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Hidden Prey

Hidden Prey

Titel: Hidden Prey Kostenlos Bücher Online Lesen
Autoren: John Sandford
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of the back. He was a tall man, wearing black jeans and a plain white T-shirt; his hair, once blond, was going gray. He was barefoot. “What do you two want?” he asked.
    “We need to talk to you for a moment. It’s important, but . . .” Grandpa looked at the woman, and then back at Roger. “It’s private.”
    Roger looked at them for a long four seconds, then asked, “Something happen to Jan?”
    “No. It’s about the four families,” Grandpa said. “We’ve got a big problem.”
    “Fuck that,” Roger said. But he turned to the woman and said, “You go on back in the bedroom. I’ll be back in five minutes. You shut that door tight.”
    She put her hands on her hips and sighed, as if he’d just unloaded the burden of the world on her, then sullenly went back to the bedroom and slammed the door.
    When the door slammed, Roger looked at Grandpa and then at Carl, and said, “Carl knows?”
    “Yes,” Grandpa said. He had his hand in his pocket and when he took it out, he had the silenced pistol in it.
    Carl said, “What?” when he saw the pistol coming up, and Grandpa shot Roger in the heart.
    Roger, looking surprised, fell down with a thump. The wooden floor echoed like a drum.
    Carl said, “You shot my dad.” Like a slap in the face; it staggered him.
    Grandpa said, “Don’t think. Go do the woman.” He handed the gun to Carl. “Don’t think, don’t touch her, don’t touch anything. Just go do it.”
    “You shot my fuckin’ dad,” Carl said, and the gun barrel drifted up toward Grandpa’s waist.
    “Don’t point the gun at me; just take care of the woman.”
    “You . . . Jesus Christ.” Carl stared at the old man.
    Grandpa’s voice turned to gravel: “Take care of the woman.”
    For a moment, everything balanced on a knife. The gun was now aiming at Grandpa’s heart, and Carl took up the slack in the trigger.
    “Don’t think . . .”
    They posed for another three seconds, then Carl suddenly turned, walked to the bedroom door, pushed it open. Grandpa heard the woman say, “What?” and then three shots, a quick bap-bap , and then a finishing bap.
    Carl wandered back into the living room, a dazed look on his face. Grandpa said, “Are you all right?”
    “Maybe.”
    “Give me the gun.”
    Carl handed it over. “Are you going to kill me someday?”
    Grandpa was neither startled nor disturbed by the question. “No.” He put the gun in his pocket and took out two black oversized garbage bags. “Help me get Roger in these things. I don’t want blood in the trunk of the car.”
    “What’s going on?” Carl asked, a pleading note in his voice.
    “The cops were breaking us down—they’re going to break us down. Unless we give them the shooter. We’re giving them Roger.”
    “Why would . . . this is crazy.”
    “No. I can’t tell you all of it. I can tell you this: from now on, you have to be a kid. You told me about maybe asking this girl to thehomecoming. Tomorrow you’ve got to do it. You have to borrow some money from me for a sport coat and slacks, and you have to go buy them.”
    “What . . . ?” Crazier and crazier.
    Grandpa touched Carl on the shoulder, looked straight into his eyes. “There’s more on this to do . . . But listen to me now. You are the last one of us. You have to go underground, and for you, that means that you have to go back to being a kid. A child. You’re an adult now, and it’ll be hard, but it’s critical, Carl. You have to remember what you are, but you have to play at being a high-school boy. Can you do that?”
    Carl shrugged, and said, “I suppose,” and a flock of tears trickled down his cheek. He didn’t notice.
    Grandpa pointed at Roger’s body, and Carl, stunned, helped roll the body into the two bags. When they were done, there was a small blood puddle on the floor, and Grandpa cleaned it up with paper towels and water and found that he’d left a clean spot on a dirty floor.
    They fixed that by dragging a welcome mat across it a few times, until it had blended. That done, Grandpa went in to look at the woman: she was dead, all right. Carl had walked the gun up her body, shooting her first in the stomach and then in the chest, with a final shot in her forehead.
    Okay.
    “Let’s get him out to the car.”
     
    T HE WORST OF IT , Carl thought, was that Roger was still warm. He could still feel his father’s body, all the heat, all the still-living cells, that hadn’t yet gotten the message from his

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