The Shop

Read The Shop for Free Online Page A

Book: Read The Shop for Free Online
Authors: J. Carson Black
Tags: Fiction, General, Thrillers, Crime
kid who looked at the stars. Turned out Brendan was one of the last two finalists chosen earlier that day. No wonder he was happy.
    Poor kid. Brendan Shayles was in the wrong place at the wrong time.
    Landry looked back at the television. There was the cottonmouth, coiled up, its mouth wide open and showing white—white like cotton. Showing his mouth as a warning, because snakes didn’t use their venom indiscriminately.
    He looked back at Brendan Shayles. The question remained: Why kill a bunch of kids from a television show? Why kill a celebrity like Brienne Cross? Were the kids collateral damage, or were they also the targets?
    There would be a pattern. The Aspen killings weren’t random, any more than mathematics was random. It would have its own logic.
    The snake documentary was over, and now The Dog Whisperer was on. Landry switched the TV off.
    He had undergone a battery of psychological tests for his current job—thoroughly profiled. He knew he’d been chosen for the job because he did his work without question. He saw his job in terms of mission only.
    When he was working with the team, he answered to “Peters.” There were four of them: Peters, Jackson, Davis, and Green. Peters had no connection to the life he had with his wife, his daughter, his brothers, and the racetrack.
    Because he compartmentalized so well—it was an absolute necessity for him to do so—Landry had never looked for patterns in the missions he was given. He took each job as it came. He stayed away from the news and didn’t read any paper except for the Daily Racing Form . He’d built a wall around the job, because the job defined him and he refused to look at it in any other light. The job was who he was . He carried out the missions that had to be done to keep this country safe and her people unaware. Blissfully unaware. He shouldered that burden for them.
    But Brienne Cross?
    Landry thought about some of “the Shop” missions, the ones that fit a similar profile to the Aspen killings. They had seemed unusual at the time, but Landry had lived long enough to know that danger could come from unusual sources.
    There was the blonde Mexican woman in Malibu. She’d looked familiar. He’d dispatched her one twilight as she jogged alone down Serra Road near her rented house. His orders were to stab her in the heart and leave her there, exposed.
    The Egyptian professor at Berkley. Landry could see a reason for this man’s death. He could have been a radical Islamist.
    But he didn’t know for sure, did he? Because he didn’t read the papers or watch the news.
    The wealthy couple in Montana. The man had looked familiar.
    He Googled them.
    The Mexican woman was Jacinta Rivera, a Mexican pop star. She was very popular in the United States, but a superstar in Mexico. There had been a national day of mourning for her.
    The Egyptian professor was a well-known political pundit and author. He had a show on CNN.
    The husband and wife in Montana were both actors. The husband was an up-and-coming star, widely hailed to be “the next Brad Pitt.” They had just bought the ranch and retreated there between films.
    Landry stared at the crime scene photos of the ranch, remembering the mission. He and his team had been swift and merciless. That was a year and a half ago, during the hostage crisis at the U.S. embassy in Yemen. The U.S. government had botched the hostage situation, and both U.S. soldiers and American civilians had been killed and dragged through the streets.
    He counted them on his fingers. A Mexican pop star. An Egyptian professor with a show on CNN. The famous actor who was the next Brad Pitt.
    He found himself thinking about poisonous snakes, how they knew when to strike and why. And he thought: What strange places to use your venom .

11
    “Stop!” Maddy shouted. “That’s it. I’m sure this time.”
    In the last two hours, Jolie and Maddy had driven all over Palm County looking for Chief Akers’s guns and phone, finally

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