#1 bestselling author Harlan Coben has become an unstoppable force in suspense fiction. His most recent novel, The Woods, spent more time on the New York Times bestseller list than his previous books and sales reached his highest levels to date. His latest page-turner, which is about just how far parents will go to protect their kids, is destined for the top of every bestseller list.
Tia and Mike Baye never imagined they'd become the type of overprotective parents who spy on their kids. But their sixteen-year-old son Adam has been unusually distant lately, and after the suicide of his classmate Spencer Hill—the latest in a string of issues at school—they can't help but worry. They install a sophisticated spy program on Adam's computer, and within days are jolted by a message from an unknown correspondent addressed to their son: "Just stay quiet and all safe."
Meanwhile, browsing through an online memorial for Spencer put together by his classmates, Betsy Hill is struck by a photo that appears to have been taken on the night of her son's death ... and he wasn't alone. She thinks it is Adam Baye standing just outside the camera's range; but when Adam goes missing, it soon becomes clear that something deep and sinister has infected their community. For Tia and Mike Baye, the question they must answer is this: When it comes to your kids, is it possible to know too much?
Check out the Hold Tight trailer.
1
Marianne nursed her third shot of cuervo, marveling at her endless capacity to destroy
any good in her pathetic life, when the man next to her shouted, “Listen
up, sweetcakes: Creationism and evolution are totally compatible.”
His spittle landed on Marianne’s neck. She made a face and
shot the man a quick glance. He had a big, bushy mustache straight out of a
seventies porn flick. He sat on her right. The over-bleached blonde with
brittle hair of straw he was trying to impress with this stimulating banter was
on her left. Marianne was the unlucky luncheon meat in their bad-pickup
sandwich.
She tried to ignore them. She peered into her glass as if it were a
diamond she was sizing up for an engagement ring. Marianne hoped that it would
make the mustache man and straw-haired woman disappear. It didn’t.
“You’re crazy,” Straw Hair said.
“Hear me out.”
“Okay, I’ll listen. But I think you’re
crazy.”
Marianne said, “Would you like to switch stools so you can be
next to each other?”
Mustache put a hand on her arm. “Just hold on, little lady. I
want you to hear this too.”
Marianne was going to protest, but it was easier not to. She turned
back to her drink.
“Okay,” Mustache said, “you know about Adam and
Eve, right?”
“Sure,” Straw Hair said.
“You buy that story?”
“The one where he was the first man and she
was the first woman?”
“Right.”
“Hell, no. You do?”
“Yes, of course.” He petted his mustache as if it were
a small rodent that needed calming. “The Bible tells us that’s what
happened. First came Adam. Then Eve was formed out of his rib.”
Marianne drank. She drank for many reasons. Most of the time it was
to party. She had been in too many places like this, looking to hook up and
hoping it would come to more. Tonight, though, the idea of leaving with a man
held no interest. She was drinking to numb, and damn it if it wasn’t
working. The mindless chatter, once she let go, was distracting. Lessened the
pain.
She had messed up.
As usual.
Her entire life had been a sprint away from anything righteous and decent,
looking for the next unobtainable fix, a perpetual state of boredom punctuated
by pathetic highs. She’d destroyed something good, and now that
she’d tried to get it back, well, Marianne had screwed that up too.
In the past, she had hurt those closest to her. That was her
exclusive club of whom to emotionally maim—those she loved most. But now,
thanks to her recent blend of idiocy and selfishness, she could add total
strangers to the list of victims of the Marianne Massacre.
For some reason, hurting strangers seemed worse. We all hurt those
we love, don’t we? But it was bad karma to hurt the innocent.
Marianne had destroyed a life. Maybe more than one.
For what?
To protect her child. That was what
she’d thought.
Dumb ass.
“Okay,” Mustache said, “Adam begot Eve or
whatever the hell the term was.”
“Sexist crap,” Straw Hair said.
“But the word of God.”
“Which has been proven wrong by science.”
“Now just wait, pretty lady. Hear me out.” He held up
his right hand. “We have Adam”—then he held up his
left—“and we have Eve. We have the Garden of Eden, right?”
“Right.”
“So Adam and Eve have two sons, Cain and Abel. And then Abel
kills Cain.”
“Cain kills Abel,” Straw Hair corrected.
“You sure?” He frowned,
thinking about it. Then he shook it off. “Look, whatever. One of them
dies.”
“Abel dies. Cain kills him.”
“You’re sure?”
Straw Hair nodded.
“Okay, that leaves us with Cain. So the question is, who did
Cain reproduce with? I mean, the only other available woman is Eve, and
she’s getting on in years. So how did mankind continue to survive?”
Mustache stopped, as if waiting for applause. Marianne rolled her
eyes.
“Do you see the dilemma?”
“Maybe Eve had another kid. A girl.”
“So he had sex with his sister?” Mustache asked.
“Sure. In those days, everyone did everyone else,
didn’t they? I mean, Adam and Eve were the first. There had to be some
early incest.”
“No,” Mustache said.
“No?”
“The Bible forbids incest. The answer lies in science.
That’s what I mean. Science and religion can indeed coexist. It’s
all about Darwin’s
theory of evolution.”
Straw Hair looked genuinely interested. “How?”
“Think about it. According to all those Darwinists, what did
we descend from?”
“Primates.”
“Right, monkeys or apes or whatever.
So anyway Cain is cast out, and he’s wandering around this glorious
planet on his own. You with me?”
Mustache tapped Marianne’s arm, making sure she was paying
attention. She turned sluglike in his direction. Lose the porn mustache, she
thought, and you might have something here.
Marianne shrugged. “With you.”
“Great.” He smiled and arched an eyebrow. “And
Cain is a man, right?”
Straw Hair wanted back in. “Right.”
“With normal male urges, right?”
“Right.”
“So he’s walking around. And he’s feeling his
oats. His natural urges. And one day, while walking through a
forest”—another smile, another pet of the
mustache—“Cain stumbles across an attractive monkey. Or gorilla. Or
orangutan.”
Marianne stared at him. “You’re kidding, right?”
“No. Think about it. Cain spots something from the monkey
family. They’re the closest to human, right? He jumps one of the females.
They, well, you know.” He brought his hands together in a silent clap in
case she didn’t know. “And then the primate gets pregnant.”
Straw Hair said, “That’s gross.”
Marianne started to turn back
to her drink, but the man tapped her arm again.
“Don’t you see how that makes sense? The primate has a
baby. Half ape, half man. It’s apelike, but slowly, over time, the
dominance of mankind comes to the forefront. See? Voilà! Evolution and
creationism made one.” He smiled as though waiting for a gold star.
“Let me get this straight,” Marianne said. “God
is against incest, but He’s into bestiality?”
The mustached man gave her a patronizing, there-there pat on the
shoulder.
“What I’m doing here is trying to explain that all the
smarty-pants with their science degrees who believe that religion is not
compatible with science are lacking in imagination. That’s the problem.
Scientists just look through their microscopes. Religionists just look at the
words on the page. Neither is seeing the forest in spite of the trees.”
“That forest,” Marianne said. “Would that be the
same one with the attractive monkey?”
The air shifted then. Or maybe it was Marianne’s imagination.
Mustache stopped talking. He stared at her for a long moment. Marianne
didn’t like it. There was something different there. Something off. His
eyes were lightless black glass, like someone had randomly jammed them in, like
they held no life in them. He blinked and then moved in closer.
Studying her.
“Whoa, sweetheart. Have you been
crying?”
Marianne turned to the straw-haired woman. She stared too.
“I mean, your eyes are red,” he went on. “I
don’t mean to pry or anything. But, I mean, are you okay?”
“Fine,” Marianne said. She thought that maybe there was
a slur in her voice. “I just want to drink in peace.”
“Sure, I get that.” He raised his hands.
“Didn’t mean to disturb you.”
Marianne kept her eyes on the liquor. She waited for movement in
her peripheral vision. It didn’t happen. The man with the mustache was
still standing there.
She took another deep sip. The bartender cleaned a mug with the
ease of a man who’d done it for a very long time. She half expected him
to spit in it, like something from an old Western. The lights were low. There
was the standard dark mirror behind the bar with the anticosmetic glass so you
could scope out your fellow patrons in a smoky thus flattering light.
Marianne checked the mustache man in the mirror.
He glared at her. She locked on those lightless eyes in the mirror,
unable to move.
The glare slowly turned into a smile, and she felt it chill her
neck. Marianne watched him turn away and leave, and when he did, she breathed a
sigh of relief.
She shook her head. Cain reproducing with an ape—sure, pal.
Her hand reached for her drink. The glass shook. Nice distraction,
that idiotic theory, but her mind couldn’t stay away from the bad place
for long.
She thought about what she had done. Had it really seemed like a
good idea at the time? Had she really thought it through—the personal
price, the consequences to others, the lives altered forever?
Guess not.
There had been injury. There had been injustice. There had been
blind rage. There had been the burning, primitive desire for revenge. And none
of this biblical (or, heck, evolutionary) “eye for an eye”
stuff—what had they used to call what she’d done?
Massive retaliation.
She closed her eyes, rubbed them. Her stomach started gurgling.
Stress, she imagined. Her eyes opened. The bar seemed darker now. Her head
began to spin.
Too early for that.
How much had she drunk?
She grabbed hold of the bar, the way you do on nights like this,
when you lie down after you have too much to drink and the bed starts twirling
and you hang on because the centrifugal force will hurl you through the nearest
window.
The gurgling in her stomach tightened. Then her eyes opened wide. A
thunderbolt of agony ripped through her abdomen. She opened her mouth, but the
scream wouldn’t come—blind pain squeezed it shut. Marianne doubled
over.
“Are you okay?”
Straw Hair’s voice. She sounded very
far away. The pain was horrible. The worst she had felt, well, since
childbirth. Giving birth—God’s little test. Oh, guess
what—that little being you are supposed to love and care for more than
yourself? When it first comes out, it is going to cause physical pain you
can’t begin to fathom.
Nice way to start a relationship, don’t you think?
Wonder what Mustache would make of that.
Razor blades—that was what it felt like—clawed
at her insides as if fighting to get out. All rational thought fled. The
pain consumed her. She even forgot about what she’d done, the damage she
had caused, not just now, today, but throughout her life. Her parents had
withered and been aged by her teenage recklessness. Her first husband had been
destroyed by her constant infidelity, her second husband by the way she treated
him, and then there were her kid, the few people who’d befriended her for
more than a few weeks, the men she’d used before they used her…
The men. Maybe that was about payback too.
Hurt them before they hurt you.
She was sure that she was going to vomit.
“Bathroom,” she managed.
“I got you.” Straw Hair again.
Marianne felt herself falling off the stool. Strong hands slithered
underneath her armpits and kept her upright. Someone—Straw
Hair—guided her toward the back. She stumbled toward the bathroom. Her
throat felt impossibly dry. The pain in her stomach made it impossible to stand
upright.
The strong hands held on to her. Marianne kept her eyes on the
floor. Dark. She could only see her own feet shuffling, barely lifting. She
tried to look up, saw the bathroom door not far ahead, wondered if she’d
ever get there. She did.
And kept on going.
Straw Hair still held her under the armpits. She steered Marianne
past the bathroom door. Marianne tried to put on the brakes. Her brain
wouldn’t obey the command. She tried to call out, to tell her savior that
they’d passed the door, but her mouth wouldn’t work either.
“Out this way,” the woman whispered. “It will be
better.”
Better?
Marianne felt her body push against the metal rod of an emergency
door. The door gave way. Back exit. Made sense, Marianne figured. Why mess up a
bathroom? Better to do it in a back alley. And get some fresh air. Fresh air
might help. Fresh air might make her feel better.
The door opened all the way, hitting the outside wall with a bang.
Marianne stumbled out. The air did indeed feel good. Not great. The pain was
still there. But the coolness on her face felt good.
That was when she saw the van.
The van was white with tinted windows. The back doors were open
like a mouth waiting to swallow her whole. And standing there, right by those
doors, now taking hold of Marianne and pushing her up inside the van, was the
man with the bushy mustache.
Marianne tried to pull up, but it was no use.
Mustache tossed her in as if she were a sack of peat moss. She
landed on the van’s floor with a thud. He crawled in, closed the back
doors, and stood over her. Marianne rolled to a fetal position. Her stomach
still ached, but fear was taking over now.
The man peeled off his mustache and smiled at her. The van started
moving. Straw Hair must be driving.
“Hi, Marianne,” he said.
She couldn’t move, couldn’t breathe. He sat next to
her, pulled his fist back, and punched her hard in the stomach.
If the pain had been bad before, it went to another dimension now.
“Where’s the tape?” he asked.
And then he began to hurt her for real.
Praise for The Woods
“The Woods might just be the best thing Coben has written. . . . A gripping story, filled with fine characters and dark secrets.”
—Chicago Sun-Times
“Gripping. . . . The characters are authentic, the writing spare, and the courtroom drama so riveting.”
—Boston Sunday Globe
“Harlan Coben has been keeping me awake at night. . . . I devoured his latest bestseller The Woods. . . . Fortunately you won’t have to worry about navigating impenetrable woods. Coben is the perfect guide, clearing all the hurdles with maximum speed and efficiency.”
—The Orlando Sentinel