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Meet the Women's Murder Club
JamesPatterson.com

Books by James Patterson

Alex Cross
KISS THE GIRLS
JACK & JILL
POP GOES THE WEASEL
ROSES ARE RED
VIOLETS ARE BLUE
FOUR BLIND MICE
THE BIG BAD WOLF
LONDON BRIDGES
MARY, MARY
CROSS
DOUBLE CROSS
CROSS COUNTRY
ALEX CROSS’S TRIAL
I, ALEX CROSS

Michael Bennett
STEP ON A CRACK with Michael Ledwidge
RUN FOR YOUR LIFE with Michael Ledwidge

The Women's Murder Club
1st TO DIE
2nd CHANCE
3rd DEGREE
4th OF JULY with Maxine Paetro
THE 5th HORSEMAN with Maxine Paetro
THE 6th TARGET with Maxine Paetro
7th HEAVEN with Maxine Paetro
THE 8th CONFESSION with Maxine Paetro

Other Books
THE MURDER OF KING TUT:
The Plot to Kill the Child King
with Martin Dugard
SWIMSUIT with Maxine Paetro
AGAINST MEDICAL ADVICE: One Family's Struggle with an Agonizing Medical Mystery with Hal Friedman
SAIL with Howard Roughan
SUNDAYS AT TIFFANY’S with Gabrielle Charbonnet
YOU'VE BEEN WARNED
THE QUICKIE with Michael Ledwidge
JUDGE & JURY with Andrew Gross
THRILLER: Stories To Keep You Up All Night (Editor)
BEACH ROAD with Peter de Jonge
LIFEGUARD with Andrew Gross
HONEYMOON with Howard Roughan
SAM'S LETTERS TO JENNIFER
THE LAKE HOUSE
THE JESTER
THE BEACH HOUSE with Peter de Jonge
SUZANNE'S DIARY FOR NICHOLAS
CRADLE & ALL
WHEN THE WIND BLOWS
MIRACLE ON THE 17TH GREEN

Reading Group Guides
SUZANNE'S DIARY FOR NICHOLAS
SAM'S LETTERS TO JENNIFER

1st TO DIE
James Patterson
Warner Vision
Thriller
ISBN: 0446610038

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Chapter 1

BEAUTIFUL LONG-STEMMED RED ROSES filled the hotel suite — the perfect gifts, really. Everything was perfect.

There might be a luckier man somewhere on the planet, David Brandt thought as he wrapped his arms around Melanie, his new bride. Somewhere in Yemen, maybe — some Allah-praising farmer with a second goat. But certainly not in all of San Francisco.

The couple looked out from the living room of the Grand Hyatt's Mandarin Suite. They could see the lights of Berkeley off in the distance, Alcatraz, the graceful outline of the lit-up Golden Gate Bridge.

"It's incredible." Melanie beamed. "I wouldn't change a single thing about today."

"Me either," he whispered. "Well, maybe I wouldn't have invited my parents." They both laughed.

Only moments before, they had bid farewell to the last of the three hundred guests in the hotel's ballroom. The wedding was finally over. The toasts, the dancing, the schmoozing, the photographed kisses over the cake. Now it was just the two of them. They were twenty-nine years old and had the rest of their lives ahead of them.

David reached for a pair of filled champagne glasses he had set on a lacquered table. "A toast," he declared, "to the second-luckiest man alive."

"The second?" she said, and smiled in pretended shock. "Who's the first?"

They looped arms and took a long, luxurious sip from the crystal glasses. "This farmer with two goats. I'll tell you later.

"I have something for you," David suddenly remembered. He had already given her the perfect five-carat diamond on her finger, which he knew she wore only to please his folks. He went to his tuxedo jacket, which was draped over a high-backed chair, and returned with a jewelry box from Bulgari.

"No, David," Melanie protested. "You're my gift."

"Open it anyway," he said to her. "This you'll like."

She lifted the top. Inside a suede pouch was a set of earrings, large silver rings around a pair of whimsical moons made from diamonds.

"They're how I think of you," he said.

Melanie held the moons against the lobes of her ears. They were perfect, and so was she.

"It's you who pulls my tides," David murmured.

They kissed, and he unfastened the zipper of her dress, letting the neckline fall just below her shoulders. He kissed her neck. Then the tops of her breasts.

There was a knock on the door of the suite.

"Champagne," called a voice from outside.

For a moment, David thought of just yelling, "Leave it there!" All evening, he had longed to peel away the dress from his wife's soft white shoulders.

"Oh, go get it," Melanie whispered, dangling the earrings in front of his eyes. "I'll put these on."

She wiggled out of his grasp, backing toward the Mandarin's master bathroom, a smile in her liquid brown eyes. God, he loved those eyes.

As he went to the door, David was thinking he wouldn't trade places with anybody in the world.

Not even for a second goat.


Excerpted from 1ST TO DIE © Copyright 2001 by James Patterson. Reprinted with permission by Little Brown, an imprint of Time Warner. All rights reserved.

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