14th Deadly Sin: (Women’s Murder Club 14)

14th Deadly Sin: (Women’s Murder Club 14) by James Patterson Read Free Book Online Page A

Book: 14th Deadly Sin: (Women’s Murder Club 14) by James Patterson Read Free Book Online
Authors: James Patterson
Tags: Fiction, General
couldn’t stop beaming. I was so damned proud of her.
    I stood off to the side of the table, but I heard Conklin saying to Cindy, “Sign this one to me. Don’t spare the
X
s and
O
s. And sign this one to my mom.”
    Cindy laughed and said, “You betcha. Whatever you like, handsome.”
    Cindy and Conklin had been having a hot off-and-on relationship for years, and right now, they were
on.
I hoped that this time they were on for good. Cindy signed books for her man and maybe her future mother-in-law. When Conklin stepped aside, I asked the lady in line behind him if she could do a favor and take a photo.
    “You bet,” she said.
    I handed her my phone and grabbed my partner and my good friend. We put Cindy in the middle, linked arms around her, and said “Cheese,” and then we said it again.
    Cindy said, “Let me see.” We all gathered around that little piece of tech that had caught all three of us, looking good—how often does that happen? A banner had been strung behind the podium. It was centered right over our heads: AUTHOR CINDY THOMAS, TODAY .
    “Wow, this is totally great,” Cindy said, doing a little dance in place. “A perfect photo of a perfect day.”

CHAPTER 19
     
    THE MAN WHO called himself One was in the backseat of the four-door sedan, directly behind the driver. The two other guys in his crew were numbered Two and Three to prevent the accidental blurting out of an actual name.
    One knew that human stupidity was the only thing that could screw up this job. Everything else was easy. There were no security guards. No camera. There was plenty of cash in the drawer and there was only one person in the store.
    Unlike bank jobs, where security was tight and the average take was about four Gs, check-cashing stores ordinarily had fifty to a hundred thousand in the drawer. And while mercados had less, this one had an impressive stash on the premises from its Western Union franchise.
    One and his crew were quiet as they watched the light foot and car traffic on this commercial block of South Van Ness Avenue. When he was ready, One used a burner phone to call the cops.
    He said urgently, “Nine-one-one? The liquor store at Sixteenth and Julian Avenue is being
robbed.
I just heard
shots.
Lots of them. Send the cops. Right away.”
    He clicked off as the operator asked his name, but he knew she would put out the radio call. This diversion would draw any random cruisers patrolling the neighborhood and send them to a location a half mile away.
    Across the street, the girl in the brightly lit Spanish market was behind the counter, taking cash from a customer, an old man. One thought the girl looked to be in her midtwenties. She was wearing a long tan cardigan over a shapeless brown dress. When she’d put the groceries into the customer’s striped fabric bag, she came from behind the counter and walked him to the front door, saying a few words to him in Spanish as they stood on the sidewalk.
    Then she went back inside the shop, closed the glass door, and flipped the sign inside the door to CLOSED . One watched her walk to the back of the long, narrow store.
    When she was out of sight, Two said, “She’s alone, One. Did you want me to stay in the car? Save some time?”
    One heard sirens now, the cruisers and unmarkeds heading over toward Sixteenth. It was time to go.
    “Yeah. Good idea. That’ll work.”
    One and Three got out of the car with their SFPD Windbreakers zipped up, masks in their pockets, and guns tucked down in their belts. It took only seconds to cross the street. When they stood in the deeply shadowed doorway of the little grocery store, they pulled on their masks.
    One adjusted the bill of his cap and knocked on the door, looking down so that the girl would see the SFPD on his Windbreaker but not his masked face.
    Three stood with his back to the store and looked at his feet while he waited for the locks to open. The locks clattered and the bell above the door rang as the girl opened the

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