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The Face

The Face

Titel: The Face Kostenlos Bücher Online Lesen
Autoren: Dean Koontz
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hall, the door to the security chief’s apartment stood open.
        At the sight of this, Corky at once grew more serious. With caution he approached the apartment. He stood with his back to the hallway wall, beside the open door, listening.
        When he crossed the threshold, he went in low and fast, holding the Glock in two hands, sweeping left to right, right to left.
        The study was deserted.
        Quickly but prudently, he searched the rest of the apartment and found no sign of his quarry.
        Returning to the front room, he noticed the contents of the six black boxes on the desk. Evidently, Truman was still trying to solve the riddle. Amusing.
        Lines of text on the computer screen drew his attention. Truman appeared to have stepped out in the middle of reading e-mail.
        [563] Indulging the curiosity that was such a fundamental part of him and that had served him remarkably well over the years, Corky spotted YORN at the end of the e-mail. William Yorn, the groundskeeper.
        He read the message from the top: FRIC IS MAKING HIMSELF A HIDEY-HOLE IN THE CONSERVATORY-Much of Yorn’s complaint meant nothing to Corky, but the stuff about the hidey-hole definitely interested him.
        With his two targets roving beyond Corky’s ken, he needed to get to another Crestron panel, and fast. One was inlaid in the bedroom wall here in the security chief’s apartment, but Truman might return at any moment, while Corky was distracted in the other room.
        He saw something on the floor, near the sofa. A cell phone. As if it had been not dropped but flung aside.
        Cautiously he returned to the west hall. He followed it to the door of the McBees’ apartment.
        The blueprints had specified a Crestron panel in their living room. Happily, they were in Santa Barbara.
        According to Ned Hokenberry, in order to facilitate cleaning and other household services, the live-in staff seldom locked the doors to their private quarters other than when they were in residence.
        Good old dead Hokenberry, the freak, proved to be as reliable as the blueprints. Corky entered the McBee apartment and closed the door behind him.
        Next to the front door, the Crestron panel brightened at his touch. He didn’t bother with a lamp.
        A quick motion-detector scan through the ground floor showed no blip except Corky’s, here in the McBee living room.
        On the second floor, someone turned out of the west hall into the long north wing, proceeding in the direction of the library. Perhaps Truman. Perhaps the young Manheim. Whichever, he appeared to be hurrying.
        No movement or detectable body heat on the third floor.
        He surveyed the two subterranean levels. Nothing.
        [564] The figure on the second floor had reached the library. The blip had to be Ethan Truman. He must have gone up there by the back stairs in the west wing.
        Where was the boy? Undetected. Not moving. Not producing any heat within range of the sensors.
        The kid could be in his bedroom or a bathroom. No sensors in those areas.
        Or he might be hunkered in his hidey-hole in the conservatory.
        This hidey-hole business was odd. Judging by Yorn’s message, the staff thought it was peculiar, too.
        Truman running to the library. The kid missing. The cell phone flung aside on the floor of Truman’s apartment.
        Corky Laputa believed in meticulous planning and on the faithful execution of the plan. He was also a friend of chaos.
        He recognized the hand of chaos in this moment. He suspected that Truman knew the property had been breached.
        Ditching the plan for the time being, his heart thrilling to this unexpected development, Corky trusted chaos and sprinted for the conservatory.

        Leaving Maxwell Dalton alone with assurances that he would return in a minute, Hazard Yancy hurried downstairs while the window-breaking can of pine-scented disinfectant was still bouncing from the porch roof to the lawn.
        Tall sidelights flanked the front door, but neither was wide enough to accommodate a man, especially not one as large as Hazard. Furthermore, the relationship of the sidelights to the door lock made it impossible for him to claim to have reached inside and disengaged the deadbolt after smashing either pane.
        Having bolstered his handgun, opening the door, Hazard suddenly expected to be confronted by

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