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17 A Wanted Man

17 A Wanted Man

Titel: 17 A Wanted Man Kostenlos Bücher Online Lesen
Autoren: Lee Child
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itself into separate beige pearls of light, which turned out to be dim electric bulbs in bulkhead fixtures set knee-high on the walls of a long low motel building. The design of the place was standard. There was dark brown siding, and a lobby and an office at the north end, with a Coke machine and a porte cochère, and then the building continued south in a regular rhythm, window, door, window, door, for a total of twelve rooms. Each door had two white plastic lawn chairs next to it. The low-set bulkhead fixtures were to light a sidewalk that ran the length of the building. Two rooms had cars parked outside, one an old sedan, lacy with rust, and the other an immense pick-up truck painted in a motorcycle manufacturer’s colours. There was a third car parked tight against the office wall, a three-door import not much bigger than a golf cart. The night clerk’s ride, presumably.
    Alan King slowed the Chevy and stopped and idled on the road twenty feet from the motel’s entrance. He surveyed the place, carefully, end to end, and he said, ‘Good enough?’
    Don McQueen said, ‘Works for me.’
    King didn’t seek Karen Delfuenso’s opinion. There was no big three-way democratic discussion. He just rolled onward and turned in on the far side of the porte cochère and came to a stop under it, facing north, with the rooms behind him. Inconvenient, in that he would have to back up or turn around after checking in, but inevitable, in that America drives on the right and takes circles counterclockwise.
    There was a night light burning in the lobby. Reacher could see a reception counter, and a closed door behind it that no doubt led to an office. Probably the night guy was in there, asleep in a chair. There was a vase of flowers on the counter, probably fake.
    Alan King said, ‘Mr Reacher, would you go make the inquiry about rooms?’
    Reacher said, ‘Obviously there are rooms. There are twelve doors and two cars.’
    ‘Then would you kindly check us in?’
    Reacher said, ‘I’m not the best guy to do that.’
    ‘Why not?’
    Reacher thought:
Because I don’t want to get out of the car. Not now. Because I no longer control the car key
.
    He said, ‘Because I don’t have a credit card.’
    ‘Really?’
    ‘Or ID. Apart from an old passport, that is. But it’s been expired for years, and some people don’t like that.’
    ‘You must have a driver’s licence, surely.’
    ‘I don’t.’
    ‘But you were just driving.’
    ‘Don’t tell the cops.’
    ‘Unlicensed driving is a felony.’
    ‘Probably just a misdemeanour.’
    ‘Have you ever had a licence?’
    ‘Not a civilian licence, no.’
    ‘Have you ever even passed a test?’
    ‘I guess so. Probably. In the army, possibly.’
    ‘You don’t remember?’
    ‘I remember learning. I don’t remember a test, as such.’
    McQueen said, ‘I’ll come with you. I have a credit card.’
    Which worked for Reacher. He didn’t want to be out of the car alone, but equally he didn’t want either King or McQueen to select the rooms alone. He wanted some influence over who went where. He opened his door. McQueen opened his door. They got out together, McQueen ten feet from the lobby, Reacher on the far side of the car. McQueen waited. Reacher looped around the trunk. He paused, gestured, right-handed, open palm:
Go ahead. After you
. A precaution, not politeness. He didn’t want to walk in front of a man with a gun. Not that he thought there was a serious danger of getting shot. Not then and there. Not with a night clerk and at least two motel guests within earshot.
    McQueen went ahead down a decorative path made of broken paving stones jigsawed together. Reacher followed. McQueen pulled the lobby door. Reacher stepped up and held it and gestured again:
After you
.
    McQueen went in. Reacher followed. The lobby had a vinyl floor and four gaudy wicker armchairs grouped around a low table. There was a higher table with push-top coffee flasks and stacks of paper cups. There was a rack on the wall with compartments for small folded brochures describing local tourist attractions. It was mostly empty.
    The reception counter butted up against the side wall on the right. It ended six feet short of the wall on the left, near the table with the coffee. There was low TV sound behind the office door, and a rim of soft light all around it. McQueen bellied up to the counter on the right, and Reacher came to a stop alongside him, on the left.
    ‘Hello?’ McQueen called.
    No

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