The People vs. Alex Cross

The People vs. Alex Cross by James Patterson Read Free Book Online Page A

Book: The People vs. Alex Cross by James Patterson Read Free Book Online
Authors: James Patterson
them?”
    “Creeps,” the FBI agent said, taking another sip of coffee.
    I was getting chilled, so I untied the hoodie around my waist and put it on as she continued.
    “On the clear net, they troll porn,” Batra said. “In the darknet areas where I can track them, they’re into lots of the sicker stuff. I wrote it all down.”
    “Where are they?”
    “You mean physical location? All over the world, though one of the regular creeps posting is definitely local.”
    “How local?” I said, stopping.
    “Right here,” she said, waving her coffee cup. “DC.”
    “You have a name? Address?”
    Batra studied me several beats, calculating what to tell me, no doubt, and then said, “Close enough.”

CHAPTER
13
    LEAVING THE BROOKLAND-CUA Metro stop later in the day, I knew damn well I shouldn’t have been walking up John McCormack Drive. I could hear Bree in my head saying I had no authority here and that my time would be better spent working on my defense for trial.
    But I was back in the game, and who was going to tell Bree or anyone?
    The creep?
    Not a chance. The creep would want to avoid any contact with legitimate law enforcement. And I just might learn something useful about Gretchen Lindel and the other missing blondes, which would more than justify my actions as a concerned citizen.
    With that firmly in mind, I went to the security guard at the main entrance to the Catholic University of America and asked how to find the alumni office. The guard gave me a map. I thanked him and started in that direction until I was around a corner and out of sight.
    Then I made my way to Flather Hall, a brick-faced dormitory for male freshmen. Classes were over that Friday. Rap and heavy-metal music pulsed and dueled from inside open dorm rooms. I spotted a few underage drinkers and smelled hemp burning as I made my way to the second floor and down a long hallway that reeked of too many young men living on their own for the first time.
    The door I sought, number 278, was ajar. I stood there, listening, hearing nothing, and then knocked. No response.
    I pushed open the door, saw bunk beds to my right and a single twin bed across the room. Two white males in their late teens sat on a love seat between the single bed and me, wearing Beats headphones and holding video-game controllers. They were absorbed in a violent game playing on a screen on the wall, oblivious to my presence.
    Beyond them, at a desk tucked in the corner, there was a third white male, small, scrawny, oily brown hair, lots of acne. Three computer screens dominated the small desk where he sat, and he had headphones on as well, engrossed in the screens.
    I reached over and flicked the dorm room light off and on twice.
    As if a hypnotist had snapped his fingers, all three of them came up out of their virtual trances and looked around groggily. The closest kid, a chubby towhead named Fred Vertze, spotted me first. His double chin retreated, and he tugged off his headphones.
    “Who are you?” he said. “What are you doing in here?”
    I waited until the other two removed their headphones before making a show of shutting the door behind me and locking it. They were alarmed when my cold attention swept over them.
    “Who are you?”
Vertze demanded again.
    “Who I am is irrelevant,” I said.
    “Hell it is,” said Juan Cyr, the other young man who’d been playing the video game. Cyr was built like a fullback and stood up to show me he was no one to be trifled with.
    Brian Stetson, the kid with the acne and the three computer screens, said, “Don’t do anything
el stupid-o,
Juan. I’m calling campus security.”
    “Do that and I’ll have to tell campus security what I know about what goes on in this dorm room,” I said.
    They glanced at one another uncertainly.
    Vertze, who could have used a shower or two, said, “We don’t know what you’re talking about, man.”
    “Okay, let’s cut right to it, then, before I alert the NSA, the FBI, and six other law

Similar Books

Alphas - Origins

Ilona Andrews

Poppy Shakespeare

Clare Allan

Designer Knockoff

Ellen Byerrum

MacAlister's Hope

Laurin Wittig

The Singer of All Songs

Kate Constable