Bücher online kostenlos Kostenlos Online Lesen
Delusion in Death

Delusion in Death

Titel: Delusion in Death Kostenlos Bücher Online Lesen
Autoren: J. D. Robb
Vom Netzwerk:
black facing the privacy-screened windows, an important chair of bold orange leather mated to it.
    The first-rate D&C center—yes, he’d have a look at that. The long, deep sofa in hard green, deep blue tabletops, a dizzying pattern on the rug, art in those same colors, splashed and streaked and framed in black.
    Except for one, he noted. A moody and rather lovely painting of Rome. The Spanish Steps on a sun-washed afternoon.
    As he found it the only really tasteful item he’d seen thus far, he walked over, examined it, looked behind it, checked the frame, the backing.
    Finding nothing, he put it back on the wall.
    Comfortable enough, Roarke decided. A mini AC and Friggie. He could settle in here, have what he needed.

    He opened a double-doored closet, smiled. Shelves of office supplies, extra discs, even a small unit for washing dishes.
    “A bit shallow, aren’t you, and a fairly recent addition here?”
    He crouched, studied the underside of the shelves, the sides, then patiently removed some of the supplies. Gave the back wall a few knocks.
    “Ah. Yes.”
    He imagined Callaway considered himself cagey and clever to have installed the false wall, the shelves. And they might have fooled a casual observer, a cleaning crew or a very sloppy search. It took him under three minutes to find and access the mechanism. Released, the shelves pivoted out, opening the small room beyond.
    And here , Roarke thought, here, he’d brewed up death .
    Mushrooms sealed in jars, seeds, chemicals, powders, liquids—all meticulously labeled. While tiny, the lab appeared carefully laid out and supplied. For one purpose, Roarke thought. Burners, petri dishes, mixers, a microscope, and a small, powerful computer—all fairly new, he saw, all top of the line.
    He found the old journal, its cover cracked and faded, paged through it. Crouched again, he opened the lid of a storage box, nudged through photos, more journals, clippings, a tattered Bible, and what he recognized as a manifesto—handwritten, and signed by Menzini.
    He stepped out, walked across the hall. “I think I’ve found what you’re looking for.”
    He got out of their way, went back into the living area.
    “Nothing on this unit,” Feeney said. “Bastard barely used it.”
    “This area’s for show. There’s a small laboratory behind a false wall in the office closet.”

    As Roarke spoke, Feeney’s head came up like a wolf scenting a bloodied sheep. “If I remember the formula correctly, all the necessaries are there, as well as journals, the formula itself clearly written in one, and what appear to be more recent, handmade notes. There are photographs, and Menzini’s personal manifesto. And a computer which will likely prove more interesting than that one.”
    “Got the fucker.”
    “It seems so. I’ll call the lieutenant, let her know.”
    “Tell her we’ll bring everything in. She can start wrapping him up.” He started toward the office. “When we close this down, I’ll buy you a beer.”
    “I’ll hold you to it.” Roarke took out his ’link, waited for Eve to come on screen.
    “Give me something good.”
    “Would a small, secret lab with the ingredients contained in the substance, the formula for said substance, Menzini’s journal, and a computer that likely holds pertinent data be something good?”
    “Jesus. Jesus, you’re going to get so much sex.”
    “Jenkinson says: ‘Hoo-haw!’”
    “For Christ’s—”
    “I’m winding you up, darling. I’m quite alone at the moment, and will happily take you up on so much sex. Do you have him in the house?”
    “In restraints. He slipped up enough I’ve charged him, and I’m about to head in to work a confession out of him, with details. You just nailed it shut.”
    “Feeney said we’ll bring everything in.”
    “Give me some details so I can use them to cook him some.”
    “The lab’s behind a false wall, lined with shelves, in his office. The journal with the formula has a leather binding—it’s faded brownleather and cracked with age, and there are notes that appear more recent and in another handwriting with the formula. There’s a storage box holding more journals, an old Bible, and a manifesto hand-written by Menzini. It’s titled End of Days .”
    “That’ll do it. Mira’s messing with him now. I’ll fill in Teasdale and Peabody, and we’ll tie it up.”
    “I’ll see you soon then.”
    “Yeah. What’s wrong? There’s a thing.”
    “Nothing, really. This

Weitere Kostenlose Bücher