'No one gets this big without amazing natural storytelling talent - which is what Jim has, in spades. The Alex Cross series proves it.' LEE CHILD __________________________________
They came for his family. Now Detective Alex Cross is out for vengeance.
Cross is met with shocking news that his niece has been brutally murdered. He vows to hunt down the killer, and soon learns that his niece was mixed up in one of Washington's wildest scenes where every fantasy is possible, if you have the credentials to get in.
Cross finds himself confronting some very important, very protected, very dangerous people in levels of society where only one thing is certain - they will do anything to keep their secrets safe.
As Cross closes in on the killer, he discovers evidence that points to the unimaginable - a revelation that could rock the entire world. __________________________________
'Alex Cross is a legend' HARLAN COBEN
'It's no mystery why James Patterson is the world's most popular thriller writer . . . Simply put: nobody does it better.' JEFFERY DEAVER
'The master storyteller of our times' HILLARY RODHAM CLINTON
'Patterson boils a scene down to the single, telling detail, the element that defines a character or moves a plot along. It's what fires off the movie projector in the reader's mind.' MICHAEL CONNELLY
'One of the greatest storytellers of all time' PATRICIA CORNWELL
HANNAH WILLIS WAS a second-year law student at Virginia, and everything that lay ahead of her seemed bright and promising—except, of course,
that she was about to die in these dark, gloomy, dismal woods.
Go, Hannah, she told herself. Just go. Stop thinking. Whining and crying won’t help you now. Running just might.
Hannah stumbled and staggered forward until her hands found another tree trunk to hold on to. She leaned her aching body into
it, waiting for the strength to take another breath. And then to move another burst of steps forward.
Keep going, or you’ll die right here in these woods. It’s that simple.
The bullet lodged somewhere in her lower back made every movement, every breath an agony, more pain than Hannah had ever known
was possible. It was only the threat of a second bullet, or maybe worse, that kept her on her feet and going at all.
God, the woods were almost pitch-black back in here. A quarter moon drooping over the thick forest canopy did little to light
the ground below. Trees were shadows. Thorns and brambles were invisible in the underbrush; they pierced and raked her legs
bloody as she pushed through. What little she’d been wearing to begin with—just an expensive black lace teddy—now hung in
shreds off her shoulders.
None of that mattered, though, or even registered with Hannah anymore. The only clear thought that cut through the pain, and
the panic, was Go, girl. The rest was a wordless, directionless nightmare.
Finally, and very suddenly—had it been an hour? more?—the low canopy of trees opened up around her. “What the…” Dirt turned
to gravel underfoot, and Hannah stumbled to her knees with nothing to hang on to.
In the hazy moonlight, she could make out the ghost of a double line, showing the curve of a country road. It was like a miracle
to her. Half of one, anyway; she knew she wasn’t out of this mess yet.
When a motor sounded in the distance, Hannah leaned on her hands and pushed up off the gravel. Summoning strength she didn’t
know she still had, she stood again, then staggered into the middle of the road. Her world blurred through sweat and fresh
tears.
Please, dear God, don’t let this be them. This can’t be those two bastards.
You can’t be so cruel, can you?
A red truck careened around the bend then, coming at her fast. Too fast! Suddenly, she was just as blind as she’d been before,
in the woods, but from the truck’s headlights.
“Stop! Please stop! Pleee-ase!” she screamed. “Stop, you sonofabitch!”
At the last possible second, the tires squealed on the pavement. The red pickup skidded into full view and stopped just short
of flattening her right there into roadkill. She could feel heat coming off the engine through the grille.
“Hey, sweetheart, nice outfit! All you had to do was stick out your thumb.”
The voice was unfamiliar—which was good, really good. Loud country music was blasting from the cab too—Charlie Daniels Band, her mind vaguely registered, just before Hannah collapsed onto the pavement.
The driver was down there on the road a second later as she regained consciousness. “Oh, my God, I didn’t… What happened to
you? Are you—what happened to you?”
“Please.” She barely mustered the word. “If they find me here, they’ll kill us both.”
The man’s strong hands wrapped around her, grazing the dime-sized hole in her back as he picked her up. She only exhaled,
too weak to scream now. A cluster of gray and indistinct moments later, they were inside the truck and moving really fast
down the two-lane highway.
“Hang in there, darlin’.” The driver’s voice was shaky now. “Tell me who did this to you.”
Hannah could feel her consciousness slipping away again. “The men…”
“The men? What men, sweetheart? Who are you talking about?”
An answer floated vaguely through Hannah’s mind, and she wasn’t sure if she said it out loud or maybe just thought it before
everything went away.
The men from the White House.
HIS NAME WAS Johnny Tucci, but the boys back in his South Philadelphia neighborhood all called him Johnny Twitchy, on account of the way
his eyes jumped around when he was nervous, which was most of the time.
Of course, after tonight, the boys in Philly could go screw themselves. This was the night Johnny got into the game for real.
This was man time. He had “the package,” didn’t he?
It was a simple job but a real goody, because he was alone and had to take full responsibility. He’d already picked up the
package. Scared him, but he’d done just fine.
No one ever said so, but once you started making deliveries like this, it meant you had something on the family, and they
had something on you. In other words, there was a relationship. After tonight, there’d be no more running numbers for Johnny,
no more scrapping for crumbs in southside neighborhoods. It was like the bumper sticker that said, Today is the first day of the rest of your life.
So naturally, he was pumped—and just a little bit nervous.
His uncle Eddie’s warning kept playing like a tape in his mind. Don’t blow this opportunity, Twitchy, Eddie had said. I’m way out on a limb here for you. Like he was doing him some kind of big favor with this job, which Johnny supposed maybe he was, but still. His own uncle
didn’t have to rub his face in it, did he?
He reached over and turned up the radio. Even the country music they played down here was better than listening to Eddie’s
nagging in his head all night long. Turned out, it was an old Charlie Daniels Band tune, “The Devil Went Down to Georgia.”
He even knew some of the words. But the familiar lyrics couldn’t keep Eddie’s voice out of Johnny’s head.
Don’t blow this opportunity, Twitchy.
I’m way out on a limb for you.
Oh, fuck!
Blue flashers danced off his rearview mirror—coming out of nowhere. Two, three seconds ago, he could have sworn he had I-95
all to himself.
Apparently not.
Johnny felt the corner of his right eye start to twitch.
He goosed the gas; maybe he could make a run for it. Then he remembered the piece-of-shit Dodge he was driving, lifted out
of a Motel 6 parking lot back in Essington. Goddamnit! Should have gone to the Marriott. Got a Jap car.
Still, it was possible the stolen Dodge hadn’t been flagged yet. Whoever owned it was probably sleeping back at that motel.
With any luck, Johnny could just eat the ticket and no one would ever have to know.
But that was the kind of luck other people had, not him.
It took the cops forever and a day to get out of their cruiser, which was a bad sign—the worst. They were checking the make
and the plates. By the time they came up on either side of the Dodge, Johnny’s eyes were going like a couple of Mexican jumping
beans.
He tried to be cool. “Evening, officers. What seems to be—”
The one on his side, a tall dude with a redneck accent, opened the driver’s door. “Just keep your mouth shut tight. Step out
of the vehicle.”
It didn’t take them any time at all to find the package. After they checked the front and back seats, they popped the trunk,
pulled the spare-tire cover, and that was that.
“Holy Mother of God!” One of the troopers shone his light down on it. The other one gagged at the sight. “What the hell did you do?”
Johnny didn’t stick around to answer the question. He was already running for his life.
NOBODY HAD EVER been any deader, or dumber, than he was right now. Johnny Tucci knew that, even as he broke across the tree line and started
slip-sliding down a ravine at the side of the highway.
He could hide from these cops, maybe, but not from the Family. Not in jail, not anywhere. It was a fact of life. You didn’t
lose a “package” like this without becoming one yourself.
Voices came from up the slope, and then dancing flashlight beams. Johnny dropped down low and threw himself under a clump
of bushes. He was trembling all over, his heart was going so fast it hurt, and his lungs were heaving from too many cigarettes.
It was almost impossible to keep still and keep quiet.
Oh shit, I am so dead. I am so, so dead.
“You see anything? See that little bastard? That freak?”
“Nothing yet. We’ll get him. He’s down here somewhere. Can’t be far.”
The troopers fanned out on either side of him, working their way down. Very deliberate and efficient.
Even as he caught his breath now, the trembling only got worse, and not just because of the cops. It was because he’d started
to figure out what he had to do next. Strictly speaking, there were only two real options. One involved the .38 he had holstered
to his ankle. The other, the package—and who owned it. It was only a question of which way he wanted to die.
And in that cold moonlight, it didn’t really seem like much of a question at all.
Moving as slowly as he could, he reached down and pulled the .38. With a badly shaking hand, he fitted the barrel in his mouth.
The damn metal clacked hard against his teeth and tasted sour on his tongue. He was ashamed of the tears coming down his face,
but that couldn’t be helped, and who would ever know but him anyway?
Jesus, was it really going down this way? Crying like a punk, all alone in the woods? What a crummy world this was.
He could just hear the boys now. Sure wouldn’t want to go out the way Johnny did. Johnny Twitchy. They’d put it on his gravestone—just for spite. Those heathen bastards!
The whole time, Johnny’s brain was saying pull, but his trigger finger wouldn’t do it. He tried again, both hands on the grip this time, but it was no go. He couldn’t even
do this right.
He finally spit the gun barrel out, still crying like a little kid. Somehow, knowing he was going to live another day didn’t
do a thing to stop the tears. He just lay there, biting his lips, feeling sorry for himself, until the cops got as far as
the stream at the bottom of the ravine.
Then Johnny Twitchy crawled real fast back up the way he’d come, ran across the interstate, and dropped into the woods on
the other side—wondering how in Christ he was going to make himself disappear off the face of the earth, knowing that it just
wasn’t going to happen.
He’d looked. He’d seen what was in “the package.”
I CELEBRATED MY birthday with a small, very exclusive, very festive and fun party on Fifth Street. It was just the way I wanted it.
Damon had come home from boarding school in Massachusetts as a special surprise. Nana was there, acting large and in charge
of the festivities, along with my babies, Jannie and Ali. Sampson and his family were on hand; and of course Bree was there.
Only the people I loved most in the world were invited. Who else would you want to celebrate another year older and wiser
with?
I even made a little speech that night, most of which I forgot immediately, but not the opening few words. “I, Alex Cross,”
I began, “do solemnly promise—to all those present at this birthday party—to do my best to balance my life at home with my
work life, and not to go over to the dark side ever again.”
Nana raised her coffee cup in salute, but then she said, “Too late for that,” which got a laugh.
Then, to a person, everybody did their best to make sure I was aging with a little humility but also a smile on my face.
“Remember the time at Redskin stadium?” Damon cackled. “When Dad locked the keys in the old car?”
I tried cutting in. “To be fair—”
“Called me out of bed past midnight,” Sampson said, and growled.
“Only after he tried breaking in for an hour because he didn’t want to admit he couldn’t do it,” Nana said.
Jannie cupped a hand around her ear. “’Cause he’s what?” And everyone chorused back, “America’s Sherlock Holmes!” It was a
reference to a national-magazine piece from a few years ago that I will apparently never live down.
I swigged my beer. “Brilliant career—or so they say—dozens of big cases solved, and what am I remembered for? Seems to me,
someone was supposed to have a happy birthday tonight.”
“Which reminds me,” Nana said, somehow taking the bait and cutting me off at the same time. “We’ve got a piece of unfinished
business here. Children?”
Jannie and Ali jumped up, more excited than anyone. Apparently, there was a Big Surprise coming for me now. No one was saying
what it was, but I’d already opened a pair of Serengetis from Bree, a loud shirt and two minis of tequila from Sampson, and
a stack of books from the kids that included the latest George Pelecanos and a biography of Keith Richards.
Another clue, if I can call it that, was the fact that Bree and I had become notorious plan cancelers, with one long weekend after another
falling by the wayside since we’d met. You might think that working in the same department, same division—Homicide—would make
it easier for us to coordinate our schedules, but it was just the opposite most of the time.
So I had some idea, but nothing really specific, about what might be coming.
“Alex, you stay put,” said Ali. He’d started calling me Alex lately, which I thought was all right but for some reason gave
Nana the creeps.
Bree said she’d keep an eye on me and stayed back while everyone else snuck off to the kitchen.
“The plot thickens,” I muttered.
“Even as we speak,” said Bree with a smile and a wink. “Just the way you like it.”
She was on the couch, across from where I sat in one of the old club chairs. Bree always looked good, but I preferred her
like this, casual and comfortable in jeans and bare feet. Her eyes started on the floor and worked their way up to mine.
“Come here often?” she asked.
“Once in a while, yeah. You?”
She sipped her beer and casually cocked her head. “Want to get out of here?”
“Sure thing.” I jerked my thumb toward the kitchen door. “Just as soon as I get rid of those pesky, um—”
“Beloved family members?”
I couldn’t help thinking that this birthday was getting better and better. Now I had two big surprises coming up.
Make that three.
The phone rang in the hall. It was our home line, not my cell, which everyone knew to use for work. I also had a pager up
on the dresser where I could hear it. So it seemed safe to go ahead and answer. I even thought it might be some friendly soul
calling to wish me a happy birthday, or at the very worst, someone trying to sell me a satellite dish.
Will I ever learn? Probably not in this lifetime.
“ALEX, IT’S DAVIES. I’m sorry to bother you at home.” Ramon Davies was superintendent of detectives with Metro, and also my boss, and he was
on the line.
“It’s my birthday. Who died?” I asked. I was ticked off, mostly at myself for answering the phone in the first place.
“Caroline Cross,” he said, and my heart nearly stopped. At that very moment, the kitchen door swung open and the family came
out singing. Nana had an elaborate pink-and-red birthday cake on a tray, with an American Airlines travel folio clipped on
top.
“Happy birthday to you…”
Bree held up a hand to quiet them. My posture and my face must have said something. They all stopped right where they were.
The joyful singing ended almost midnote. My family remembered whose birthday this was: Detective Alex Cross’s.
Caroline was my niece, my brother’s only daughter. I hadn’t seen her in twenty years; not since just after Blake died. That
would have made her twenty-four now.
At the time of her death.
The floor under my feet felt like it was gone. Part of me wanted to call Davies a liar. The other part, the cop, spoke up.
“Where is she now?”
“I just got off the phone with Virginia State Police. The remains are at the ME’s office in Richmond. I’m sorry, Alex. I hate
to be the one to tell you this.”
“Remains?” I muttered. It was such a cold word, but I appreciated Davies not over-handling me. I walked out of the room, sorry
I’d said even that much in front of my family.
“Are we talking homicide here? I assume that we are.”
“I’m afraid so.”
“What happened?” My heart was thudding dangerously. I almost didn’t want to know.
“I don’t have a lot of details,” he told me, in a way that instantly gave me a hint—he was holding something back.
“Ramon, what’s going on here? Tell me. What do you know about Caroline?”
“Just take one thing at a time, Alex. If you leave now, you can probably be there in about two hours. I’ll ask for one of
the responding officers to meet you.”
“I’m on my way.”
“And Alex?”
I’d almost hung up the phone, my mind in splinters. “Wha. . .
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