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The Empty Chair

The Empty Chair

Titel: The Empty Chair Kostenlos Bücher Online Lesen
Autoren: Jeffery Deaver
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drop to the ground but, of course, remained upright in the Storm Arrow wheelchair. More bullets slammed into the van where Sachs and Lucy, now face down on the grass, had been standing a moment before. Thom was on his knees, trying to work the heavy wheelchair out of the depression of soft earth where it was lodged.
    “Lincoln!” Sachs cried.
    “I’m okay. Move! Get to the other side of the van. Under cover.”
    Lucy said, “But Garrett can target us from there.”
    Sachs snapped back, “But he’s not the one who’s goddamn shooting!”
    Another shotgun blast missed them by a foot and the pellets rattled along the porch. Thom put the wheelchair in neutral and muscled it toward the cabin side of the van. “Stay low,” Rhyme said to the aide, who ignored a shot that zipped past them and shattered a side window of the vehicle.
    Lucy and Sachs followed the two men to the shadowy area between the cabin and the van.
    “Why the hell’re they doing this?” Lucy cried. She fired several shots, sending O’Sarian and Tomel scrabbling for cover. Rhyme couldn’t see Culbeau but knew that the big man was directly in front of them somewhere. The rifle that he’d been carrying was high powered and fitted with a large telescopic sight.
    “Take the cuffs off and give me the gun,” Sachs shouted.
    “Give it to her,” Rhyme said. “She’s a better shot than you.”
    “No goddamn way!” The deputy shook her head, her expression one of astonishment at this suggestion. More bullets slapped the metal of the van, dug out chunks of wood from the porch.
    “They’ve got fucking rifles!” Sachs raged. “You’re no match for them. Give me the gun!”
    Lucy rested her head against the side of the van and stared in shock at the slain deputies lying in the grass. “What’s going on?” she muttered, crying. “What’s happening?”
    Their cover—the van—wasn’t going to last much longer. It protected them from Culbeau and his rifle but the other two were flanking them. In a few minutes they’d set up a cross fire.
    Lucy fired twice more—into the grass where a shotgun blast had erupted a moment before.
    “Don’t waste your ammunition,” Sachs ordered. “Wait till you have a clear shot. Otherwise—”
    “Shut the hell up,” Lucy raged. She patted her pockets. “Lost the goddamn phone.”
    “Lincoln,” Thom said, “I’m taking you out of the chair. You’re too much of a target.”
    Rhyme nodded. The aide undid the harness, got his arms around Rhyme’s chest and pulled him out, laid him on the ground. Rhyme tried to lift his head to see what was going on but a contracture—a merciless cramp—gripped his neck muscles and he had to lower his head tothe grass until the pain passed. He’d never felt as stabbed by his helplessness as at this moment.
    More shots. Closer. And more insane laughter from O’Sarian. “Hey, knife lady, where are you?”
    Lucy muttered, “They’re almost in position.”
    “Ammo?” Sachs asked.
    “I’ve got three left in the chamber, one Speedloader.”
    “Loaded six?”
    “Yeah.”
    A shot slammed into the back of the Storm Arrow and knocked it on its side. A cloud of dust rose up around it.
    Lucy fired at O’Sarian but his giggling and the staccato response from the Colt told them that she’d missed.
    The rifle fire also told them that in only a minute or two they’d be completely flanked.
    They’d die here, shot to death, trapped in this dim valley between the shattered van and the cabin. Rhyme wondered what he would feel when the bullets tore into his body. No pain, of course, not even any pressure in his numb flesh. He glanced at Sachs, who was looking at him with a hopeless expression on her face.
    You and me, Sachs. . . .
    Then he glanced at the front of the cabin.
    “Look,” he called.
    Lucy and Sachs followed his eyes.
    Garrett had opened the front door.
    Sachs said, “Let’s get inside.”
    “Are you crazy?” Lucy called. “Garrett’s with them. They’re all together.”
    “No,” Rhyme said. “He’s had a chance to shoot from the window. He didn’t.”
    Two more shots, very close. The bushes rustled nearby. Lucy lifted the pistol.
    “Don’t waste it!” Sachs called. But Lucy rose and fired two fast shots at the sound. The rock one of the men had thrown to shake the bushes and trick her into presenting a target rolled into view. Lucy jumped aside just asTomel’s shotgun blast, meant for her back, streaked past, puncturing the side of

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