Wednesday, September 19, 2012

Excerpt a wanted man Jack Reacher novel

Excerpt a wanted man Jack Reacher novel

The eyewitness said he didn’t actually see it happen. But how else could it have gone down? Not long after midnight a man in a green winter coat had gone into a small concrete bunker through its only door. Two men in black suits had followed him in. There had been a short pause. The two men in the black suits had come out again.

The man in the green winter coat had not come out again.

The two men in the black suits had walked thirty brisk feet and climbed into a bright red car. Fire-engine red, the eyewitness called it. Vivid red. Fairly new. A regular four-door sedan, the eyewitness thought. Or maybe a five-door. Or a three-door. But definitely not a two-door coupe. A Toyota, the eyewitness thought. Or maybe a Honda. Or a Hyundai. Maybe a Kia.

But whichever, the two men in the black suits had driven away in it.

There was still no sign of the man in the green winter coat.

Then blood had pooled out from under the concrete bunker’s door.

The eyewitness had called 911.

The county sheriff had shown up and gotten the story. He was good at hustling folk along while looking patient. It was one of his many talents. Eventually the eyewitness had finished up. Then the county sheriff had thought for a long moment. He was in a part of the nation where in every direction there were hundreds of square miles of emptiness just over the dark horizon. Where roads were long lonely ribbons.

He was in roadblock country.

So he had called the highway patrol, and then he had ordered up the helicopter from the state capital. He had put out an urgent APB on a bright red import carrying two men in black suits.

Jack Reacher rode for ninety miles and ninety minutes with a woman in a dirty gray van, and then he saw bright vapor lights up ahead at the highway cloverleaf, with big green signs pointing west and east. The woman slowed the van, and stopped, and Reacher got out and thanked her and waved her away. She used the first ramp, west toward Denver and Salt Lake City, and he walked under the bridge and set up on the eastbound ramp, one foot on the shoulder and one in the traffic lane, and he stuck out his thumb and smiled and tried to look friendly.

Which was not easy. Reacher was a big man, six feet five inches tall, heavily built, and that night as always he looked a little ragged and unkempt. Lonely drivers wanted pleasant and unthreatening company, and Reacher knew from long experience that visually he was no one’s first choice of companion. Too intimidating. And right then he was further handicapped by a freshly broken nose. He had patched the injury with a length of silver duct tape, which he knew must make him look even more grotesque. He knew the tape must be shining and glittering in the yellow light. But he felt the tape was helping him medically, so he decided to keep it in place for the first hour. If he didn’t get a ride inside sixty minutes, he would consider peeling it off.

He didn’t get a ride inside sixty minutes. Traffic was light. Nebraska, at night, in the wintertime. The cloverleaf he was at was the only significant interchange for miles around, but even so whole minutes passed with no action at all. Up on the bridge the through traffic was fairly steady, but few people seemed keen to join it. In the first hour only forty vehicles showed up to turn east. Cars, trucks, SUVs, different makes, different models, different colors. Thirty of them blew past without even slowing. Ten drivers checked him out and then looked away and accelerated onward.

Not unusual. Hitchhiking had been getting harder for years.

Time to shorten the odds.

He turned away and used a splintered thumbnail to pick at the edge of the duct tape on his face. He got half an inch of it loose and gripped that makeshift tab between the pad of his thumb and his forefinger. Two schools of thought. One went for the fast rip. The other advocated a slow peel. An illusory choice, Reacher thought. The pain was the same either way. So he split the difference and opted for a fast peel. No big deal on his cheek. A different story across his nose. Cuts reopened, the swelling lifted and moved, the fracture itself clicked and ground.

No big deal on the other cheek.

He rolled the bloodied tape into a cylinder and stuck it in his pocket. He spat on his fingers and wiped his face. He heard a helicopter a thousand feet overhead and saw a high-power searchlight beam stabbing down through the darkness, resting here, resting there, moving on. He turned back and put one foot in the traffic lane again and stuck out his thumb. The helicopter hung around for a spell and then lost interest and hammered away west until its noise died back to nothing. Traffic heading cross-country on the bridge stayed sparse but steady. Feeder traffic heading north and south on the county road got thinner. But almost all of it turned one way or the other on the highway. Almost none of it continued straight. Reacher remained optimistic.

The night was cold, which helped his face. Numbness dulled the ache. A pick-up truck with Kansas plates came out of the south and turned east and slowed to a roll. The driver was a rangy black guy bundled into a thick coat. Maybe his heater wasn’t working. He eyeballed Reacher long and hard. He almost stopped. But he didn’t. He looked away and drove on by.

Reacher had money in his pocket. If he could get to Lincoln or Omaha he could get a bus. But he couldn’t get to Lincoln or Omaha. Not without a ride. He took to tucking his right hand under his left arm between cars, to stop it from freezing. He stamped his feet. His breath pooled around his head like a cloud. A highway patrol cruiser blew by with lights but no siren. Two cops inside. They didn’t even glance Reacher’s way. Their focus was up ahead. Some kind of an incident, maybe.

Two more cars almost stopped. One out of the south, and one out of the north, minutes apart. They both slowed, stumbled, stuttered, eyeballed, and then picked up speed and drove on by. Getting closer, Reacher thought. It’s coming. Maybe the late hour was helping. People were more compassionate at midnight than midday. And night driving already felt a little out of the ordinary. Picking up a random stranger wasn’t such a big leap.

He hoped.

Another driver took a good long look, but kept on going.

And another.

Reacher spat on his palms and slicked his hair into place.

He kept the smile on his face.

He remained optimistic.

And then finally, after a total of ninety-three minutes on the ramp, a car stopped for him.

Chapter 2

The car stopped thirty feet upstream of him. It had a local plate, and was a reasonable size, and American, and dark in color. A Chevrolet, Reacher thought, probably dark blue, or gray, or black. It was hard to tell, in the vapor light. Dark metallics were always anonymous at night.

There were three people in the car. Two men in the front, and a woman in the back. The two men were twisted around in their seats, like there was a big three-way discussion going on. Like a democracy. Should we pick this guy up or not? Which suggested to Reacher that the three people didn’t know each other very well. Such decisions among good friends were usually instinctive. These three were business colleagues, maybe, a team of equals, thrown together for the duration, exaggeratedly respectful of each other’s positions, especially the outnumbered woman’s.

Reacher saw the woman nod, and he lip-read her yes, and the men turned back and faced front again, and the car rolled forward. It stopped again with the front passenger’s window alongside Reacher’s hip. The glass came down. Reacher bent at the waist and felt warmth on his face. This car’s heater was working just fine. That was for damn sure.

The guy in the front passenger seat asked, “Where are you headed tonight, sir?”

Reacher had been a cop in the army for thirteen years, and then for almost as long had lived on his wits, and he had survived both phases of his life by being appropriately cautious and by staying alert. All five senses, all the time. Deciding whether or not to take an offered ride depended mostly on smell. Could he smell beer? Weed? Bourbon? But right then he could smell nothing at all. His nose had just been broken. His nasal passages were clogged with blood and swellings. Maybe his septum was permanently deviated. It felt entirely possible he would never smell anything ever again.

Touch was not an option in that situation, either. Nor was taste. He would learn nothing by groping around like a blind man, or by licking things. Which left sight and sound. He heard neutral tones from the front passenger, no marked regional accent, an educated cadence, an air of authority and executive experience. On all three of them he saw soft uncalloused hands, unmuscled frames, neat hair, no tans. Indoor people. Office folk. Not at the top of the tree, but a long way from the bottom. They each looked somewhere in their middle forties, perhaps halfway through their lives, but more than halfway through their careers. Like lieutenant colonels, maybe, in army terms. Solid achievers, but not superstars.

Each of them had on black pants and a blue denim shirt. Like uniforms. The shirts looked cheap and new, still creased from the wrapper. A team-building exercise, Reacher figured. Some kind of corporate bullshit. Fly a bunch of middle-ranking executives out from their regional offices, get them together in the wilderness, give them shirts, set them tasks. Maybe all the hoo-hah was making them feel a little bit adventurous, which was why they were picking him up. And maybe there would be candid mutual critiquing afterward, which was why they had labored through the big three-way democratic discussion. Teams needed teamwork, and teamwork needed consensus, and consensus needed to be unforced, and gender issues were always sensitive. In fact Reacher was 
A Wanted Man: A Jack Reacher Novel

          



Wednesday, August 22, 2012

The Last Victim by Karen Robards review

The Last Victim by Karen Robards review

This book will come under a lot of criticizing, as it is very controversial much like fifty shades of grey.This book is a little like Darynda Jone's First Grave on the Right, with a powerful female head who can speak to the dead, a full cast of lovable characters, and a sexy bad boy who's sexual game is yet unidentified.I like books that are fresh and different and falling in love with a sick ass serial killer having sex with his ghost is about as different as it gets.This is a sick book the lead is obsessed with serial killers since her childhood escape from one,she devoted her life to studying them and trying to understand there sickness. Ultimately she Pursues a killer of seven woman and develops a fetish for the charming handsome sicko.Sounds bad huh but remember this is only a book one woman's mental creation a fantasy take it with the intent she wrote it as a mystery not yet solved.this is a great written book by a great author, the first of a series as we all know and i think we all know Micheal will be proven to be innocent in the end of the second or third book.This is a good book well written scary, mysterious, suspenseful it will take off like wild fire because of the controversy  like shades of grey this is a sure best seller.

The Last Victim: A Novel

Kindel
The Last Victim: A Novel






Tuesday, July 24, 2012

Gone Girl:by Gillian Flynn a good book about a bad marriage

Gone Girl:by Gillian Flynn a good book about a bad marriage
Gillian Flynn’s previous books, Sharp Objects and Dark Places, were very good books well written and interesting to read, her most intricately twisted and deliciously sinister story Gone Girl is dangerous for any reader who has ever been married, this is her break through book to greatness.

“An ingenious and viperish thriller… It’s going to make Gillian Flynn a star… The first half of Gone Girl is a nimble, caustic riff on our Nancy Grace culture and the way in which ''The butler did it'' has morphed into ''The husband did it.'' The second half is the real stunner, though. Now I really am going to shut up before I spoil what instantly shifts into a great, breathless read. Even as Gone Girl grows truly twisted and wild, it says smart things about how tenuous power relations are between men and women, and how often couples are at the mercy of forces beyond their control. As if that weren’t enough, Flynn has created a genuinely creepy villain you don't see coming. People love to talk about the banality of evil. You’re about to meet a maniac you could fall in love with. A” Jeff Giles, Entertainment Weekly


“A portrait of a marriage so hilariously terrifying, it will make you have a good hard think about who the person on the other side of the bed really is. This novel is so bogglingly twisty, we can only give you the initial premise: on their fifth anniversary, Nick Dunne’s beloved wife Amy disappears, and all signs point to very foul play indeed. Nick has to clear his name before the police finger him for Amy’s murder.” Time


Gone Girl is a book with more twist than the viper and more violence than war of the roses.If you are a newly wed do not read this book because you will start suspecting your spouse of everything from cheating to murder.Gillian does a great job of keeping your attention by adding odd twist to this story although there are parts that are very slow i think they are set up poonts for the next twist.


GONE GIRL is a great thriller, but it's a gradual burn. Flynn strings you along. She gives out just enough details to make you believe you've figured things out before she hits you with another haha exposure that changes every little thing. And she saves the biggest i gotcha of all for the end, which is shocking in its seductively. The way the story ends puts the final seal on what a truly sick relationship Nick and Amy had.


On a warm summer morning in North Carthage, Missouri, it is Nick and Amy’s fifth wedding anniversary. Presents are being wrapped and reservations are being made when Nick Dunne’s clever and beautiful wife disappears from their rented McMansion on the Mississippi River. Husband-of-the-Year Nick Dunne isn’t doing himself any favors with cringe-worthy daydreams about the slope and shape of his wife’s head, but hearing from Amy through flashbacks in her diary reveal the perky perfectionist could have put anyone dangerously on edge. Under mounting pressure from the police and the media—as well as Amy’s fiercely doting parents—the town golden boy parades an endless series of lies, deceits, and inappropriate behavior. Nick is oddly evasive, and he’s definitely bitter—but is he really a killer? As the cops close in, every couple in town is soon wondering how well they know the one that they love. With his twin sister Margo at his side, Nick stands by his innocence. Trouble is, if Nick didn’t do it, where is that beautiful wife? And what was left in that silvery gift box hidden in the back of her bedroom closet? exert from http://gillian-flynn.com/gone-girl/

    
Gone Girl: A Novel

Monday, July 9, 2012

Defending Jacob review

Defending Jacob review


What would you do if your 14 year old son was charged with the murder of a classmate.


What would you do if your 14 year old son was charged with the murder of a classmate and you were the assistant D.A. of that town. Probably the same thing as Andy Barber did defend him with your life.Each and every parental impulse Andy has rallies to defend his boy. Jacob contends that he is not guilty, and Andy believes him. He’s his father no choice. But as frightening facts and shocking details surface, as a marriage is threatened to crumble and the trial worsens, as the crisis unveils how little a father knows about his son, Andy will faces a trial of his own—between loyalty and the law, between truth and accusations, between a past he’s tried to hide and a future he cannot conceptualize.This is a great story written by a ex D.A. with nice insights to a long court battle very real very believable could happen to any of us that is what scares me.a real mystery court room thriller with a shocking ending read it you will love it.


Defending Jacob: A Novel
Kindle
Defending Jacob: A Novel


Nooks click here
Defending Jacob

Tuesday, June 26, 2012

Ten best books so far this year

Ten best books so far this year


We are six month into 2012 now with the thousands of books being published every day here is my perception of what the best ten books are so far this year.

1-3-One is a easy pick Fifty Shades Trilogy: Fifty Shades of Grey, Fifty Shades Darker, Fifty Shades Freed 
Everyone is talking about the 50 shades trilogy at home, the office,online everywhere the reason because it is different fresh and controversial.Those are the exact reasons i loved the series about a entrepreneur and a innocent college girl falling in love and he is heavily into to bondage it is a love story, a porn story, a romance story bringing out the fascination of bondage to the forefront of the best sellers list, as all three books hit number one.I love these books there different fresh and naughty and they make you think they are very well written you will be deep inside the characters after just a few chapters.

Fifty Shades Trilogy: Fifty Shades of Grey, Fifty Shades Darker, Fifty Shades Freed 3-volume Boxed Set



4-  Oh,Baby ! by Tia Mowry

We all know Tia Mowry from the TV show sister sister the young cute twin with quick one liners.Now Tia has grown up, she is brilliant beautiful still has her witty one liners.I don't know if she wrote this while she was pregnant or after maybe she just took really good notes but she remembers everything. I love this book because it is fresh by a new writer and the funniest book i ever read.Tia holds back nothing in this candid descriptive tale of her pregnancy and you will not be able to hold back the laughs as we all learn the pains the discomfort the embarrassing moments of being pregnant.As you read this book you can just see it as a sitcom with Tia in the lead, it really is entertaining with the success of this book i am sure Tia will be writing more about raising kids she is a great talent and a great story teller.There is also a great learning factor in this book that every new mom or soon to be mom should read,and every man should be required to read this book so he can understand exactly what women go through when there pregnant.Read it you will love it!

Oh, Baby!: Pregnancy Tales and Advice from One Hot Mama to Another



5-Dust devils by Roger Smith
I love a low down dirty flawed character book,Roger can make a hero out of a Hell's Angle or a goat out of the local town sheriff he is a writers writer and a avid readers writer.He is so talented when you read his books you can feel the Cape Town heat on your back smell the odor of death in the air lots of twists underhanded dealings and low life ruckus the action of action books

Dust Devils



6-Monday mornings by Sanjay Gupta
Dr. Sanjay Gupta, America's doctor, has created a page-turner. It's an exhilarating medical thriller with the sympathy, hope, enthusiasm and desire that outline Sanjay. Five  surgeons at Chealsea Hospital take the skills and talents to the limit to save the most seriously ill patients and extend there life. It is Monday Mornings that presents a distinctive look at the real method in which surgeons understand - through their flaws. It is Monday Mornings when, if you're fortunate, you have a opportunity at redemption.This is the Doctors E>R General hospital and Dr.Kildar all rolled up into one fantastic book.CNN's chief medical correspondent goes fiction after two non fiction best sellers.

Monday Mornings: A Novel



7- Capture by Roger Smith
Roger Smith again makes Cape Town the most frightful city on earth with corruption, murder and mystery and lies,this book is sure to be a block buster movie as it is brilliant one of the best written books i have ever read truly is a book you will not put down till you finish it,live this master piece no way you can not like this book i promise.

Capture

8- Black List: A Thriller (Scot Harvath) 
This is a new release i haven't  written the review yet but it is amazing action thriller by one of the best writers of today.A stunning masterwork of action, intrigue, and ingenious plot twists.

Black List (Scot Harvath)



9-New York To Dallas J D Robb

Some times i think Nora Roberts does her best work under her alias J D Robb.My love affair with Nora Roberts go up and down like the worlds longest roller coaster since she has 170 million books in print she almost writes them faster than i can read them sometimes to fast ,yet some of  my favorite books  were penned by her also.But like i always said because i like a few of your books does not mean i will like them all. Nora writes under another name called J.D.Robb to put out a detective series with Eve Dallas as the super romantic super smart star of the series about NYPSD Lieutenant Eve Dallas .
New York to Dallas (In Death, No. 33)

Monday, June 25, 2012

Capture by Roger Smith review

Capture by Roger Smith review
 You do not read a Roger Smith book you live it

6 months ago i apologized to Roger Smith for not reading any of his books,i then stated Dust devils as one of the best books i had ever read,i then i read wake up dead and i knew this was one of the greatest suspense writers of our generation.A few days ago Robert sent me a personal twit telling me his new book Capture was available at amazon e books immediately i downloaded it and began reading my 5th Roger Smith thriller.

One thing about books with hero's bigger than life is they usually are squeaky clean tough guys with high morals ,big guns and at worst a heavy sexual appetite as in James bond ,Jack Reacher and many James Patterson thrillers.The thing i notice most about Smiths books is each book gets better with Dust devils having been his best work up till now.


I love books that are different, in this day when so many books are similar with ,matching hero's in the bond image,or the ,mass produced love stories from Nora Roberts who writes books faster than i can read them and some of them such as The three fates i thought were amazing.that is the reason i loved Fifty Shades of Grey a erotic love story with a lot of bondage thrown in but had a intense love story line because it was different someone had the balls to put a bondage love story on the best seller list a trilogy, all three hit number one so i guess i am not the only one who likes something new and different.


All that brings me to this point the reason Roger Smith's books are so different, so intense is the hero is never squeaky clean, he mite be just one step away from being the bad guy, maybe a drug addict or a drunk every single one of the characters in smith's books have flaws not only making them interesting but making them  understandable to us flawed readers.Roger does an amazing job of a taking flawed hero's making them so likable you feel like there your friends or neighbors.I love down and dirty books about poverty rebellion and survival and that is what Capture is all about.This guy's writing is so good you can smell the stench of the swamps,feel the Capetown heat or smell the pot in the background you do not read a Roger Smith book you live it as if your there with him.


Roger Smith again makes Cape Town the most frightful city on earth with corruption, murder and mystery and lies,this book is sure to be a block buster movie as it is brilliant one of the best written books i have ever read truly is a book you will not put down till you finish it,live this master piece no way you can not like this book i promise.


This is very new i think it's only on kindle right now Capture



Barnes@Noble
        
                                                                                            Barnes@Noble

Wednesday, June 20, 2012

Daniel Silva's The Fallen Angel

Daniel Silva's The Fallen Angel

Daniel Silva author of The Unlikely SpyThe Mark of the AssassinThe Marching SeasonThe Kill ArtistThe English AssassinThe ConfessorA Death in ViennaPrince of FireThe MessengerThe Secret ServantMoscow RulesThe DefectorThe Rembrandt Affair and Portrait of a Spy. He is married to NBC NewsToday correspondent Jamie Gangel; they live in Washington, D.C.,


Silva is the master of intrigue and suspense is among the top 5 authors in this category.i loved a death in Vienna .His fictional character Gabriel Allon—art restorer, spy, and assassin—returns in a spellbinding new thriller from the #1 New York Times-bestselling master of intrigue and suspense is right up there with Jack Reacher and a couple of other fictional spies that keep returning to the best seller list.Due out July 17 this book may be pre ordered .


'Allon is the 21st century James Bond - stylishly paced, refined and brillient., Daily Mail 'Sexily brooding Allon... must be the most famous superspy not played by Daniel Craig' Daily Telegraph 'In true Bauer fashion, shoot-outs, kidnappings and international terror plots follow Gabriel Allon wherever he goes' USA Today 'Silva builds tension with breathtaking double and triple turns of the plot, People



                                             



The Fallen Angel, on sale July 17!
Signed First Editions Now Available



After narrowly surviving his last operation, Gabriel Allon, the wayward son of Israeli intelligence, has taken refuge behind the walls of the Vatican, where he is restoring one of Caravaggio’s greatest masterpieces. But while working early one morning in the conservation lab, he is summoned to St. Peter’s Basilica by his friend and occasional ally Monsignor Luigi Donati, the all-powerful private secretary to his Holiness Pope Paul VII. The body of a beautiful woman, a curator from the antiquities department, lies smashed and broken beneath Michelangelo’s magnificent dome. The Vatican police suspect suicide, though Gabriel, with his restorer’s eye and flawless memory, believes otherwise. So, it seems, does Donati. But the monsignor is fearful that a public inquiry might inflict another scandal on the Church, and so he calls upon Gabriel to use his matchless talents and experience to quietly pursue the truth—with one important caveat.

“Rule number one at the Vatican,” Donati said. “Don’t ask too many questions.”

Gabriel soon learns that the dead woman had uncovered a dangerous secret—a secret that threatens a global criminal enterprise that is looting timeless treasures of antiquity and selling them to the highest bidder. But there is more to this network than just greed. A  mysterious operative, an old enemy out for vengeance, is plotting an unthinkable act of sabotage that will plunge the world into a conflict of apocalyptic proportions. Once again, Gabriel must return to the ranks of his old intelligence service—and place himself, and those he holds dear, on the razor’s edge of danger.

An intoxicating blend of art, intrigue, and history, The Fallen Angel moves swiftly from the cloistered chambers of the Vatican, to the glamorous ski slopes of St. Moritz, to the graceful avenues of Berlin and Vienna—and, finally, to a shocking climax beneath the world’s most sacred and contested parcel of land. Each setting in this extraordinary novel is rendered with the care of an Old Master, as are the spies, lovers, priests, and thieves who inhabit its pages. It is a story of faith and of the destructive power of secrets. And it is an all-too-timely reminder that those who do not remember the past are doomed to repeat it.

Reference http://danielsilvabooks.com/

Sunday, June 10, 2012

11th Hour BY James Patterson & Maxine Paetro



I liked most of the Women's murder club books but this one may very well be the best of the lot Patterson is the master of mystery. Another fast paced story from James Patterson as we rejoined with the four women of the "Women's Murder Club" in this sequel "11th Hour". In 11th Hour , we find out that Lindsey Boxer is pregnant with hubby Joe's baby , Cindy is engaged to Rich Conklin , Yuki is sleeping with Lindsey's boss Jackson and of course Claire is just being Claire.In Most of James's novels there is a couple of twists and usually two main story lines . The first story line is that somebody is killing all the hoodlums on the street mostly Drug Dealers  but when one of the dealers turns out to have been an Undercover FBI agent , it is discovered that the killer known as "Revenge" could very well be not only a cop killer but a cop and the top of the suspicious list is Lindsey and Rich's ex Jacobi, Can the pair prove Jacobi's innocent and track down the real killer ? The other tale is that in one of the Richest estates - a couple of skulls were found and then ultimately it is uncovered that the backyard is like Skull ecstasy as a total seven skulls are located . Who is the mysterious killer and where is the rest of the bodies ? If solving these cases weren't hard enough , Lindsey is having issues and fears that she may lose her job and she has no-one to talk to when a female co-worker of Joe's lets her on a little secret relationship she had with him.
What happens when the clock strikes Eleven ?

                  11th Hour

11th Hour (Women's Murder Club)
Find out in Eleventh Hour by James Patterson and Maxine Paetro.

Here's a exert from Pattersons blog http://www.jamespatterson.com/books_11thHour.php#excerpts
A GOOD-LOOKING MAN in his forties sat in the back row of the auditorium at the exclusive Morton Academy of Music. He was wearing a blue suit, white shirt, and a snappy striped tie. His features were good, although not remarkable, but behind the blue tint of his glasses, he had very kind brown eyes.
He had come to the recital alone and had a passing thought about his wife and children at home, but then he refocused his attention on someone else’s child.
Her name was Noelle Smith. She was eleven, a cute little girl and a very talented young violinist who had just performed a Bach gavotte with distinction.
Noelle knew she’d done well. She took a deep bow with a flourish, grinning as two hundred parents in the audience clapped and whistled.
As the applause died down, a gray-haired man in the third row popped up from his seat, buttoned his jacket, stepped out into the aisle, and headed toward the lobby.
That man was Chaz Smith, Noelle’s father.
The man in the blue suit waited several seconds, then followed Smith, staying back a few paces, walking along the cream-tiled corridor, then taking a right past the pint-size water fountain and into the short spur of a hallway that ended at the men’s room.
After entering the men’s room, he looked beneath the stalls and saw Chaz Smith’s Italian loafers under the door at the far right. Otherwise, the room was empty. In a minute or two, the room would fill.
The man in the blue suit moved quickly, picking up the large metal trash can next to the sink and placing it so that it blocked the exit.
Then he called out, “Mr. Smith? I’m sorry to disturb you, but it’s about your car.”
“What? Who is that?”
“Your car, Mr. Smith. You left your lights on.”
The man in the blue suit removed his semiauto .22-caliber Ruger from his jacket pocket, screwed on the suppressor. Then he took out a tan-colored plastic bag, the kind you get at the supermarket, and pulled the bag over his gun.
Smith swore. Then the toilet flushed and Smith opened the door. His gray hair was mussed, white powder rimmed his nostrils, and his face showed fierce indignation.
“You’re sure it’s my car?” he said. “My wife will kill me if I’m not back in my seat for the finale.”
“I’m really sorry to do this to your wife and child. Noelle played beautifully.”
Smith looked puzzled—then he knew. He dropped the vial of coke, and his hand dove under his jacket. Too late.
The man in the blue suit lifted his bag-covered gun, pulled the trigger, and shot Chaz Smith twice between the eyes.
Copyright © 2012 by James Patterson Available in kindle and nook

Kindle
. 11th Hour (Women's Murder Club)


nook