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Hells Kitchen

Hells Kitchen

Titel: Hells Kitchen Kostenlos Bücher Online Lesen
Autoren: Jeffery Deaver
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your knees, my man. And I’ll give you ten bucks you flash me some real crew signs.”
    But the boy knew them and gestured broadly. Pellam had no idea what the signs meant but they looked authentic. In an L.A. crew Ismail’d be considered a perfect T.G., a tiny gangster. He slipped him the ten dollars, hoping it would go for food.
    “Thanks, cuz.”
    “How’s your mother?”
    “Dunno. She gone. My sister too.”
    “Gone? What do you mean?”
    He shrugged. “Gone. Ain’t ’round the shelter no more.”
    “Where’re you hanging?”
    “Don’t got no place. Hey, whatchu looking, Pellam. You giving me the eye like that.”
    “Come on. There’s somebody I want you to meet.”
    “Yeah? Who?”
    “This woman.”
    “She a fox?”
    “I think so. I don’t know how you’ll feel.”
    “Why you wanna introduce me to yo’ bitch, Pellam?”
    “Watch the language.”
    “No way.”
    “Ismail.”
    “No motherfuckin’ way,” he grumbled.
    Pellam clamped his hand down hard on the boy’s arm and dragged him into the Youth Outreach Center.
    “Ismail, stop the swearing.”
    “Yo, cuz, I know what that bitch want. Man, she try to run a drag on me. . . .”
    “What’s his name?” Carol Wyandotte asked, unfazed by the little ball of angry child in front of her.
    “Ismail.”
    “Hello, Ismail. I’m Carol. I run this place.”
    “Yo, you a slob bitch and I ain’t staying here—”
    “That’s it, young man,” Pellam barked.
    He responded, surly, “You keep that white bitch away from me.”
    Pellam thought he’d try the soft approach. He said calmly, “Ismail, look, some people don’t think that’s a very nice word to use.”
    “Okay, okay.” The boy looked contrite. “I ain’t say ‘white’ no more.”
    “Very funny.”
    “Oh, he doesn’t mean ‘bitch’ that way,” Carol said matter-of-factly, rocking back and studying him. “It’s just verbal window dressing.”
    “Don’t be telling me what I mean, bitch.”
    Pellam snapped, “You want to be my friend or not? Watch your mouth.”
    The boy crossed his arms and dropped sullenly onto the windowsill.
    “His mother and sister’ve vanished,” Pellam told her.
    “Vanished?”
    “From the shelter,” Pellam explained.
    “Ismail, what happened?”
    “Dunno. I come back and they gone. Dunno where.”
    The boy had spotted a stack of comic books in the corner. He began flipping through an old issue of X-Men.
    “Anything you can do for him?” Pellam asked.
    Carol shrugged. “We could call SSC, Special Services for Children. They’ll place him in an emergency home in twenty-four hours. He’ll run away in twenty-five. I think we should keep him here for a few days, see if his mother shows up. . . . Ismail?”
    The boy looked up.
    “You have a grandmother?”
    “Hey, you don’ know shit. The whole everbody got a grandmother.”
    “I mean, who you know.”
    He shrugged.
    “Where’s yours live?”
    “Dunno.”
    “Either of them? How about aunts? Anybody else?”
    “Dunno.”
    It hit Pellam hard that the boy didn’t know any of his relatives. But Carol calmly said, “You like those books? We’ve got a lot of them.”
    He snorted, said defiantly, “Shit. I could ’jack myself a thousand motherfuckin’ comics, I wanted to.”
    Pellam walked over to the boy, crouched down. “You and me, we’re friends, right?”
    “I guess. I dunno.”
    “Will you stay here for a while? And not make any waves.”
    Carol said to him, “We’ll help you find your mother.”
    “I don’t want her. She a cluckhead bitch. Doing rock allthe time. She put the rush on all these guys, make some money. Mother fuckers, you know what I’m saying?”
    Pellam offered, “Just stay for a little while. For me?”
    He put down the book. “Okay, fo’ you, Pellam, I do that.” He eyed Carol. “But listen up, bitch—”
    “Ismail!” Pellam shouted. “Once more, and I’m cutting you loose.”
    The boy blinked in surprise at this outburst. He nodded uncertainly.
    Carol said to the boy, “We’d like you to stay. There are some kids you can hang with. Go on in the back. Ask for Miss Sanchez. She’ll find you a bed in the boy’s dormitory.”
    He looked at Pellam. “I come see you?”
    “It’s not a prison,” Carol told him. “You come and go as you like.”
    Ignoring Carol, he said to Pellam, “We hang in the ’hood together, cuz?”
    “I’d like that.”
    Ismail’s dark, contracted eyes appraised the dim office. “Okay,” he

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