Home / Urban / The Cross Family / No Shortcuts

Share

No Shortcuts

last update publish date: 2026-02-03 10:32:24

Alexander Cross did not raise his voice.

That alone told Adrian how bad it was.

The conference room at Cross Holdings was sealed tight—privacy glass opaque, phones face-down on the polished table, security posted outside the door. The city stretched beyond the windows in clean, expensive lines, but inside the room the air was heavy, compressed.

Alexander stood at the head of the table, jacket still on, hands braced against the wood. His jaw was set so tight a vein pulsed faintly at his temple.
Continue to read this book for free
Scan code to download App
Locked Chapter

Latest chapter

  • The Cross Family   Final Stretch

    Casey had always thought the hardest part would be the fall.The headlines. The handcuffs. The humiliation of standing under fluorescent jail lights while strangers decided who he was based on one bad night and a last name that made people hungry.He’d been wrong.The hardest part was everything that came after—when the storm passed, and there was nothing left to blame but himself.No sirens. No shouting. No adrenaline to hide inside.Just quiet.Just consequence.Just the question he couldn’t avoid anymore: Who are you when the world isn’t watching?He’d spent most of his life sprinting away from that question like it was a man with a gun.Now he walked toward it.He didn’t do it perfectly. He didn’t do it quickly. But he did it honestly, and that was new.On Sunday morning, the city looked clean after rain. The streets outside Rowan’s building glistened, reflecting traffic lights and early sunlight like the world had been polished overnight. Casey stood at the bottom of her steps wi

  • The Cross Family   The Choice

    Rowan found out on a Wednesday.Not during a dramatic briefing. Not through gossip in the locker room. Not because someone cornered her in the hall with wide eyes and whispers.It came the way most life-changing things did for her—quietly, on paper, delivered like it was just another administrative update.She was at her desk finishing a report when Harper motioned for her to come into his office.Rowan stood, already bracing. Her mind ran through possibilities automatically: complaint, new assignment, another round of scrutiny she hadn’t earned.Harper shut the door behind her, then leaned against his desk with his arms crossed.“Before you start plotting how to kill me,” he said, “this is not bad.”Rowan blinked. “I wasn’t plotting.”Harper snorted. “Sure.”He slid a folder across his desk.Rowan didn’t touch it immediately. “What is it?”Harper’s eyes held hers. “Offer.”Rowan narrowed her eyes. “Offer from who?”“Major Crimes,” Harper said. “Downtown. Task force slot.”Rowan froze

  • The Cross Family   Public, Not Owned

    Rowan didn’t dress for the cameras.That was the first thing Casey noticed.She dressed the way she always did when she was stepping into a room that might try to chew her up—boots she could move in, black fitted pants, and a structured jacket that hugged her shoulders like a decision. Her tattoos weren’t hidden. Her hair was down, dark and glossy, brushing her collarbone. The blue of her eyes looked sharper tonight, like the color came with a warning label.Casey watched her from the doorway of her bedroom while she adjusted a hoop earring and checked her reflection once—only once.No nerves. No second-guessing.She turned and caught him staring.“What?” she asked, already suspicious.Casey’s mouth twitched. “You look… like you’re about to arrest the whole gala.”Rowan rolled her eyes. “That’s because a gala is just a crime scene with nicer lighting.”Casey laughed softly. “You’re going to have a terrible time.”Rowan walked past him, grabbing her clutch. “I’m going to have a control

  • The Cross Family   No More Running

    Casey didn’t announce his decision like he used to.There was no dramatic speech at the family table, no impulsive vow, no reckless “watch me” energy that could be mistaken for confidence. He just… started doing the work.Rowan noticed because Rowan noticed everything.It began with the smallest shifts—things other people might’ve missed, things that didn’t make headlines. Casey stopped texting like every thought was an emergency. He stopped showing up with that frantic brightness in his eyes, the kind that said he was one bad day away from chasing a distraction just to feel alive.Instead, he started showing up steady.It didn’t make him less Casey. It made him more real.On a quiet Saturday morning, Rowan walked into a small gym tucked between a laundromat and a closed-down bakery. The kind of place that smelled like rubber mats, disinfectant, and effort. Nothing polished. Nothing curated.She didn’t belong here, strictly speaking. Not in a schedule sense. Not in a why are you awake

  • The Cross Family   Quiet Victory

    The scandal didn’t end with a bang.It ended the way most storms did—slowly, quietly, almost anticlimactically, like the world got bored and wandered away.Rowan noticed it first in small things.The photographers stopped showing up outside the precinct. The anonymous accounts that had been dissecting her every move went dormant, last posts left hanging like abandoned threats. Her name stopped trending. The whisper of Internal Affairs stopped following her through hallways like a shadow.Even the officers who’d avoided eye contact started meeting her gaze again.It wasn’t forgiveness.It was relief.People liked things simple. They liked a villain they could point at and then forget.Rowan had never liked simple.But she did like quiet.On a Tuesday afternoon, she was finishing a report at her desk when Harper tossed a folder onto her workspace.“Update,” he said, gruff.Rowan glanced up. “On what?”He nodded toward the folder. “Your favorite circus.”Rowan opened it.A single-page me

  • The Cross Family   Choosing

    Rowan didn’t answer Casey’s invitation right away.Not because she didn’t want to.Because wanting something had become dangerous.She read his text in the quiet of her car, parked outside her apartment, the streetlamp above her hood flickering like it couldn’t decide whether to stay on. Her uniform itched. Her shoulders ached. Her badge felt heavier now that she’d fought to get it back.Come to dinner next time. You’d be welcome.Welcome.Rowan stared at the word until it stopped looking like letters and started feeling like a trap—warm on the surface, complicated underneath.She tucked her phone into her pocket and went upstairs without replying.Inside, the apartment was dim. The flowers still sat on her counter, slightly wilted, their whiteness too delicate for the mood she carried.Rowan changed out of her uniform slowly, like shedding armor. She washed her face, brushed her teeth, and tried to tell herself she was fine.She wasn’t.She climbed into bed and lay there staring at t

  • The Cross Family   Uninvited Ally

    The distribution facility didn’t look like a place where lives could disappear.That was the problem.From the highway it was just another rectangle of steel and concrete—white panels, blue Cross Logistics signage, a lot big enough to hold a small fleet. Trucks slid in and out like clockwork. Worke

    last updateLast Updated : 2026-03-28
  • The Cross Family   The Rule

    Eva didn’t go upstairs.She stood in the parking lot with the tracker still warm in her palm, the weight of it small and obscene, like a lie pretending to be nothing. The streetlight above flickered again, buzzing softly, and the sound grated against her nerves. Alexander was already moving—one ste

    last updateLast Updated : 2026-03-28
  • The Cross Family   Part Four: Alexander's Story

    The Cross Family continues with...Part Four: Alexander's StoryChapter: FirewallAlexander Cross didn’t raise his voice. He didn’t need to.The boardroom was all glass and muted lighting, the kind of space designed to make people feel watched even when they weren’t. A wall of windows looked out ov

    last updateLast Updated : 2026-03-28
  • The Cross Family   Choice with Teeth

    Pike and 12th didn’t look dangerous at first glance.It was just another frayed corner of the city—liquor store with flickering neon, a laundromat that never seemed to close, a bus stop with a cracked plastic shelter and a bench scarred by names carved with keys.But danger didn’t always announce i

    last updateLast Updated : 2026-03-27
More Chapters
Explore and read good novels for free
Free access to a vast number of good novels on GoodNovel app. Download the books you like and read anywhere & anytime.
Read books for free on the app
SCAN CODE TO READ ON APP
DMCA.com Protection Status