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Night Prey

Night Prey

Titel: Night Prey Kostenlos Bücher Online Lesen
Autoren: John Sandford
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was.”
    “Could have been a con,” Lucas said.
    Hillerod thought about it, then said, “Yeah. Could have been, I guess. But I felt like he was a cop.”
    “And he looked like this picture,” Connell said.
    “Yeah. It’s not quite right, I don’t think. I can’t remember that well, but his beard’s wrong,” he said, studying the drawing. “And there’s something wrong about the mouth. And the guy’s hair was flatter . . . But that’s who it mostly looks like.”
    “The cop,” Lucas said.
    “Yeah. The cop.”
     
     
     
    “SONOFAGUN,” CONNELL SAID bitterly. They stood next to a water fountain, the office lawyers and secretaries flowing around them. “The cop shows up again. Davenport—I believe him.” She gestured down the hall at Bich’s office, where Hillerod waited. “I can’t believe he just pulled that out of his ass. He’s not smart enough.”
    “Don’t panic yet,” Lucas said. “We’ve still got some lab work to do. We’ve got the knife.”
    “You know as well as I do . . . Are we sure the St. Paul cop is out of it?”
    “St. Paul says he is.”
    “There’s no way they’d cover for a guy on something like this,” she said, not quite making it a question.
    “No way,” Lucas agreed. “I talked to one of their guys, and they worked him over pretty good.”
    “Goddamnit,” Connell said. She shook her head. “We’re going back to the beginning.”

    CONNELL DROVE: SHE wanted to handle the Porsche. On the way out to the interstate, the sun dropping toward the horizon, windshield greased by a million bugs from the roadside ditches, she said, “George Beneteau was surprisingly professional. I mean, for a county sheriff.”
    Lucas rode along for a minute, then said, “He asked about you. Marital status, that kind of thing.”
    “What?”
    Lucas grinned at her and she flushed. “He said . . .” Lucas dropped into a cornball accent, which Beneteau didn’t have, “ ‘that’s a fine-lookin’ woman.’ ”
    “You are lying to me, Davenport.”
    “Honest to God,” Lucas said. After a minute, he said, “He wanted your phone number.”
    “Did you give it to him?”
    Lucas said, “I didn’t know what to do, Meagan. I didn’t know whether to tell him you were sick, or what. So I . . . yeah, I gave it to him.”
    “You didn’t tell him I was sick?”
    “No. I didn’t.”
    They drove on for another minute, in silence, and then Connell began to weep. Eyes open, head up, big hands square on the wheel, she began sobbing, breath tearing from her chest, tears streaming down her face. Lucas started to say something, looking for words, but she just shook her head and drove on.

18
    EVANHART STOOD with one hand in his pocket, his voice low, concerned. His back was to the balcony, so he was framed in the dark square; he wore a blue suit with a conservative striped shirt, and carried a square Scotch glass in his left hand. He’d taken his necktie off and thrust it in his pocket. Sara could see just the point of it sticking out from under the flap of his coat pocket. “Have you talked to the police?”
    She shook her head. “I don’t know what I’d tell them.” She crossed her arms over her chest, rubbed her triceps with her hands, as though she were cold. “It’s like having a ghost,” she said. “I feel somebody, but I’ve never seen anything. I had the burglary, and since then . . . nothing. They’d say it’s paranoia—paranoia brought on by the burglary. And I hate being patronized.”
    “They’d be right about the paranoia. You can’t be a good trader if you’re not paranoid,” Hart said. He sipped the Johnnie Walker Black.
    “ ’Cause somebody is out to get you,” she said, finishing the old Wall Street joke. She drifted across the front room toward him. She also had a glass, vodka martini, three olives. She looked out across the balcony, over the building across the street, toward the park. “To tell the truth, I am a little scared. A woman was killed just across the street, and the guy with her is still in a coma. This was just a few days ago, a couple of days after my burglary. They haven’t caught anybody yet—they say it was gang kids. I’ve never seen any gang kids here. It was supposed to be safe. I used to walk around the lake in the evenings, but I’ve stopped.”
    Hart’s face was serious again. He reached out and brushed her arm with two fingertips, just a light touch. “Maybe you should think about moving out of

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