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Rules of Prey

Rules of Prey

Titel: Rules of Prey Kostenlos Bücher Online Lesen
Autoren: John Sandford
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stepped quickly back out of the room, over to Vullion. Vullion was dead. Lucas nodded, retrieved the gym bag, and lifted out the silenced pistol. He fitted it to Vullion’s gloved hand, pointed it at Carla’s shelf of art books, and pulled the trigger. There was a phut and pop ! as the slug hit a three-inch-thick copy of The Great Book of French Impressionism. Lucas pulled the silencer off the muzzle and laid the weapon on the floor a few feet from Vullion’s outstretched hand. He looked around on the floor, found the shell casing from the blank he’d fired, and pocketed it.
    The elevators started up and Lucas pulled the silencer apart as he reviewed the scene.
    There would be powder residue, nitrites, on Vullion’s glove, on his bare wrist, on the sleeve of his coat and his face. The slug in the bookshelf, if it could be salvaged at all, would match test shots from the Smith found on the floor next to Vullion’s body. Both the Smith and Lucas’ P7 were nine-millimeters, so that would account for the fact that the shots would sound the same on the 911 tape. And the shots were sequenced so closely that no one would doubt that Lucas had fired in self-defense.
    It would hold up, he thought with satisfaction. He would have to work on his story a bit. He and Vullion fought in the bedroom. He dragged Vullion out, not wanting to endanger Carla, and outside the room, Vullion had pulled the pistol, which had been tucked into his waistband. That would do it. Nobody would want to know too much, anyway.
    He walked to a window, pulled it open, and threw out the two big plastic pieces of the silencer. Just more street junk. The Thinsulate wrapping and the internal tube he tossed among Carla’s stock of weaving materials. He would retrieve it later, get rid of it.
    He slipped his own pistol into its holster and walked back to Carla’s bedroom. She lay unmoving on the bed, but her chest was rising and falling regularly.
    “It’s Lucas again,” he told her, gripping her leg with his good hand. “Everything’s going to be okay. It’s Lucas.”
    He heard the first St. Paul cop enter the room, and yelled, “Back here, Minneapolis police, Lucas Davenport, we need an ambulance quick . . .”
    As he called out, Vullion’s stunned and dying face flashed through the back of Lucas’ mind.
    He thought, “That’s six.”

CHAPTER
35
    Two days after Christmas, his hand still in a cast six weeks after the surgery, Lucas walked across an empty campus, through a driving snowstorm, to Elle Kruger’s office in Fat Albert Hall. Her office was on the third floor. He took the worn concrete steps, unzipping his parka and brushing snow from his shoulders as he climbed. The third-floor hallway was dark. At the far end, one office showed a lighted pane of frosted glass. His footsteps echoed as he walked down and knocked.
    “Come in, Lucas.”
    He pushed open the door. Elle was reading in an armchair that sat to one side of the desk, facing a small couch. An inexpensive stereo played “The Great Gate of Kiev” from Pictures at an Exhibition. Lucas handed her a package he’d carried in his coat pocket.
    “A gift.” She smiled happily, her face lighted, weighing the package in her hand. “I hope it wasn’t expensive.”
    Lucas hung his parka on a coatrack and dropped onto the couch. “Tell you the truth, it cost an arm and a leg.”
    Her smile diminished slightly. “You know we seek poverty.”
    “This won’t make you any richer,” Lucas said. “If you ever sell it, I’ll come over and strangle you.”
    “Ah. Then I suppose . . .” She shook her head and began to unwrap the box. “My biggest problem, the cause of my most grievous sin, is curiosity.”
    “I’ll never understand the Church,” Lucas said.
    The nun opened the small red box and fished out amedallion of yellow gold on a long gold chain. “Lucas,” she said.
    “Read it,” he said.
    She turned it in her hands and read, “ ‘Agnus Dei: qui tollis peccata mundi, miserere nobis’  . . . it’s from the Missal. ‘O Lamb of God, who takest away the sins of the world, have mercy on us.’ ”
    “That’s certainly pious enough.”
    She sighed. “It’s still gold.”
    “So wear it with disdain. When you start to like it, send it to Mother Teresa.”
    She laughed. “Mother Teresa,” she said. She looked at the medallion again, then looked closer and said, “What’s this? On the other side.”
    “A minor inscription.”
    “The letters are so

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