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Phantom Prey

Phantom Prey

Titel: Phantom Prey Kostenlos Bücher Online Lesen
Autoren: John Sandford
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the bathroom, but flared up again late in the day.
    They all ate dinner together, and Letty talked about bullet wounds she’d seen, which were numerous, considering her age, and compared his current wound to a hangnail.
    He snapped at her: “It might be a hangnail, but it hurts like hell,” and she suddenly got teary, and pushed away from the table and stalked out of the room and when he called, “Hey,” she called back, “I was just trying to cheer you up.”
    Weather said, “Ah, jeez,” and Sam exhaled and looked suddenly sad.
    “Better tomorrow,” Lucas said.
    Another restless night, but this time, thinking about Letty and Sam.
    The third morning after the shooting, the pain was still there, but more of an ache, like a bruise, than a cutting pain; like the pain you get forty-five seconds after being hit by a fastball. Weather redressed the wound and pronounced him improved. The wound had sealed, with no obvious inflammation showing, and she said that it was superficial and shouldn’t be dangerous.
    “Good. I’m going downtown.”
    “Take the truck,” she said. “You won’t want to use a clutch.”
    Letty made a point of kissing him on the forehead before she left, which really did make him feel better, if elderly. Sam ran into a wall and creased an eyebrow and thought not much of it. Sam ran into things a lot and called the subsequent wounds “bimps.”
    Before he left, he read the Star Tribune ’s second-day story about the shooting, which was a rewrite of the first day’s, leaving out the history, and adding only that the police had learned nothing more.
    The Star-Tribune had asked the governor for a comment, and he’d said, “Sometimes, in these matters, we have to take risks, and sometimes we get hurt. I’m told Lucas is already on his feet, and I expect he’ll get right back out there and nail this guy.” The governor sounded as though he’d been behind Lucas’s left shoulder, with a gun in his hand.
    He got the crutch and went out to the truck.
    Lucas limped into the office and Carol asked, “Oh my God , what are you doing here?”
    “Working.”
    “That crutch looks like a waste of time.”
    He looked at it. “Yeah.”
    He called Austin: “I’ve got to see you, the earlier the better. Where are you?”
    “In my car, I’m almost at the Wanderwood location, it’s up by North Oaks. I’ll be here for a couple of hours, if you could stop by there?”
    “Sure. Half an hour, probably.”
    When he left, Carol was coming back up the hallway carrying an old-fashioned wooden cane. She gave it to him and said, “Try this.”
    “Ah, for Christ’s sakes, I’m not elderly.”
    “Try it.”
    He tried it, and it helped. “What a pain in the ass,” he said. “If it’ll make you happy . . .”
    He strolled down to the elevator, twirling it like a baton, but after he got downstairs, used it to walk out to the car. It took a few pounds off the leg, and that helped. A lot.
    Fuckin’ women.
    Wanderwood was a well-kept, yellow-painted concrete-block building that shared a parking lot with a Caribou Coffee shop. He left the cane in the truck, thinking that he could suppress the urge to limp, took two steps, and went back for the cane. Inside, a receptionist looked him over and said, “You’re not here about the mirrors.”
    “No. I’m here to see Alyssa Austin. She’s expecting me.”
    “Hang on one second,” the receptionist said, and disappeared down a tiled hallway. Lucas looked around: there was just the faintest tang of sweat about the place, but it might have come from a spray bottle. Otherwise, it smelled like Chanel, or some other kind of French perfume.
    Expensive-looking easy chairs were arranged around a tree-trunk coffee table, very ecological-looking, in the waiting area. The table held an apricot-colored orchid in a plain terra-cotta pot, and a stack of appropriate magazines: In Style, Vanity Fair, Fitness, Marie Claire, Allure, Vogue. Nothing with a car on the cover, or even a suggestion that a car existed.
    He paged through Fitness for a moment, then the receptionist reappeared and said, “Come on back.”
    She took him past a small open workout area, where a half-dozen women rode bikes or ran on treadmills, to a private workout room where Austin was working with a trainer, doing Pilates. She was flat on her stomach doing foot-and-hand lifts with light weights in her hands, sweating like a dog, but when she finished, she did a kind of snap push-up that bounced

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