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Hotline to Murder

Hotline to Murder

Titel: Hotline to Murder Kostenlos Bücher Online Lesen
Autoren: Alan Cook
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said, “or we would have been trapped like a fox in the henhouse. I’d better call Bonita Beach and give them an update.” He got out his cell phone.
    “Don’t tell them we broke into the apartment.”
    “I won’t.” He told the desk officer that LAPD was going to the apartment building and suggested that this was a good time to coordinate with them to search Nathan’s apartment.
    “How do you know this?” the officer asked.
    Tony disconnected.
    “I hope it doesn’t get screwed up and the evidence lost,” Shahla said.
    “We can’t worry about that,” Tony said. “We’ve got to find Nathan.” His shoulders slumped. “But how do we find him?”
    “Give me his cell phone number,” Shahla said.
    “Why?”
    “I’m going to call him.”
    “You’re what?”
    “I’m going to call him. What else can we do? We have to keep Nathan from killing Tina.”
    ***
    Shahla took the cell phone and the piece of paper with Nathan’s address and telephone numbers on it from Tony. Her mind was moving faster than his. And it was going to take speed if they were going to save Tina. But before she tried to call Nathan, she had to call the Bonita Beach Police one more time.
    She called, using redial. The desk officer answered after two rings and said, “Bonita Beach Police.”
    “This is Shahla.”
    “Where are you?”
    She wasn’t falling into that trap. “I’m only going to say this once, so listen carefully. We believe that Nathan Watson has kidnapped Tina. He belongs to the Church of the Risen Lord. The church is on…” she looked at Tony and he said, “Brora Street.” She repeated, “Brora Street, in LA. The minister is Luther Hodgkins. The members think that they are going to ascend into heaven tonight at midnight. We don’t know the location where they are gathering, but it’s probably a local hilltop. We know it’s somewhere near a bus line. We are hoping that Nathan is going to take Tina there so that she will ascend with them.”
    “Spell the name of the minister.”
    Shahla spelled it. “Have you got that?”
    “Where are you now?”
    “Have you got all the information?”
    “I want you two to come to the station and stop playing detective. You’re going to mess this whole thing up. Or get yourselves killed.”
    Shahla disconnected and said, “He wants us to come to the station.”
    “You did that better than I could have,” Tony said.
    Shahla was pleased with Tony’s compliment. But the hardest part was yet to come. She punched in Nathan’s cell phone number. As it rang, she wondered if he still had the phone with him. Or whether the number was disconnected. She should at least get some kind of a message. Finally, voice mail came on. It was Nathan’s voice. Shahla felt some relief.
    “Nathan, this is Shahla,” she said after the beep. “I-I have changed my mind. I feel in my heart now that you are correct. The website of the church says that the ascent into heaven is going to be tonight. I want to go with you, Nathan. Please. Give me a call.” She recited Tony’s cell phone number.
    “Did I put enough passion into my voice?” she asked after she disconnected.
    “That will get him if anything can. What should we do while we wait for him to call back?”
    “I saw a McDonald’s a couple of blocks from here. Let’s get something to eat.”
    ***
    Shahla ate her Big Mac with gusto and popped each ketchup-drenched French fry into her mouth, separately, in order to fully savor it. Since her brush with hunger, yesterday, food had risen in her scale of importance. She hoped that this newfound appetite wouldn’t make her fat. Tony was eating a more sensible fish sandwich.
    They were sitting in the car, parked outside the McDonald’s. A Porsche wasn’t the most comfortable place to eat lunch, but at least it was temporarily shaded from the September sun by the fronds at the top of a tall palm tree, and the top was down so they benefited from a wisp of a breeze.
    Other people, young and old alike, continuously streamed in and out of the restaurant, like bees at a hive. The young ones looked like high school students. Apparently this was a lunch hangout for a local school. Shahla remembered that she should be in school. She felt a pang of conscience. She hated to miss even one day.
    When the cell phone rang, it startled her, even though she was hoping it would ring. She had the Big Mac in one hand and a couple of fries in the other. “Let me answer it,” she said,

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