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Pop Goes the Weasel

Pop Goes the Weasel

Titel: Pop Goes the Weasel Kostenlos Bücher Online Lesen
Autoren: James Patterson
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Shafer’s thrill-seeking ride that ended near Dupont Circle. It seemed a strangely appealing prospect. I took my own advice not to try to guess how the jury would decide the case. It could go either way.
    I let myself think about Christine, and I choked up. It was too much. Tears began to stream down my cheeks. I had to pull over.
    I took a deep breath, then another. The pain in my chest was still as fresh as it had been the day she disappeared in Bermuda. She had tried to stay away from me, but I wouldn’t let her. I was responsible for what had happened to her.
    I drove around Washington, riding in gently aimless circles. I finally reached home more than two and a half hours after leaving the courthouse.
    Nana came running out of the house. She must have seen me pull into the driveway. She’d obviously been waiting for me.
    I leaned out of the driver’s-side window. The deejay was still talking congenially on Public Radio.
    “What is it, old woman? What’s the matter now?” I asked Nana.
    “Ms. Fitzgibbon called you, Alex. The jury is coming back. They have a verdict.”

Chapter 100
    I WAS APPREHENSIVE as could be. But I was also curious beyond anything I could remember.
    I backed out of the driveway and sped downtown. I got back to the courthouse in less than fifteen minutes. The crowd on E Street was even larger and more unruly than it had been at the height of the trial. At least a half-dozen Union Jacks waved in the wind; contrasting with them were American flags, including some painted across bare chests and faces.
    I had to push and literally inch my way through the crush of people up close to the courthouse steps. I ignored every question from the press. I tried to avoid anyone with a camera in hand, or the hungry look of a reporter.
    I entered the packed courtroom just before the jury filed back inside. “You almost missed it,” I said to myself.
    Judge Fescoe spoke to the crowd as soon as everyone was seated. “There will be no demonstrations when this verdict is read. If any demonstrations occur, marshals will clear this room immediately,” he instructed in a soft but clear voice.
    I stood a few rows behind the prosecution team and tried to find a regular breathing pattern. It was inconceivable that Geoffrey Shafer could be set free; there was no doubt in my mind that he’d murdered several people — not just Patsy Hampton, but at least some of the Jane Does as well. He was a wanton pattern killer, one of the worst, and had been getting away with it for years. I realized now that Shafer might be the most outrageous and daring of all the killers I’d faced. He played his game with the pedal pressed to the floor. He absolutely refused to lose.
    “Mr. Foreman, do you have a verdict for us?” Judge Fescoe asked in somber tones.
    Raymond Horton, the foreman, replied, “Your Honor, we have a verdict.”
    I glanced over at Shafer; he appeared confident. As he had since the trial began, he was dressed today in a tailored suit, white shirt, and tie. He had no conscience whatsoever; he had no fear of anything that might happen to him. Maybe that was a partial explanation for why he’d run free for so long.
    Judge Fescoe looked unusually stern. “Very well. Will the defendant please rise?”
    Geoffrey Shafer stood at the defense table, and his longish blond hair gleamed under the bright overhead lighting. He towered over Jules Halpern and his daughter, Jane. Shafer held his hands behind him, as if he were cuffed. I wondered if he might have a pair of twenty-sided dice clasped in them, the kind I had seen in his study.
    Judge Fescoe addressed the foreman again. “As to count one of the indictment, Aggravated, Premeditated Murder in the First Degree, how do you find?”
    The foreman, “Not guilty , Your Honor.”
    I felt as if my head had suddenly spun off. The audience packed into the small room went completely wild. The press rushed to the bar. The judge had promised to clear the room, but he was already retreating to his chambers.
    I saw Shafer walk toward the press, but then he quickly passed them by. What was he doing now? He noticed a man in the crowd and nodded stiffly in his direction. Who was that?
    Then Shafer continued toward where I was, in the fourth row. I wanted to vault over the chairs after him. I wanted him so bad, and I knew I had just lost my chance to do it the right way.
    “Detective Cross,” he said in his usual supercilious manner. “Detective Cross, there’s

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