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Mind Prey

Mind Prey

Titel: Mind Prey Kostenlos Bücher Online Lesen
Autoren: John Sandford
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tech: “That’s him.”
    At the radio station, the DJ leaned into it. “George Dunn? Damn, boy, you almost missed the call of your life, of the week, anyway.”
    And Mail could hear it all on the radio.
    “This is Milo Weet at K-LIK with a We-Squeeze-It, You-Suck-It-Up; one thousand, two hundred and nine dollars on the line. You know how we play—we squeeze out a classic rock song in five seconds, the whole song, and you have ten seconds to tell us what it is. Are you ready?”
    Mail knew the game. They thought his name was George Dunn, that was Manette’s husband, but Weet was asking again, “Uh, George, excuse me, this is where you’re supposed to say, ‘Go ahead, dude,’ unless you been into the vegetable matter again, in which case, give me your address and I’ll be right out.”
    “Uh, go ahead, dude,” Mail said. He’d never been on the radio. He could hear himself with his other ear, a strange, electronic echo.
    “Here it comes, then, Georgie.” There was a second of dead air, and then a nearly incomprehensible packet of noise with a vague rhythm to it, almost recognizable. What was it? Da-duh-da-Duh-da-Duh… Let’s see.
     
    T HE TECH WAS working what looked like a television set, shouting at the pilot, “Hold it there, hold it, hold it…” while yellow numbers scrambled across the screen, and then, “Go 160, go, go…” and they took off, southeast.
     
    “G EORGE? Y OU THERE, boy? You got it? Tell you what, buddy, this is getting old. I’ll give you another five seconds, another song by the same group. Not the same song, the same group…”
     
    T HE TECH WAS saying, “We’ve got him on, goddamn, he’s right between us.” He clicked on his microphone. “Frank, you got him?”
    From the radio: “We got him, we’re heading out at 195, but we’re getting some shake in the reception…”
     
    T HE SECOND SQUIRT of sound ended, and Mail said to Weet, “‘All Night Long’, by AC/DC.”
    He added, on the air, “Davenport, you cocksucker.”
    And he was gone.

13
    M AIL PUNCHED THE Off button and with the phone still in his hand, ran outside. Overhead, a jetliner passed in-bound for Minneapolis–St. Paul. That’s how they’d come , he thought, looking into the sky for lights, red or white, blinking, swooping, focusing on him. Choppers. An envelopment.
    He ran down to the drive and piled into the van, fumbled the keys out of his jeans pocket, roared backwards out of the driveway onto the gravel road. If they were coming, and if he could get just a little bit north, maybe he could lose himself in the suburban traffic…
    Mail wasn’t frightened as much as he was excited. And angry. They’d played him for a sucker. He’d bet a hundred-to-one that Davenport was behind the call. Hell, he’d go a thousand-to-one. It was all very slick. So slick that he found himself grinning in the night, then sliding into an angry sulk, then grinning again, despite himself. Slick.
    But not quite slick enough, he thought.
    From a mile away, atop a hill, Mail looked back at his house. He couldn’t really see it, but he could see the lighted kitchen door, which he’d left open, a thin candlestick against the dark fields. There was nothing near him—nothing coming. He shifted into park, and let the engine idle. Nothing at all.
    After a moment, he turned off the engine and got out to listen: nothing but a thin breeze blowing through the goldenrod in his headlights…
     
    A NDI AND G RACE had nearly given up on the weapon idea. The only thing they could find, that might be anything at all, was a large nail that had bent over when it was being driven into the rafters above them. If they could pull it free, Andi thought, they might be able to hone it on the granite fieldstone in the walls.
    “It’d be like a short ice pick, I guess,” Andi said. They had nothing to work with, except the aluminum cans that the strawberry soda came in. While they were trying to figure out how to use the cans to pull the nail free, they began experimenting with the cans themselves. They could pull the tops and bottoms off without too much trouble—Andi wrapped her fingers in her shirt, and literally tore the aluminum free. They then had a thin, flexible sheet of aluminum. They tried folding it and flattening it, with the idea of sharpening the point and using it like a knife blade.
    They could get a point, but not with enough stiffness to penetrate skin and muscle deeply enough to do damage. They might get an

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