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Will Coburn stopped in front of the dead woman lying crumpled on the threadbare carpet. He stared down at her. Violent death still gave him pause even after years of seeing it.
He held his flashlight steady and examined the woman's body. She was in her midtwenties. She'd kept her black hair short and neat, but blood matted it now. More blood streaked her face and made her look of pained surprise even more stark. She wore blue jeans and a dove gray blouse under a nondescript green Windbreaker.
Someone had cut the woman's throat. Crimson streaked the front of her blouse and Windbreaker.
Only a few blood streaks stained the carpet she lay on.
Violence and death no longer shocked Will. Since his transfer to NCIS, the Naval Criminal Investigative Services, three years ago, he had seen every kind of inhumanity one person could show another. But he never got used to seeing it. It was enough, at times, for him to question God, though he knew that God allowed men free will. When men abused their freedom, it was their own fault, not God's. Still, the peace Will had with the Lord was an uneasy thing, made even more uneasy by what was occurring in his own family life these past months.
Will glanced around theapartment, trailing the flashlight beam with his sea green eyes. There was no electrical power to the room. The building super was supposed to be working on that.
Unfurnished and untended, the apartment held the thick smell of must and old sweat. The late March night left the room cloaked in thick shadows. Whirling blue lights from the police car parked in the street outside washed over the spiderwebs clinging to the top part of the window. The lower part of the window was broken. Glass lay inside on the floor, telling Will that the window had been broken from outside.
"Is she one of yours?" The voice was loud and challenging.
Will turned to face the man who had accompanied him into the grim room.
Wilmington police detective Leonard Carpenter stood nearby. He was shorter than Will's six feet one inch and at least twenty pounds above his ideal weight. His sandy hair held streaks of gray and he wore a neat mustache. His pale blue eyes looked permanently bloodshot. His tan suit held wrinkles.
"She's one of ours," Will answered. He ran a hand through his thick shock of black hair, cut within military regulations. Though the room was cool, his khaki Dockers felt like they were clinging to his legs, and he was beginning to feel uncomfortably warm under his blue NCIS jacket. He shrugged the jacket off, revealing the Springfield Extreme Duty .40-caliber pistol he carried in a holster strung across his broad shoulders.
Carpenter flipped through his notes. "Says here that she's Chief Petty Officer Helen Swafford. She was NCIS?"
Will nodded.
Carpenter put his notepad away. "Know what she was doing out here?"
"No."
"If she was working on something, seems like she would have had a partner."
"The rest of the team is accounted for." Will had checked that through Swafford's supervisor.
"Then she was out here on her own hook."
"Looks that way," Will agreed.
"Wilmington's not that far from Camp Lejeune," the homicide detective said, "but she came a fair piece to get herself killed."
"I'm sure getting killed wasn't on her agenda, Detective," a feminine voice stated.
Will glanced up as Maggie Foley entered the apartment. At five feet four inches tall and slender, Maggie didn't look like much of a threat. Her dark brown hair was cropped at the shoulder, and she looked younger than her twenty-seven years. But she had an obsession with the gym and no-holds-barred volleyball that made her tough as nails on a martial-art mat.
Maggie looked as if she'd been at a dinner party when the call had come in. She wore black slacks with razor-edge creases and a charcoal, bias-striped shirt. French cuffs added an understated elegant flair. Her diamond earrings glittered as they caught the light. To Will, Maggie's appearance seemed in stark contrast to her surroundings in this room of death. But then, even in fatigues, Maggie Foley never looked middle class.
The NCIS drafted most of its agents from the civilian sector, including a number of ex-policemen and security guards. Will's unit was different. Because his team handled potentially lethal special assignments, most of his team members had been handpicked from the military. Maggie was the sole civilian. None of the personnel the military had to draw from had the expertise she brought to the team. She'd spent eight weeks in boot camp prior to assignment to the unit, then another month working with Special Ops personnel to bring her up to speed. There were things she was still learning about military ops, but she learned them quickly.
"According to the super, this apartment has been vacant for two months." Maggie shined her beam on piles of empty beer cans and cigarette butts in three corners of the room, and the two stained sleeping bags in the center. "Somebody comes calling while the three bears are out."
"Neighborhood kids," Carpenter replied. "They come up here and party when no one's looking."
"Did one of them make the call to the PD?" Maggie asked.
"Don't know. Caller didn't identify himself."
"According to the phone records of the pay phone outside," Maggie said, "a call was placed to the Wilmington Police Department about an hour and a half ago. That was at 7:17 p.m. Took you a while to call us, didn't it?"
"I wanted to verify the murdered woman's identity before I bothered you," Carpenter said.
Will knew that wasn't exactly the truth. Anytime military personnel were involved in a crime-whether that person was the victim or the criminal-the investigation was turned over to the military. The friction between the local authorities and the military investigators was long-standing.
"How did you make the identification?" Maggie persisted.
"Her ID was on the floor."
"Did you disturb the body?"
Anger stained Carpenter's broad face. "I got better things to do than stand here and answer stupid questions." He started to walk away.
"Detective Carpenter." Will's voice carried command. After twelve years spent aboard ships-six of them commanding one, the aircraft carrier USS John F. Kennedy-his voice was a tool, as solid and heavy as a ball-peen hammer. "I can contact your captain. I bet I could free up some time in your schedule."
Carpenter cursed beneath his breath but the sound carried in the small room. "I got fifteen years in on homicide. I know not to mess with evidence. When I checked that ID, this was still my murder scene."
"Now," Maggie said coolly, "it's ours."
Will knew Carpenter wanted to say something. Intent stiffened the man's bulky frame. But he kept silent. A moment later, the homicide detective turned and left the room.
"Well," Maggie said, "I suppose that could have gone better."
"It could have," Will agreed. "It didn't." He turned his attention back to the dead woman.
"He cost us nearly two hours." Maggie pulled on a pair of thin surgical gloves from her purse.
Looking at the dead woman, Will said, "We were already too late."
* * *
>> 2139 HOURS
"She wasn't killed here." Maggie moved around the room and shot images with a digital camera from every angle.
"I know," Will replied. He took notes on an iPAQ Pocket PC.
"There's not enough blood and no signs of a struggle." Maggie took another image and moved closer to the body, where small triangular white markers with black numbers on them marked evidence.
"There are bruises on her face and arms," Maggie went on, "and three of her fingernails are broken. She didn't go down without a fight."
Twenty minutes ago, the building super had reconnected the electricity to the room. The bulbs offered a weak yellow incandescence that required an external flash on the camera. But the light relieved the darkness that had filled the room.
"Judging from the blood smears on her clothing, whoever killed her used something to transfer the body." Maggie squatted and took another shot. "I'm guessing a sheet or a piece of carpet from the blotches I'm seeing. Something fabric, not plastic."
Will had already guessed that. When he'd first taken the NCIS assignment, processing a crime scene had seemed beyond his capabilities. There were so many things to know. He'd surprised himself by learning them so quickly. He'd surprised his field training officer as well.
"That transfer material is incriminating," Maggie said. "That's why he or she took it from the scene."
"Maybe we'll get lucky and find it." Luck, Will knew, was part of every criminal investigation. Sometimes it worked for an investigator and sometimes it worked against. But luck was made by effort. They had to start beating the bushes.
* * *
>> 2218 HOURS
Dr. Nita Tomlinson was thirty-one years old, a tall, lean redhead with freckles and gray-green eyes. She possessed an easy disposition and could generally be counted on to join the beer-and-pizza crowd after hours. She was also the team's medical officer.
As she stepped from the military Hummer that would carry Chief Petty Officer Helen Swafford's mortal remains back to the medical lab at Camp Lejeune, Nita pulled a lab coat on over the charcoal slacks and green-and-white-striped knit top she wore that enhanced the curves of her body. Her high-heeled boots seemed designed more for clubbing than fieldwork.
"Interrupt something?" Will asked when he went outside to meet her.
Nita brushed her hair back from her face. "What?"
"Nice clothes," Will said. "I thought maybe you got called away from a night out with Joe."
Joe Tomlinson was Nita's husband of five years. They had a four-year-old daughter named Celia. Will knew that with the backlog of work Nita had verifying even routine deaths and checking files on those killed in action, she seldom got home during the evenings these days.
Nita seemed a little disconcerted. "No. I was ... out. By myself. Just had a couple drinks with girlfriends to clear my head. I wasn't ready to go home and put on my mommy cap. Where's the body?"
"Inside." Will walked beside her as he guided her toward the building. The police had roped off the area with yellow NCIS crime-scene tape and sawhorses.
"Commander Coburn," a young Asian woman called from behind the tape. A press ID hung from the lapel of her jacket. She held a microphone out. "Could you give us a comment?"
"I see the press has learned your name," Nita said.
Will didn't offer a comment, nor did he break stride. He assumed the media people had resourced his picture and made identification. So far the media still didn't have the dead chief petty officer's name.
"Where's the rest of the crew?" Nita asked as they stepped into the building's foyer.
"Frank and Shel are knocking on doors in the neighborhood," Will said. "Estrella is going through the chief petty officer's office files."
"The vic wasn't on assignment?"
"According to her supervisor, nothing she was working would have brought her out to this neighborhood."
Nita frowned. "So it's a mystery."
"So far."
"I hate mysteries."
"When we finish the job," Will said, "there won't be any mysteries left." As he turned toward her, he smelled alcohol on her breath. "Are you in shape to do this?"
Nita shot him a reproachful look. "Yes."
"I smell alcohol."
"At this time of night, you usually would." Nita took a breath mint from her purse and pulled on a pair of surgical gloves. "I'm fine. If I wasn't, I'd call someone else in. I know how to do my job." Her tone was angry and defensive.
Will had heard that in her voice a lot lately. "All right," he said. He'd never known a time when Nita couldn't perform her job. But he was afraid a storm was brewing on the horizon. He'd been a sailor much of his life, and sailors knew storms. Maybe he'd have noticed Nita's situation earlier if he hadn't been dealing with his own.
(Continues...)
Excerpted from PAID IN BLOOD by Mel Odom Copyright © 2006 by Mel Odom. Excerpted by permission.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.
Anonymous
Posted September 21, 2006
I've read several of Mel Odom's books recently and I must say, they're getting better each time. Paid In Blood initially revolves around the death of Chief Petty Officer Helen Swafford, who was found murdered and whose demise eventually opens up a 'can of worms'. As the main character, Commander Will Coburn, investigates the death of the officer he discovers clues that make him realize there's more to the murder than meets the eye. The murder leads Will and his team (Maggie Foley, Estrella Montoya, Frank Billings Shel McHenry and Nita Tomlinson) on an investigation that has ties in the Middle East, Russia, Colombia and South Korea. I won't spoil the book by giving too many details about the plot and content, but I can say that Mel Odom leaves you wanting more at the end of each chapter. Mel skillfully makes the characters in the story 'human', allowing us to get into their personal lives, present struggles and into their pasts. While there are human casualties and losses throughout the book, he also introduces new characters at various points throughout the story, adding to the plot and keeping your interest in check. What I found most interesting is how Mel mixes his indepth knowledge of forensics with criminal invertigation, then frequently ties in a jolt of action and suspense, making this a great read. I'm glad to see that this is book 1 and am hoping that book 2 comes out sooner rather than later. I'd recommend this book to anyone who enjoys action, suspense, forensics, investigation, military-based thrillers or 'CSI-ish' types of storylines. What more could you want? -BW
4 out of 4 people found this review helpful.
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback. Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.Though somewhat immune to murder having been a Naval Criminal Investigative Services Agent for a few years, in Wilmington, North Carolina Commander Will Coburn sadly looks at the corpse of NCIS Chief Petty Officer Helen Swafford, who was on her own unauthorized hook when her throat was slashed. As he wonders what she was involved in, Will and his team (Maggie Foley, Shel McHenry, Estrella Montoya, Dr. Nita Tomlinson, and Frank Billings ) begins tracking clues involving the illegal trafficking of military weapons being sold to rogue states and terrorist groups. Their efforts lead them to Chainae, Republic of Korea where they spy on a suspected weapons dealer.----- However, to their shock and chagrin, hooligans working for a drug dealer abduct their prime suspect. When they finally catch up to the kidnappers and their victim, the NCIS team find corpses only, as if someone knows what they are doing and wiped out the evidence. The Navy takes control of the body of their prime suspect, only to have it snatched from them leaving behind a dead NCIS agent. With no time to mend fences at home though each, except perhaps Frank, face personal crisis, the unit finds clues in South Korea, Colombia, Russia, and the Middle East, but how drug dealers and weapons sellers converge as their commodity markets are so different remains just out of reach.--------- Though the investigation turns over the top with global repercussions, Mel Odom¿s fine NCIS thriller is an exciting tale starring real people as the Navy investigators. Each of the team members has issues back home with family members or with themselves as they struggle with personal demons while battling an insidious unknown enemy who may be connecting two major illegal commodity selling groups into a super power. Fans will enjoy observing the dedicated team members follow the clues in North Carolina and overseas trying to save the big world while their little world teeters on the brink of implosion.------------ Harriet Klausner
2 out of 2 people found this review helpful.
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Posted July 16, 2011
A great book. Highly recommend!
1 out of 1 people found this review helpful.
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback. Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.8131543
Posted May 4, 2011
This was a great book! I enjoyed getting to know a little bit about each team member throughout the book and can't wait to read more of the series. I highly recommend reading this book.
1 out of 1 people found this review helpful.
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback. Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.EagleScout97
Posted April 26, 2011
Highly recommended.
1 out of 1 people found this review helpful.
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback. Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.I got this and the second one for my birthday last year from a friend. I am addicted to the television series NCIS and when I read the summary, I wasn't sure. Different characters, locations, etc. But I started reading it and I couldn't stop. I loved the book. The plot twists, the suspense, all of it. After finishing the first two, I just had to look for the third. Now I am waiting to see if there will be another.
I totatlly recommend this series to anyone, especially if you follow NCIS on TV.
1 out of 1 people found this review helpful.
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback. Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.ILoveGoodBooks
Posted March 13, 2010
This is one of the best books I have read in a while. I wanted to read the book, because I already love the TV show NCIS and wanted to learn more about it. I love the chacters and the action. I am only 13 years old and I was highly pleaed to find no cussing or sex. It also did not have hugely chalenging vocabulary. I loved Odom's style of writing, and the page-turning suspense. I would deffinatley recomend this book to a friend.
1 out of 1 people found this review helpful.
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback. Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.Anonymous
Posted October 21, 2006
If you know anything about NCIS, you'll be disappointed. The book definitely lacked research on the Navy and NCIS. I didn't even finish the book. The author spends too much time adding extra explainations that are completely redundant. He basically stops the story to explain, picks it back up, then stops again to expain...and so forth. So, don't buy this book.
1 out of 2 people found this review helpful.
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback. Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.Anonymous
Posted August 29, 2006
This is the first Mel Odom book I have read and I found it to be a really great read. The Character development is great and Mel gives you just a little bit everyonce in awhile as the story goes along instead of trying to shove it down your throat all at once. The overall story of the NCIS team trying to find out the murderer of another Naval member is greatly written and very easy to follow. It is interesting to read about some of the ways the criminal has tried to cover their tracks. Great Detail on the forensic part of the story.
1 out of 1 people found this review helpful.
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback. Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.Anonymous
Posted February 2, 2012
Wow. I felt like I was on an unending roller coaster ride. I almost could not catch my breath. Air was coming in gulps. On occasion, I even talked to the book or screamed out loud (especially when a negative incident occurred with one or two of the NCIS special agents). Great Read! It was so intense, not sure if I can read the next installment. I am a big TV-NCIS fan, so this book did not disappoint. The inspirational tones were very subdued, so it is a book that can be enjoyed by any adult.
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Posted December 11, 2011
Good reading. All of the NCIS series are well written and a good read for all.
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback. Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.I am a huge fan of the NCIS tv series, so I am not surprised that I enjoyed this book. This is a well written, fast paced book that kept me up nights wanting to read more. I can't wait to read the next in the series.
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback. Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.Joyce36
Posted April 18, 2011
I enjoy NCIS on tv, so was drawn to this bood right away, it will keep your interest.
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback. Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.Anonymous
Posted July 7, 2006
NCIS ¿ Paid in Blood, where to start? First off the spine of the book says `Novel one¿ which indicates that there are more coming in this series, so rather than repeat a lot of plot elements that are better written by the author, lets look at that aspect. I read an average of 4 ¿ 6 books a month, split between fiction and non fiction, balanced between SCI-FI, Finance and Spirituality. That being said I¿ve delved into my share of series books. If this is indeed the 1st book in a new series, as it appears to be, I have to say that Mel has done something that seems VERY difficult in writing. He¿s made a 1st book very easy to get involved with. Typically many series books start off using the first volume to fill in the entire back story on every primary character being utilized. Although I do agree that knowing the characters past helps you become involved in their present and care about their future, there have been some very good Volume One¿s that have been VERY hard to get through, due to all the back story. Whether it¿s LEFT BEHIND, INTERVIEW WITH A VAMPIRE or LORD OF THE RINGS, the stories themselves are great the books are good, but the depth at which most authors seem to subject their readers to detail of history is overwhelming! Not Mel, he drops you SMACK DAB in the middle of it! There is action and intrigue from page one! Now this is not to say that the characters history is ignored, instead it¿s fed to you a little bit at a time, in just enough volume to make it palatable and yet still keep it relevant to the story at hand. Mr. Odom should also be applauded at the amount of precise detailed military information that he relates to each character and their story. Not since Tom Clancy in the early 80¿s have I read a novel with as much accurate detail in relation to the story and the tools being used. More over this isn¿t simply a recitation of facts and figures in relation to bullet grains and wind velocity, this information is made integral to the movement of the plotline. But most importantly I think that any prospective reader should know up front that Mel has brought us back to a method of story telling that seems buried in the past, but that made so MANY books great! His chapters are short, legible and leave you at a cliff hanger at the end of every one! Whether you like Dan Browns Da Vinci Code or not, I believe that the thing that has made it such a HUGE success is that he brought reading back to the average person! The average chapter in Da Vinci was about 4 pages, and it always left you wanting more! NCIS does the exact same thing! The chapters are more than 4 pages, but within each he moves along several different characters, each being left in a situation where you the reader are holding your breath! I¿m not quite old enough to remember the Tom Mix movie serials of the 50¿s but I absolutely understand the concept! Leave your fans for more! Even the END of the book leaves the reader going `Hey wait! What happens NEXT?¿ I first read Mel Odom in his `sideline¿ to the Left Behind Series ¿Left Behind-Military¿, and although I am avidly awaiting the continuation of that series, I personally feel that the writing, story, plot and character development in NCIS far outweighs that of the other series. Perhaps it has to do with the investment he as an author makes in characters and a universe of his own creation. Whatever the reason, I for one hope that this does become a series and will be looking out for the next volume. Also a search through this bookstore shows that he has done an awful lot of work with other characters and universes that I¿m a fan of. So if, like me, you buy and enjoy this book, I¿d strongly recommend you see what else he has on tap.
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Posted May 19, 2006
I was unable to get much into this book, due to the absurdity of the data presented in chapter one. The team leader is a USN Commander (O-5) who has 12 years sea experience, and spent 6 of those years as the captain of an aircraft carrier. Sorry, this doesn't rise to the level of frivolity. No USN CV is ever commanded by less than an O-6 (Navy Captain), and no USN CV has had one officer remain in command of it for 6 years within my lifetime.
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Posted April 16, 2011
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Posted October 9, 2011
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Posted July 27, 2011
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Posted May 31, 2011
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Posted December 7, 2011
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Overview
The death of a fellow NCIS agent in North Carolina leads Will Coburn and his special team of naval crime-scene investigators to discover a drug-and-arms smuggling ring. The investigation leads them to a U.S. military base in South Korea. When a body is stolen from a crime scene, the team discovers that their suspect is not who he seems. Nuclear weapons have gone missing, and it's a race against time as the NCIS team uncovers the true face of evil.