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From the Corner of His Eye

From the Corner of His Eye

Titel: From the Corner of His Eye Kostenlos Bücher Online Lesen
Autoren: Dean Koontz
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fly.
        He pressed his right ear to the door, held his breath, heard nothing, and addressed the top lock first. Quietly, he slid the thin pick of the lock-release gun into the key channel, under the pin tumblers.
        Now came a slight but real risk of being heard inside: He pulled the trigger. The flat steel spring in the lock-release gun caused the pick to jump upward, lodging some of the pins at the shear line. The snap of the hammer against the spring and the click of the pick against the pin tumblers were soft sounds, but anyone near the other side of the door would more likely than not hear them; if she was one room removed, however, the noise would not reach her.
        Not all of the pins were knocked to the shear line with a single pull of the trigger. Three pulls were the minimum required, sometimes as many as six, depending on the lock.
        He decided to use the tool just three times on each deadbolt before trying the door. The less noise the better. Maybe luck would be with him.
        Tick, tick, tick. Tick, tick, tick.
        He turned the knob. The door eased inward, but he pushed it open only a fraction of an inch.
        The fully evolved man never has to rely on the gods of fortune, Zedd tells us, because he makes his luck with such reliability that he can spit in the faces of the gods with impunity.
        Junior tucked the lock-release gun into a pocket of his leather jacket.
        In his right hand again, the real gun, loaded with ten hollow-point rounds, felt charged with supernatural power: to Bartholomew as a crucifix to Dracula, as holy water to a demon, as kryptonite to Superman.
        As red as Angel had been for her evening outing, she was that yellow for retirement to bed in her own home. Two-piece yellow jersey pajamas. Yellow socks. At the girl's request, Celestina had tied a soft yellow bow in her mass of springy hair.
        The bow business had started a few months ago. Angel said she wanted to look pretty in her sleep, in case she met a handsome prince in her dreams.
        "Yellow, yellow, yellow, yellow," Angel said with satisfaction as she examined herself in the mirrored closet door.
        "Still my little M&M."
        "I'm gonna dream about baby chickens," she told Celestina, "and if I'm all yellow, they'll think I'm one of them."
        "You could also dream of bananas," Celestina suggested as she turned down the bedclothes.
        "Don't want to be a banana."
        Because of her occasional bad dreams, Angel chose to sleep now and then in her mother's bed instead of in her own room, and this was one of those nights.
        "Why do you want to be a baby chicken?"
        "'Cause I never been one. Mommy, are you and Uncle Wally married now?"
        Astonished, Celestina said, "Where did that come from?"
        "You've got a ring like Mrs. Moller across the hall."
        Gifted with unusual powers of visual observation, the girl was quick to notice the slightest changes in her world. The sparkling engagement ring on Celestina's left hand had not escaped her notice.
        "He kissed you messy," Angel added, "like mushy movie kisses."
        "You're a regular little detective."
        "Will we change my name?"
        "Maybe."
        "Will I be Angel Wally?"
        "Angel Lipscomb, though that doesn't sound as good as White, does it now?"
        "I want to be called Wally."
        "Won't happen. Here, into bed with you."
        Angel sprang-flapped-fluttered as quick as a baby chick into her mother's bed.
        Bartholomew was dead but didn't know it yet. Pistol in hand, cocoon in tatters, ready to spread his butterfly wings, Junior pushed the door to the apartment inward, saw a deserted living room, softly lighted and pleasantly furnished, and was about to step across the threshold when the street door opened and into the hall came Ichabod.
        The guy was carrying a purse, whatever that meant, and when he walked through the door, he had a goofy look on his face, but his expression changed when he saw Junior.
        So here it came again, the hateful past, returning when Junior thought he was shed of it. This tall, lanky, Celestina-humping son of a bitch, guardian of Bartholomew, had driven away, gone home, but he couldn't stay in the past where he belonged, and he was opening his mouth to say Who are you or maybe to shout an alarm, so Junior shot him three times.
        Tucking the covers

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