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★ Fresh Access for Authors 📚 New Books This Week 📰 Latest News 🎪 Reader Games πŸ–οΈ Summer Kick Off Giveaways

Love, Danger, Homecomings & Heart β€” Your June Reading Escape Starts Here

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One disastrous night. One devastating man. One diabolical proposition.


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He’s stubborn. She’s tougher. His kid? Already picked the bride.


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A small-town second chance wrapped in danger, desire, and Sharon Sala heart.


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She came home to save the ranch… and found the cowboy she never forgot.


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From reality TV heartbreak to real-life reinvention.


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A missing twin. A deadly cartel. One K-9 team caught in the crossfire.


Excerpt of The Monkey's Raincoat by Robert Crais

Purchase


Elvis Cole #1
Bantam Books
March 1992
On Sale: March 1, 1992
Featuring: Ellen Lang; Joe Pike; Elvis Cole
237 pages
ISBN: 0553275852
EAN: 978055327585
Mass Market Paperback
Add to Wish List

Mystery Private Eye

Also by Robert Crais:

The Big Empty, January 2025
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Racing the Light, October 2023
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Racing the Light, November 2022
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A Dangerous Man, February 2020
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A Dangerous Man, August 2019
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A Dangerous Man, August 2019
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The Wanted, January 2019
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The Wanted, January 2018
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The Promise, December 2016
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The Promise, June 2016
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The Promise, November 2015
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Suspect, October 2014
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Suspect, February 2013
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Taken, January 2012
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The Sentry, January 2011
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The First Rule, January 2010
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Chasing Darkness, July 2008
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The Watchman, March 2007
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The Two-Minute Rule, January 2007
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The Forgotten Man, January 2006
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Hostage, June 2005
Mass Market Paperback
The Forgotten Man, February 2005
Hardcover
The Two-Minute Rule, February 2005
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Sunset Express, January 2005
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The Last Detective, March 2004
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Indigo Slam, February 2003
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Demoliton Angel, July 2001
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L.A. Requiem, February 2000
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Voodoo River, March 1996
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Free Fall, April 1994
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Lullaby Town, May 1993
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Stalking the Angel, March 1992
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The Monkey's Raincoat, March 1992
Mass Market Paperback

Excerpt of The Monkey's Raincoat by Robert Crais

"Mrs. Lang, do you know where Mort kept his gun?"
She looked surprised. "Mort didn't have a gun."
I showed her the receipt. "Well, this is years ago,"
she said.
"Guns tend to hang around. Keep an eye out for it."
She nodded. "All right. I'm sorry."
"You say that a lot. You don't have to he sorry. You
look away a lot, too, and that's something else you don't
have to do."
"I'm sorry."
"Quite all right."
She took a sip of her milk. It left a moustache on her
upper lip. "You are funny," she said.
"It's either that or be smart." I killed the rest of
the sandwich and sorted the paperwork: bank stuff together;
credit card billings together, phone stuff by itself.
Without Janet Simon around, she was much more relaxed. You
could look past the frightened eyes and mottled face and
slumped shoulders and get glimpses of her from better days I
said, "I'll bet you were the third prettiest girl in
eleventh grade."
Happy-lines came to the corners of her eyes. She
touched at her hair again. "Second prettiest," she said.
It was good when she smiled. She probably hadn't done a
lot of that lately "You meet Mort in college?"
"High school. Clarence Darrow Senior High in Elverton.
That's where we grew up. In Kansas."
"High school sweethearts."
She smiled. "Yes. Isn't that awful?"
"Not at all. You go to college together?"
Her eyes turned a little wistful. "Mort was in theater
arts and business. His parents had quite a large paint store
there, in Elverton. They wanted him to take it over but Mort
wanted to act. No one can understand that in Elverton. You
say you want to act and they just look at you."
I shrugged. "Mort didn't have it so bad."
She looked at me.
"He had the second prettiest girl at Clarence Darrow
Senior High, didn't he?"
She looked at me some more until she realized what I
was doing, then she grinned, and nodded, and finally gave a
short uncertain laugh. She told me I was terrible.
I pushed the paperwork across the table to her. "Be
that as it may, I want you to go through and notate all the
phone numbers that you can identify. Go through the credit
card billings and see if the purchases make sense to you.
Same with the bank statements and the check stubs."
She looked at the stacks of paper. The smile
disappeared. No happy-lines around the eyes. "Isn't that
what I'm paying you for," she said softly.
"We're going to have to take care of that, too. So far,
you're not paying me anything."
"Yes, of course." Awkward and uncomfortable.
I sighed. "Look, I could do this, sure, but it's faster
if you do it. I don't know any of these phone numbers, but
you will, and that will save time. I don't know what you
people bought from the Broadway or on Visa. I see a Visa
charge from The Ivy for a hundred dollars a week every week,
I don't know you and Janet make a regular thing of it there
every Thursday."
"There's nothing like that."
"There might be something else."
She was looking at the paper like it was going to jump
at her. "It's not that I don't want to, she said, "it's just
that I'm not very good at these things."
"You'll surprise yourself."
"I'm so bad with figures."
"Try."
"I'll mess it up." I leaned back in the chair and put
my hands on the table. At the Grand Canyon, I'd seen a man
with acrophobia force himself toward the guardrail because
his daughter wanted to look down. He almost made it, both
hands on the rail, leaning forward in a lunge with his feet
as far back as possible, before the cold sweats cut his
knees out from under him and he collapsed to the pavement.
Ellen Lang's eyes looked like his eyes.
She tried to smile again, but it came out broken this time.
"It really will be better if you do it, don t you see?"
I saw. "Mort really did it to you, didn't he."
She stood quickly and scooped up what was left of her
sandwich and the Fred Flintstone glass. "You stop that right
now. You sound just like Janet."
"Nope. With me it was just an observation."
She stood breathing hard for a second and then she went
into the kitchen. I waited. When she came back out she
said, "All right. Tell me what to do again."
I told her. "Now about my fee."
"Yes, of course."
"Two thousand, exclusive of expenses."
"I remember."
I looked at her. She looked at me. Nobody moved. After
twenty or thirty years I said, "Well?"
"I'll get it to you."
I took the checkbook out of the stack of bank paper and
pushed it across the table to her. "What's wrong with now?"
A tick started on her right eye. "Do you . . . take Visa?"
It was very still in the house. I could hear a
single-engine light plane climbing out of Van Nuys Airport
to the north. Somewhere down the street a dog with a deep,
barrel-chested voice barked. There was a little breeze, but
the jasmine was soured by the smog. I slid the checkbook
back and looked at it. Most of the couples I know have the
husband's name printed out, with the wife's name printed
beneath it, two individuals. Theirs read: Mr. and Mrs.
Morton K. Lang. There was a balance of $3426.15. All of the
stubs were written in the same masculine hand. I said
quietly "Go get a pen and I'll show you how."
She went back into the kitchen. When she didn't come
out for a while I went to see. She was standing with one
hand on the counter and one hand atop her head. Her glasses
were off and her chest was heaving and there was a puddle of
tears on the tile counter by the glasses. Streamers of mucus
ran down from her nose. All of that, but you couldn't hear
her. "It's okay," I said.
She broke and turned into my chest, sucking great
gasping sobs. I held her tight, feeling the wet soak through
my shirt. "I'm thirty-nine years old and I can't do
anything. What did I do to myself? What did I do? I've got
to have him back. Oh God, I need him."
I knew she wasn't talking about Perry
I held her until the heaving stopped and then I wrapped
some ice in a dishtowel and wet it and told her to put it on
her face.
After a while we went back out to the dining room and I
showed her how to fill in the check and how to maintain the
balance on the stub. She was fine with the figures once she
knew where to put them.
When the check was written she tried to smile but all
the life had gone out of her. "I guess I'll need to do this
to pay the bills."
"Yes."
"Excuse me."
She went down the hall toward her bedroom. I sat at the
table for a while, then brought the dishes into the kitchen.
I washed both glasses and the plate and the saucer, and
dried them with paper towels, then I went back out, gathered
together the bank records, and went into the living room by
the overturned couch. She'd done a fair job of stapling the
bottom cloth back on, but she would have a helluva time
righting it. I listened, but couldn't hear her moving
around. I turned the couch over and put it where I thought
it should go and left.

Excerpt from The Monkey's Raincoat by Robert Crais
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