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The Devils Teardrop

The Devils Teardrop

Titel: The Devils Teardrop Kostenlos Bücher Online Lesen
Autoren: Jeffery Deaver
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said.
    “Where?” Kennedy asked sourly.
    “Right outside. In the hallway.” Then he examined the mayor. “You’re having doubts again?”
    How trim the man was, Kennedy thought, how perfect he looks in his imported suit, with his shaved head, his silk tie frothing at his throat.
    “Sure, I’m having doubts.”
    The mayor looked out of another window—one that didn’t offer a view of the Capitol. He could see, in the distance, the logotype tower of Georgetown University. His undergrad alma mater. He and Claire lived not far away from the school. He remembered, last fall, the two of them walking up the steep stairway the priest had tumbled down at the end of The Exorcist.
    The priest who sacrificed himself to save the girl possessed by a demon.
    Now, there’s an omen for you.
    He nodded. “All right. Go talk to him.”
    Jefferies nodded. “We’ll get through this, Jerry. We will.” Into the phone he said, “I’ll be right out.”
    * * *
    In the hallway outside of the mayor’s office a handsome man in a double-breasted suit leaned against the wall, right below a portrait of some nineteenth-century politician.
    Wendell Jefferies walked up to him.
    “Hey, Wendy.”
    “Slade.” This was the man’s first name, his real givenname, believe it or not, and—with the surname Phillips—you’d think his parents had foreseen that their handsome infant would one day be a handsome anchorman for a TV station. Which in fact he was.
    “Got the story on the scanner. Dude lit up two agents, did a Phantom of the Opera on a dozen poor bastards in the bleachers.”
    On the air, with an earplug wire curling down his razor-cleaned neck, Phillips talked differently. In public he talked differently. With white people he talked differently. But Jefferies was black and Slade wanted him to think he talked the talk.
    Phillips continued. “Capped one, I think.”
    Jefferies didn’t point out to the newscaster that in gangsta slang the verb “cap” meant “shoot to death” not “chandelier to death.”
    “Nearly got the perp but he booked.”
    “That’s what I heard,” Jefferies said.
    “So the man’s gonna rub our uglies and make us feel better?” This was a reference to Kennedy’s impending press conference.
    Jefferies had no patience today to coddle the likes of Slade Phillips. He didn’t smile. “Here it is. This quote dude’s gonna keep going. Nobody knows how dangerous he is.”
    “How dangerous is—”
    Jefferies waved him quiet. “This is as bad as it gets.”
    “I know that.”
    “Everybody’s going to be looking at him.”
    Him. Uppercase H. Jerry Kennedy. Phillips would understand this.
    “Sure.”
    “So, we need some help,” Jefferies said, lowering hisvoice to a pitch that resonated with the sound of money changing hands.
    “Help.”
    “We can go twenty-five on this one.”
    “Twenty-five.”
    “You bargaining?” Jefferies asked.
    “No, no. Just . . . that’s a lot. What do you want me to do?”
    “I want him—”
    “Kennedy.”
    Jefferies sighed. “Yes. Him . To get through this like he’s a hero. I mean, the hero. People’re dead and more people’re probably gonna die. Get the focus on him for visiting vics and standing up to terrorists and, I don’t know, coming up with some brilliant shit about catching the killer. And get the focus off him for fuckups.”
    “Off—?”
    “The mayor,” Jefferies said. “Kennedy’s not the one—”
    “No, he’s not the one running the case.” Phillips cleared his baritone voice. “Is that what you were going to say?”
    “Right,” Jefferies said. “If there’s any glitch make sure he wasn’t informed and that he did his best to make it right.”
    “Well, it’s a Feebie operation, right? So we can just—”
    “That’s true, Slade, but we don’t want to go blaming the Bureau for anything.” Jefferies talked to his ten-year-old nephew in just this tone.
    “We don’t? Why exactly?”
    “We just don’t.”
    Finally Slade Phillips, used to reading off of a TelePrompTer, had had it. “I don’t get it, Wendy. What do you want me to do?”
    “I want you to play real reporter for a change.”
    “Sure.” Phillips began writing copy in his head. “So Kennedy’s taking a tough line. He’s marshaling cops. He’s going to the hospitals . . . Wait, without his wife?”
    “ With his wife,” Jefferies said patiently.
    Phillips nodded toward the press room. “But wait—they were saying . . . I mean, the guy

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