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Dead Man's Footsteps

Dead Man's Footsteps

Titel: Dead Man's Footsteps Kostenlos Bücher Online Lesen
Autoren: Peter James
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in a rug – in case you were wondering where it had gone.’
    With the phone clamped to her ears, she tripped back downstairs and into her mother’s flat, closing the door behind her. She walked through into the sitting room, staring at the bare boards showing through the underlay again. Tears were streaming down her face. She was shaking, starting to feel disassociated, the first signs of a panic attack coming on.
    ‘I’m calling the police, Ricky,’ she said. ‘I don’t care about anything else any more. OK? I’m going to call the police right now.’
    ‘I don’t think so, Abby,’ he said calmly. ‘I think you are too smart to do that. What are you going to say to them? I stole everything this man had and now he’s caught up with me and he’s taken my mother as hostage . You have to be able to account for things, Abby. In the western world today, with all the money-laundering regulations, you have to be able to account for substantial possessions and amounts of money. How are you going to account for what you’ve got, on the earnings of a Melbourne bar waitress?’
    She screamed back down the phone, ‘I don’t care any more, Ricky. OK?’
    There was a brief silence. Then he said, ‘Oh, I think you do. You didn’t do what you did to me on a sudden impulse. You planned this long and hard, you and Dave, didn’t you? Any position he didn’t tell you to shag me in, or was it just me who got fucked?’
    ‘This has nothing to do with my mother. Bring her back. Bring her here and we’ll talk.’
    ‘No, you bring me everything you’ve taken and then we’ll talk.’
    The panic attack was worsening. She was taking deep gulps of air. Her head was burning. She felt as if she was half floating out of her body, that her body was going to die on her. She tripped sideways, hit the end of the sofa, clung desperately to one of the arms, then swung herself down on to it and sat there giddily.
    ‘I’m hanging up now,’ she gasped, ‘and I’m calling the police.’
    But even as she said the words she could feel that some of the conviction had gone from her voice, and that he could feel it too.
    ‘Yeah, and then what?’
    ‘I don’t care. I don’t bloody care!’ Like a child having a tantrum, she repeated several times, louder each time, ‘I don’t bloody care!’
    ‘You should. Because they’re going to find a chronically ill woman who has committed suicide, and her daughter a thief, with a cock-and-bull story about the man she stole from, and the man who put her up for it isn’t exactly in a position to enter any witness box to back her up. So think your way out of that one, smart bitch. I’m going to leave you to calm down now and I’m going to brew your mum a nice cup of tea, and then I’ll call you back.’
    ‘No – wait—’ she shouted.
    But he had hung up.
    Then, suddenly, she remembered the taxi waiting outside, with the meter running.

89
OCTOBER 2007
    Roy Grace sent Cleo a brief text telling her he had arrived as he stood waiting for the baggage carousel to start up. By his calculation, it would be 6.15 p.m. in the UK. Fifteen minutes before the start of the evening briefing meeting on Operation Dingo .
    He called DI Lizzie Mantle to get an update, but both her direct landline and mobile numbers went to voicemail. Next he tried Glenn Branson, who answered on the second ring.
    ‘Got your shoes back on?’
    ‘Yeah, I phoned to tell you that. Thought you might be pleased.’
    ‘So where are you? You’ve arrived, right? JFK Airport?’
    ‘Newark. Just waiting for my bag.’
    ‘All right for some, swanning off to New York, leaving us all here at the coal face.’
    ‘I would have sent you to Australia, but I didn’t think in your current situation that would have been too clever.’
    ‘At this moment, the further away I am from Ari, the happier she is. Anyhow, more on that when you get back.’
    Spare me , Grace thought. And whilst he would do anything to help this man he loved so much, he was always nervous about giving him – or indeed anyone else – advice on matters that could affect their lives. What the hell didhe know? And what kind of an example had his own marriage been? But he said none of this now.
    ‘So, tell me, what updates?’ he said.
    ‘Well, we’ve actually been hard at work while you’ve been lounging back, swigging champagne and watching movies for the past seven hours.’
    ‘I’ve been in cattle class, fighting off cramp, listeria and deep-vein

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