor has prescribed "Front Porch Therapy" for both Mary and Jack, when they are not writing or editing. They enjoy a mile-high climate, with its clean clear air and mild summers and winters, with their dog , Kitty and cat, Chigger.