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Cross Country

Cross Country

Titel: Cross Country Kostenlos Bücher Online Lesen
Autoren: James Patterson
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kissed her cheek and wondered how much longer I could be good around Adanne.
    “Remember Alex, I
know
what you’re thinking. I’m probably thinking the same thing.”
    It wasn’t until we came around the corner onto her parents’ street that we realized something was wrong.
    “Oh, no,”
she groaned.
“Oh, no, oh, no.”
    Adanne stopped her car at the top of the block. At least half a dozen police and fire units were parked at urgent angles to one another in front of her parents’ home. Hose lines snaked from the street through the open gate, and black smoke billowed up from behind the wall.
    Adanne clawed at the seat-belt release until the strap flew away. “My God, my God! Oh, my God!”
    “Adanne, wait a minute,” I said and tried to grab and hold her back.
    But she was already out of the car and running toward her parents’ house. She was screaming in a full voice.
    And then I was running too.

Chapter 104
    I CAUGHT UP to Adanne just shy of the gate to the house. I grabbed her and picked her up. Her legs kicked off the ground and she struggled against me, reaching toward the gate even as I pulled her away from it.
    “Adanne,” I said. “You don’t want to go in there and see. Trust me, please.”
    The house was still burning but it was mostly a ghastly, black skeleton of itself. From where we were, Adanne and I could see straight through to the back of the property. The roof was already completely gone.
    The driveway and lawn were littered with smoking black debris. Clearly, there had been an explosion. It looked as though it might have been a firebombing.
    When I saw two small lumps under sheets on the lawn, I grabbed Adanne tighter and pressed her head into my chest. The bodies had to be the twins, poor little James and Calvin. Adanne knew this too, and she was crying softly in my arms.
    A police officer ran by and I caught his attention. “How many were inside?”
    He looked me over before answering any questions. “Are you family? Who are you? Why do you want to know?”
    “This is her parents’ house. I’m a friend. She’s Adanne Tansi.”
    “Three adults, two children,” he said. He looked at Adanne, then back at me, and shook his head no.
No survivors
.
    A deep shudder went through Adanne and then she began to sob. She was saying something; maybe it was a prayer. I couldn’t make out the words or even the language she was speaking.
    “I need to talk to your commander,” I said to the patrolman standing with us.
    “About what?”
    “CIA,” was what I said next.
    The policeman opened his mouth again, but I cut him off. “Just get your commander. Get him over here right now.”
    As he walked away, I spoke softly against Adanne’s forehead. “I’m here. You’re not alone.” She continued to sob in my arms, shivering like she was freezing cold in the ninety-degree heat.
    I watched the commander approach, a tall, broad-backed man in a dark suit. I couldn’t hear anything over the fire crew and the hiss of water jets, but I didn’t need to.
    I knew his face — the flat nose, those round cheeks, that idiotic Mike Tyson squint of his. The last time I’d seen it, he had been dangling me out a hotel window.

Chapter 105
    “ADANNE, LISTEN TO me!”
I was already pushing her back toward the car. “It’s not safe for us here. We have to go right now. That man, the policeman, he almost killed me at my hotel.”
    She nodded and seemed to understand, and then we were walking quietly. I got her up the block to her car and into the passenger seat. “We have to go.”
    When I reached the driver’s side, I could see the police commander through the windshield. He’d picked his way through the knot of emergency vehicles in front of the house. Then he broke into a run, heading straight for us. Two other men came running with him. I thought that I recognized one of them as the other man who’d come into my hotel room and tried to scare me out of the country.
    “Adanne, fasten your seat belt! We have to get out of here.
Right now!

    I put the car in reverse and checked over my shoulder. The intersection behind me was too busy; I couldn’t wait for the traffic to clear, though.
    So I changed my mind.
    I shifted into drive and drove right at the approaching cops. I began to blare the horn, hitting the wheel again and again.
    Adanne’s car was only a little Ford Escort, but I caught the cops off guard. I floored it and stayed the course directly at the men. The “commander”

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