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Acts of Nature

Acts of Nature

Titel: Acts of Nature Kostenlos Bücher Online Lesen
Autoren: Jonathon King
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chief,” he finally said. “And it ain’t kosher.”
    Harmon looked away. His partner was already suspicious and he hadn’t even mentioned the C-4.
    “You don’t even know what kosher means, Squires,” Harmon finally replied, picking up his bag and hefting it into the helicopter.
    “Means illegal.”
    “Like we haven’t done that before?”
    Squires fixed a nonjudgmental gaze on him.
    “Not this close to home.”
    On the pilot’s signal both men climbed up into the cockpit, Squires riding shotgun in the rear seat, and they clamped radio headsets over their ears as the whine of the single engine slowly increased and the blades began spinning to action. There were no other active aircraft on the field that Squires could see. When they started to rise in the gray sky they swung immediately to the west, the rising sun at their backs and below the most obvious destruction of the now finished storm was in the dumped airplanes and scattered trash of trees and the patchy scabs of rooftops where orange barrel tiles had been stripped away. A hangar near the end of the runway was caved in, as if it had been chopped at the middle of its roof peak by the edge of a giant hand.
    “Mr. Rae,” Harmon said into the mouthpiece, his voice sounding with an electronic crackle, “can we travel at a higher altitude, please. I really don’t need to see this all again.”

TWENTY-FIVE
    I had willed myself to stay awake, aided by the buzz of mosquitoes and the self-appointed task of keeping them from landing for a blood feast on Sherry’s skin. On the other side of the room it was Marcus whose turn it was to sit watch. He was in the wooden, straight-back chair, the iPod wires flowing out of his ears and the shotgun lying across his thighs. On occasion he would start bobbing his head to a tune I couldn’t hear and close his eyes but I had to hand it to both boys: whether it was fear of what Buck might do if he found them asleep or if they were simply used to a late-night existence, neither of them nodded out. Whenever the sound of animal movement, or of a scraping across the floor by me or their napping crewmates, both sentries’ reactions were swift and fully alert. So much for sneaking out the blade strapped on my ankle and easing over to cut someone’s throat and gain control of that gun. It only happens in the movies that way. In real life I would have to wait for a mistake, a surprise that might come from an outside source, a prayer answered from someplace else.
    Long ago I had dribbled the last of the canned peach juice into Sherry’s mouth and with the back of my hand felt the heat coming off her forehead and neck. I conceded that my ability to gauge might be diminished, but I convinced myself that the fever had gone down with the liquids and the food. She had opened her eyes several times, though it was hard to read how reactive they were in the dim light of the Coleman lantern.
    I was also trying to gauge what time it was, waiting for the sunrise. With the knife strapped to my calf I’d got more than I could have hoped for. I could cut the bindings on my ankles quickly enough. Then I’d hold the blade with my insteps and slice through the tape on my wrists with a single stroke. Then it would be hand-to-hand combat against three—at least two of them armed and who knows what the other kid brought back with him from the airboat. I’d spent most of the silent night flexing my fingers, keeping up the blood flow and working the scenes in my head, how I would move, the advantage of my height and length, the possibilities of when, but not where. I couldn’t wait any longer. I’d have to take my chances here, in this small room where their movement would be confined. I’d need the shotgun first. It was a vicious thing at close range, but in this tight space the shot pattern wouldn’t have time to spread out. Whatever it hit would be a shredded mess. The exact timing, though, was impossible to plan. I’d need to wait for sunrise because even if we were lucky, even if I neutralized all three, there was no way I could find the airboat in the dark. That was my reasoning, but I was still asking myself why they had waited this long. They could have blown a hole in a window of the other room with mat shotgun alone and men torn their way through me internal skin. Even if Buck had convinced himself that the room was filled with narcotics, wouldn’t he have taken a chance of unloading it at night with flashlights rather

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