Alex Cross 16

Alex Cross 16 Read Online Free PDF

Book: Alex Cross 16 Read Online Free PDF
Author: James Patterson
room.
    We followed the two of them back through the kitchen and attached laundry room to what I assumed had once been a maid's quarters. There was a separate entrance from the back hall and a bedroom with its own bathroom
    — small but with lots of privacy.
    "We haven't touched anything," Mr. O'Neill said, and then he added almost affectionately, "You can see what a slob he was."
    page 20
    My first reaction was that messes are good for hiding things in. The room had as much strewn on the floor as anywhere else. Timothy had never really grown up, had he?
    There were clothes piled everywhere — on the bed, over the easy chair, on top of the desk. Some of it was just jeans and T-shirts, but there was a lot of expensive-looking stuff, too. The one thing he seemed to keep hung up was a collection of suits and jackets, and three leather coats. Two of them were Polo, one Hermès. That's where I found the haystack needle. Sampson and I had been sifting for about fifteen minutes when I pulled a piece of paper out of one of the blazer pockets.
    It had a string of ten letters written on it — like the ones from Caroline's date book. This one said AFIOZMBHCP.
    I held it up for Sampson to see. "Check this out, John."
    Mrs. O'Neill stepped back into the room. She'd been waiting outside the door. "What is it? Please tell us."
    "Could be a phone number, but I'm not sure," I said. "I don't suppose Timothy left his cell phone behind."
    "No. He was attached to that thing twenty-four/seven. I mean, who isn't these days?" She tried a weak smile, and I tried one back, but it was hard. All I could think about was how much more likely it had just gotten that she would never see Timothy again.

Chapter 15
    JOHNNY TUCCI HAD stuck to a rigid system for survival since the trooper car stopped him on I-95. For starters, he never traveled in the same direction for two days in a row and never spent more than twenty-four hours in any one place. In fact, if the skinny girl working the register at the 7-Eleven in Cuttingsville hadn't been such an easy, willing young thing, or if he could even remember the last time he'd gotten laid, he probably would have been long gone by now.
    Woulda, coulda, shoulda, he was thinking.
    He was in the middle of his second time around with the register girl when the flimsy door to room 5 at the Park-It Motel opened. Two men in gray suits strolled in like they had a key or something. How the hell had they gotten in the door? Whatever. They were in.
    Johnny jumped about three feet off the bed and pulled the sheet up to cover himself. So did the girl. Liz? Lisl?
    "Johnny Tucci? The Johnny Tucci?"
    One intruder — the speaker — was a white guy, the other Hispanic. Maybe Brazilian? Johnny had no clue who they were, but he sure knew why they'd come to the motel. All the same, he gave it his best. "You got the wrong room, man. Never heard of John whatever-you-said. Now, please get out!" The Hispanic guy fired before Johnny even saw he had a gun in his hand. He flinched hard and almost had a heart attack on the spot. When he looked, the girl, Liz/Lisl, was sitting cockeyed against the headboard with a hole in her forehead and blood seeping down to the tip of her nose, then onto her breasts.
    "Jesus Christ!" Johnny fell off the bed more than got off, and then crab-walked himself back into a corner. He'd never actually been shot at before.
    "Let's try this again. Johnny Tucci?" said the white dude. " The Johnny Tucci?"
    "Yeah, yeah, okay! " He kept his hands up, one of them at the side of his face so he wouldn't have to see the girl lying there dead and leaking blood. "How'd you find me? What do you want? Why'd you hurt her?" The two guys looked at each other and laughed at his expense.
    These guys obviously weren't Family. They were too "white" for that, even the dark one. "What the hell are you? CIA or something?"
    "Worse for you, John. We're former DEA. Less paperwork, if you know what I mean." Johnny was pretty sure he did.
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