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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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shrugged, and then she nodded, reluctantly, as if despite herself. She said, ‘There’s another call I have to make.’
    ‘To who?’
    ‘A county sheriff back in Nebraska. Delfuenso’s daughter is about to wake up.’
    ‘I’m sorry.’
    ‘So I need to put the cuffs on you. I need to put you in the back of the car.’
    ‘That’s not going to happen.’
    ‘This is not a game.’
    ‘It’s going to rain,’ Reacher said. ‘We’re going to lose the tyre marks.’
    ‘Turn around,’ Sorenson said. ‘Hold your hands out behind you.’
    ‘Have you got a camera?’
    ‘What?’
    ‘A camera,’ Reacher said. ‘Have you got one?’
    ‘Why?’
    ‘We need pictures of the tyre marks. Before it rains.’
    ‘Turn around,’ Sorenson said again.
    ‘Let’s make a deal.’
    ‘What kind of a deal?’
    ‘You lend me your camera, and I’ll take pictures of the tyre marks, while you make your call to the county sheriff.’
    ‘And then what?’
    ‘And then we’ll talk some more.’
    ‘About what?’
    ‘About my personal situation.’
    ‘What’s my other option?’
    ‘You don’t have another option.’
    ‘I’m the one with the gun here.’
    ‘Except you’re not going to use it. We both know that. And you have my word. I won’t run. You can trust me. I swore an oath too. In the army. A bigger oath than yours.’
    ‘I have to take you back with me. You understand that, right? Omaha has to do something right tonight.’
    ‘You could say you never found me.’
    ‘The motel keeper knows I did.’
    ‘You could shoot him in the head.’
    ‘I was tempted.’
    ‘Do we have a deal?’
    ‘You have to come back with me afterwards.’
    ‘That wasn’t in the deal. Not yet. Not technically. That was to be decided later. I said, and then we’ll talk some more.’
    ‘If you’re telling the truth, you have nothing to worry about.’
    ‘You still believe stuff like that?’
    Sorenson said, ‘Yes, I do.’
    Reacher said nothing.
    ‘Weigh it up,’ Sorenson said. ‘Think about it. Make a choice. You have no car, no phone, no contacts, no support, no help, no back-up, no budget, no facilities, no lab, no computers, and you have absolutely no idea where those guys have gone. You need food and rest. You need medical attention for your face. But I could leave you here like that. Right here, right now, alone, in the middle of nowhere, with the rain coming. Then I’d be fired, and guess what? You’d be hunted down like a dog anyway.’
    Reacher said, ‘What’s my other option?’
    ‘Come back with me to Omaha, help us out, and maybe even pick up some information as you go along. To do with as you wish.’
    ‘Information from where?’
    ‘From who, not from where.’
    ‘OK, from who?’
    ‘From me.’
    ‘Why would you?’
    ‘Because I’m improvising here. I’m trying to find a way to get you in the car.’
    ‘So now you’re the one offering a deal.’
    ‘And it’s a good deal. You should take it.’
    Reacher took his photographs while Sorenson called the county sheriff back in Nebraska. It was a digital camera. He half remembered maybe once taking a picture with a cellular telephone, but apart from that vague possibility the last time he had handled a camera had been back in the age of film. Not that it made much difference, he assumed. In both cases there was a lens, and a little button to press, and a little thing to look through. Except there wasn’t. There was no viewfinder hole. Instead the operator had to do the whole thing on a tiny television screen. Which meant working with the camera held out at arm’s length, and walking backward and forward. Like a man in a hazard suit with a Geiger counter.
    But he got the two shots he wanted, and he headed back to the car. Sorenson was through with her call by then. It hadn’t been fun, by the look of it. Not a barrel of laughs. She said, ‘OK, let’s go. You can ride in the front.’
    He said, ‘Look at the pictures first.’
    The rain started to fall. Big heavy drops, some of them vertical, some of them sideways on the gusting wind. They got in the car, and he passed her the camera. She knew how to use it. She toggled forward, and then back again.
    ‘You only took two pictures?’ she said.
    ‘Two was all I needed.’
    ‘Two of the same thing?’
    ‘They’re not of the same thing.’
    The rain hammered on the Crown Vic’s roof. Sorenson looked at the first photograph, very carefully, and then the second, just as carefully. They were

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