The Pawn

Book Award genres
Book Award Sub-Category
Book Cover Image
Logline or Premise
A viral arrest. A brutal foreign prison. A businessman who swears he was set up. As reporter Pete Lemaster investigates, he uncovers a conspiracy stretching from Jacksonville to Singapore, and a betrayal closer to home than he ever imagined.
First 10 Pages - 3K Words Only

One

Jacksonville, Florida, USA

Thursday, 7 p.m. EST

The phone started to vibrate its way across the kitchen counter. I hated that. It shook when it went unanswered, bleating like a wounded sheep.

Pay attention to me. Answer me.

But it was my day off, and my phone had been set to Do Not Disturb. Yet it still rang. I was watching the NCAA basketball tournament, as was my right on my day off. My Florida Gators were struggling more than they should as the favorite in their first-round game. I had a little bit of money but mainly pride on the line.

Still bleating.

I read an article recently, saying members of Generation Z were now offended if you called unannounced. Text before you call, they so arrogantly professed. Make an appointment to hear any voice associated with the participation-trophy generation.

Being neither a Gen Zer nor a trophy, I didn’t know who was calling. Someone in my contact list had called in rapid succession, working around the do-not-bother-me setting. So, either something was up, or the spam callers had cracked another smartphone code.

I got up and went to the kitchen and to the phone. I wanted another beer anyway.

The name on the screen said Cole Nathan, one of my college buddies.

Not work. Thank you, basketball gods.

I was fully expecting we would immediately jump into a conversation about why our star player was launching three-pointers without anyone under the basket to rebound. The phenom had also seemingly forgotten how to pass.

I picked up the phone and just started talking, “Can you believe this guy? I mean, I know he’s gonna be in the NBA next year, but he’s like one step from half-court and letting it fly.”

“Pete, I’m not watching the game, sorry,” Cole said. “I need to talk to you about something.”

“Oh, okay,” I said. “What’s going on?”

“Uncle Scotty is in jail.”

“What?” I said. I had to think for a second. I had met Cole’s uncle a few times in college. We went out to bars with him. “What happened?”

“He got arrested yesterday at the airport in Singapore.”

“You’re kidding. Shit. For what?”

“Drug possession.”

“Damn. That sucks. Singapore?” Questions were flowing through my head faster than I could articulate them. “Um, I don’t really know what to say, man. I can’t even remember Scotty doing drugs. It was usually fun, but it’s been years since you have even mentioned him. Did he have a problem? And wait, Singapore?”

“He’s not a drug dealer, if that’s what you’re asking,” Cole said.

“I don’t know what I’m asking. Let’s start with what happened and what you know.”

“I’m not exactly sure what’s going on. We got a report they found drugs in his luggage when he was going to Singapore on business.”

“What kind of business?” I asked. Scott was always pretty slick.

“He works for a real estate fund. He’s been there before. It’s a big mess,” he said.

“I’m sorry, Cole. It’s terrible. Do you need a referral for a lawyer? I can talk to my brother. I don’t think this is the kind of thing he does, but he knows a lot of other lawyers.”

“Well, he’s got a lawyer over there, and we’re talking to some guys here. But we think it might hit the news and be bad, and that’s why I thought about you.”

“Okay, Cole, you know I cover Jacksonville, right? Every once in a while, something crazy happens and I cover national news, but I’m not sure how I can help.”

“Uncle Scotty lives in Jacksonville,” Cole said.

“He does?” I said, putting down the not-yet-opened new beer and looking for a pen.

“Yes, he does.”

“Oh, okay, if a business guy from Jacksonville just got arrested in Singapore, I’m guessing our desk already knows about it. I don’t know who’s going to cover this or even if it’ll get assigned to somebody. Do you guys want the world to know about this? I mean, I can’t kill it if the desk is on it, but I might be able to help. What do you want?”

“Pete, we’re worried the world will think my uncle is a drug dealer. You know him. I don’t know what happened, but something is not right about this. It makes no sense. I need help figuring out what is going on. My uncle is rich. He has no reason to smuggle drugs.”

“Was he traveling alone?” I asked. “Did he ever get married?”

“My uncle, married? That’s a good one.” Cole said. “He was traveling alone, baching it like always.”

“Got it. Well, I was supposed to be off today to watch the game, but it looks like our Gators have this one under control.”

Famous last words.

The Gators were up eight with seven minutes left. “I will make some calls, see what I can find out, and call you back. Is this the best number?”

“Yes and thanks,” Cole said.

As I hung up, our star guard again launched a bomb from the mid-court logo, which clanged off the rim and bounced over the backboard. Not sure who was giving me more heartburn—the star player or Cole’s uncle.

I called the breaking news desk at WJAX-TV where I work as a general assignment reporter and sometimes investigative journalist. My friend and colleague Olivia Marquez, a breaking news digital journalist and all-around technology maven answered.

“I thought you were off,” she said.

“I am, but when did that ever stop me from bugging you?” I said. “Have you heard anything about a Florida businessman being arrested in Singapore on drug charges?”

“Is he from Jacksonville?”

“He is.”

“I think I would have noticed that.” I could hear her typing, and I turned to take another look at the game.

A moment later, she found it. “Well, here’s something from the Associated Press about American executive Scott Wilkins arrested in Singapore, I guess yesterday.”

“That’s the one,” I said.

“But isn’t it already tomorrow over there, like a major difference, twelve hours ahead?”

There were several questions in there. Olivia had a supremely quick brain. “Says he entered the country from a flight from San Francisco, and he originated in Orlando.”

“Gotcha. Well, he’s from Jacksonville.”

“Do you know him?”

“Well, sort of. He’s my friend’s uncle. I met him when I was in college. We painted the town a few times, among other things. The family is freaking out.”

“Can’t blame them. What do you want me to do with this?”

“Do me a favor and just hold tight on it. I will call you back.”

Cole answered on the first ring. “Pete, what do you know?” he asked.

“It’s on the AP wire with his full name and that he’s an American businessman arrested in Singapore on drug charges. It’s short. The story is tagged Orlando because I guess he flew out of there. I’m guessing the story hasn’t gotten any traction because he’s not from Orlando and the time difference.”

“What do you mean about Orlando?”

“Stories come across the wire tagged with locations, kind of like keywords. In Jacksonville, we care about stories relevant to Jacksonville. In Orlando, they are looking for stories tagged to there. Doesn’t mean anything except it kind of gives you and your family some time to try to get ahead of it.”

“Okay, so it’s not all over the place?”

“Not yet. But it may not turn into anything because, you know, the news gods are fickle. Right now, Orlando news stations might be trying to confirm he is from Orlando, but they aren’t finding anything because he’s not. So the story is in limbo.”

“You are in a weird business, Lemaster,” Cole said with a sigh.

“Yes, I am. Listen, it’s up to you. It’s my day off. I can do nothing on this story and be fine with it, but I can’t prevent somebody else from covering it. If you want me to do something today, then you have a bit more control because, well, we’re buddies, and I’m gonna make sure it’s balanced. Honestly, we would probably start with a short item that this local guy was locked up in Singapore. If I get you on the record, confirming it and the basic info, then we can pull a short story together, maybe thirty seconds or so. Just a short item. We don’t have a lot. We would need to get a picture.” I paused. “Or I could watch the end of the game, and we can wait it out and talk tomorrow. It’s up to you.”

“My uncle has been locked in a fucking jail cell in Singapore for like the past two days, so whatever they’re doing now hasn’t gotten him out,” he said, somewhere between pissed off and distressed. “So I say let’s try to generate some support. We’ve got to maybe try to get the government to help us or somebody to help us.”

“I get it,” I said.

“Do you know what the penalties are for drug possession in Singapore, Pete?”

“I have no idea.”

“Google it. It’s scary. We need to do the story.”

“Okay, Cole. So, let me get this on the record and make it official. You are confirming that your uncle, business executive Scott Wilkins of Jacksonville, was arrested in Singapore on drug charges?”

“Yep, 100 percent. He lives in Ponte Vedra Beach.”

“And you are saying he is being wrongfully detained?” I added, coaching-prodding in a way I technically should not do.

“Absolutely. Singapore has made a huge mistake, and we need the support of the US government to get him out. How does that sound?”

“That helps me. Do you have a picture of him?”

“I will send you one.”

“Okay, I will let you know if I need anything else.” We hung up.

I called Olivia back.

“Hey, so is Rod there?” I asked.

Rod Kirby was the acting general manager of the station and my boss.

“Yeah, he’s in his office. Do you want to talk to him?” she said.

“No, not yet. Please do me a favor and take this down. I can confirm business executive Scott Wilkins of Ponte Vedra Beach has been detained on drug charges in Singapore. Looks like it happened two days ago. I’m trying to get you a picture. The family in the US is saying he has been wrongly detained, and they want the US government to intervene. Please take this to Rod and see what he wants to do with it.”

“Okay,” she said.

My phone chimed, and I opened a text message from Cole with an image attached, and there he was—Scott “Uncle Scotty” Wilkins—just as I remembered him. He had light brown hair just past collar length, with a little bit of gray in the temples, and steely blue eyes that accented high, chiseled cheekbones. In the photo, he had a light tan, a big smile, showcasing perfect teeth, and a day or two of manicured stubble. He looked like a model, straight off a billboard. He was wearing a casual linen long-sleeved shirt with a sweater pretzeled over his shoulders in a way no one ever wore—just people who were posing for pictures. He wore jeans and unfinished leather loafers, no socks. The perfect, eligible rich guy online dating photo.

“I just got his photo—sending it to you now,” I said.

I forwarded the image to her and a moment later heard her phone beep.

“Oh my god, he’s hot,” she said, giggling. “Is he single?”

“Well, I don’t know, but he’s not available because he’s in jail in Singapore.”

“He’s ridiculously good-looking. Gotta share this with the girls in the office.”

“How about talking to Rod first?” I suggested, hoping to bring her back to earth.

“Yeah, I’m on it.”

“Thank you, Olivia.” I hung up and texted Cole that we were probably going to run an item with the photo, and I would stay in touch.

I turned the basketball tournament back on, watching my Gators advance to the next round, not knowing I had just lit a most unusual fuse.


TWO

Pete’s Apartment

Friday morning

A few minutes after seven a.m. the next morning, my phone rang. It was Rod Kirby.

“Good morning, Pete. Sorry to hit you up so early, but I wanted to ask you something,” he said.

“Don’t worry about it. What do you need?”

“How well do you know Scott Wilkins?”

Well, that’s a loaded question.

“I do know him, but it’s been a while.” I wanted to qualify my relationship in case he was, in fact, a drug kingpin or whatever. “He’s my buddy’s uncle. I met him when I was in college. Honestly, I have always known him as Uncle Scotty. He would come party with us at UF. I guess some people would call him a playboy.”

“People of a certain age, you’re saying?” Rod, who was at least twenty years older than me, asked.

“Ha, I’m not walking into that one,” I said. “But yeah, he liked to party. He’s a nice guy. Was always a ton of fun. But I haven’t seen or spoken to him in maybe five years.”

“Well, this story has completely blown up on our website. I have it as the top item right now. We’ve got more hits on this story than anything we’ve covered in months.”

“You’re kidding. I only gave Olivia thirty seconds worth of info on him last night.”

“I wish you had given her more, Pete. She tweeted out the story with his photo, and it’s been retweeted something like five hundred times. We’ve gotten a ton of traffic on the website, and according to Olivia, the guy had something like one hundred and fifty followers on Instagram yesterday and he now has more than seven thousand.”

“I’m told he’s easy on the eyes,” I said.

“That’s a massive understatement,” Rod said. “It looks like anyone who finds men attractive is following this story with great interest, and we don’t have shit to follow up on it. What do you know about him?”

“Okay, personally, I don’t have much more than what I have already told you. I remember him from school. He was a good-looking guy who was fun to go out with. He always had money. He could always get girls. His nephew is one of my good friends, and I know he and the family are freaking out. I could probably get my buddy or someone from the family to do an interview. They want to get him out of jail. No idea how that works.”

“Okay, that’s a start,” he said.

“But, Rod, I have to tell you. I know the clicks are great, but this guy is locked up on the other side of the world. I think he’s in serious trouble.”

“Yeah, I have Ted researching it,” he said, and I could feel my face contorting into a frown.

Even though producer Ted Stone was one of my best friends at the station, the idea that he was working this story without my input fired up my competitive streak.

“What is Ted working on?” I tried not to sound too defensive.

It probably wasn’t working.

“We are trying to figure out what happened and what these charges really mean. The penalties are pretty severe over there. He’s going to brief you when you get in. Don’t worry. You’re gonna quarterback this one. When will you be in?”

“Give me an hour.”

“An hour?”

“Thirty-seven minutes?”

“Okay. We’re gonna meet in the conference room and go through what we have so far. This is another interesting one you’ve gotten yourself into, Pete.”

I was always energized when a story felt like it was gonna break big, but why did it have to be Scott Wilkins?

Comments

Stewart Carry Wed, 11/03/2026 - 19:08

A great premise that really hits home given the implications associated with drug-smuggling in Singapore and other Asian destinations. The setup is very plausible and the dialogue really on point. The narrative is given a very clear direction from the beginning and for that reason, the momentum gathers pace and never let's up. There's obviously an underlying conflict yet to be revealed but we're hooked and ready for the journey. A fabulous start.

Falguni Jain Tue, 17/03/2026 - 18:30

The story has an interesting start and a conversation that draws attention. However, there is a heavy use of dialogue with very little narration. Adding more descriptive narration and scene-setting could help balance the flow and make the reading experience richer and more immersive.

Jennifer Rarden Fri, 20/03/2026 - 04:08

This is a great start. It feels very natural for the most part...like his internal thoughts, the narrative, etc. Even most of the dialogue is great. One thing I would caution, though, is that there are several places (enough that they stuck out to me) where contractions could be used in dialogue that you don't use them. If you notice when people are talking, especially when they're stressed and in a rush, they use contractions. Example: "I don’t know what happened, but something is not right about this." Yes, you have don't, but the guy is super stressed. To me, he would be rushing, and that would isn't, not is not. There aren't a ton of them, but again, there were enough that they stuck out to me. Even so, I want to read more! Very intriguing!

Chat Ask Paige - Team Assistant