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Till Murder Do Us Part
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The crimes in this book are 100 percent real. Certain elements of the stories, some scenes and dialogue, locations, names, and characters have been fictionalized, but these stories are about real people committing real crimes, with real, horrifying consequences.
Copyright © 2021 by James Patterson
Cover design by Jonathan Bush
Cover art by Gloria Miguelez
Cover © 2021 Hachette Book Group, Inc.
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ISBN 978-1-5387-5248-7 (trade pb) / 978-1-5387-5251-7 (HC library edition) / 978-1-5387-1905-3 (large-print pb) / 978-1-5387-5249-4 (ebook)
Library of Congress Control Number 2020940672
E3-20201208-DA-NF-ORI
Table of Contents
Cover
Title Page
Copyright
Till Murder Do Us Part Prologue One
Two
Three
Four
Part 1 Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Part 2 Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Chapter 20
Chapter 21
Chapter 22
Part 3 Chapter 23
Chapter 24
Chapter 25
Chapter 26
Chapter 27
Chapter 28
Chapter 29
Chapter 30
Chapter 31
Chapter 32
Chapter 33
Chapter 34
Part 4 Chapter 35
Chapter 36
Chapter 37
Chapter 38
Chapter 39
Epilogue
Ramp Up to Murder Prologue
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Chapter 20
Chapter 21
Chapter 22
Chapter 23
Chapter 24
Chapter 25
Chapter 26
Chapter 27
Chapter 28
Chapter 29
Chapter 30
Epilogue
Discover More
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Till Murder Do Us Part
James Patterson
with Andrew Bourelle
Prologue
One
San Joaquin County, California
August 7, 1980
Friends Reggie Sanders and Pat Moorehouse walk along a path parallel to a concrete channel filled with slow-moving water. There isn’t a cloud in the sky, and the sun reflects off the steel-gray surface, making visibility into the water impossible. Between them, the two men are carrying fishing poles, tackle boxes, portable lawn chairs, and a small cooler. The cooler currently contains only a six-pack of Schlitz, though the men hope it will be full of striped bass when they make this walk in reverse in a few hours.
“Are we there yet?” Pat asks, his forehead beaded with sweat.
“Almost,” Reggie assures him. “It’s just up here. I’m telling you—I saw all kinds of fish in there. You won’t be sorry.”
A few weeks ago, Reggie and his wife had taken an evening walk along the canal, and he’d spotted a section where dozens of fish were swimming. The deeper water is nearly opaque, but in the right light, the top foot or so is translucent enough to allow for glimpsing what’s floating around down there. As soon as Reggie saw how many fish there were, he told Pat they needed to come throw some lines in and try to land a few—though it’s taken the men, who both work at the nearby Altamont Speedway, until now to find time in their schedules to go fishing.
The waterway—technically named the Governor Edmund G. Brown California Aqueduct, though most people simply call it the California Aqueduct—is a series of canals and tunnels carrying water throughout the state. Its four hundred miles of waterways also happen to be full of fish, at least in this twenty-foot-wide section outside the city of Tracy.
It’s morning, but the temperature is already warm. The day is only going to get hotter, so the two friends will probably knock off by early afternoon. There isn’t any shade out here.
“Here it is,” Reggie says. “The spot I was telling you about.”
He sets down his tackle box and lawn chair, and takes the teardrop-shaped fishing net dangling from his belt and drops it in the dirt.
“I don’t see any,” Pat says, squinting down at the water. It’s hard to see anything because of the angle of the sun reflecting brightly off the surface. “You said the water was so thick with them that you could practically walk across it.”
“That was a figure of speech,” Reggie says.
The men set up their lawn chairs and open their tackle boxes. Reggie has also brought a Styrofoam container of live night crawlers, and the two men bait their hooks with squirming worms and then cast their lines out into the water.
“Want a beer?” Pat asks.
“Does the pope shit in the woods?” Reggie laughs as Pat tosses him a Schlitz. “It’s nice and quiet out here, ain’t it?”
“Sure is.”
It’s hard to believe that to the east, the bustling San Francisco Bay Area is not far away. But here, among the beige sandy walkways along the canal and the fields of golden hay stretching in all directions, the crowded metropolitan world feels very distant.
“Hey,” Pat says, sitting up in his chair and pulling on his pole. “I think I got one.”
His rod curves sharply as he tries to reel in whatever is on the end of the line.
“Nah,” he says, disappointed. “It ain’t no fish.
I’m snagged on something.”
“Huh,” Reggie says. “Wonder what it could be.”
One benefit of fishing in the aqueduct is that it’s relatively free of debris. Compared to a river or lake, there are few logs, branches, and rocks. Snagging a hook on something is relatively uncommon.
“Whatever it is, it’s gonna break my line if I’m not careful.”
Reggie picks up his fishing net and kneels down at the edge of the slope.
“Get it close to the surface, and I’ll try to get the net on it, whatever it is.”
Reggie reaches with the three-foot-long handle and dips the teardrop-shaped loop down into the water. He feels something large—maybe a log—and gets the net over it. He heaves and is surprised by the weight. He can’t believe Pat’s line hasn’t broken already.
“What is it?” Pat asks.
“Can’t see it.” Reggie groans with the effort of trying to pull the thing up without falling into the water.
What soon surfaces from the water, Reggie’s fishing net all tangled around it, is a human head, with the rest of the body visible just below the surface of the water. The face belongs to a man, its skin ghoulishly pale, its eyes sunken and milky inside cavernous sockets. A tongue pokes from the mouth like a swollen purple leech.
“Holy shit!” Reggie shouts, letting go of the net’s aluminum handle as if it has suddenly become scalding hot.
Pat jerks his pole in terror and the line finally snaps. The body bobs at the surface for a moment before it begins to sink again. Before it disappears back into the murk, pulling the fishing net down with it, they can see that a heavy chain, like a vehicle tow cable, is wrapped around its shoulders and torso.
Reggie and Pat stare at the surface of the water, their chests heaving.
“Did I just see what I thought I saw?” Pat says.
“I’m afraid so,” Reggie says.
“What do we do?”
“What do you think? We get the hell out of here and go call the police.”
Two
Oakland, California
September 19, 1980
Kate Wright is holding her son, six-week-old Jeremy, at the kitchen table when her husband, Eric, comes into the room for breakfast. The baby boy fell asleep while nursing, and as Kate rises to put him in his crib, Eric kisses her on the forehead, careful not to jar the baby awake. He stands there for a moment, looking at his son cradled in his wife’s arms.
“What an angel,” he whispers, smiling.
Kate loves Eric’s smile—it lights up his whole face with an expression of pure joy. That’s one reason she fell in love with him—he’s always happy, always smiling.
As Kate settles the baby into his crib in the bedroom, Eric pours himself a bowl of Kellogg’s Frosted Mini-Wheats. Kate’s tired from being up with the baby, but she comes back out to sit with Eric while he eats; she wants to spend a few minutes with her husband before he heads out for the day.
“I’m so glad you don’t work for the sheriff’s office anymore,” she says.
“Me, too,” Eric agrees.
“I worried all day long,” Kate says. “I kept thinking something bad was going to happen.”
“Nothing bad was going to happen to me,” Eric says, taking a bite of his cereal.
Eric resigned from the sheriff’s office last year. At thirty-one years old, he’d been a lieutenant—the youngest person ever to achieve that rank in Alameda County—but he’d claimed the job had become “too boring.”
Although that’s his usual excuse, Kate suspects he really quit to assuage her fears. Plus, they had the baby on the way—and Eric already has two older children from a previous marriage to help support—so she figures he wanted to find a more lucrative career anyway. Maybe he called police work boring to protect his reputation, or his own ego, but whatever the reason, she’s genuinely thankful that he changed careers.
After he resigned from the sheriff’s department, Eric took a job in a precious metals firm. He surprised Kate with his enthusiasm for the job, learning everything he could about the gold and silver business. She wouldn’t have thought a man like her husband, always craving adventure, would have found learning about metals more exciting than police work, but Eric genuinely seemed to think so. As far as she could tell, he loved his new job and didn’t have any regrets about giving up law enforcement.
Personally, she can certainly breathe easier now that he has a more ordinary nine-to-five job.
“Gotta go,” Eric says, rising to put his empty bowl in the sink.
Kate walks him to the door and kisses him at the doorstep. The mid-September air outside is cool and pleasant.
“Are you working late again?” she asks.
“Nope,” he says. “I’ll be home in time for dinner.”
He climbs into his Honda Civic and pulls out of the driveway. He sticks his arm out the window to wave at her, and she blows him a kiss good-bye.
She heads back to their bedroom and lies down, hoping to get a little more rest while the baby is asleep. As she drifts off, she thinks about how she’d never be able to relax this way if Eric was still working as a cop—she’d be anxious all day.
When the phone jars her awake a while later, it wakes the baby, too. She lifts the crying infant into her arms.
“Shhh. Shhh,” Kate says, rocking Jeremy in her arms. Then she plucks the phone out of its cradle and tucks it into the crook of her neck. “Wright residence,” she says, finally getting the baby calmed down.
“Hi, Kate. It’s Dale over at the office. Is Eric there?”
Why would Eric’s boss be calling? thinks Kate, her mind still foggy from sleep.
“No, he’s on his way to work. He’ll be there any…” She trails off because her eyes have found the clock hanging on the wall.
It’s almost noon.
“Wait,” she says, shaking her head to try to clear it. “Is Eric not at work this morning?”
“No,” Dale says. “I figured he came down with something. But I need some information about one of our accounts.”
Kate stares at the clock, now fully awake.
“Um, Dale,” she says. “Eric left for work four hours ago. Are you sure he’s not there?”
“Huh,” Dale says. “That’s strange. I hope nothing bad has happened.”
Three
Kate Wright paces the house for twenty minutes. She’s afraid if she calls the police, they’ll tell her it’s too soon to open a missing person investigation. But she has another idea. She’ll call her father, an Alameda County Municipal Court judge.
Her fingers tremble as they work the rotary dial.
“Dad,” she says, “Eric’s disappeared. I’m worried.”
She explains the situation and is prepared for him to tell her not to be concerned about it. To her relief, he takes her worries seriously.
“I’ll call the sheriff,” he says. “I’ll get them looking for him.”
Her father tells her to try not to worry.
“He probably just had a flat tire or something,” her father says.
Kate spends the day trying not to fall apart every time the baby cries. She calls a couple of friends and asks them to come over and sit with her, but they can’t. One woman has to go into San Francisco for an appointment. The other has friends visiting and they’re going to Alcatraz.
For much of the day, she sits on the front porch. She keeps the door open so she can listen for the baby and for the telephone. But she keeps an eye out, hoping that Eric’s Honda Civic will pull up to the curb and he’ll step out with an embarrassed smile on his face. He’ll apologize for worrying her and have an excuse for why he was missing all day.
Every time a car approaches, she feels her heart swell with hope and then deflate from disappointment when it’s not a Civic but a Ford pickup or a Chevy Nova or a Volkswagen Beetle. Occasionally a car that looks like his will approach, and the anticlimax is even more crushing.
His car never comes. Nor does the phone ring.
Finally, at close to five o’clock, her father’s Mercury Grand Marquis pulls up in front of the house. Her dad steps out, still wearing his shirt and tie, his sleeves rolled to the elbow. Her father has always had a good poker face—as a judge, he’s well practiced at hiding his emotions. But in her gut, Kate knows he’s here to deliver bad news.
If it was good news, he would have called.
“Kate,” he says, “let’s go in the house.”
“What happened?” she says, already feeling her knees go weak.
“I’ll tell you inside,” he says. “Where’s the baby? Is Jeremy okay?”
“He’s sleeping,” she says, nearly shouting. “Tell me what happened.”
“They found Eric’s car.”
“His car? Not him?”
“It was at the BART station at El Cerrito Plaza,” he says. “I don’t know how to say this, so I’m just going to give it to you straight. There was a bullet hole in the driver’s side door and blood on the front seat.”
From inside, as if he heard his grandfather’s news, six-week-old Jeremy begins to wail.
Four
While Kate couldn’t get anyone to come over on the day Eric disappeared, now she can’t get people to leave her alone. For the next two days, a steady rotation of friends and family stop by to check in, keep her company, and help with the baby.
Everyone keeps telling her that Eric could be okay. To keep her spirits up. To try not to worry until they know more. But Kate knows her husband is dead. Everyone else is just fooling themselves.
Her father, who took the day off, is at the house when the sheriff’s vehicle pulls up. A fresh-faced deputy steps out along with a veteran detective named Billy Horvath whom Kate recognizes from when Eric worked on the force.
“Ma’am,” says the detective, “may we speak to you? Judge, you’re welcome to join us.”
“Have you found him?” Kate says.
“No,” Horvath says, “but we do have some news.”
When her father showed up with his news, she insisted on hearing it right away. But this time, Kate feels certain she knows what’s coming, and she doesn’t mind putting it off for a moment. She invites the men in and offers them coffee. They decline, and when Kate is finally seated across the table from them—with the baby sleeping soundly in the nursery—the detective gives her the update.