Alex Cross's Trial Read online

Page 6


  “Well, suh, we just thinking with the crop coming you might be needin’ some mo’ help round the gin,” said one of the boys.

  “That’s the trouble with you niggers, is when you set in to tryin’ to think,” said Leander Purneau. He spoke in a friendly, jokey voice, which put me, and the boy, off guard. But then he popped him a solid punch on the side of his face and sent the boy down onto his knees.

  The other boys skittered away like bugs from a kicked-over log. Suddenly I really was back in the past, and the boy on the ground was in serious trouble, like poor George Pearson had been.

  There was one difference now—I was not a timid little boy. I was a grown man. As I wiped my wet hands on my shirt, I considered what I was about to do.

  If I caused a commotion, made a scene, called attention to myself, I might endanger my mission even before it started.

  But if I did nothing?

  Fortunately, the boy on the ground rolled over and jumped up. He sprinted off down the platform, holding his jaw, but at least he was getting away.

  And at that very moment, I felt something cold and hard jammed against the side of my neck.

  It felt an awful lot like the barrel of a gun.

  A deep voice behind me: “Just put your hands in the air. Nice and slow, high, that’s the way to do it.”

  Chapter 29

  “NOW, I WANT you to turn around real slow, partner. Don’t make any fast moves.”

  I did exactly as I was told. Real slow.

  And found myself looking straight into the face of Jacob Gill. Jacob and I had been inseparable from as far back as I could remember, until the day I left Eudora for college.

  “You son of a bitch!” I shouted at him.

  Jacob was laughing so hard he actually held his stomach and doubled over. His laughter made him do a little jig of delight.

  “You nearly gave me a goddamn heart attack,” I said. “You’re a jackass.”

  “I know,” Jacob said, howling some more.

  Then we hugged, seizing each other by the shoulders, stepping back to get a good look.

  “How’d you even know it was me?” I asked.

  “We don’t have too many yellow-haired fellows ten feet tall hanging around,” said Jacob. Then he added, “I saw you decide not to mix it up with Jocko and Leander. That was smart thinking on your part.”

  “I guess so,” I said. I remembered the time Jacob left me in the swamp to watch what happened to George Pearson. I wished I could tell him why I’d held back this time.

  “Hey, it’s near dinnertime,” Jacob said and lightly punched my shoulder. “Let’s go get some catfish.”

  “That sounds good. Where we going?”

  “Don’t tell me you’ve turned into such a big-city boy you forgot Friday is catfish day at the Slide Inn?”

  Chapter 30

  I PUSHED THE BICYCLE between us down Myrtle Street, toward the town square. Jacob stopped twice along the way to take a nip of whiskey from a pint he kept in his worn leather toolbox, and I said hello to a couple more people I recognized, or who remembered me.

  The Slide Inn was alive with the hum of conversation, the smell of frying fish, the smoke from the cigars of the old fellows who always occupied the front table, solving the world’s problems on a daily basis.

  “Why aren’t you staying at your daddy’s?” Jacob asked as soon as we sat down at a corner table.

  “You know my father,” I said. “It seemed like Maybelle’s was the smart place to be. My father and I just don’t get along.”

  “All right, then. But there is one question I been dying to ask: What in hell are you doing back in Eudora?”

  “Nothing much,” I said. “I’ve got a little business to tend to.”

  “Lawyer business?”

  “Just a simple job for the Justice Department. I have to interview a few lawyers in the county, that’s all it is. In the meantime—it’s catfish!” I said.

  Pretty soon Miss Fanny came from behind the counter bearing plates of crispy fried fish, sizzling-hot hush puppies, and ice-cold sweet-pickle coleslaw. The first bite was delicious, and every bite after. I asked Miss Fanny what time the place opened for breakfast, and made up my mind never to suffer through another of Maybelle’s breakfasts.

  “Hell, I look old, but you still look like a high-school boy, Ben,” said Jacob. “Like you could run ten miles and never even break a sweat.”

  “Oh, I did plenty of sweating just riding that bike a dozen blocks,” I said. “It’ll take me a while to get used to this heat again. How you been keeping yourself, Jacob?”

  “Well, let me see… you probably heard I turned down the offer to be ambassador to England… and that was right after I passed on the chance to be president of the university up in Tuscaloosa. Well, sir, it was shortly after that I made up my mind that the profession I was most suited for was as a carpenter’s assistant.”

  “That’s good,” I said. “Honest work.”

  “Yeah, me and Wylie Davis are the men you want to see if you need a new frame for your window screens, you know, or a new roof for your johnny house.”

  Then there was silence, a good and acceptable kind of silence—nothing nervous or uncomfortable about it. The kind of quiet that is tolerable only between old friends.

  It was Jacob who finally broke it.

  “They were good days, Ben. Weren’t they?”

  “They were great days.”

  “We were friends! Right through it all.”

  “The best,” I said. “We were like brothers.”

  We clinked our iced-tea glasses. Then Jacob spoke.

  “But there is one thing I need to make very clear to you, Ben.”

  “What’s that?” I tried to keep the note of concern out of my voice.

  “You said we were like brothers?”

  “Yeah? That’s what I said.”

  “I just need to remind you of something.”

  “Well, go ahead, Jacob,” I said.

  “I was always the pretty one.”

  Chapter 31

  ENOUGH!

  Enough idle thoughts about my long-ago romance with Elizabeth Begley.

  Enough turning over in my mind the painful lack of affection between my father and me, the disgust in his face when he saw me for the first time in six years.

  Enough reliving an old friendship like Jacob’s and mine.

  Theodore Roosevelt hadn’t sent me to Eudora to take a rickety bicycle ride down memory lane. I had a job to do, and it might even help change history.

  I paid the bill for our lunch, and Jacob left two bits for Miss Fanny. Then he headed off up Commerce Street to help Wylie frame a new roof for the front porch of the town hall.

  An old black man stepped off the sidewalk as Jacob passed, not to avoid a collision, but simply making the customary show of respect. Black men of all ages had been stepping down off sidewalks to get out of my way since I was five years old.

  I rode the bicycle back to Maybelle’s, changed my shirt, and set off on foot for the Eudora Quarters. On my way out, I made sure to tell Maybelle I had some interviews to attend to.

  I considered trying to hire a horse and buggy, and couldn’t think of anywhere in town to do such a thing. My father had three perfectly good horses in his barn, of course, but I was determined to do what I came to do without him.

  ABRAHAM CROSS, EUDORA QUARTERS said the slip of paper the president had given me.

  It was time for me to meet this Mr. Cross.

  Chapter 32

  I KNEW THE STREETS of the Quarters almost as well as I knew the rest of Eudora. I knew the history of how it came to be. After the war, the slaves from all the plantations and farms in the vicinity of Eudora had been freed. Most of them had either left their previous lodgings or been turned out by masters who no longer wanted to provide housing for people they didn’t own.

  So the freed slaves built their homes where no one else wanted to live, in a swampy, muddy, mosquito-ridden low place half
a mile north of the center of Eudora.

  They gathered fallen logs from the woods and lumber from derelict barns to build their little houses. They laid boards across the swampy, pestilential ground to keep their children’s feet out of the mud. They stuffed rags and old newspapers in the chinks in the walls to keep out the wind in winter.

  They ate squirrel and possum, poke sallet and dandelion greens. They ate weeds from the field, horse corn, the leftover parts of a pig, and whatever else they could get their hands on.

  Walking along there now, as the neighborhood changed from poor white to poorer black, I saw a colored man sitting on the porch of a shack painted a gay shade of blue. He nodded at me.

  I returned his nod. “Pardon me, do you know a man by the name of Cross? Abraham Cross?”

  He never blinked. His eyes didn’t move from mine, but I had the feeling he was deciding whether or not I was worthy of the information I sought.

  “Yes, suh,” he finally said. “If you just keep walkin’, you will come on a house with a strong smell of onions. That will be Abraham’s house.”

  The sight of a white man walking on this street was not a welcome one for most of the people I came across. They kept their eyes down as they passed, which seemed to be customary now in Eudora but had not been the case when I was a boy.

  Within minutes I caught the sharp tang of onions on the air. I saw thick patches of the familiar blue-green stalks in the yard of a small red house.

  Suddenly, from the space between two houses, one little boy came running, followed by two more, and two more in pursuit.

  “He gonna snatch you and eat you,” the lead boy shouted.

  Then I saw what was chasing them—a wild pig, huge and hairy and grunting, bearing down on the boys with a pair of very bad-looking tusks.

  “That ain’t the most beautiful animal in the world,” said a colored man standing on the porch of the red house.

  I answered, “That is a face not even a mother could love.”

  I looked closer. The man was taller than me, by at least three inches, and older, by at least fifty years.

  “But she sure is beautiful when she’s angry,” he said.

  We both laughed.

  Then he said, “Begging your pardon, sir, but I get the idea you might be looking for someone.”

  “Well, as a matter of fact, I am looking for a man. His name is Abraham Cross.”

  “Yes, sir. You lookin’ at him.”

  I must have appeared surprised.

  “You was expectin’ some young fella, weren’t you, Mr. Corbett?”

  “No, I—I really had no idea who to expect…”

  “Well, sir, I confess I was expectin’ a young fella myself. So I guess at least one of us was right.”

  Chapter 33

  MAYBE IT WAS because he looked like a picture of silver-haired wisdom. I just don’t know. But the truth is, I liked Abraham Cross from the moment I met him.

  When he shook my hand, he grasped my shoulder with his other hand, so that I felt well and truly gripped.

  “From this moment, Mr. Corbett—”

  “Call me Ben,” I said.

  “From this moment, Mr. Corbett,” he said pointedly, “I am happy to be of service to you as a guide and advisor. With luck, we may also become friends.”

  I told him that I felt luck would be on our side.

  He offered me a seat on his porch, which had a view of everyone passing along the boards from one end of the Quarters to the other. Abraham greeted everyone—man, woman, child—with a friendly wave and a personal word of greeting. I think if that hairy old boar had come back, Abraham would have waved and said howdy.

  Abraham Cross had the way of a man at ease with himself. He wore dark woolen trousers, a neatly ironed white shirt, and a navy blue bowtie. I don’t know if he’d dressed up because he was expecting me or if he dressed this way every day.

  On his head was a faded blue baseball cap with the initial P faded to near invisibility. I asked him what the P stood for.

  “Pythians,” he said. “Does that mean anything to you?”

  “Weren’t they athletes in ancient Delphi?” I said.

  “Well, sir, I may be old but I ain’t as old as the Greeks in old Delphi,” he said, laughing.

  Then he explained.

  His greatest love in his young life, he told me, was baseball. After the War between the States he headed north, where a few Negro teams played.

  “Notice I said they ‘played.’ I didn’t say they ‘flourished.’ Anyways, I made the team in Philadelphia. We was porters and butlers, iron men, lawn mower men during the week. On the weekends we played baseball.”

  At Abraham’s nod, I followed him off his porch and toward the little “downtown” of the Quarters.

  We were passing the colored general store, Hemple’s, where you could see the canned goods inside through gaps between the boards. By the front door stood a neat pyramid of beautiful peaches.

  Abraham reached into his pocket for a couple of pennies, which he took inside to the old man at the cash box. He came back out and selected a nice fat peach from the side of the stack.

  “Were you any good?” I asked the old man.

  He smiled. He looked past me to a broom standing just inside the door. He asked me to hand it to him.

  “You want to know if I was any good?”

  He held the broom short, like a baseball bat. Then he tossed that beautiful peach into the air.

  He swung.

  He connected. Tasting a fine spatter of peach juice on my face, I watched it sail up and up, into the hot afternoon sky.

  “Don’t bother to go lookin’ for that peach,” he said.

  “I believe it is gone,” I agreed.

  “In a minute or two it’s gonna be in Loo-siana,” he said with a grin. “They always said tall, skinny boys like you and me can’t play baseball. They say we too far from the ground. I’ll tell you something, I proved they don’t know everything.”

  He wiped the broom handle on his shirt and put the broom back inside.

  We walked a few minutes in silence. Then Abraham stopped, his face suddenly serious.

  “I could talk baseball and swing at soft peaches all day,” he said. “But you and I have some other business.”

  “Yes, we do,” I said.

  “This is serious business, Mr. Corbett. Sad business. My people are worse off now than they were the day Mr. Lincoln signed the Emancipation.”

  Chapter 34

  “WE DON’T HAVE TO GO far to find a lynching tree,” Abraham said. “But I know how tired you young fellas get from walking in the heat of the day. I reckon we’d best take the hosses.”

  The two “hosses” Abraham led out from a rickety blacksmith shop were mules—in fact, they were mules that had hauled one too many plows down one too many cotton rows. But those skinny animals proved their worth by depositing us, less than twenty minutes later, at a secluded swampy area that was unmistakably the site of a lynching.

  Unmistakably.

  A cool grotto tucked back in the woods away from the road. Big branches interlaced overhead to form a ceiling. The dirt was packed hard as a stone floor from the feet of all the people who had stood there watching the terrible spectacle.

  Abraham pointed to an oak at the center of the clearing. “And there’s your main attraction.”

  Even without his guidance, I would have recognized it as a lynching tree. There was a thick, strong branch barely a dozen feet from the ground. The low dip in the middle of the branch was rubbed free of its bark by the friction of ropes.

  I walked under the tree. The hard ground was stained with dark blotches. My stomach churned at the thought of what had happened in this unholy place.

  “Somebody left us a greeting,” Abraham said. “That would be the Klan.”

  He was pointing behind me, to the trunk of a sycamore tree. About five feet up, someone had used an odd-looking white nail to attach a plank with crude lettering on it:
<
br />   BEWARE ALL COONS! BEWARE ALL COON LOVERS!

  “I’ve never seen a nail that color,” I said.

  “You never seen a nail made out of human bone?” said Abraham.

  I shuddered, reaching up to haul the plank down.

  “Don’t waste your strength, Mr. Corbett,” he said. “You pull that one down today, there’ll be a new sign up there next week.”

  His face changed. “We got company,” he said.

  Chapter 35

  THE DOUBLE-BARRELED SHOTGUN pointed our way was almost as big as the girl holding it. It was so long and heavy I was more afraid she would drop it and discharge it accidentally than that she might shoot us on purpose.

  Abraham said, “What you fixin’ to do with that gun? That ain’t no possum you aimin’ at.”

  I was distracted by the fact that she was very serious and very pretty. She wore a simple cotton jumper, stark white against the smooth brown of her skin. A perfect face, with delicate features that betrayed the fierceness of her attitude. Deep brown eyes flashed a steady warning: keep away from me.

  “What y’all doing messin’ around the lynching tree?” she said.

  “You know this girl, Abraham?”

  “I surely do. This is Moody. Say hello to Mr. Corbett.”

  Moody didn’t say a word to me. She kept her barrel trained on my heart. If she was going to stare at me this way, I couldn’t help looking back at her.

  “Well, if you know her,” I said, “maybe you should tell her not to go around pointing firearms at people.”

  “Moody, you heard the man,” said Abraham. “Put it down. Now, granddaughter.”

  “Oh, Papaw,” she said, “what you bring this white man out here for?”

  Abraham reached out and pushed the gun barrel away. Moody pulled back from him as if he were trying to take away her doll.

 

    Miracle at Augusta Read onlineMiracle at AugustaThe Store Read onlineThe StoreThe Midnight Club Read onlineThe Midnight ClubThe Witnesses Read onlineThe WitnessesThe 9th Judgment Read onlineThe 9th JudgmentAgainst Medical Advice Read onlineAgainst Medical AdviceThe Quickie Read onlineThe QuickieLittle Black Dress Read onlineLittle Black DressPrivate Oz Read onlinePrivate OzHomeroom Diaries Read onlineHomeroom DiariesGone Read onlineGoneLifeguard Read onlineLifeguardKill Me if You Can Read onlineKill Me if You CanBullseye Read onlineBullseyeConfessions of a Murder Suspect Read onlineConfessions of a Murder SuspectBlack Friday Read onlineBlack FridayManhunt Read onlineManhuntFilthy Rich Read onlineFilthy RichStep on a Crack Read onlineStep on a CrackPrivate Read onlinePrivatePrivate India Read onlinePrivate IndiaGame Over Read onlineGame OverPrivate Sydney Read onlinePrivate SydneyThe Murder House Read onlineThe Murder HouseMistress Read onlineMistressI, Michael Bennett Read onlineI, Michael BennettThe Gift Read onlineThe GiftThe Postcard Killers Read onlineThe Postcard KillersThe Shut-In Read onlineThe Shut-InThe House Husband Read onlineThe House HusbandThe Lost Read onlineThe LostI, Alex Cross Read onlineI, Alex CrossGoing Bush Read onlineGoing Bush16th Seduction Read online16th SeductionThe Jester Read onlineThe JesterAlong Came a Spider Read onlineAlong Came a SpiderThe Lake House Read onlineThe Lake HouseFour Blind Mice Read onlineFour Blind MiceTick Tock Read onlineTick TockPrivate L.A. Read onlinePrivate L.A.Middle School, the Worst Years of My Life Read onlineMiddle School, the Worst Years of My LifeCross Country Read onlineCross CountryThe Final Warning Read onlineThe Final WarningWord of Mouse Read onlineWord of MouseCome and Get Us Read onlineCome and Get UsSail Read onlineSailI Funny TV: A Middle School Story Read onlineI Funny TV: A Middle School StoryPrivate London Read onlinePrivate LondonSave Rafe! Read onlineSave Rafe!Swimsuit Read onlineSwimsuitSam's Letters to Jennifer Read onlineSam's Letters to Jennifer3rd Degree Read online3rd DegreeDouble Cross Read onlineDouble CrossJudge & Jury Read onlineJudge & JuryKiss the Girls Read onlineKiss the GirlsSecond Honeymoon Read onlineSecond HoneymoonGuilty Wives Read onlineGuilty Wives1st to Die Read online1st to DieNYPD Red 4 Read onlineNYPD Red 4Truth or Die Read onlineTruth or DiePrivate Vegas Read onlinePrivate VegasThe 5th Horseman Read onlineThe 5th Horseman7th Heaven Read online7th HeavenI Even Funnier Read onlineI Even FunnierCross My Heart Read onlineCross My HeartLet’s Play Make-Believe Read onlineLet’s Play Make-BelieveViolets Are Blue Read onlineViolets Are BlueZoo Read onlineZooHome Sweet Murder Read onlineHome Sweet MurderThe Private School Murders Read onlineThe Private School MurdersAlex Cross, Run Read onlineAlex Cross, RunHunted: BookShots Read onlineHunted: BookShotsThe Fire Read onlineThe FireChase Read onlineChase14th Deadly Sin Read online14th Deadly SinBloody Valentine Read onlineBloody ValentineThe 17th Suspect Read onlineThe 17th SuspectThe 8th Confession Read onlineThe 8th Confession4th of July Read online4th of JulyThe Angel Experiment Read onlineThe Angel ExperimentCrazy House Read onlineCrazy HouseSchool's Out - Forever Read onlineSchool's Out - ForeverSuzanne's Diary for Nicholas Read onlineSuzanne's Diary for NicholasCross Justice Read onlineCross JusticeMaximum Ride Forever Read onlineMaximum Ride ForeverThe Thomas Berryman Number Read onlineThe Thomas Berryman NumberHoneymoon Read onlineHoneymoonThe Medical Examiner Read onlineThe Medical ExaminerKiller Chef Read onlineKiller ChefPrivate Princess Read onlinePrivate PrincessPrivate Games Read onlinePrivate GamesBurn Read onlineBurn10th Anniversary Read online10th AnniversaryI Totally Funniest: A Middle School Story Read onlineI Totally Funniest: A Middle School StoryTaking the Titanic Read onlineTaking the TitanicThe Lawyer Lifeguard Read onlineThe Lawyer LifeguardThe 6th Target Read onlineThe 6th TargetCross the Line Read onlineCross the LineAlert Read onlineAlertSaving the World and Other Extreme Sports Read onlineSaving the World and Other Extreme Sports1st Case Read online1st CaseUnlucky 13 Read onlineUnlucky 13Haunted Read onlineHauntedCross Read onlineCrossLost Read onlineLost11th Hour Read online11th HourBookshots Thriller Omnibus Read onlineBookshots Thriller OmnibusTarget: Alex Cross Read onlineTarget: Alex CrossHope to Die Read onlineHope to DieThe Noise Read onlineThe NoiseWorst Case Read onlineWorst CaseDog's Best Friend Read onlineDog's Best FriendNevermore: The Final Maximum Ride Adventure Read onlineNevermore: The Final Maximum Ride AdventureI Funny: A Middle School Story Read onlineI Funny: A Middle School StoryNYPD Red Read onlineNYPD RedTill Murder Do Us Part Read onlineTill Murder Do Us PartBlack & Blue Read onlineBlack & BlueFang Read onlineFangLiar Liar Read onlineLiar LiarThe Inn Read onlineThe InnSundays at Tiffany's Read onlineSundays at Tiffany'sMiddle School: Escape to Australia Read onlineMiddle School: Escape to AustraliaCat and Mouse Read onlineCat and MouseInstinct Read onlineInstinctThe Black Book Read onlineThe Black BookLondon Bridges Read onlineLondon BridgesToys Read onlineToysThe Last Days of John Lennon Read onlineThe Last Days of John LennonRoses Are Red Read onlineRoses Are RedWitch & Wizard Read onlineWitch & WizardThe Dolls Read onlineThe DollsThe Christmas Wedding Read onlineThe Christmas WeddingThe River Murders Read onlineThe River MurdersThe 18th Abduction Read onlineThe 18th AbductionThe 19th Christmas Read onlineThe 19th ChristmasMiddle School: How I Got Lost in London Read onlineMiddle School: How I Got Lost in LondonJust My Rotten Luck Read onlineJust My Rotten LuckRed Alert Read onlineRed AlertWalk in My Combat Boots Read onlineWalk in My Combat BootsThree Women Disappear Read onlineThree Women Disappear21st Birthday Read online21st BirthdayAll-American Adventure Read onlineAll-American AdventureBecoming Muhammad Ali Read onlineBecoming Muhammad AliThe Murder of an Angel Read onlineThe Murder of an AngelThe 13-Minute Murder Read onlineThe 13-Minute MurderRebels With a Cause Read onlineRebels With a CauseThe Trial Read onlineThe TrialRun for Your Life Read onlineRun for Your LifeThe House Next Door Read onlineThe House Next DoorNYPD Red 2 Read onlineNYPD Red 2Ali Cross Read onlineAli CrossThe Big Bad Wolf Read onlineThe Big Bad WolfMiddle School: My Brother Is a Big, Fat Liar Read onlineMiddle School: My Brother Is a Big, Fat LiarPrivate Paris Read onlinePrivate ParisMiracle on the 17th Green Read onlineMiracle on the 17th GreenThe People vs. Alex Cross Read onlineThe People vs. Alex CrossThe Beach House Read onlineThe Beach HouseCross Kill Read onlineCross KillDog Diaries Read onlineDog DiariesThe President's Daughter Read onlineThe President's DaughterHappy Howlidays Read onlineHappy HowlidaysDetective Cross Read onlineDetective CrossThe Paris Mysteries Read onlineThe Paris MysteriesWatch the Skies Read onlineWatch the Skies113 Minutes Read online113 MinutesAlex Cross's Trial Read onlineAlex Cross's TrialNYPD Red 3 Read onlineNYPD Red 3Hush Hush Read onlineHush HushNow You See Her Read onlineNow You See HerMerry Christmas, Alex Cross Read onlineMerry Christmas, Alex Cross2nd Chance Read online2nd ChancePrivate Royals Read onlinePrivate RoyalsTwo From the Heart Read onlineTwo From the HeartMax Read onlineMaxI, Funny Read onlineI, FunnyBlindside (Michael Bennett) Read onlineBlindside (Michael Bennett)Sophia, Princess Among Beasts Read onlineSophia, Princess Among BeastsArmageddon Read onlineArmageddonDon't Blink Read onlineDon't BlinkNYPD Red 6 Read onlineNYPD Red 6The First Lady Read onlineThe First LadyTexas Outlaw Read onlineTexas OutlawHush Read onlineHushBeach Road Read onlineBeach RoadPrivate Berlin Read onlinePrivate BerlinThe Family Lawyer Read onlineThe Family LawyerJack & Jill Read onlineJack & JillThe Midwife Murders Read onlineThe Midwife MurdersMiddle School: Rafe's Aussie Adventure Read onlineMiddle School: Rafe's Aussie AdventureThe Murder of King Tut: The Plot to Kill the Child King Read onlineThe Murder of King Tut: The Plot to Kill the Child KingFirst Love Read onlineFirst LoveThe Dangerous Days of Daniel X Read onlineThe Dangerous Days of Daniel XHawk Read onlineHawkPrivate Delhi Read onlinePrivate DelhiThe 20th Victim Read onlineThe 20th VictimThe Shadow Read onlineThe ShadowKatt vs. Dogg Read onlineKatt vs. DoggThe Palm Beach Murders Read onlineThe Palm Beach Murders2 Sisters Detective Agency Read online2 Sisters Detective AgencyHumans, Bow Down Read onlineHumans, Bow DownYou've Been Warned Read onlineYou've Been WarnedCradle and All Read onlineCradle and All20th Victim: (Women’s Murder Club 20) (Women's Murder Club) Read online20th Victim: (Women’s Murder Club 20) (Women's Murder Club)Season of the Machete Read onlineSeason of the MacheteWoman of God Read onlineWoman of GodMary, Mary Read onlineMary, MaryBlindside Read onlineBlindsideInvisible Read onlineInvisibleThe Chef Read onlineThe ChefRevenge Read onlineRevengeSee How They Run Read onlineSee How They RunPop Goes the Weasel Read onlinePop Goes the Weasel15th Affair Read online15th AffairMiddle School: Get Me Out of Here! Read onlineMiddle School: Get Me Out of Here!Middle School: How I Survived Bullies, Broccoli, and Snake Hill Read onlineMiddle School: How I Survived Bullies, Broccoli, and Snake HillFrom Hero to Zero - Chris Tebbetts Read onlineFrom Hero to Zero - Chris TebbettsG'day, America Read onlineG'day, AmericaMax Einstein Saves the Future Read onlineMax Einstein Saves the FutureThe Cornwalls Are Gone Read onlineThe Cornwalls Are GonePrivate Moscow Read onlinePrivate MoscowTwo Schools Out - Forever Read onlineTwo Schools Out - ForeverHollywood 101 Read onlineHollywood 101Deadly Cargo: BookShots Read onlineDeadly Cargo: BookShots21st Birthday (Women's Murder Club) Read online21st Birthday (Women's Murder Club)The Sky Is Falling Read onlineThe Sky Is FallingCajun Justice Read onlineCajun JusticeBennett 06 - Gone Read onlineBennett 06 - GoneThe House of Kennedy Read onlineThe House of KennedyWaterwings Read onlineWaterwingsMurder is Forever, Volume 2 Read onlineMurder is Forever, Volume 2Maximum Ride 02 Read onlineMaximum Ride 02Treasure Hunters--The Plunder Down Under Read onlineTreasure Hunters--The Plunder Down UnderPrivate Royals: BookShots (A Private Thriller) Read onlinePrivate Royals: BookShots (A Private Thriller)After the End Read onlineAfter the EndPrivate India: (Private 8) Read onlinePrivate India: (Private 8)Escape to Australia Read onlineEscape to AustraliaWMC - First to Die Read onlineWMC - First to DieBoys Will Be Boys Read onlineBoys Will Be BoysThe Red Book Read onlineThe Red Book11th hour wmc-11 Read online11th hour wmc-11Hidden Read onlineHiddenYou've Been Warned--Again Read onlineYou've Been Warned--AgainUnsolved Read onlineUnsolvedPottymouth and Stoopid Read onlinePottymouth and StoopidHope to Die: (Alex Cross 22) Read onlineHope to Die: (Alex Cross 22)The Moores Are Missing Read onlineThe Moores Are MissingBlack & Blue: BookShots (Detective Harriet Blue Series) Read onlineBlack & Blue: BookShots (Detective Harriet Blue Series)Airport - Code Red: BookShots Read onlineAirport - Code Red: BookShotsKill or Be Killed Read onlineKill or Be KilledSchool's Out--Forever Read onlineSchool's Out--ForeverWhen the Wind Blows Read onlineWhen the Wind BlowsHeist: BookShots Read onlineHeist: BookShotsMurder of Innocence (Murder Is Forever) Read onlineMurder of Innocence (Murder Is Forever)Red Alert_An NYPD Red Mystery Read onlineRed Alert_An NYPD Red MysteryMalicious Read onlineMaliciousScott Free Read onlineScott FreeThe Summer House Read onlineThe Summer HouseFrench Kiss Read onlineFrench KissTreasure Hunters Read onlineTreasure HuntersMurder Is Forever, Volume 1 Read onlineMurder Is Forever, Volume 1Secret of the Forbidden City Read onlineSecret of the Forbidden CityCross the Line: (Alex Cross 24) Read onlineCross the Line: (Alex Cross 24)Witch & Wizard: The Fire Read onlineWitch & Wizard: The FireWomen's Murder Club [06] The 6th Target Read onlineWomen's Murder Club [06] The 6th TargetCross My Heart ac-21 Read onlineCross My Heart ac-21Alex Cross’s Trial ак-15 Read onlineAlex Cross’s Trial ак-15Alex Cross 03 - Jack & Jill Read onlineAlex Cross 03 - Jack & JillLiar Liar: (Harriet Blue 3) (Detective Harriet Blue Series) Read onlineLiar Liar: (Harriet Blue 3) (Detective Harriet Blue Series)Cross Country ак-14 Read onlineCross Country ак-14Honeymoon h-1 Read onlineHoneymoon h-1Maximum Ride: The Angel Experiment Read onlineMaximum Ride: The Angel ExperimentThe Big Bad Wolf ак-9 Read onlineThe Big Bad Wolf ак-9Dead Heat: BookShots (Book Shots) Read onlineDead Heat: BookShots (Book Shots)Kill and Tell Read onlineKill and TellAvalanche Read onlineAvalancheRobot Revolution Read onlineRobot RevolutionPublic School Superhero Read onlinePublic School Superhero12th of Never Read online12th of NeverMax: A Maximum Ride Novel Read onlineMax: A Maximum Ride NovelAll-American Murder Read onlineAll-American MurderMurder Games Read onlineMurder GamesRobots Go Wild! Read onlineRobots Go Wild!My Life Is a Joke Read onlineMy Life Is a JokePrivate: Gold Read onlinePrivate: GoldDemons and Druids Read onlineDemons and DruidsJacky Ha-Ha Read onlineJacky Ha-HaPostcard killers Read onlinePostcard killersPrincess: A Private Novel Read onlinePrincess: A Private NovelKill Alex Cross ac-18 Read onlineKill Alex Cross ac-1812th of Never wmc-12 Read online12th of Never wmc-12The Murder of King Tut Read onlineThe Murder of King TutI Totally Funniest Read onlineI Totally FunniestCross Fire ак-17 Read onlineCross Fire ак-17Count to Ten Read onlineCount to TenWomen's Murder Club [10] 10th Anniversary Read onlineWomen's Murder Club [10] 10th AnniversaryWomen's Murder Club [01] 1st to Die Read onlineWomen's Murder Club [01] 1st to DieI, Michael Bennett mb-5 Read onlineI, Michael Bennett mb-5Nooners Read onlineNoonersWomen's Murder Club [08] The 8th Confession Read onlineWomen's Murder Club [08] The 8th ConfessionPrivate jm-1 Read onlinePrivate jm-1Treasure Hunters: Danger Down the Nile Read onlineTreasure Hunters: Danger Down the NileWorst Case mb-3 Read onlineWorst Case mb-3Don’t Blink Read onlineDon’t BlinkThe Games Read onlineThe GamesThe Medical Examiner: A Women's Murder Club Story Read onlineThe Medical Examiner: A Women's Murder Club StoryBlack Market Read onlineBlack MarketGone mb-6 Read onlineGone mb-6Women's Murder Club [02] 2nd Chance Read onlineWomen's Murder Club [02] 2nd ChanceFrench Twist Read onlineFrench TwistKenny Wright Read onlineKenny WrightManhunt: A Michael Bennett Story Read onlineManhunt: A Michael Bennett StoryCross Kill: An Alex Cross Story Read onlineCross Kill: An Alex Cross StoryConfessions of a Murder Suspect td-1 Read onlineConfessions of a Murder Suspect td-1Second Honeymoon h-2 Read onlineSecond Honeymoon h-2Chase_A BookShot_A Michael Bennett Story Read onlineChase_A BookShot_A Michael Bennett StoryConfessions: The Paris Mysteries Read onlineConfessions: The Paris MysteriesWomen's Murder Club [09] The 9th Judgment Read onlineWomen's Murder Club [09] The 9th JudgmentAbsolute Zero Read onlineAbsolute ZeroNevermore: The Final Maximum Ride Adventure mr-8 Read onlineNevermore: The Final Maximum Ride Adventure mr-8Angel: A Maximum Ride Novel mr-7 Read onlineAngel: A Maximum Ride Novel mr-7Juror #3 Read onlineJuror #3Million-Dollar Mess Down Under Read onlineMillion-Dollar Mess Down UnderThe Verdict: BookShots (A Jon Roscoe Thriller) Read onlineThe Verdict: BookShots (A Jon Roscoe Thriller)The President Is Missing: A Novel Read onlineThe President Is Missing: A NovelWomen's Murder Club [04] 4th of July Read onlineWomen's Murder Club [04] 4th of JulyThe Hostage: BookShots (Hotel Series) Read onlineThe Hostage: BookShots (Hotel Series)$10,000,000 Marriage Proposal Read online$10,000,000 Marriage ProposalDiary of a Succubus Read onlineDiary of a SuccubusUnbelievably Boring Bart Read onlineUnbelievably Boring BartAngel: A Maximum Ride Novel Read onlineAngel: A Maximum Ride NovelStingrays Read onlineStingraysConfessions: The Private School Murders Read onlineConfessions: The Private School MurdersStealing Gulfstreams Read onlineStealing GulfstreamsWomen's Murder Club [05] The 5th Horseman Read onlineWomen's Murder Club [05] The 5th HorsemanZoo 2 Read onlineZoo 2Jack Morgan 02 - Private London Read onlineJack Morgan 02 - Private LondonTreasure Hunters--Quest for the City of Gold Read onlineTreasure Hunters--Quest for the City of GoldThe Christmas Mystery Read onlineThe Christmas MysteryMurder in Paradise Read onlineMurder in ParadiseKidnapped: BookShots (A Jon Roscoe Thriller) Read onlineKidnapped: BookShots (A Jon Roscoe Thriller)Triple Homicide_Thrillers Read onlineTriple Homicide_Thrillers16th Seduction: (Women’s Murder Club 16) (Women's Murder Club) Read online16th Seduction: (Women’s Murder Club 16) (Women's Murder Club)14th Deadly Sin: (Women’s Murder Club 14) Read online14th Deadly Sin: (Women’s Murder Club 14)Texas Ranger Read onlineTexas RangerWitch & Wizard 04 - The Kiss Read onlineWitch & Wizard 04 - The KissWomen's Murder Club [03] 3rd Degree Read onlineWomen's Murder Club [03] 3rd DegreeBreak Point: BookShots Read onlineBreak Point: BookShotsAlex Cross 04 - Cat & Mouse Read onlineAlex Cross 04 - Cat & MouseMaximum Ride Read onlineMaximum RideFifty Fifty: (Harriet Blue 2) (Detective Harriet Blue Series) Read onlineFifty Fifty: (Harriet Blue 2) (Detective Harriet Blue Series)Alex Cross 02 - Kiss the Girls Read onlineAlex Cross 02 - Kiss the GirlsThe President Is Missing Read onlineThe President Is MissingHunted Read onlineHuntedHouse of Robots Read onlineHouse of RobotsDangerous Days of Daniel X Read onlineDangerous Days of Daniel XTick Tock mb-4 Read onlineTick Tock mb-410th Anniversary wmc-10 Read online10th Anniversary wmc-10The Exile Read onlineThe ExilePrivate Games-Jack Morgan 4 jm-4 Read onlinePrivate Games-Jack Morgan 4 jm-4Burn: (Michael Bennett 7) Read onlineBurn: (Michael Bennett 7)Laugh Out Loud Read onlineLaugh Out LoudThe People vs. Alex Cross: (Alex Cross 25) Read onlineThe People vs. Alex Cross: (Alex Cross 25)Peril at the Top of the World Read onlinePeril at the Top of the WorldI Funny TV Read onlineI Funny TVMerry Christmas, Alex Cross ac-19 Read onlineMerry Christmas, Alex Cross ac-19#1 Suspect jm-3 Read online#1 Suspect jm-3Fang: A Maximum Ride Novel Read onlineFang: A Maximum Ride NovelWomen's Murder Club [07] 7th Heaven Read onlineWomen's Murder Club [07] 7th HeavenThe End Read onlineThe End