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A Maidens Grave

A Maidens Grave

Titel: A Maidens Grave Kostenlos Bücher Online Lesen
Autoren: Jeffery Deaver
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part of the reason they’re in trouble in the first place. And I’ve never known a priest to do anything more than rile up a taker.” He was pleased to notice that Budd took this not as a chastisement but as information; he seemed to store it somewhere in his enthusiastic brain.
    “Sir.” Sheriff Dean Stillwell’s voice floated to them on the breeze. He trooped up and mussed his moppish hair with his fingers. “Got one of my boys gonna make the run with that phone. Come over here, Stevie.”
    “Officer,” Potter said, nodding, “what’s your name?”
    “Stephen Oates. I go by Stevie mostly.” The officer was lanky and tall and would look right at home in white pinstripes, working on a chaw of tobacco out on the pitcher’s mound.
    “All right, Stevie. Put on that body armor and helmet. I’m going to tell them you’re coming. You crawl up to that rise there. See it? By that old livestock pen. I want you to stay down and pitch the knapsack as far as you can toward the front door.”
    Tobe handed him the small olive-drab satchel.
    “What if I hit those rocks there, sir?”
    “It’s a special phone and the bag’s padded,” Potter said. “Besides, if you hit those rocks, you should get out of law enforcement and try out for the Royals. All right,” he announced, “let’s get this show on the road.”
    Potter gripped the bullhorn and crawled to the top of the rise where he’d hailed Handy last time, sixty yards from the black windows of the slaughterhouse. He dropped onto his belly, caught his breath. Lifted the bullhorn to his lips. “This is Agent Potter again. We’re sending a telephone in to you. One of our men is going tothrow it as close to you as he can. This is not a trick. It’s simply a cellular phone. Will you let our man approach?”
    Nothing.
    “You men inside, can you hear me? We want to talk to you. Will you let our man approach?”
    After an interminable pause a piece of yellow cloth waved in one window. It was probably a positive response; a “no” would presumably have been a bullet.
    “When you come out to get the phone we will not shoot at you. You have my word on that.”
    Again the yellow scrap.
    Potter nodded to Oates. “Go on.”
    The trooper started toward the grassy rise, staying low. Still, Potter noted, a rifleman inside could easily hit him. The helmet was Kevlar but the transparent face mask was not.
    Of the eighty people now surrounding the slaughterhouse, not a soul spoke. There was the hiss of the wind, a far-off truck horn. Occasionally the sound of the chugging engines of the big John Deere and Massey-Ferguson combines swam through the thick wheat. It was pleasant and it was unsettling. Oates scrabbled toward the rise. He made it and lay prone, looking up quickly, then down again. Until recently, throw phones were bulky and hard-wired to the negotiator’s phone. Even the strongest officer could pitch them only thirty feet or so and often the cords got tangled. Cellular technology had revamped hostage negotiation.
    Oates rolled from one clump of tall bluestem to another like a seasoned stuntman. He paused in a bunch of buffalo grass and goldenrod. Then kept going.
    Okay, thought Potter. Throw it.
    But the trooper didn’t throw it.
    Oates looked once more at the slaughterhouse then crawled over the knoll, past rotting posts and rails of livestock pens, and continued on, a good twenty yards. Even a bad marksman would have his pick of body parts from that range.
    “What’s he doing?” Potter whispered, irritated.
    “I don’t know, sir,” Stillwell said. “I was real clearabout what to do. I know he’s pretty worried about those girls and wants to do everything right.”
    “Getting himself shot isn’t doing anything right.”
    Oates continued toward the slaughterhouse.
    Don’t be a hero, Stevie, Potter thought. Though his concern was more than the man’s getting killed or wounded. Unlike special forces and intelligence officers, cops aren’t trained in anti-interrogation techniques. In the hands of somebody like Lou Handy, armed with only a knife or a safety pin, Oates’d spill everything he knew in two minutes, telling the location of every officer on the field, the fact that HRT wasn’t expected for some hours, what types of guns the troopers had, anything else Handy might be curious to know.
    Throw the damn phone!
    Oates made it to a second rise and quickly looked up at the slaughterhouse door again then ducked. When there was no fire he

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