The Body and the Blood

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Authors: Michael Lister

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The Body and the Blood

a John Jordan novel by

Michael Lister

Books by Michael Lister

Power in the Blood

Blood of the Lamb

Flesh and Blood

North Florida Noir

Double Exposure

Thunder Beach

Florida Heat Wave

The Body and the Blood

The Big Goodbye

Blood Sacrifice

Burnt Offerings

Separation Anxiety

The Meaning of Life in Movies

Finding the Way Again
Living in the Hot Now

The Body and the Blood

a John Jordan novel by

Michael Lister

Pulpwood Press, Panama City, FL
You buy a book. We plant a tree.

Copyright © 2010 by Michael Lister

All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publisher.

This is a work of fiction. Any similarities to people or places, living or dead, is purely coincidental.

Inquiries should be addressed to:

Pulpwood Press

P.O. Box 35038

Panama City, FL 32412

The Body and the Blood by Michael Lister
Book #4 in the John Jordan Mystery Series

Ebook ISBN: 978-1-888146-93-6

For Micah and Meleah
Thanks for the best childhood a dad could ever have! It’s a Wonderful Life.

Table of Contents

 

Acknowledgements

Chapter One

Chapter Two

Chapter Three

Chapter Four

Chapter Five

Chapter Six

Chapter Seven

Chapter Eight

Chapter Nine

Chapter Ten

Chapter Eleven

Chapter Twelve

Chapter Thirteen

Chapter Fourteen

Chapter Fifteen

Chapter Sixteen

Chapter Seventeen

Chapter Eighteen

Chapter Nineteen

Chapter Twenty

Chapter Twenty-one

Chapter Twenty-two

Chapter Twenty-three

Chapter Twenty-four

Chapter Twenty-five

Chapter Twenty-six

Chapter Twenty-seven

Chapter Twenty-eight

Chapter Twenty-nine

Chapter Thirty

Chapter Thirty-one

Chapter Thirty-two

Chapter Thirty-three

Chapter Thirty-four

Chapter Thirty-five

Chapter Thirty-six

Chapter Thirty-seven

Chapter Thirty-eight

Chapter Thirty-nine

Chapter Forty

Chapter Forty-one

Chapter Forty-two

Chapter Forty-three

Chapter Forty-four

Chapter Forty-five

Chapter Forty-six

Chapter Forty-seven

Chapter Forty-eight

Chapter Forty-nine

Chapter Fifty

Chapter Fifty-one

Chapter Fifty-two

Chapter Fifty-three

Chapter Fifty-four

Chapter Fifty-five

Chapter Fifty-six

About the Author

Acknowledgements

 

Thanks to all those who’ve believed in and supported me and John over the years, especially, Lynn Wallace, Bette Powell, Cricket Freeman, Margaret Coel, Lou Boxer, Kim Ludlam, Carolann Johns, Jamie Smith, Rich Henshaw, Terry Lewis, Dan Nolan, Dayton Lister, Phillip Weeks, Tim Whitehead, Bruce Benedict, Michael Connelly, Pam, Micah, Meleah, Mike, and Judi Lister.

Chapter One

 

“How much does prison change a man?”

That one stopped me—I had just been thinking about how much PCI was changing me—and if the question hadn’t, the woman asking it would have.

Unlike so many of the unsophisticated and impoverished family members who braved a visit to the big house, the attractive young woman exiting Potter Correctional Institution wore designer clothes, moved with the lissomeness of a runway model, and spoke like an anchor person.

I had stopped at the gate before reentering the institution to stand in awe of the setting sun—a feeble attempt at stress relief and mindfulness—and had only glanced at her before turning my attention back to the western horizon.

It was nearly dusk in mid-October, and the sinking sun backlighting the tall slash pines and cypress trees to the west resembled a child’s Halloween drawing—black craggy crayon trees on bright orange construction paper.

“Immeasurably,” I said almost to myself.

I was tired and wanted to be somewhere else—anywhere enjoying the spectacular sundown in silence, my only companion an ice-cold Cherry Coke or Dr. Pepper. It had been a long hard day already and I wouldn’t still be here if not for the possibility of preventing a murder.

Potter Correctional Institution had the reputation for being one of Florida’s most brutal prisons. Officers at the north Florida Reception Center tell stories of inmates crying when they discover this particular hell is their destination.

“Are you the chaplain?” she asked.

The chaplain of hell
, I thought, and it amused me in a slightly perverse way.
Talk about downward mobility, the parish no one wants.

The truth was, I had never felt more fulfilled, never been happier—though what that says about my life before I came to hell I’m not sure. The happiness came from getting to spend so much time with my best friends, Anna and Merrill, and the sense of fulfillment I felt at finally finding a job that gave me opportunities to minister
and
investigate, disparate vocations not normally brought together in a single position.

“Yes. John Jordan,” I said, extending my hand.

“Jordan. You related to the sheriff?”

I nodded.

Growing up in a law enforcement family, I worked as deputy in my dad’s department, and had nearly completed a degree in criminology before everything changed and I dropped out mid-semester and entered seminary. I put myself through school working as a cop with the Stone Mountain Police Department. When I graduated, I traded my gun and badge in for a Bible and a clerical collar. Periods of my life were spent as an investigator, others as a minister, but returning to the Panhandle and becoming a prison chaplain was the first time I had made an attempt at doing both simultaneously. Of course,
attempt
was the operative word. The two vocations were difficult to reconcile and I rarely got it just right—or even close to right.

I really looked at the young woman for the first time.

Though not short, she wasn’t as tall as her heels made her seem. She looked to be in her early to mid-thirties, her sun-streaked blond hair contrasting nicely the tops of her darkly tanned shoulders. Her head was tilted back and she was looking up at me with green cat-like eyes.

“I’m Paula Menge,” she said with an impatient edge in her voice, and I could tell she was accustomed to the full attention of whoever was fortunate enough to be in her presence.

“I’m sorry,” I said. “I was distracted by the sunset.”

She slunk toward me with feline fluidity, and I realized that her eyes weren’t all that was cat-like about her. Her sleek, sinewy body looked to have the athleticism and agility required for pouncing. Feeling uncomfortable so close, and fearing she might curl her tail around my leg, I leaned back slightly and looked at the sunset again.

She let her gaze follow mine and we both stood there in silence and watched as construction paper orange turned to flamingo pink before becoming pastel peach in the sunset-softened sky.

“It
is
overwhelming,” she said, and something about the way she said it made me think her next line had she not left it unspoken would have been,
But so am I
—a sentiment with which most men and many women would agree.

“You don’t really look like a chaplain,” she said. It sounded like a compliment.

“Well, I don’t really try very hard,” I said.

Her immediate frown was quickly replaced by a knowing smile and her eyes lit up intelligently.

I took a deep breath and waited.

Fall, what little there is in north Florida, comes late and leaves early, but over the past few days it had begun to arrive, and what I breathed in was far more than cool, crisp air. It was football games and pep rallies, a new school year and season premieres; burning leaves and bonfires, first love, freshman dances, and long kisses in heated cars on cold nights.

“I just finished visiting my brother,” she said.

My mind finally finished connecting the dots, and I realized who she was.

“Justin Menge’s your brother?” I asked.

She nodded. “You know him?”

I nodded. “I’m surprised I haven’t seen the two of you together before,” I said. “I can really see the resemblance.”

“He’s in protective management,” she said, “so I have to visit him alone at night, but to tell you the truth this is my first visit.”


Really
?” I said. “He’s been here quite a while, hasn’t he?”

She pursed and twisted her lips, then frowned. “It’s a long story.”

“I’ll be seeing him in just a few minutes,” I said. “I was just headed down to the PM unit.”

“You are?” she asked, her voice filling with hesitant hope. “Could you check on him for me?”

“Didn’t you just see him?”

“I know it’s the first time I’ve seen him in four years, but he’s
so
different, and I wondered if it’s just because of prison or if it’s something else. How much does it change them?”

“It doesn’t just change
them
,” I said, “it changes us all. How much depends on the person. But no one is ever quite the same.”

I thought about how hardened I’d become, how I had allowed the daily assault of this place on my senses to pull me back toward the darkness, toward the man I didn’t want to be again. At various times in my life, rage had taken the place of alcohol as my primary addiction, and if there were a better place than PCI to bring that about again, I wasn’t aware of it.

“That’s a truly disturbing thought.”

“I guess it is,” I said, “but more than change us, it brings out what’s inside us already.”

“What do you mean?”

“I’ve given this a lot of thought. It’s as if prison’s a cauldron that brings the impurities of our souls to the surface.”

She smiled. “You may not look like a chaplain, but you sure sound like one.”

Regardless of what I sounded like, or the title on my business card, I was just a man trying to be a better man, and though at some point I thought it would get easier, so far it hadn’t.

Beyond the chain-link fence and razor wire, the institution was unusually still and quiet. The compound had the eerie feel of a small town whose inhabitants had all suddenly and mysteriously vanished. The evening meal completed, the inmates were in the dorms sitting on their bunks for the evening master roster count.

Nestled on Florida’s forgotten coast between Panama City and Tallahassee, PCI is quickly becoming the largest prison in the state. It’s already nearly double the size of Pottersville, and rumors persist that eventually death row will be housed here.

“He hasn’t just changed,” she said. “I’d’ve expected that. I mean he’s completely different. I wouldn’t’ve recognized him if we’d met on the street.”

“How was he different? Physically? Did he talk differently? Was it his countenance? Was he harder?”

“I can’t explain it, but I’m worried. Will you check on him?”

Her questions came across as demands, and I sensed that her aloofness emanated from a sense of superiority more than insecurity. As sensual as she seemed, I suspected her sexuality was more about power than pleasure, that it, like everything she possessed, was always in the service of something else—something she probably wasn’t even ware of. Of course, I had known her all of ten minutes, and I had been wrong about women a time or two before.

“Sure,” I said.

“Just see if you notice anything strange about him.”

As the day grew dimmer, the light coming through the tinted glass of the control room seemed to intensify, and I could see the sergeant and the officer scurrying around to clear count.

“Four years is a lot of time,” I said.

“I know, but I also know my brother. He’s very different—and, in addition to everything else, very scared.”

I raised my eyebrows. “Any idea why?”

She shrugged. “Maybe. I don’t know. We ran out of time. Right now I just want you to check on him.”

“Okay,” I said, “but maybe he was just nervous about seeing you.”

“But you’ll check on him? You don’t think I’m crazy?”

“Of course not.”

I had received an anonymous note earlier in the day claiming that a murder would take place during the Catholic Mass in the PM unit later that night. It was why I was reentering the institution after having already put in a full day, and why I didn’t think she was crazy.

We were silent for an awkward moment, neither of us knowing what else to say.

Finally, we said goodbye and she began to walk away, but after just a few steps I called after her.

“Four years is a long time,” I said again. “Why so long?”

“I just couldn’t see him the way things were.”

“What changed?”

She gave me a tentative tight-lipped smile. “I found out he was innocent.”

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