The Dangerous Days of Daniel X

The Dangerous Days of Daniel X Read Free

Book: The Dangerous Days of Daniel X Read Free
Author: James Patterson
Tags: FIC002000
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it—which it obviously did. Then I began shredding the murderous monster into tiny pieces with my hands.
    It was terrible and gruesome and took hours to accomplish, and I hated every second of it, every shred.
    But when the deed was done, I was able to cross Number 19 off my List, and I was one step closer to Number 1—The Prayer, who had killed my mom and dad.
    All in a night’s work in the sewers of Portland.
    Chapter 3
    THE SUN WAS JUST COMING UP— well, the grayish-white smudge that passes for a sun in forever-overcast Portland—as I lumbered through my rental apartment’s front door and plopped down on the couch.
    I crossed my muddy boots on the coffee table and yawned as I opened the morning’s
Oregonian.
    As exhausted as my body was, my mind was still wired about the night before. I jumped up and went to my computer. I pulled up The List of Alien Outlaws and checked to see who was naughty and had been recently exterminated.
Yessiree, Number 19 was no longer on the boards!
    This was, in fact, the same List that The Prayer had been trying to find that fateful day twelve years ago. When I was thirteen, I finally revisited the burnt-down farmhouse where my poor parents had been incinerated. After several days of searching, I found The List—buried under mud and rocks in the rather picturesque brook that ran behind the house.
    The List was on a computer—the one now before me, which is thin as a notepad and probably five hundred years in advance of anything currently offered by Apple or IBM. When I first opened it, I discovered that it contained the names, full description, and approximate whereabouts of the known outlaw aliens currently roaming the earth. And trust me on this:
they are out there, watching and studying us.
    There was also a disturbing message for me from my mom and dad. If I was reading it, the note said, I was to replace them. I was to be the Alien Hunter. I would have to learn how mostly by myself.
    As I was pondering this troubling episode from my past, the front doorbell rang.
    Not good. I wasn’t expecting anyone—
I’m never expecting anyone.
I don’t really like visitors, which is ironic, since I’m lonely most of the time and I adore people, actually.
    Oh, no!
I thought, realizing who it was. And when I say I knew who it was, I’m not saying I had a really good hunch. I
knew
it as fact.
    We’ll get into that in greater detail after I get rid of my visitors.
    The police.
    Chapter 4
    PARANOIA ALERT!
I told myself.
    Standing on my doorstep were two hulking, none-too-happy-looking Portland PD uniforms. Their radios were squawking loudly beside their holstered 9 millimeter handguns.
    “Hey, champ,” the older-looking of the two said. “Parents home?” Interesting question. And a real conversation stopper given my history.
    “Uh,” I said. “Yeah. I mean, of course . . . but they’re . . . pretty busy right now. Maybe I could help you? Or you could come back later?”
    “Later?” he said. “That’s not exactly going to work with our busy schedule. See, we’re from the Runaway Juvenile Unit. One of your neighbors called us. Said she sees you coming in and out at all times of the day and night, and no sign of your parents anywhere. So if they’re too
busy
to come out and talk to the police, you can come with us. We’ll straighten this out at the precinct house. That be okay? You following me so far?”
    I’d dealt with the runaway units of several police departments in my travels over the previous couple of years. They were usually pretty cool people who were, for the most part, trying to help troubled kids. For the most part,
but not right now.
    I guess I could have told these two the truth. That I wasn’t a runaway but an Alien Hunter in town to take care of an important extermination. But I don’t know. They didn’t look ready to hear about the timely end of Orkng Jllfgna down in Portland’s sewers.
    “Okay, kid. Time’s up now. Let’s get moving,” the older guy

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