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Dead Tomorrow

Dead Tomorrow

Titel: Dead Tomorrow Kostenlos Bücher Online Lesen
Autoren: Peter James
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beyond the table. More symbols and numbers flickered on smaller screens on free-standing monitoring equipment behind the young girl’s head.
    ‘What the hell does this have to do with you?’ he exploded, the visible parts of his face turning puce.
    ‘Quite a lot, actually,’ Caitlin said, breathing heavily. She jabbed her chest with her free hand. ‘I’m meant to be getting her liver.’
    There was a moment of stunned silence.
    Draguta shouted a command for her to comeout, as if she were shouting at a dog.
    ‘She’s alive, at this moment, yes,’ the younger man said enthusiastically, as if this was something Caitlin wanted to hear.
    She lunged forward, grabbed at the drip lines that were in Simona’s arm with her left hand and jerked them free, then grabbed the ones out of the neck and tore at the cardiac monitor pads.
    The surgeon seized Caitlin by her shoulders. ‘Are you crazy, little girl?’
    Caitlin responded by biting his hand, hard. The surgeon cried out in pain and she wriggled free, twisting, staring at pairs of eyes behind masks, all of them in shock, uncertain what to do. Then she saw the nurse marching towards her.
    She raised the scalpel, holding it by the handle like a dagger, brandishing it at everyone, beyond caring.
    ‘Get her off that table!’ she said, her voice cracking. ‘Get her off that table now!’
    The entire theatre team stood motionless, staring at her in shock.
    Except the big nurse, who pushed through, grabbed Caitlin’s free arm and yanked her so hard she almost fell over. Then she jerked her back across the room to the door, Caitlin’s trainers sliding on the tiled floor as she tried, with her failing strength, to resist.
    ‘Let me go, you ugly fucking cow!’ she hissed.
    The nurse stopped to push open the door, then jerked Caitlin hard again. She stumbled forward, falling, and as she shot out her arm to cushion herself, the blade of the scalpel, still gripped tightly in her hand, sliced through the top of the woman’s cheekbone, cleanly through her right eye and the bridge of her nose.
    The woman let out a terrible howl, her hands shootingto her face, blood jetting in every direction. She staggered against someone, wailing like a banshee, and several of the team rushed over to help and to stop her falling.
    In the commotion, no one noticed Caitlin stumbling out.

116
    Marlene Hartmann was striding anxiouslydown the tiled corridor, her normal steely composure already shot to pieces, when she heard the screams. She broke into a run, then saw what looked like utter mayhem spilling out of the operating theatre.
    She stormed through the supplies room and saw her theatre team frantically trying to restrain the massive nurse, who had blood gouting from her face and spurting all over her white tunic. She was lashing out with all her considerable strength and screaming hysterically as, blood-spattered, Sir Roger Sirius and two junior surgeons, the anaesthetists and the scrub nurses all wrestled with her. Simona lay on the operating table, wires and lines all around her, oblivious to everything.
    ‘ Gottverdammt , what is happening?’
    ‘The girl went crazy,’ Sirius said, panting.
    Then, before he could say anything further, Draguta’s meaty fist smashed into his cheek, sending him reeling backwards and crashing on to the hard floor.
    Marlene ran over to him, knelt and helped him to his feet. He looked dazed.
    ‘There’s a police helicopter here!’ Marlene yelled at him. ‘We need to do a lock-down! Pull yourselves together! Do you understand?’
    Draguta fell, with several green-gowned members of the team crashing down on top of her.
    ‘I’m blind!’ she screamed inRomanian. ‘God help me, I’m blind!’
    ‘Get her sedated!’ commanded Marlene. ‘Shut her up! Quickly!’
    A junior anaesthetist grabbed a syringe, then scrabbled around on the trolley and picked up a vial.
    One of the nurses said, ‘We need to get Draguta to an eye hospital.’
    ‘Where’s the English girl? Caitlin? Where is she?’
    Blank, dazed eyes stared at her.
    ‘WHERE IS THE ENGLISH GIRL?’ Marlene Hartmann shouted.

117
    The roundabouts were getting worse. Caitlin, freezing cold, sleet tickling her face every few seconds, bumpedagainst the wall, pushed herself away and almost fell over. It was an effort to move her feet. She dragged one, then the other. She was almost at the front of the building now. She could see a car park. Rows and rows of vehicles.
    They came in and out of

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