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The Bodies Left Behind

The Bodies Left Behind

Titel: The Bodies Left Behind Kostenlos Bücher Online Lesen
Autoren: Jeffery Deaver
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attempted to kill them tonight and he had no reason to think they’d given up trying. Sure, they wanted to escape. But he couldn’t get Brynn’s eyes out of his mind. Both in the driveway of the Feldmans’ house and then in the van just before she released the brake, risking her own death to stop him.
    You have the right to remain silent. You have the right to an attorney.  . . .
    Hart had to smile.
    At that moment a faint scream sounded in the distance, ahead of them. A high squeal.
    “The hell’s that?” Lewis looked alarmed. “Fucking Blair Witch Project. ”
    Hart laughed. “That’s the girl. The little girl.”
    “She’s as good as your GPS, Hart.”
    And they broke into a run.

    “AN ANIMAL?” MUNCE asked in a whisper.
    Graham cocked his head, listening to the keening howl somewhere nearby, to their left, it seemed, carried on the breeze. He’d seen an animal—a coyote or feral dog, maybe even a wolf—on a ridge, looking their way. Was that the source of the sound? He knew plants, he knew soil and silt and rock. He didn’t know animals or their habits.
    “Could be, I don’t know.”
    It hadn’t sounded like a woman’s voice. It had almost seemed like a child. But that couldn’t be.
    “Maybe the wind,” Munce offered.
    Though there’d been a sense of alarm, an uneasiness about it. Fear more than pain. Now silence.
    Wind, bird, animal . . . Please. Let it be one of those.
    “Down there,” Munce said. “Right below us.”
    Graham was frowning at the daunting sweep of trees that disappeared away from them. They’d come about a quarter mile, picking their way slowly through the dense woodland. It was a much longer trek than expected, owing to detours around brush thick as scouring pads and steep cliffs that couldn’t be negotiated without rappelling gear—which Munce had announced he wished they’d had and Graham was grateful they didn’t.
    They started down the hillside, using trees as handholds once again. Then they found themselves stymied—in a funnel of rock. “I think that’s our only option,” Munce said, pointing down a chute descending away from them. It was about six feet wide and at a forty-five-degree slope, littered with shale and gravel and dirt. Slippery as ice. And if you fell you’d slide along the rugged stone surface for a good fifty feet to a precipice. They couldn’t see what lay beyond. “Or we go back and try to make our way around.”
    Just then another wail filled the night. The men looked at each other, eyes wide.
    There was no doubt the sound had come from a human throat.
    “We go,” Graham said, torn between a frantic need to find the source of the screams and fear that, if they lost their footing here, they’d find themselves tumbling off a cliff—or sliding into a grove of deadly honey locust.

“WHERE’S MY MOTHER?” Amy shrieked again.
    “Please, honey,” Brynn said to the little girl. Held her finger to her lips. “Please be quiet.”
    Exhausted, emotionally drained, the little girl was losing it.
    “No!” she wailed. Her face was bright red, eyes and nose streaming. “Noooo!”
    “Those men will hurt us, Amy. We have to be quiet.”
    “Mommy!”
    They were on a relatively flat stretch of ground in a thick forest, the trees only a yard or two apart. They’d been moving along well when suddenly Amy had become hysterical.
    “Where’s my mommy ? I want to go back to Mommy!”
    Forcing a smile onto her face, Brynn knelt down and took the girl by the shoulders. “Please, honey, we have to be quiet. We’re playing that game, remember? We need to be quiet.”
    “I don’t want to play any game! I want to go back! I want Mommy!”
    The girl’s age was close to ten but once again Brynn thought she was acting more like a five- or six-year-old—maybe a reaction to this terrible evening, maybe a harrowing insight about her upbringing.
    “Please!”
    “Nooo!” The volume of the accompanying squeal was astonishing.
    “Let me try,” Michelle said, kneeling in front of Amy and setting down the spear. She handed the girl her stuffed toy. Amy flung it to the ground.
    Brynn said, “I’ll check behind us. If they’re nearby they had to’ve heard her.” She jogged back twenty feet and climbed a small hillock, gazed back.
    The girl’s screaming seemed like a siren.
    Brynn squinted through the night.
    Oh, no . . .
    She was dismayed, but not surprised to see, twohundred yards away, the men making their way in this direction.

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