Discover millions of ebooks, audiobooks, and so much more with a free trial

Only $11.99/month after trial. Cancel anytime.

Divine Justice
Divine Justice
Divine Justice
Ebook436 pages6 hours

Divine Justice

Rating: 4 out of 5 stars

4/5

()

Read preview

About this ebook

CFBI Agent and Pyro-Psychic Jasi McLellan battles a serious infection that threatens to claim her life. Slipping in and out of consciousness, she remembers the Parliament Murders...

One by one, members of Ontario's Parliament are disappearing, only to be found days later, disoriented and drugged. Or worse―dead. Police are stumped and the CFBI brings in a covert PSI team, agents with special psychic abilities.

Accompanied by Psychometric Empath Ben Roberts and new team member Victim Empath Natassia Prushenko, Jasi heads for Ottawa and uncovers a plot so devious that Canada's national security is at risk. If that isn't enough to deal with, Jasi bumps into old flame, Zane Underhill, who wants to rekindle their relationship that ended three years earlier.

But the investigation takes precedent and Jasi is forced to place her feelings for Zane on hold in order to find a killer who has more than justice in mind for his victims, and in the end she makes a gut-wrenching decision―one that will cost the life of someone close to her.

"Divine Justice is a powerfully-written chill ride that will give you nightmares. Best to keep the lights on with this one." ―Rick Mofina, bestselling author of In Desperation

"This fast-paced thriller should be a runaway best-seller. Divine Justice reminds me of CSI or Medium. If you like J.D. Robb's In Death series, you'll love Cheryl Kaye Tardif's Divine series." ―Midwest Book Review, Betty Dravis, co-author of Dream Reachers series

"One of those 'sitting on the edge of your seats' read as the team unravels the mystery and tries to solve the case. It is a unique blend of action, mystery...This book is highly recommended." ―Margaret Orford, Allbooks Review

LanguageEnglish
PublisherImajin Books
Release dateMay 3, 2011
ISBN9781926997087
Divine Justice
Author

Cheryl Kaye Tardif

Cheryl Kaye Tardif is an award-winning, international bestselling Canadian suspense author published by various publishers. Some of her most popular novels have been translated into foreign languages. She is best known for CHILDREN OF THE FOG (over 100,000 copies sold worldwide) and WHALE SONG.When people ask her what she does, Cheryl likes to say, “I kill people off for a living!” You can imagine the looks she gets. Sometimes she’ll add, "Fictitiously, of course. I'm a suspense author." Sometimes she won't say anything else.Inspired by Stephen King, Dean Koontz and others, Cheryl strives to create stories that feel real, characters you’ll love or hate, and a pace that will keep you reading.In 2014, she penned her first “Qwickie” (novella) for Imajin BooksTM new imprint, Imajin QwickiesTM. E.Y.E. of the Scorpion is the first in her E.Y.E. Spy Mystery series.She is now working on her next thriller.Booklist raves, “Tardif, already a big hit in Canada...a name to reckon with south of the border.”Cheryl's website: http://www.cherylktardif.comOfficial blog: http://www.cherylktardif.blogspot.comTwitter: http://www.twitter.com/cherylktardifFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/CherylKayeTardif

Read more from Cheryl Kaye Tardif

Related to Divine Justice

Titles in the series (3)

View More

Related ebooks

Mystery For You

View More

Related articles

Reviews for Divine Justice

Rating: 3.886561880977313 out of 5 stars
4/5

573 ratings45 reviews

What did you think?

Tap to rate

Review must be at least 10 words

  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    About usual for a David Baldacci book. The Camel Club is not my favorite of the series that he writes.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Synopsis: After the disaster at the visitor center, Oliver has to get justice for his friend, his wife, and his daughter. He sets out to eliminate the two men who ordered these people killed - and he is successful. His act puts him on the run. By helping a young man he ends up in a very small town that is close to a maximum security prison. Hunted by another federal agent, Oliver wants to run, again, but is trapped by his feelings of responsibility for people in this town. The Camel Club comes to the rescue, but changes are still in the works for Oliver.Review: A real page turner, there is hope that someone will clean up Washington DC - at least in the realm of fiction.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    I think I would have got more out of this book had I read others in the Camel Club series. Very plot-driven where I prefer more character-driven stories. That said, it was a highly entertaining read,
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Of all the "adventure" fiction I read, this series by David Baldacci is my favorite. I really like the characters he develops, there's plenty of action, plenty of character development, even a little introspection thrown in now and again.

    In this one, it seemed early on as though Stone/Carr was moving on and some new characters would get developed. I kind of liked that idea, though that's not what happened. His old friends came back, and he connected with them again. Though there is the potential for a lingering love interest, which leaves the reader hanging.

    Again, these are really good adventure fiction books. I have to say that a huge appeal to me is that the author's political leanings seem very much in line with mine, so as a reader I'm not constantly frustrated by idiotic politics spewed from characters - the stuff they say and express is common-sense and reasonable.

    I'll keep reading these for sure.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    In the beginning of this book, two of Oliver Stone's enemies are assassinated. The assassinations set off a manhunt of enormous proportions by some of the highest officials in government. The Camel Club must fend for itself, all the while protecting their elusive leader, Stone, as he avoids capture by the sometimes uninformed Joe Knox, the man in charge of the hunt.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Another really good Camel Club story. Baldacci's cast of anti-heroes come through again in a rapid paced thriller. Oliver Stone, the head of the club, finally gets some payback!
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    I have read many of David Baldacci's earlier novels, but haven't read him in awhile. Big mistake - I forgot how good he is! Divine Justice is newly released from Hachette Books. It picks up the story of Oliver Stone, aka John Carr - one of the most deadly assasins the U.S. government ever produced. But when Carr wanted out and they killed his family, they made a terrible mistake. Stone retaliates and Macklin Hayes, a high ranking spy, is determined to find him and make him disappear for good. Stone ends up in the small mining town of Divine, Virgina hoping to lie low for awhile. But trouble seems to go hand in hand with Oliver Stone. All is not fine in Divine. Stone's sense of justice will not let him walk away. At the same time his friends from the Camel Club are trying to find him to help him. As I had not read the Camel Club, The Collectors or Stone Cold, the other novels featuring these characters, I was a bit concerned that I wouldn't understand the plot in Divine Justice. But it wasn't a problem. A few pages in I was up to speed. Most of the action takes place in the Divine setting. If you're looking for a fast paced, thrilling novel - this is it! The characters are larger than life and the action never stops. Good and evil are clearly defined and you'll find yourself rooting for John Carr. Having just discovered the Camel Club, I'm curious if there will be another? I'd put it on my list. If you have enjoyed the Jack Reacher character by Lee Child, then this is a series you would enjoy
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Latest in the Camel Club series picks up where Stone Cold left off (ie, after Simpson and Gray) with Oliver on the run. Brings Joe Knox in as he is sent to find Oliver. The Divine refers to the very small mining town of Divine and a complex plot (as usual) that speeds to a breath-taking finish (as usual).Satisfying and more with all the usual cast present and more info on Stone's background emerges. Part of his story seems to be based on that of Col. Jack Jacobs, Medal of Honor recipient.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    As payback for their dirty deeds, Camel Club member "Oliver Stone", murders a US Senator and an Intelligence Chief and has no choice but to flee Washington DC. On the train ride out of town he intervenes in a 3-on-1 fight and saves Danny Riker from getting pummeled. Now kicked off the train and no where near his destination Oliver has no alternative but to join Danny on his return trip to the tiny town of Divine, Virginia.Oliver only intends to see Danny home, earn a few traveling dollars and hightail it out of Divine to safety in the crowded city of New Orleans but he quickly gets himself in the middle of Divine's troubles. On his way out of town Oliver saves another one of Divine's young men and now the whole town knows his face when he seeks nothing more than anonymity. But the trouble doesn't stop there and Oliver is targeted by a group of men who are covering up Divine's biggest secret. With help from the rest of the Camel Club and unlikely assistance from the government agent hired to track him down Oliver just might make it out of the mess he's found himself in. Oliver reminds of me an older Jason Bourne. He can make 3 separate groups of punks run with fright and he gets himself out of the stickiest situations sometimes with just his belt as a weapon or his monkey bar skills. The story has multiple surprises and intersecting plot lines that are neatly tied together in the end. This is the fourth book from Baldacci featuring the Camel Club and I highly recommend reading the other three books first. My review is based on the unabridged audio book that was narrated by Ron McLarty. McLarty's voice characterizations are a little too similar for my liking but he does a great job with setting the scene by tone and infliction. As a huge Baldacci fan I wasn't disappointed and I recommend this book to all thriller lovers.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Divine Justice is the fourth book in the Camel Club series. This story follows Oliver Stone, aka John Carr on a breathtaking ride to Divine, Virginia. Stone, a former hit man for the government is on the run after taking out two very high profile figures. He lands in Divine, Virginia a little by accident thinking that the small, quiet town will be a great place to hide out for a while. However, he gets pulled into a much larger situation that threatens his life as much as the feds that are after him.This is the first book I've read of Baldacci's, but I will be adding the previous three Camel Club novels to my wish list. I enjoyed the audio version of this book, and was hooked by the middle of disc one. I almost listened to it all in one day! One thing that I really liked about the audio version was the music. There was a little bit at the beginnings and endings of some of the chapters, but best of all, there were also places where there were sound effects too. For example, there was gunfire, and also the screeching of tires. A couple of times I actually jumped out of my seat, but I enjoyed it! I found myself really liking the characters of the book, and I think that's why I'd like to go back to the beginning of the series so that I can understand how it is that these people are friends. They are each different, yet very loyal. Overall, great book!
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Divine Justice is the 4th book in the Camel Club series. The book plunges directly into the story by starting a heartbeat after the last book ends, with Oliver Stone breaking water to get his first breath after jumping off a 30' cliff into the ocean. Oliver is in constant motion from that point on, always worried about the authorities catching up with him. All the while he keeps making decisions to help others that is likely to get him caught, until his 'help' lands him in even worse trouble.Oliver's friends suspect he had something to do with the 2 high profile killings and after Knox interrogates all of the Camel Club (except Rueben, who avoids Knox) they fear what will happen so try to find Oliver before Knox. It turns into a game of Cat and Mouse and a big Cat shows up that no one was expecting and makes matters even more difficult.Overall, I enjoyed this book quite a bit, the action was constant, the mystery was decent and while Oliver is still superman, believability isn't left too far behind. No major plot holes and some really fun table turns happen. Worth a read.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    I have to admit, I'm a bit of a snob about what I call "mass market authors"--those that churn out one or two books a year, typically in a series. Baldacci, however, defied my stereotype. Divine Justice, the newest entry in the Camel Club series, is well-written with solid characters and an interesting plot. Oliver Stone is a former government assassin on the run. Trouble always seems to follow him even as he retreats into rural America. You can tell he is a good man at heart and that makes you root for him. His ragtag group of friends are all equally likeable and also mysterious. How did this group come together? Unlike the James Patterson book I just read, I think I would have benefited from reading the previous Camel Club books first. I definitely plan to go back them now. I was up late into the night trying to finish this gripping tale. If you are a David Baldacci fan, you will not be disappointed by Divine Justice. If you are a mystery fan who has yet to discover David Baldacci, you should pick up one of his books right now.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    This will be my entry for all of Baldacci's books. It may not be his best but it is darned good and perhaps the last of The Camel Club. I have all of his books and he is one of my favorite authors for a good read and a get away from it all time. I just finished First Family which brought back Michelle and Sean and it was up to par for Balducci.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    The final installment, to date, of the Camel Club series and I have thoroughly enjoyed this entire series. Great storytelling, in depth characters and conspiracy theories aplenty!
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Baldacci has impressed me with his ability to create villains so fully that you end up rooting for them nearly as much as the protagonist. He's done it before, and here in Divine Justice he went beyond that... but I will stop there to prevent spoilers! Very exciting, full of suspense. Baldacci puts Stone through some of his worst trials yet. Good read!
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Known by his alais, "Oliver Stone," John Carr is the most wanted man in America. With two pulls of the trigger, the men who destroyed Stone's life and kept him in the shadows were finally silenced. But his freedom comes at a steep price; the assassination he carried out prompt the highest levels of the U.S.government to unleash a massive manhunt. Yet behind the scenes, master spy Macklin Hayes is playing a very personal game of cat and mouse. He, more than anyone else wants Stone dead. With their friends and unofficial leader in hiding, the members of the Camel Club risk everything to save him. Now, as the hunters close in, Stone's fight from the deamons of his past will take him from the power corridors of Washington D.C., to the small, isolated coal-mining town of Devine, Virginia-and into the world every bit as bloody and lethal as the one he left behind.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    Another (could it be the last?) of the Camel Club series. Oliver Stone/John Carr and the usual cast of characters, one by one, end up in a small mining town rife with corruption. As always an entertaining read and at long last (spoiler alert here) Oliver/John finds a little romance along the way.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    I picked up this book as a double volume and after reading "Stone Cold" was pleased to find that "Divine Justice" was a sequel. I enjoyed the diversion of action in the little town of Divine, away from the blood and thunder of the American FBI, CIA, etc, etc. It was nice to have a bit of action amongst "ordinary" people.Fast-paced, full of action. A nice read!
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Couldn't put it down.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    great book! love political suspense
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    "I don't think I'm that lucky""Well, I am""Why?""I'm Irish. We always keep some reserve in the tank."Oliver Stone has finally exacted justice for some old wrongs, but he has sacrificed his liberty and identity for the justice. On the run in deepest Virginia, he seems to have been appointed guardian angel to the town of Divine, where a hot-headed youth named Danny keeps getting into trouble. Oliver's old Camel Club buddies want to help him, but they'll have to find him first... before Agent Joe Knox of the CIA does.I've never got on as well with Baldacci's Camel Club series as I did with the three books featuring Sean King and Michelle Maxwell (Split Second, Hour Game and Simple Genius), but they're still exciting thrillers with a nice mix of conspiracy, espionage, gadgetry and general crookedness.Baldacci makes all his characters so darn positively flawed, which causes the reader a few issues - all the characters, particularly the Camel Club misfits, have their quirks/foibles/character defects, but we know they all have their hearts in anatomically correct locations. I just don't like any of them.Joe Knox is a bit better - he's an honest agent in a tough spot, working for a jerk, but I take issue with his common sense (or lack thereof). On discovering that Stone is a should-have-been-decorated war hero, he can't quite decide which master to serve - so he dives in with both feet to sort out the whole mess himself. How can a CIA veteran seriously think that's a sensible approach?The town and people of Divine reminded me of the country towns described by Jodi Picoult in her family dramas - a bit forgotten by modern life, beaten-down, a dead end for a teenager; yet mysteriously the scene of Seriously Bad Things. Much like one assumes that the entire population of Midsomer must have been murdered by now, it's a bit of a stretch to believe that evil people reside in insignificant places. However, the setting fits the purpose, and Baldacci's not exactly writing to win a Pulitzer prize for his lyrical evocation of Nowhere, USA.I have read this before, but I didn't remember any of the Big Twists, and they were all appropriately surprising. And a few people die unexpectedly in the grand finale, of which I rather approve - big ol' shoot 'em-ups in which only the baddies die are just a bit unbelievable.7/10 to a good adventure with serious double-crossing and conspiracy, so-so characters and a decent setting.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    A very fast paced book that puts you in the middle of the action from page one. It is the continuing saga of the Camel Club. This time, though, John Carr, aka Oliver Stone is in a whole heap of trouble. Two VIPs have been murdered and after staging his own death is on the run.....He doesn't even let the rest of the Camel Club know where he is. Trouble seems to find Stone though and he stumbles into a small town named Divine. There the story unfolds in Baldacci's exciting style of intrigue, yet with enough human interest to keep you turning each and every page. Thumbs up!
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    My library is having a Baldacci promotion so we were given this as a 2nd reading group book.My mother loves Mr Baldacci but I am not a big fan of this sort of book and my mother says she was not very enamoured of the Camel Club books either.So it was just OK. A typical thriller - a lot of very unlikely things happen to basic characters. And is every miner in the USA really high as a kite?The reading group were not that impressed either. I now have another [The Innocent] so Mr B gets a second try.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Another fast-moving thriller in the Camel Club series. Completely improbable, but it sounds good when you're reading it. This one gets a bit over-the-top in terms of violence, but it is fun to see the characters introduced in each book come together. Caleb's description of why he is such a good driver is a high point in the book.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    I quite liked this Baldacci novel. I like the flow of the story. I liked that you didn't need to have read the books before it to follow. It kept me interested to the point i now need to read otheres in this series. I hadn't read the camel club but after reading this novel i plan on reading it soon. This one was well done enough and entertaining enough that i want to read more.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    As action heroes go, Oliver Stone has to be one of my all time favourites. Old enough to be well past it and flawed, yet still utterly invincible in combat and sharp as a tack. What isn't there to love about Stone and the rest of the motley crew that make up the Camel Club? In this instalment, Stone's past as a government assassin really threatens to catch up with him. So, as any decent all American heroes do, he flees to the Appalachians, hotly followed by CIA tracker with a conscience Joe Knox, where they accidentally stumble on a drugs ring. I truly loved this book from beginning to end, revisiting all the wonderfully constructed characters I've come to know and love. Please, please David Baldacci, don't make this the last Camel Club book!!
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Another fast paced read from David Baldacci. Divine Justice, the fourth in the Oliver Stone/Camel Club series, at times boarders on beyond belief, but is still a fun addition to the series.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    This series has been nothing short of brilliant till now but I half wish that Divine Justice had been the last. The reason for that is that there is such a happy ending, a perfect way to finish Oliver Stone's story. But I know there's a fifth book. And I do know that Oliver is going to suffer in all manner of imaginative ways. The author is going to make sure that is on the cards. But this book was a roller coaster in terms of storytelling. It was good to see the new members of the Camel Club in action. The pain of young Danny and Debbie and Willie was very real, and I always gasp at the loss of potential and the unlucky hand dealt to these types of characters. It all could have been shown grotesquely or with the wrong touches. But kudos goes to Baldacci for never putting a foot wrong. I'm going to read the fifth book, and then I'm going to proceed and read every single book of his that I have. Is he that good? I'd say hell yeah.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    I could focus on the ridiculous plot elements of this one and how contrived it all is, or I could recommend that you appreciate it as a lightweight, but fun thriller with perhaps the most likable cast of regular characters (including, hopefully, a new regular) from any series that I follow. I'm going to choose the latter, and it's only because of the characters (and some late character developments for the main protagonist) that it gets a third star. But honestly, anyone who requires a story that makes internal sense while being remotely plausible will want to avoid this one. But if you're more in the mood for characters than plot, then Baldacci has something to offer you here. For me, it's all like Jack Bauer and the former 24 series: a fun, but absurd bit of escapism, and a guilty pleasure.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    I absolutely love this series.

Book preview

Divine Justice - Cheryl Kaye Tardif

Bvcbook_preview_excerpt.html}ۖFR/y8eUҲ$$aH M?10_rbL$D"/;v\]wqB;~+\[Ο1MqK_Pp>7ws2z*Nb|S]őkٹwo_w*^ƭ8߹R5NW5L+*.F75c ˁxRwil^>aD/ۉS=*QZOiIGl1e@e~Qw Qo͒1Fޮ[1l6x:^$o'$}:O| -\Ա"?TϮMe3I'R/F`/''^`o7E; dzk*.>y?n8׭SnN!)5Abч89]˱~ԝXM]bX]O2,_RaT!Ъ $RQ<[ߦRDe#<ӔGEmxSۂ]}/"e*v0RxO|{M5U8uA6 a=cNngʰ?<fuڀf,kbFd1KCeX 'nՁ&0NxKx #|bX}=4n-7l֎2Ȱ7Iybg5"t6^"p ϾF~ D\YNNruO^:Qu'^>șLӊ- VWtND14 y9S-BSqRLbzdo|qd{Ƹ qu CE p{'6%=-7T7*:L/.uSQ4)b*عObYr8/lJt?Lzo^`y skkGptg+?9R?co3A$#K3-UL g=i>HZlH٣ .(JF}J~a1?va]!$vԴQ XDCۮxYm.h٘0əjxb'RG#gum%;bO.>N>VIFvS/ջ\!Z? \S G'?/^ٍkW&ٴ @+V,Ge1ࡰǡd+p  u$شN 0'4'4a3e8B9P츇,%dKA|r1N´ "cu. OA+adz9v +-e.vbb]!OntqLt#z ߉(yVٻau.&&6{nt0N|ty+B)/ -qƝ l[]|UmҎSΎ'ey&ZO5\x9tv3O%l1KqVd0~bfySUu̮B:ʇ`<3+l T': #Dw:馩~(ŭʖEpU%na(d[EbjCh(u4)il / 7Ӌޏ#]h+2D ?*^%vr*5r3iwI TX(dIՋ-0tsX$;W8:ѦΥX0[76̻N S]!G7P$۝O0F'j\pNx; rb-:雱G 32f&SUn\-\X4n(ӤM[\irb/3>6~YwbE6wߌB]^0lG{S6zPu+a k)u+F4tj?$k sv`u\m8Dm| xU'22gCŪ\<.JD娬u'6 +Rr MslJ Hf)@D6(} EfMϕoxahuנl$vJCvC1'#/xY#!oD?Wxd"0}$ikKQ &rj;o.G=q\$:& ~n(FDy+_^M 5O=1Y/?. W}}( bi Ў]'"ne&qjSiſGp: 9i\hA" Zҿ~IVi+q Y>fyL@ Xԃz%R"b}훆Lҏ5&6O&\N Ecp; ) P ;;pguL|1 i^ poܶ^ kng1V: ܙ^#R %kf.Sk BQ#?DY 4~Ve=ӂA} S\·o5E8m Ճh05L<@YTKD96[)o\rȹٻ7LuṛwAI?| "(4bC]Ƒ~v vccDHԂ76z3cҚCV^>yع96 R Pf A|ρq?΂ׅg0jnKP ir,EBxՉ\KÅp]Nqs }wK̊}PjAlpn"Gp8p*ۗvq0;^X}ɦ1mChlUzӆ2=aY?p&$5=|ѯ|U 1d9-jEIv q>0(eDXDTm20$4dhV.U.9Q}qsʹ'ЇS4BAHHSD =qkٱV_y0jb X:ѧ~""@PܭLn0-0Oּ%EH'ϑe E `fld*Z\sgl9P-C]./(7*9Hke,dvH*zvME {0*K%xaߋdMau>6gL+*^Q-?/;z$6LXΑyHc%o5O 5\$~C5'g&durcNrfΛ%3ٶ'iӰ EprQL9[v*2RDU?0Y/x]@t'5eᢓ_]e,if lLcAP\nТuC΢.wYš!r5"mxWI]6< tv̒ۑ:Q ̩ܻwrJ6 MTՒk}i)h`dB:{뿄x."*;.O0!F@u#N#=NeצKgQl-Bsk`|z߹"qOCGGl(2"+F?]| Lݬoxyз{Trg땟d[o"W!FɳBwg~M Mu}$CPP1GESEo\&L4$zuH7ߺOB% WEC}x߭˒;JDH)gC\% c`x@ F%A pLcxHTyUr`=6˦bsX,$網.nl3l@uy{)>[Yϛ,(hb'W3N)HjSs?X>:E^nl2 䩎ctʺFr`t'9fe3]PWd^λdJTf;JNؼ.Ȼ^oe=LU§582!emk_L]tTY`NLQ'f"6kڀ`/^pl,?;,Qȋ8(Vǒ/Rt9SZ À6,Iw:o LY337Gƃ^&z-`^,x9H٪WCΝօy-F145uIW^ɨ;r])L]$}(WF\P O4nwN#HFYh EL5)5|&rHO^3 Y؂S |•3iY9g3m1o8qȿװJ_4x-}QbD`面K#eac澯=$rC^E)R5|f`Vj\U0%VRP6?#ڒE8br!DQbe'~5хeжaX O)3 򿗾#ˉ'b:$%F+GB(T_,=UzI[vk๥PjͮzSr6 leۗxTMMIB-$#jxLJrvqA& 1]mj5 /^q&TG 8݀x=pjI켝'TUOY$JD[WFI`DDPW̆Aq j*G*P+9pSQ*igBqÁT|.ԟk G:)V>Sʔ5(/ Z,vYdFƧڟ,i`5 =N 3M&}~-wM1 yMMFH)0d>[(5/7b5g PN9H?b7L9>tgyIuFk蕐ݺ_b<^Ѝ[]Kxɝ5΂+y6RvPϊ<K'F1rX 5F"gW Qa pjL {jU@>85`x˥DpJA0"~uR53 ҉?Ř̘Z0 5=rd V)]ZXЕT|Fk{p&pG$[)L\Q2ZXJACzDu$`plNF'b5>R )OA@>#`&l~OAKy̍cwS0t1gK`#36D`&{rQv+U}*2L(%eGVGd>k-78➟,Nӽ&V!׼SVəo 28.̱^tK}Hb6H A_W (OU1w4]2yLҦK^Bm8C\$ʳD5]]moncV*,H6PLQMTk ~U,r>TQ[#A|iC] (+Ab]-F߻R^~x#m^0<3k&d ͭqM e#-UNhw9@xZN"LNr1Ӯ9jG V-8Ṕnjc*e'؛w~G50[1Q|)_cҬ6jLp1i3@gpVE6,8|DTm Y][rdk/FN#2*('}nemPjg''CE9׫AG*.~ؠ@;sVDwYˤs+*\6T6DXdNo(vld18M{ru×0%Fԟ'[9鸔Oo/{qk͢õ 6:jM{jʰG]MzeT_^1ה]~NP~uJkQ2ejPDqg`K"ޒ >dSÜl^ DL=]9e1^e*ǻ(jZ^Ov`0uI~f(@[ #@Mzb;犨Yg9cHoNҭaMq#~j~({tCP3|$]xm3Ps `RfU/H zTffU_⛅ADsWJ?X/bԖ& z2&.V`9("c:F;dm"֩/ѭziV;jg(B=a@lU Z 1Z|Ӗ Z.Ӧ[K5:(kS #-^oP3Ȥ ,5BsX:t^5w+϶ m*x!o~"2TY;jMF.V7a%&jp=r%0z)K_.`T7](P*ֱ ͭI-]-RK\ 6RDǀV[탚DƣV*t'XLl𤮙V*]yZ5_#*2{Bȯ*/xéٰ~\dB9͓Cl>"&tkuZ'ā;h-W]T -,2YQٛPfDqt`{Ww!^F cgdW^&y@lW+!,=Xv]$pA|Hބf8F{`-m~P̧xaHs⓪ue X2&m:ߤ,$u,k[1XhC~DZAcR-[m"flC2đ0w3m4t@ ;SEctS,d;*KalCe<7SXeg %̨̋c,1(EW*UVa䠖'Pinr][Jǰt4dt~:<ى>11QiD ȆQ g#<5lxaMVˬ%u)sOH,oHәj -Us[d ߂yc\e8v;vןԩGlG44xkKwՊ.:$33/Uòe*=hWk7wRv}9\ELI6U mx񥮋o| [Cn_OTQhb[f)dܢZw W=@$K i]zS9R9[jsuAןDuk/,>&8d NIW*[G +^{peI49DY_IȆ:إ s[6D~_GދLZ;ZSZ/W0 #R| l^R%l\umf/ˆNYhG&}V Eg %~Kwâ̪ZIL-rEz,siCRcs(?3&hY:6Ziɢ?zk;Pɛ.Q=.}g5y8n62w8k/O_tLz=iGlޛ_r~|<+Gdj^&wDf:ҐsRƹ3hVֆH>v#> *Rk]R$?SB*Hq( ޙ瀗wiVvOW? 8k>0╬cnig ^ug|;vs?E _JƧc H0 L5q?d r޴eɞ?ASK琴RZqںy Nqjo}&&aXһNpoC겇6yArd[EDcegB;~:$-S;`Rm1 &yl]w ~|EF{~MA̕Ӳ]w A[*gj4TTe21"ȬV;׻kob>wVR>Q3F4ERPcϳiik4zQ cǛ/!/>RhihCLgʮL-i.;.CPFO2+M)R_U_zSO;CSk_-Po6/ebːno 7a3!Ԝ8G$w[hwn< 0AsGVa|Sp&eV9 L7S\TY)|H(hD7G5<2weLT9~_YE.\ka ϓNswz^٩n\w?V5:=HL>Ƙs>zk*g("-Y6>5cV""F}h. g]'&>4␐y~I;1C`igZWGl dr0\Ε z
Enjoying the preview?
Page 1 of 1