Cat and Mouse

Cat and Mouse by James Patterson Read Free Book Online

Book: Cat and Mouse by James Patterson Read Free Book Online
Authors: James Patterson
too. I would have guessed it was maybe nine-thirty when I happened to glance at my watch. It was actually ten to twelve.
    “It’s a school night,” Christine said. “I have to go, Alex. I really do. My coach will turn into a pumpkin and all that.”
    Her car was parked on Nineteenth Street and we walked there together. The streets were silent, empty, glittering under overhead lamps.
    I felt as if I’d had a little too much to drink, but I knew I hadn’t. I was feeling carefree, remembering what it was like to be that way.
    “I’d like to do this again sometime. How about tomorrow night?” I said and started to smile. God, I liked the way this was going.
    Suddenly, something was wrong. I saw a look I didn’t like — sadness and concern. Christine peered into my eyes.
    “I don’t think so, Alex. I’m sorry,” she said. “I’m really sorry. I thought I was ready, but I guess maybe I’m not. There’s a saying — scars grow with us.”
    I sucked in a breath. I wasn’t expecting that. In fact, I don’t remember ever having been so wrong about how I was getting along with someone. It was like a sudden punch to the chest.
    “Thanks for taking me to just about the nicest restaurant I’ve ever been to. I’m really, really sorry. It’s nothing that you did, Alex.”
    Christine continued to look into my eyes. She seemed to be searching for something, and I guess not finding it.
    She got into her car without saying another word. She seemed to efficient suddenly, so in control. She started it up and drove away. I stood in the empty street and watched until her car’s blazing brake lights disappeared.
    It’s nothing that you did, Alex.
I could hear her words repeating in my head.

Chapter 18

    B AD BOY was back in Wilmington, Delaware. He had work to do here. In some ways, this might even be best part.
    Gary Soneji strolled the well-lit streets of Wilmington, seemingly without care in the world. Why should he worry? He was skillful enough at makeup and disguises to fool the stiffs living here in Wilmington. He’d fooled them in Washington, hadn’t he?
    He stopped and stared at a huge, red-type-on-white poster near the train station. “Wilmington — A Place to Be Somebody,” it read. What a terrific, unintentional joke, he thought.
    So was a three-story mural of bloated whales and dolphins that looked as if it had been stolen from some beach town in Southern California. Somebody ought to hire the Wilmington town council to work on
Saturday Night Live.
They were good, real good.
    He carried a duffel bag, but didn’t draw any attention to himself. The people he saw on his little walk looked as if they had outfitted themselves from the pages of the Sears catalog, circa 1961. Lots of twill that didn’t exactly flatter girth; putrid-colored plaid; comfortable brown shoes on everybody.
    He heard the grating mid-Atlantic accent a few times, too. “I’ve got to phewn heum” (“I’ve got to phone home”). A plain and ugly dialect for plain and ugly thoughts.
    Jesus, what a place to have lived. How the hell had he survived during those sterile years? Why had he bothered to come back now? Well, he knew the answer to that question. Soneji knew why he’d come back.
    Revenge.
    Payback time.
    He turned off North Street and onto his old street, Central Avenue. He stopped across from a whitepainted brick house. He stared at the house for a long time. It was a modest Colonial, two stories. It had belonged to Missy’s grandparents originally, and that was why she hadn’t moved.
    Click your heels together, Gary. Jesus, there’s no place like home.
    He opened his duffel bag and took out his weapon of choice. He was especially proud of this one. He’d been waiting for a long time to use it.
    Gary Soneji finally crossed the street. He marched up to the front door as if he owned the place, just as he had four years ago, the last time he’d been here, the day Alex Cross had barged into his life along with his partner,

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