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R Is for Ricochet

R Is for Ricochet

Titel: R Is for Ricochet Kostenlos Bücher Online Lesen
Autoren: Sue Grafton
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window. I sat down at my desk. With the light coming in, she was almost entirely in silhouette. I picked up a pencil and made a mark on my blotter. "Where's your head at this point?"
    She turned and smiled at me briefly. "Not as far up my butt as it was."
    And that was where we left it.
    I told her to take her time thinking about the situation before she decided what to do. Vince Turner might be in a hurry, but he was asking a lot and, one way or the other, she'd better be convinced. Once she'd agreed, he couldn't afford to have her changing her mind. I watched her through the window. She got in her car and sat there long enough to light up again and then she took off. Once I knew she was gone, I put a call through to Cheney and laid out the sequence of events, including the hapless FBI agent who'd put the plan at risk.
    He said, "Shit."
    "That was my reaction."
    "Damn. And there's no name on this crud?"
    "None, and no description of him, either. I'd have pressed her for details, but I was too busy trying to act like I didn't know the whole of it in advance."
    "She buy it?"
    "I'd say so. In the main. Anyway, I thought you'd want to call Vince and let him know where we stand."
    "Which is where?"
    "I'm not sure. Reba needs time. This is a lot to digest."
    "Doesn't sound like she was that surprised."
    "I think she's always known more than she lets on. Now that it's out in the open, we'll see what she does with it."
    "Makes me nervous."
    "Me, too. Let me know what Vince says."
    "Will do. See you later."
    "Okey-doke," said I.

Chapter 14
    I closed the office at 5:00, locked the door behind me, and retrieved my car. I drove the long way home so I could stop at my favorite service station and fill the tank with gas. As I cruised down State Street past the heart of town, I spotted a familiar figure. It was William in a dark fedora and a dark three-piece suit, walking briskly toward Cabana Boulevard, swinging his black malacca stick. I slowed and honked, pulling over to the curb. I leaned over and rolled down the window on the passenger side. "You want a ride?"
    William tipped his hat. "Thank you. I'd appreciate that."
    He opened the car door and angled himself in, his long legs sticking up awkwardly in the cramped front seat. He kept his cane between his knees.
    "You can slide that seat back and get yourself more room. The lever's right down there," I said, pointing toward his feet.
    "This is fine. It's not far."
    I glanced over my left shoulder, waiting for a break in traffic before I eased into the flow. "I didn't expect to see you down here and you're all decked out. What's the occasion?"
    "I attended a visitation at Wynington-Blake. Afterward, I had a cup of tea with the sole surviving family member. Lovely man."
    "Oh, sorry. I didn't realize someone died. I wouldn't have sounded quite so chirpy if I'd known."
    "That's all right. This was Francis Bunch. Eighty-three years old."
    "Gee, that's young."
    "My thought precisely. He was mowing his lawn Monday and blew an aneurysm in his brain. His second cousin Norbert is the only one left. At one count, there were twenty-six first cousins and now everybody's gone."
    "That's a tough one."
    "It is. Francis was quite the fellow – U.S. Army veteran, who fought in WW Two. He was a retired pipe-fitter and a Baptist. Preceded in death by his parents, his wife of sixty-two years – Mae was her name – seven children, and his brother, James. Norbert said Francis loved working in his yard so he went the way he would have wanted, except perhaps not quite so soon."
    I turned the corner onto Cabana Boulevard and drove the three blocks to Castle, where I turned right again. "How long had you known him?"
    William looked surprised. "Oh, I never met the man. I read about him in the paper. With
so
many of his family gone, I thought
someone
should be there to pay their respects. Norbert was most appreciative. We had a nice long chat."
    "I thought you'd given up funerals."
    "I have… in the main… but there's no harm in attending a service now and then."
    I turned right onto my street, passing Rosie's. I spotted a space halfway between my apartment and the restaurant and then did a half-assed job of parallel parking. Close enough, I thought. I shut the engine down and turned to him. "Before you go, I've been wondering about something. Did you, by any chance, call Lewis in Michigan and talk him into coming?"
    "Oh, he didn't require much persuasion. Once I mentioned Mattie's name, he was

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