Bücher online kostenlos Kostenlos Online Lesen
The Hard Way

The Hard Way

Titel: The Hard Way Kostenlos Bücher Online Lesen
Autoren: Lee Child
Vom Netzwerk:
together, making love with a kind of patience and tenderness he had never experienced before.
    “Older women,” she said. “We’re worth it.”
    He didn’t answer. Just smiled and ducked his head and kissed her neck below her ear, where her skin was damp and tasted of salt water.

----

    Afterward they showered together and finished their wine and went back to bed. Reacher was too tired to think and too relaxed to care. He just floated, warm, spent, happy. Pauling snuggled against him and they fell asleep like that.

----

    Much later Reacher felt Pauling stir and woke up to find her hands over his eyes. She asked him in a whisper, “What time is it?”
    “Eighteen minutes to seven,” he said. “In the morning.”
    “You’re unbelievable.”
    “It’s not a very useful talent. Saves me the price of a new watch, maybe.”
    “What happened to the old one?”
    “I stepped on it. I put it by the bed and I stood on it when I got up.”
    “And that broke it?”
    “I was wearing shoes.”
    “In bed?”
    “Saves time getting dressed.”
    “You
are
unbelievable.”
    “I don’t do it all the time. It depends on the bed.”
    “What would it mean if Gregory was wrong about the time and you were right?”
    He took a breath and opened his mouth to say
I don’t know.
    But then he stopped.
    Because suddenly he saw what it would mean.
    “Wait,” he said.
    He lay back on the pillow and stared up at the darkened ceiling.
    “Do you like chocolate?” he asked.
    “I guess.”
    “You got a flashlight?”
    “There’s a small Maglite in my purse.”
    “Put it in your pocket,” he said. “Leave the purse home. And wear pants. The skirt is no good.”

CHAPTER 49
    THEY WALKED, BECAUSE it was a beautiful city morning and Reacher was too restless to ride the subway or take a cab. Barrow, to Bleecker, then south on Sixth Avenue. It was already warm. They took it slow, to time it right. They turned east on Spring Street at seven-thirty exactly. Crossed Sullivan, crossed Thompson.
    “We’re going to the abandoned building?” Pauling asked.
    “Eventually,” Reacher said.
    He stopped outside the chocolate shop. Cupped his hands against the glass and peered in. There was a light in the kitchen. He could see the owner moving about, small, dark, tired, her back to him.
Sixteen-hour days,
she had said.
Regular as clockwork, seven days a week, small business, we never rest.
    He knocked on the glass, loud, and the owner stopped and turned and looked exasperated until she recognized him. Then she shrugged and admitted defeat and walked through the front of the store to the door. Undid the locks and opened the door a crack and said, “Hello.”
    Air bitter with chocolate flooded out at him.
    He asked, “Can we come through to the alley again?”
    “Who’s your friend this time?”
    Pauling stepped forward and said her name.
    The owner asked, “Are you really exterminators?”
    “Investigators,” Pauling said. She had a business card ready.
    “What are you investigating?”
    “A woman disappeared,” Reacher said. “And her child.”
    Silence for a moment.
    The owner asked, “You think they’re next door?”
    “No,” Reacher said. “Nobody’s next door.”
    “That’s good.”
    “This is just routine.”
    “Would you like a chocolate?”
    “Not for breakfast,” Reacher said.
    “I would love one,” Pauling said.
    The owner held the door wide and Pauling and Reacher stepped inside. Pauling took a moment choosing a chocolate. She settled on a raspberry fondant as big as a golf ball. Took a little bite and made a noise that sounded like appreciation. Then she followed Reacher through the kitchen and down the short tiled hallway. Out through the back door to the alley.
    The rear of the abandoned building was exactly as Reacher had last seen it. The dull red door, the corroded black knob, the filthy ground floor window. He turned the knob and pushed, just in case, but the door was locked, as expected. He bent down and unlaced his shoe. Took it off and held the toe in his hand and used the heel like a two-pound hammer. Used it to break the window glass, low down and on the left, close to the door lock.
    He tapped a little more and widened the hole and then put his shoe back on. Put his arm through the hole in the glass up to his shoulder and hugged the wall and groped around until he found the inside door handle. He unlocked it and withdrew his arm very carefully.
    “OK,” he said.
    He opened the door

Weitere Kostenlose Bücher