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    Patrick Bowers 08 - Every Crooked Path


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      “James writes smart, taut, high-octane thrillers. But be warned—his books are not for the timid. The endings blow me away every time.”

      —Mitch Galin, producer of Stephen King’s The Stand and Frank Herbert’s Dune

      PRAISE FOR THE NOVELS OF STEVEN JAMES

      Checkmate

      “High tension all the way. James writes with precision and incisiveness. Fast, sharp, and believable. Put it at the top of your list.”

      —John Lutz, Edgar Award–winning author of Single White Female and Frenzy

      “Steven James pens another fast-paced thriller chock-full of great characters, head-snapping plot twists, impeccable research, and a truly fun ride. Highly recommended. Not to be missed.”

      —D. P. Lyle, award-winning author of the Dub Walker and Samantha Cody thriller series

      The King

      “His tightly woven, adrenaline-laced plots leave readers breathless.”

      —The Suspense Zone

      “Steven James offers yet another slam-dunk in the Bowers Files series!”

      —Suspense Magazine

      “Highly engaging with consuming tension and solid storytelling.”

      —TitleTrakk.com

      “If you love edgy, intense, on-the-edge-of-horrifying coupled with great writing, then click and order this one now.”

      —Novel Reviews

      Opening Moves

      “A mesmerizing read. From the first chapter, it sets its hook deep and drags you through a darkly gripping story with relentless power. My conclusion: I need to read more of Steven James.”

      —Michael Connelly, New York Times bestselling author of The Burning Room

      “Steven James has created a fast-moving thriller with psychological depth and gripping action. Opening Moves is a smart, taut, intense novel of suspense that reads like a cross between Michael Connelly and Thomas Harris . . . a blisteringly fast and riveting read.”

      —Mark Greaney, New York Times bestselling author of Dead Eye

      “[A] high-octane thriller.”

      —Suspense Magazine

      The Bishop

      “The novel moves swiftly, with punchy dialogue but gruesome scenes. Readers must be ready to stomach the darkest side of humanity and get into the minds of serial killers to enjoy this master storyteller at the peak of his game.”

      —Publishers Weekly

      “This novel is fresh and exciting.”

      —Booklist

      “Absolutely brilliant.”

      —Jeff Buick, bestselling author of One Child

      “Steven James locks you in a thrill ride with no brakes. He sets the new standard in suspense writing.”

      —Suspense Magazine

      THE BOWERS FILES

      Opening Moves

      The Pawn

      The Rook

      The Knight

      The Bishop

      The Queen

      The King

      Checkmate

      SIGNET SELECT

      Published by New American Library,

      an imprint of Penguin Random House LLC

      375 Hudson Street, New York, New York 10014

      This book is an original publication of New American Library.

      Copyright © Steven James, 2015

      Penguin Random House supports copyright. Copyright fuels creativity, encourages diverse voices, promotes free speech, and creates a vibrant culture. Thank you for buying an authorized edition of this book and for complying with copyright laws by not reproducing, scanning, or distributing any part of it in any form without permission. You are supporting writers and allowing Penguin Random House to continue to publish books for every reader.

      Signet Select and the Signet Select colophon are trademarks of Penguin Random House LLC.

      For more information about Penguin Random House, visit penguin.com.

      ISBN 978-0-698-14021-9

      PUBLISHER’S NOTE

      This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, business establishments, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.

      Version_1

      Contents

      Praise

      The Bowers Files

      Title Page

      Copyright

      Dedication

      Epigraph

      Author’s Note

      PART I

      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

      PART II

      Chapter 22

      Chapter 23

      Chapter 24

      Chapter 25

      Chapter 26

      Chapter 27

      Chapter 28

      Chapter 29

      Chapter 30

      Chapter 31

      Chapter 32

      Chapter 33

      Chapter 34

      Chapter 35

      Chapter 36

      Chapter 37

      Chapter 38

      Chapter 39

      Chapter 40

      Chapter 41

      Chapter 42

      Chapter 43

      Chapter 44

      PART III

      Chapter 45

      Chapter 46

      Chapter 47

      Chapter 48

      Chapter 49

      Chapter 50

      Chapter 51

      Chapter 52

      Chapter 53

      Chapter 54

      Chapter 55

      Chapter 56

      Chapter 57

      Chapter 58

      Chapter 59

      Chapter 60

      Chapter 61

      Chapter 62

      Chapter 63

      Chapter 64

      Chapter 65

      Chapter 66

      Chapter 67

      Chapter 68

      Chapter 69

      Chapter 70

      Chapter 71

      Chapter 72

      Chapter 73

      PART IV

      Chapter 74

      Chapter 75

      Chapter 76

      Chapter 77

      Chapter 78

      Chapter 79

      Chapter 80

      Chapter 81

      Chapter 82

      Chapter 83

      Chapter 84

      Chapter 85

      Chapter 86

      Chapter 87

      Chapter 88

      Chapter 89

      Chapter 90

      Chapter 91

      Chapter 92

      Chapter 93

      Chapter 94

      Chapter 95

      Chapter 96

      Chapter 97

      Chapter 98

      Chapter 99

      Chapter 100

      Ackno
    wledgments

      To the National Center for Missing & Exploited Children

      “Society prepares the crime: the criminal commits it.”

      —Found in a fortune cookie next to two smiley faces

      Author’s Note

      Dear readers,

      This is a work of fiction, and yet, in a very real sense, it also tells the truth about our world today. While the characters and situations in this story are made up, the nature of the crimes is not.

      Online predators are real.

      As a parent, I found this book particularly difficult to write, since it involved research into crimes against children. However, because of the impact of this issue on modern culture, I felt it was an important story for me to tell—perhaps my most important one so far.

      Finding out what’s really out there lurking online was a wake-up call to me. Rather than describe any exploitative images in this book, I chose to show the reactions of the characters to seeing them. I’ll trust your imagination to fill in the rest.

      During my research, I came across an organization called the National Center for Missing & Exploited Children. It’s dedicated to rescuing children and catching those who target them. NCMEC is a nonprofit organization that depends on private donations, so please consider supporting their work. For more information, go to www.missingkids.com.

      Together we can make a difference in protecting the next generation from those who would steal their innocence from them.

      —Steven James

      Autumn 2015

      PART I

      Masks

      1

      Wednesday, June 13

      New York City

      9:37 p.m.

      I clicked on my Mini Maglite as I slit the police tape crisscrossing the apartment’s front door, swung it open, and stepped into the darkened living room.

      Jodie and I would reseal the door after I was done in here.

      I pocketed my automatic knife.

      The NYPD’s Crime Scene Unit had finished up this morning so the scene had been processed, but I put on a pair of latex gloves just in case I did find anything.

      At thirty-four years old, I’d been with the Bureau for eight years, after leaving the Milwaukee Police Department, and I’d worked with evidence recovery teams and analysts from all around the country. The CSU here in New York City was sharp, so I wasn’t necessarily looking for forensic evidence they might have missed; I doubted I would find any of that. I was here to look at context.

      Though this would normally have been an NYPD case, because of my work with the joint task force, the Bureau was involved. Assistant Director-in-Charge DeYoung had asked me to take a look around.

      I’d been consulting on another investigation earlier today, so this was my first time at the actual scene, which worked out well since it was the same time of day as when the crime occurred. Similarity brings perspective. I’d taught that at the FBI Academy. Now was my chance to put it into practice.

      Almost exactly twenty-four hours ago, the man who rented this apartment was stabbed to death in the room just past the kitchen.

      Orienting myself to the lighting, the sounds, in this location at the time of day of the crime was crucial. It’s always about the intersection of an offender being in a specific place at a specific time. Start there. Motives you can try to decipher later—if you venture in that direction at all. Most investigators go about things completely backward.

      My partner, Special Agent Jodie Fleming, would be up in a few minutes. She was on the phone down by the car talking over a personal matter with Dell, the woman she was living with. Their relationship had hit a rough spot lately—actually, things had been going downhill for a while and I wasn’t sure they were going to weather this storm.

      The lights had been off in the apartment when the responding officers arrived, so, to get a better understanding of how the room had looked at the time of the crime, I kept them off as I closed the door, swept the flashlight beam before me, and studied the room.

      Well-worn, mismatched furniture. A couch. An easy chair. Two floor lamps. The glass end table was still overturned from the struggle. A wide-screen television looked out across the room from its mount on a swiveling arm on the wall. From studying the files, I knew that the windows on the south side of the room overlooked a park—even though it wasn’t visible from where I stood.

      The television was angled so that the screen was visible from the reclining chair, rather than the couch that lay perpendicular to it.

      Two remote controls sat on the arm of the recliner. I checked them—one matched the VCR player, one the DVD player. A wireless keyboard for surfing on the TV’s Internet browser rested nearby on the footstool. The television remote lay tossed haphazardly out of reach on the couch.

      Clicking off my flashlight, I noted how the residual light from the city found its way into the room through the windows.

      The struggle that started in here had ended in the master bedroom.

      My specialty wasn’t blood spatter analysis, but I’d looked over the initial reports, and now, Maglite on again, I could picture the struggle playing out.

      At a crime scene, blood can tell the story.

      The progression of the attack, the location and responses of the individuals involved—did they duck? Try to run? Fight back? If there was a struggle, the blood spatter could show who struck first, where he was standing, where and how quickly he moved while he was trying to escape. It was a study in microcosm of geospatial interactions.

      And that was my specialty.

      I watched the tale unfold.

      According to what we’d been able to piece together, the offender had accessed the apartment through the front door, apparently, based on the tool marks, picking the lock. The victim, a forty-two-year-old African-American man named Jamaal Stewart, had been seated in the recliner facing the television.

      At some point the intruder must have startled him, because the blood spatter indicated that Jamaal was most likely rising from the chair when his arm was sliced.

      Low-energy stains are created simply by the force of gravity and are circular. Impact spatter is more distinctive and happens when blood forcefully impacts a surface, so perhaps, from someone swinging his cut arm. The void patterns, that is, the absence of blood spatter where you would expect it, showed where the offender was standing during the struggle.

      When studying blood spatter that’s not just a gravity drop, you analyze the length and width, and take into account the concentration of the blood in the different parts of the spatter to identify the point of origin.

      For an unknown reason, Jamaal fled to the master bedroom rather than the front door.

      I studied the droplets, following them down the hall. Based on the size, shape, and directionality of the spatter, he was moving rapidly.

      Since he had defensive wounds, we knew he’d struggled with his attacker. The orientation of the capillary and arterial bleeding showed that the fatal stab wound was to the right side of the neck, which might have indicated a left-handed assailant, or a right-handed one, depending on how he—or she—held the knife.

      Jamaal bled out sprawled facedown on the covers of his neatly made bed.

      Often, evidence isn’t so much finding what is present, but what isn’t present that should be—like the voids in the blood spatter. Emptiness where you wouldn’t expect it speaks to you.

      The CSU found a computer cord in the apartment, but no laptop. There was a cell phone charger here, but no cell phone. Also there were two Xbox controllers but no console and a VHS player and a DVD player, but no videocassettes or DVDs.

      By all appearances, someone had taken all of Jamaal’s computers and recorded media storage devices. When we followed up to see if the computer, phone, or gaming system had remote location services turned on, none of them showed up.

      If our premise was correct that the intruder was looking for
    something, I wondered if he’d found it.

      And of course, what it was.

      A neighbor had heard the struggle, called 911, and two NYPD officers responded, only to find that Mr. Stewart was already deceased. There was no sign of his attacker.

      I checked the bedroom, under the bed, in the closet, but didn’t find anything noteworthy.

      The French doors opened to a balcony four meters long and two meters wide that overlooked Manhattan.

      I snapped the flashlight off, pocketed it, and then stepped outside. Twelve stories up. Directly below me, at the entrance to a dance club, twenty-two people stood on the sidewalk, waiting to be admitted inside.

      A storm earlier in the evening had left the smell of damp concrete lingering in the air, a musty scent of summer rain.

      A few horns honked in the distance. Someone flagged down a taxi at the end of the block. Nothing out of the ordinary.

      I was thinking of the missing electronics and recorded media, the location of the remotes, the television screen’s angle, the fact that the unit was off when the responding officers got here.

      Off.

      But—

      I heard footsteps behind me in the bedroom.

      “Hey, Jodie, I’m out here.”

      No, the television was off. So—

      Jodie didn’t respond. The footsteps came closer.

      And it wasn’t her gait.

      Because it wasn’t Jodie.

      2

      The man came at me lightning fast, swiping the blade across my left forearm. My shirtsleeve offered little protection and the knife left a streak of red behind.

      I threw my other hand up to grab his wrist and disarm him, but he knew how to block the move and easily knocked my hand away. I pivoted backward to keep him from driving the blade into my chest. When I turned, it drew him with me, onto the balcony.

      Four inches taller than me, six foot seven. A beast.

      There wasn’t much room out here for a fight.

      He held the Bowie knife military-style, with the blade angled back parallel to his wrist. A lot harder to disarm. This man knew what he was doing. He’d been trained.

      I was not going to fare well.

      It didn’t scare me.

      Motivated me, though.

     


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