The List

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Synopsis
In the vein of David Baldacci, John Grisham, and Harlan Coben—this is Steve Berry like you’ve never read him before.
Listen to an Excerpt of the book here.
After a ten-year self-imposed exile, Brent Walker is returning home to Concord, a quaint town in central Georgia nestled close to the Savannah River. Two years ago his father died and now Brent, hired by Southern Republic Pulp and Paper Company as its assistant general counsel, is returning to care for his ailing mother.
For decades Southern Republic has invested heavily in Concord, creating a thriving community where its employees live, work, and retire. But the genteel sheen of this quiet town is deceiving, and when a list of cryptic code surfaces, Brent starts to see the cracks.
Southern Republic’s success is based largely on a highly unorthodox and deadly system to control costs, known only to the three owners of the company. Now, one of them, Christopher Bozin, has had a change of heart. Brent’s return to Concord, a move Bozin personally orchestrated, provides his conscience with a chance at redemption. So a plan is set into motion, one that will not only criminally implicate Bozin’s two partners, but also place Brent Walker square in the crosshairs of men who want him dead—with only one course left available.
Find and reveal the shocking secret of the list.
"Steve Berry’s The List is a solid, if somewhat unconventional, thriller.”
— The Epoch Times
"Berry delivers a novel unlike anything he’s ever done before. Rather than exploring history, this one takes pieces of John Grisham’s The Firm and mixes them with the business aspects of a Joseph Finder novel and storytelling elements from David Baldacci. [Berry’s] going outside his comfort zone to resurrect one of his early, desk-drawer novels is beneficial to him, his fans, and thriller readers alike. The List would be a perfect story to be turned into an Alfred Hitchcock film, and this should only add to Berry’s fanbase.”
— firstClue Newsletter
“Secrets, corruption, and small-town claustrophobia come together in a must-read for John Grisham fans.”
— Readworthy
"Plenty of intrigue and action for crime fans.”
— Kirkus Reviews
"An intense well-written legal novel that is as good as any other legal novel written. The action, the setting and twists and turns make this a real page-turner.”
— redcarpetcrash.com
"This distinct departure from Berry’s long string of bestselling international thrillers trades the global arena for the courtroom with splendid results . . . The List reads like a cross between Greg Isles’ Penn Gage legal thrillers and both John Grisham and Scott Turow at their level best. This beautifully constructed Southern noir features Berry at his level best, a terrific and timeless tale leaves us hoping the next tale featuring Brent Walker never ends up in a drawer at all.”
— booktrib.com
“[One of] 19 new books [for summer] that sound so good you'll have to surgically remove them from my hands when I read them.”
— buzzfeed.com
“Berry delivers a strong narrative that builds with each passing chapter. Plot points are both intriguing and keep the reader in the middle of all the action. Surprises keep things on point and there is a great deal to reveal in short order. Berry delivers a winner here!”
— Pecheyponderings.wordpress.com
"A compelling corporate thriller that proves sometimes the most frightening monsters wear business suits and carry calculators . . . it offers genuine chills and authentic characters that linger long after the final page.”
— Bookclub.com
"Steve Berry's tense thriller gives readers so much to uncover, with questions popping off every page.
— Barnes & Noble
"The concept of The List is nothing short of brilliant, and the suspense that Berry is able to infuse it with is simply blood-curdling. I really enjoyed seeing him step away from his Cotton Malone series to bring us something from the dark side of his extremely formidable imagination.”
— bookreporter.com
"The List, by Steve Berry, has multidimensional characters within a riveting plot. This story is a page turner.
— Crime Spree Magazine
"If you’re searching for something to energize your summer commute, spark conversation about the ethics of power, or simply keep your heart racing through midnight, Steve Berry’s The List might be your smartest click all year. The thrill is real — but so is the grief and uneasy hope for redemption. And isn’t that, these days, what makes fiction matter?"
— medium.com (reviewing the audio version)
"For readers seeking intelligent thriller entertainment with genuine substance, The List, by Steve Berry delivers admirably. This haunting corporate thriller confirms that Steve Berry’s talents extend far beyond ancient mysteries into the equally treacherous territory of modern moral corruption.”
— The Bookish Elf (bookishelf.com)
Excerpt
PROLOGUE
Killing old people was like shooting bottles off a log.
So little to hold one’s attention.
Even worse, the Priority was late.
Like clockwork, the file expressly noted that the old man arrived every Friday between six and six-thirty A.M. Predictable as the squadron of yellow flies that had swarmed in a half hour ago and had been aggravating him ever since.
But not today.
Of all Fridays, the old coot decided to be late.
Of course, if there was any real anticipation—that thrill-of-the-hunt-ecstasy-of-success-bullshit—the hour just spent in sweltering August heat wouldn’t have been so bad.
He lowered the binoculars and focused on the quiet, pastoral scene. The woodbine bushes, palmettos, and sand pines of the lake’s northeast shore provided thick cover, his camouflage fatigues blending perfectly. Brooks Creek meandered ahead, Eagle Lake beyond.
Hopefully, just a few more minutes and this would be over.
______________
The old man gripped the throttle and powered the skiff across Eagle Lake. His wife called the fourteen hundred acre basin his meandering mistress. Apt. It’d been nearly thirty years since he watched bulldozers and frontend loaders carve its banks, soil that once supported pine trees and soy beans carted all over Georgia for fill dirt, the remaining massive borrow pit eventually filled with water, becoming a readily identifiable blue splotch on the state map.
He’d been one of the first to test its virgin expanse, hooked from the start, and he hoped one day the last sight for his tired hazel eyes would be the comforting taupe of Eagle Lake’s tranquil water.
He inspected the early morning sky. It would be at least another hour before the sun crested the tallest pines rising from the eastern shore. No clouds lingered in sight, a tight clammy blanket of humidity the only reminder of the nasty thunderstorms from the past couple days. But the birds and tree frogs didn’t seem to mind. Nor the insects.
Nor did he.
Ahead, he spotted the familiar break in the shore.
He released the throttle.
The outboard wound down, slowing the skiff to a crawl. He knew most Woods County fishermen avoided Brooks Creek for four practical reasons. Limited space—only fifteen feet from bank to bank. Full of mosquitoes and yellow flies. Unbearably hot and sticky most of the year.
And the gate of limbs.
Thick water oak branches that corkscrewed a barricade over the entire expanse. The space between the bark and water was limited, about four feet, yielding only to a certain size and shape boat, like his flat-bottomed skiff, bought three years ago specifically for Brooks Creek.
He allowed the outboard to die, then inched ahead using a half-horsepower trolling motor mounted to the bow.
The limbs approached.
Thirty years of visits had taught him precisely when and for how long to duck. Beyond the barrier, the creek snaked inland another twenty yards until bulging into a secluded pool, where he knew the best fishing in central Georgia waited.
______________
He spotted the old man.
About damn time.
Miserable heat. Bugs. Poison ivy. At least yesterday there’d been air conditioning, though that seventy-year-old pain-in-the-ass squirmed the whole time. He liked it, though, when they resisted a little. It added to the sport. Made for a challenge. But not too much. Bruises, cuts, blood, DNA, fingerprints. All were evidence that could definitely ruin a good thing.
He shook his head.
People were so damn predictable.
Living their whole life by precise agendas, never realizing the risks associated with regularity. Take this Priority. Every Friday, no matter what, he plopped his boat into the water at the county ramp and powered straight for Brooks Creek. Even his path across Eagle Lake was never in doubt. Like an invisible highway to the northeast, always right after dawn, staying till lunchtime. Usually, he’d take back four or five bass. Sometimes a catfish. It looked like he’d vary the routine once in a while. Maybe try the southwest shore or the east bank. No. If it’s Friday, then this must be Brooks Creek.
Damn how he loved creatures of habit.
_______________
The old man cut another glance at the early morning sky. Orange and yellow hues were being rapidly replaced by azure. What a great looking summer day. Nothing beat morning fishing, weekdays, just after dawn, all alone.
He reached over and gripped his favorite jigger pole. Years ago he’d taken a month to whittle one from cane. Now they could be bought anywhere, professionally manufactured out of lightweight flexible nylon. Slowly, he tied the special double-reverse spinner knot learned from his father, assuring that the sinking Rapala at the tip was tightly secured. It was shaped and colored like a small bream, the perfect temptation for a near-blind, greedy-gut bass.
He tested the treble hooks fore, aft, and abeam.
Sharp. Ready to snag.
He extended the black pole from the boat and ever so gently lowered the plug beneath the quelled surface. Brooks Creek was best fished early. By midday, after the sun steamed the tepid water, warmth drove the fish into the cool lake bottom. Right now, just after dawn, the environ was perfect and he stared hard at the black crevices in the creek’s east bank. Twice, when he’d won the Golden Angler award from the Woods County Bass Association, the snagged big-mouth bass came from those crevices.
The plug submerged.
Ever-so-gently he added to the allure by jiggering the pole up and down, the splashing piece of plastic now appearing like a fingerling bream casually investigating the surface. It wouldn’t take long. Never did. The trick was knowing how to splash. Too hard would scare the bass off. Too soft would never get any attention.
The line knocked hard.
He tightened his grip and hung on, allowing the hooks to tangle deep. Jerk too soon and all he’d have left was an empty lure. When he sensed the hooks were set, he swung the frantic fish up and into the boat.
Hell’s bells he loved jigger fishing.
He pinched his boot down on the thrashing bass and thrust a finger into the gills. Carefully, he removed the hooks and admired the catch. Four pounds. Maybe five.
It would make excellent fillets.
______________
He was ready.
Occasionally he wished he could simply snap their necks. It’d be so much simpler and a thousand times less trouble. Unnoticed deaths took imagination, thought, and creativity. A flair for the expected mixed with the unexpected.
Like an art form.
The scene needed to be set perfectly in the Priority’s mind.
______________
The old man dropped the bass into the catch cooler, then leaned over the side and rinsed the fish coat off his hands. He then reached into another Igloo for an apple. He’d overslept and left home in a hurry, not taking time to have his usual bowl of shredded wheat and coffee.
Overhead, swallows and mockingbirds twittered from tree to tree in search of their own breakfast. A welcome waft of honeysuckle accompanied bees filching nectar. He should have bought a lot here years ago, back before the price of lake front property skyrocketed. But even now the lack of adequate water and sewer lines and paved roads kept the number of dwellings to a minimum. Especially here, on the northeast shore. Nothing but loblolly pine all around for miles.
He gnawed on the apple and, like always, tossed the spent core into the pool where he was about to replace the lure.
It never failed to draw a fish.
Pole in hand, he extended the lure back over the water.
______________
He searched his jumpsuit pocket and found a pack of Doublemint. He folded a stick into his mouth and rejuvenated his palate. It was almost a conditioned response. Death and dry mouth.
A habit?
He grinned at the irony.
Then he relocked his eyes on the old man sitting in the boat fifty yards away. A minute went by. He flicked his wrist and the associate standing beside him understood what to do.
Timing was so important.
Nothing unusual except—
______________
The old man heard thrashing ahead in the dense scrub on the far bank, beyond the point where the creek left the pool snaking inland. People rarely frequented those woods, so he wondered if the visitor might be a deer, hog, or a brown bear. Fifty feet beyond the pool the foliage thinned to a tiny beach. He gazed into the woods beyond and saw the orange of a hunter’s vest.
“Hey,” a male voice said. “You there. I need some help.”
He whirled the jigger pole back into the boat.
“Please don’t go,” the voice said.
A man emerged from the thickets cursing after becoming entangled on a thorny dewberry vine at the water’s edge.
“What’s the problem?” he asked.
“It’s my friend. We were huntin’ hogs and he tripped. Damn palmetto root. I think his foot’s broken. I can’t carry him all the way back to the truck. I was thinkin’ maybe you could take him in the boat and I could meet you wherever you put in.”
He studied the hunter. Mid-thirties, square jaw, clean shaven. A stranger. But a lot of people traveled from all around south and middle Georgia to hunt Woods County. He was certainly dressed appropriately. Crew neck shirt beneath a fluorescent orange vest. Camouflage pants covering stumpy legs. Mud-encrusted boots. Black gloves.
“Can he walk?” he asked.
“Barely,” the hunter said, panting, trying to catch a breath. “But I think I can get him here if you’ll help me get him into the boat.”
“Go ahead. I’ll come over.”
The hunter retreated into the woods.
He shifted the two coolers, tackle box, and spare gas tank toward the stern, then reached for the paddle and inched the boat toward the clearing where the hunter just stood.
He beached the bow and climbed out to wait on shore.
A couple of minutes later the hunter he’d just talked with approached, supporting another man dressed almost identically. The other man appeared older, larger, and even with the first man’s help had a tough time walking, crying out several times as they plowed through the underbrush. He waited by the boat until they emerged from the thickets, then moved forward to help.
The hunter with the bad foot seized him by the hair.
His neck arched back.
Pain seared down his spine.
Another hand came across his face. He felt cold cloth and smelled something sickening, like fish guts dried in the sun. His eyes locked onto the hunter’s. Steel-gray with a swirl of indigo, casting a gaze of pleasure that terrified. The grip tightened. The smell turned dizzying. His knees softened, then buckled. He crumpled to the soft soil and stole a final glance upward.
Then, the light faded.
______________
He fished the walkie-talkie from his back pocket and reported, “Got him. Move in.”
Though not visible, at the mouth of Brooks Creek he knew another boat was drifting into position, its occupant there to keep watch with an unbaited line cast into the brown water, walkie-talkie ready in case a warning was needed. He yanked off his black leather gloves exposing latex ones. His associate did the same. Together, they lifted the old man and placed him in the skiff. Then they splashed water on the bank, the sodden soil smoothed with dead palmetto fronds erasing any trace of their presence.
He climbed over the old man’s body into the skiff and sat astern. His associate followed but stayed near the bow. He paddled the skiff into the pool and, using the landing net, scooped the apple core from the water. He looked fleetingly to see if a good bite might be left, but the old fool had devoured the pulp down to the seeds. He stuffed the core into the old man’s mouth, then maneuvered the skiff into the creek toward the lake.
He negotiated the protruding limbs and drifted toward the creek mouth. His other associate was now in sight and he stared toward the boat. A discreet signal confirmed everything was fine. He tossed the paddle aside and cranked the skiff’s fifty horsepower outboard.
The engine shot to life. Rpms increased.
Oil billowed out in a noxious cloud.
Another hand signal ordered his associate toward the bow to prop the old man upright on the center seat. To keep the limp body high his associate supported the old man’s head from under the chin, crouching down in front. He looked behind once more, again assured by his other associate no eyes or ears were nearby. Seeing all at ready, he twisted the outboard into gear.
The boat shot forward toward the pool.
His associate supported the old man, keeping him steady.
The outboard hummed at full throttle.
The limbs rapidly approached, the old man’s head directly in their path. In the instant before the two met, he popped the throttle to neutral and rolled out of the stern.
The tepid water felt good.
A welcome rinse for the sweat and grime that had cooked his camouflage fatigues since dawn.
He surfaced shoulder-deep and swept back his gray-streaked hair. His eyes dried and focused just as his associate released the old man’s skull, which slammed into the overhanging branches, the body pounding into the transom, reverse momentum sending what was a few seconds before somebody’s husband, father, and grandfather tumbling into the creek.
Which was exactly where he wanted it.
If the blow to the head didn’t kill, the water certainly would.
Drowning, boating accident, or any combination were all acceptable causes of death.
It really was like shooting bottles off a log.
His associate rolled out of the boat into the pool. The skiff settled into a slow cruise, finally lodging in thick brush further down Brooks Creek, motor humming in neutral.
He surveyed the scene.
Everything was according to the processing criteria.
He signaled his associate who treaded water until finding the shallows of the creek beyond the limbs. The old man’s body floated face down in the murky water, apple core nearby. He waded over and laid his fingertips on the carotid artery.
No pulse.
Confirmation.
He and his associate pushed through the creek toward the lake. Approaching the mouth, an increasing depth forced them to swim the remaining distance to the other boat. Their clothes quickly turned to anchors, but the distance was only a few yards. Once there, they climbed in, jerked off their gloves, then sped away as the old man’s body floated further down Brooks Creek.