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Point Blank

Point Blank

Titel: Point Blank Kostenlos Bücher Online Lesen
Autoren: Catherine Coulter
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arrowheads. Only thing was, it was a dead end, only the one cavern. But then again I don’t remember if I looked all that closely through there, and I haven’t been back in forty-odd years. The entrance I’m thinking about is over near Lone Tree Hill, in the steep side of a gully.” He paused, pulled on his earlobe. “I’ll have to show you, what with the snow covering everything.”
    Dix shot a look at Savich, who shrugged and nodded.
    Ten minutes later, the five of them climbed into Dix’s Range Rover pressed in between the caving equipment along with four lanterns from Chappy’s stash of camping gear.
    “A lantern and a flashlight is all you need. I never liked those built-on headlights,” Chappy said to no one in particular.
    “This is a sweet car,” Chappy continued, patting the dashboard. “Christie loved this car, said the Brits got it right with this one. I bought it for her for Christmas three years back. It’s the Westminster Edition, only three hundred of them imported that year. She liked this soft black leather, said she loved to get it up to ninety just to watch your face go red, Dix, and your fingers turn white clutching the chicken stick.”
    Chappy saw the closed look on Dix’s face, the same look he’d worn for nearly a year now. At least it was better than the blank despair Dix had shown that first year.
    Dix didn’t respond. They both looked out at the road in silence, and Ruth was left to wonder where Christie was. If she’d left, why hadn’t she taken her prized car?
    After a couple of minutes, Dix said, as he wiped his gloved hand over the bit of fog on the windshield, “
    You guys okay back there? Enough room?”
    Savich laughed. “I’ve been trying to talk Sherlock onto my lap, but no go. Yes, there’s plenty of room for us and all the lanterns, too.”
    Ruth said, “Hey, Dillon, when I get my driver’s license replaced, will you let me drive the Porsche?”
    “You think I’d let someone drive my Porsche who didn’t even know who she was until yesterday?
    Forget it, Ruth.”
    Sherlock said, “Your amnesia has nothing to do with it, Ruth. He won’t let anyone drive that car.”
    Chappy turned in the seat. “A Porsche?”
    “Yes, sir, a 911 Classic. Red, nearly as old as I am.”
    “You’re a big guy—you fit in that thing?”
    “He fits great,” Sherlock said. “I have to beat the women off with a stick.”
    “More often it’s the guys,” Savich said, “with their heads under the hood.”
    Chappy had Dix turn right off Raintree Road onto a single-lane road that was covered in snow and badly rutted. Dix said, “No one’s ever plowed this road. The snow looks pretty deep but I think we can get through. The Rover has never let me down.”
    It was slow going, the snow reaching nearly to the top of the Range Rover’s wheels at times, but they kept moving. They passed a couple of old wooden houses set in hollows of land a good ways back from the road, surrounded by trees, snow piled high around them and over the old cars parked in the driveways.
    Dix said more to himself than to anyone else, “That’s Walt McGuffey’s place. It doesn’t look like he’s left the house in a while. I’d better call Emory, have him check to see if Guff is okay.” He pulled out his cell phone and called the station.
    When he signed off, Ruth noticed how quiet it was out in the woods. The bright midday sun beat down, glistening off the white hills, sending drops of snowmelt falling in a rapid cadence from the naked oak branches.
    The road dead-ended about fifty feet ahead. Dix said, “I don’t think we should go off-road in this snow.”
    “Don’t try, we’re close enough,” Chappy said. “We’ve got us a little hike now. Ruth, you up for it?”
    “Yes, sir,” Ruth said. “A little thump on the head wouldn’t stop me. I’m up for about anything.”
    “Bring your shovel, Dix,” Chappy said.
    The snow was so deep it was inside their boots within fifteen steps of the road. They heard a rustle in the trees to their left, and a rabbit appeared, stared at them, and hopped back into the woods, up to his neck in snow.
    “I don’t think he’s one of the bad guys,” Dix said. “Look around you, it doesn’t get more beautiful than this.”
    Chappy said, “Yeah, yeah, you’re a regular PR guy for Maestro, and here you are, a city boy.”
    Dix rolled his eyes. “Not anymore, Chappy. I’ll tell you, when I visited my family in New York City last year, it

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