Rules of Honour

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Book: Rules of Honour Read Online Free PDF
Author: Matt Hilton
Tags: Fiction, General, Suspense, Thrillers, Action & Adventure
hunched over his drink at the bar. For a start he shared little in common with the young professionals who spent less time on drinking than they did on their cellphones. He was twice the age of the next oldest person in the bar, and that was the bartender. During the 1990s Cole Valley had grown popular with dot-commers, so much so that many of the original residents had moved out to make way for the young and affluent. Now some of those yuppie types were approaching their middle years, but they were still young punks to Jed. He felt old. Recently some young pup had heard his name and asked if he was any relation to Craig Newmark, the internet entrepreneur responsible for founding the San Francisco-based website Craigslist. Jed had played along and said yes. ‘Are you his dad?’ asked the young sycophant. Shit, Jed had thought, Craig Newmark has to be in his sixties by now.
    He cupped both hands around his glass, just a drop or two of whisky left in the bottom, peering over at his reflection in the warped mirror beyond the shelved liquor bottles. He looked toadlike, short, squat, and round faced. His mouth drooped down at the corners, but didn’t help smooth out any of the wrinkles round his puffy eyelids. To be honest, it was a wonder he hadn’t been mistaken for Craig’s grandad.
    He finished his drink, pushed the empty glass from him and slipped some dollars in the general direction of the bartender. Without even a nod of appreciation for the tip he’d added, the bartender continued serving Martinis to a middle-aged couple further along the bar. Feeling invisible, Jed walked out of the bar and into late afternoon sunlight. He blinked against the unfamiliar glare, before setting off for his apartment a couple of blocks south on Carmel. He was returning to an empty home. His wife, Rose, had died three years ago. Stomach cancer had spread to her liver where it did more damage than the hard liquor he’d consumed over the years ever did to his. Jed was alone in the world now. No children. No friends. That was not so until very recently, but then Andrew Rington had been taken during a senseless bout of violence in the man’s home.
    Jed muttered to himself as he walked. The liquor he’d downed had thrown a cloak of cotton wool over him, fogging the pain of grief he’d felt at the news of Andrew’s murder, but it was still there like an itch at the back of his head that he couldn’t shake. Fucking senseless. How could such a good man as Andrew Rington be gunned down in his own home? What had this world become?
    He had known Andrew and Yukiko for more than forty years. He knew the couple when they had lived in Little Rock, Arkansas, way back before the birth of their youngest son, Jared. They had been good friends, the more so because Rose and Yukiko got on so well, having grown up in the same neighbourhood of San Francisco as children. Jed had lost contact with the Ringtons for a few years, after him and Rose moved back West, and had been surprised to hear from Andrew a few years ago when they too planned to move back to Yukiko’s childhood home. Rose didn’t live too long afterwards, but it had been a happy reunion with Yukiko while it lasted. It had helped his wife through the final painful days of her illness. Jed and Andrew occasionally took themselves down to Fisherman’s Wharf to cast a line in the sea, or to simply sit on the benches and spend a couple hours in companionable silence watching the antics of the sea lions out on the jetties near Pier 39.
    He felt the sting of tears and wiped at his cheeks with the back of a wrist.
    He’d shared good memories with Andrew.
    Then again, they also shared bad memories.
    The basement.
    He shook his head. Don’t go there, he commanded himself.
    The Cole Valley district originally grew up around a streetcar stop at the entrance to the Sunset Tunnel. Now that area at the intersection of Carl and Cole Streets was the neighbourhood’s small business district, and Jed
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