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Dead Man's Time

Dead Man's Time

Titel: Dead Man's Time Kostenlos Bücher Online Lesen
Autoren: Peter James
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along the Brighton Lanes through the window.
Come in and buy something, you
morons!
No one was coming in to buy anything. Not that he cared too much about that right now. Unless a miracle happened and some lunatic came in and bought the entire stock. That was the kind
of money he needed to sort out his current mess.
    Seated in his wheelchair, Dennis Cooper was engrossed in a book of sudoku puzzles, and that was fine by Daly; he wasn’t in any mood for conversation. In any case, he didn’t
understand most of the shit Cooper talked about, which was philosophy, spouting quotes by people with strange names he’d never heard of.
    Augustine Krasniki, whose main use in this shop was humping around heavy items that he’d bought or sold, was upstairs in his flat, no doubt watching some video replay of a football
game.
    Daly checked horse race after horse race on his phone. In four races today, so far all he’d got was one lousy place. He didn’t do
place
bets; they didn’t pay out the
kind of winnings he was after. High payout trebles were the only thing that would do it for him.
    Or that phone call he was expecting.
    Then he stiffened as a figure appeared outside, walking with the aid of a stick. ‘What the fuck’s he doing here?’ he said.
    Cooper glanced up. ‘Gosh, a royal visit!’
    Moments later his father entered, and the old man was in an equally foul mood.
    ‘Hi, Dad.’
    Gavin Daly’s eyes darted around the shop, without acknowledging the greeting. ‘You’ve heard they’ve arrested someone? Gareth Dupont. Know anything about him?’
    Lucas shook his head.
    ‘I had a call from Detective Superintendent Grace. Dupont’s been charged with Aileen’s murder, as well as robbery. That means he’ll be remanded in custody, I’m
told, in Lewes Prison.’
    ‘That’s good news.’
    Gavin Daly’s face was thunder. ‘What’s good about that? I want the watch back. We need to find someone in the prison who can talk to him. Dupont has to know where it
is.’
    ‘I thought you were sure it’s in New York.’
    ‘I thought so too, but I haven’t heard back – which is not a good sign.’
    ‘Maybe your reward will prompt someone in the prison to talk to him.’
    ‘Maybe.’ Gavin Daly’s eyes roamed around the displays in the room. Then he suddenly stomped over towards the pair of Chinese vases that Lucas had failed to sell earlier.
‘What the hell are these doing here?’ he demanded.
    ‘Nice, aren’t they?’ Lucas said. ‘Got a terrific deal on them – bought them for a hundred quid; they’re worth a couple of grand, at least.’
    ‘Really?’
    ‘Yeah, Dad! Nineteenth century, Cantonese.’
    ‘I know that. I know exactly what they are.’
    Lucas tapped the side of his head, grinning proudly. ‘See, some of your knowledge has rubbed off on me.’
    ‘Really?’ Gavin Daly picked up one of the vases and examined it closely. ‘Knowledge, you say?’
    ‘Yeah.’
    ‘Who did you buy them from?’
    ‘A bloke I’d never seen before. Walked in off the street and asked me to make an offer. He didn’t know what he had!’
    ‘Nor did you. You’d sell them for two grand?’
    ‘Be a nice profit!’
    ‘They’re Ming dynasty. Got a few chips, which will reduce their value, but auction them at Sotheby’s or Christie’s and we’d be looking at north of a hundred
grand.’
    ‘No shit.’ Suddenly Lucas was really excited, seeing a solution to all his problems. ‘Bloody hell!’
    There was a crash, followed by several tinkling sounds, as fragments of centuries-old china slithered across the floor.
    Lucas Daly’s jaw dropped open in numb disbelief. ‘You dropped it. Oh shit, Dad, you dropped it!’
    ‘Clumsy me!’ his father said, picking up the second one. Moments later that slipped from his fingers, too, and shattered on the floor. ‘Whoops!’
    For a moment, Lucas Daly wondered if his father was drunk; or worse, in the early stages of dementia, or some disease of the nervous system. There was no shock, or even mild surprise in his
father’s face. Only anger.
    ‘How fucking stupid are you, Lucas?’
    ‘Stupid? Me? Look what you’ve gone and bloody done – are you mad?’
    ‘Mad, no. Angry, yes. And disappointed. I’m disappointed in my son’s stupidity. Those vases belonged to your aunt. Whoever took them didn’t realize their value and
chopped them out to some low-grade fence. And then you bought them.’ He shook his head.
    ‘I can’t believe what you just

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