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Dead Tomorrow

Dead Tomorrow

Titel: Dead Tomorrow Kostenlos Bücher Online Lesen
Autoren: Peter James
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she was already looking a little better, Lynn was relieved to see, except she was scratching again. Scratching her arms so hard they looked as if they were covered in insect bites. At the moment, iPod in her ears, she was switching focus between an old episode of the OC playing silently on the muted TV and her purple mobile phone, on which she was texting someone, with furrowed concentration, while rubbing the itching balls of her feet on the end board of the bed.
    Luke had been tapping away for nearly an hour now, working through Google, then other search engines, trying out different combinations of phrases and sentences containing the words organs, purchase, humans, donors, livers .
    He had found a debate in the Council of Europe Parliamentary Assembly on the topic of human organ trafficking, and on another site had discovered the story of a Harley Street surgeon called Raymond Crockett, who was struck off the Medical Register in 1990 for buying kidneys from Turkey for four patients. And plenty more debates about whether organ donation should be automatic on death unless a person has opted out.
    But no organbrokers.
    ‘Are you sure it’s not just an urban myth, Luke?’
    ‘There’s a website about part of Manila being called One Kidney Island,’ he said. ‘You can buy a kidney there for forty thousand pounds–including the operation. That site talked all about brokers—’
    Suddenly he stopped.
    On the screen, in clinical white against a stark black background, the words T RANSPLANTATION -Z ENTRALE G MB H had appeared.
    In a bar above were options for different languages. Luke clicked on the Union Jack flag and moments later a new panel came up:
    Welcome to
    T RANSPLANTATION -Z ENTRALE G MB H
    the world’s leading brokerage for
human organs for transplantations
    Discreet global service, privacy assured
    Contact us by phone, email
    or visit our Munich offices by appointment
    Lynn stared intently at the computer screen, feeling an intense, giddying frisson of excitement. And danger.
    Maybe there really was another option to the tyranny of Shirley Linsell and her team. Another way to save the life of her daughter.
    Luke turned to Caitlin. ‘Looks like we’ve–yeah–found something.’
    ‘Cool!’ she said.
    Moments later Lynn felt Caitlin’s arms around her shoulders and her warm breath on her neck, as she too peered at the screen.
    ‘That’s awesome!’ Caitlin said. ‘Do you think there’s–like–a price list? Like when you go online shopping at Tesco?’
    Lynn giggled, delightedthat Caitlin seemed to be returning to some kind of normality, however temporary.
    Luke began to navigate the site, but there was very little information beyond what they had already read. No phone number or postal address, just an email one: [email protected] .
    ‘OK,’ Lynn said. ‘Send them an email.’
    She dictated and Luke typed:
    I am the mother of a 15-year-old girl who is urgently in need of a liver transplant. We are based in the south of England. Can you help us? If so please let us know what service you can provide and what information you require from us. Yours sincerely,
Lynn Beckett
    Lynn read through it, then turned to Caitlin. ‘OK, my angel?’
    Caitlin gave a wistful smile and shrugged. ‘Yep. Whatever.’
    Luke sent it.
    Then all three of them stared at the mailbox in silence.
    ‘Do you think we should have sent a phone number?’ Caitlin asked. ‘Or an address or something?’
    Lynn thought for a moment, her brain feeling scrambled. ‘Yes. Maybe. I don’t know.’
    ‘No harm, is there?’ suggested Caitlin.
    ‘No, no harm,’ her mother agreed.
    Luke sent a second email, containing Lynn’s mobile number and the dialling code for England.
    Ten minutes later, down in the kitchen making a cup of tea and preparing some supper for the three of them, Lynn’s phone rang.
    On the displaywere the words, Private number .
    Lynn answered immediately.
    There was a faint hiss, then some crackle. After a fraction of a second’s time delay she heard a woman’s voice, in guttural broken English, sounding professional but friendly.
    ‘May I please speak with Mrs Lynn Beckett?’
    ‘That’s me!’ Lynn said. ‘Speaking!’
    ‘My name is Marlene Hartmann. You have just sent an email to my company?’
    Shaking, Lynn said, ‘To Transplantation-Zentrale?’
    ‘That is correct. By chance, I have the opportunity to be in England tomorrow, in Sussex. If it is convenient, we could meet,

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