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City of Night

City of Night

Titel: City of Night Kostenlos Bücher Online Lesen
Autoren: Dean Koontz
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didn’t believe any of this, and I half thought I was losing my mind.”
    “Now the only thing I can’t believe,” Michael said, “is that Dracula and the Wolfman haven’t shown up yet.”
    They ate the boulettes and the fried-okra salads in an intense but comfortable silence.
    Then before the jambalaya arrived, Carson said, “Okay, cloning or somehow he can make a perfect physical duplicate of Jack. But how does the sonofabitch make his Jack a medical examiner? I mean, how does he give him Jack’s lifetime of knowledge, or Jack’s memories? ”
    “Beats me. If I knew that, I’d have my own secret laboratory, and I’d be taking over the world myself.”
    “Except your world would be a better one than this,” she said.
    He blinked in surprise, gaped. “Wow.”
    “Wow what?”
    “That was sweet.”
    “What was sweet?”
    “What you just said.”
    “It wasn’t sweet.”
    “It was.”
    “It was not.”
    “You’ve never been sweet to me before.”
    “If you use that word one more time,” she said, “I’ll bust your balls, I swear.”
    “All right.”
    “I mean it.”
    Smiling broadly, he said, “I know.”
    “ Sweet ,” she said scornfully, and shook her head in disgust. “Be careful or I might even shoot you.”
    “That’s against regulations even during Armageddon.”
    “Yeah, but you’re gonna be dead in twenty-four hours anyway.”
    He consulted his wristwatch. “Less than twenty three now.”
    The waitress arrived with plates of jambalaya. “Can I get you two more beers?”
    Carson said, “Why the hell not.”
    “We’re celebrating,” Michael told the waitress.
    “Is it your birthday?”
    “No,” he said, “but you’d think it was, considering how sweet she’s being to me.”
    “You’re a cute couple,” said the waitress, and she went to get the beers.
    “ Cute? ” Carson growled.
    “Don’t shoot her,” Michael pleaded. “She’s probably got three kids and an invalid mother to support.”
    “Then she better watch her mouth,” Carson said.
    In another silence, they ate jambalaya and drank beer for a while, until finally Michael said, “Probably every major player in city government is one of Victor’s.”
    “Count on it.”
    “Our own beloved chief.”
    “He’s probably been a replicant for years.”
    “And maybe half the cops on the force.”
    “Maybe more than half.”
    “The local FBI office.”
    “They’re his,” she predicted.
    “The newspaper, local media?”
    “His.”
    “Whether they’re all his or not, when’s the last time you trusted a reporter?”
    “Clueless,” she agreed. “They all want to save the world, but they just end up helping to weave the handbasket.”
    Carson looked at her hands. She knew they were strong and capable; they had never failed her. Yet at the moment they looked delicate, almost frail.
    She had spent the better part of her life in a campaign to redeem her father’s reputation. He, too, had been a cop, gunned down by a drug dealer. They said that her dad had been corrupt, deep in the drug trade, that he’d been shot by the competition or because a deal had gone sour. Her mother had been killed in the same hit.
    Always she had known the official story must be a lie. Her dad had uncovered something that powerful people wanted kept secret. Now she wondered if it had been one powerful person—Victor Helios.
    “So what can we do?” Michael asked.
    “I’ve been thinking about that.”
    “I figured,” he said.
    “We kill him before he can kill us.”
    “Easier said than done.”
    “Not if you’re willing to die to get him.”
    “I’m willing,” Michael said, “but not eager.”
    “You didn’t become a cop for the retirement benefits.”
    “You’re right. I just wanted to oppress the masses.”
    “Violate their civil rights,” she said.
    “That always gives me a thrill.”
    She said, “We’re going to need guns.”
    “We’ve got guns.”
    “We’re going to need bigger guns.”
     
     
     

Chapter 10
     
    Erika’s education in the tank had not prepared her to deal with a man who was chewing off his fingers. Had she matriculated through a real rather than virtual university, she might have known at once what she should do.
    William, the butler, was one of the New Race, so his fingers were not easy to bite off. He had to work diligently at it.
    His jaws and teeth, however, were as formidably enhanced as the density of his finger bones. Otherwise, the task would have been not

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