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The Mammoth Book of Paranormal Romance

The Mammoth Book of Paranormal Romance

Titel: The Mammoth Book of Paranormal Romance Kostenlos Bücher Online Lesen
Autoren: Trisha Telep
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    Five years ago, Emma Cooper would have thought a blown tyre in the middle of a blizzard was bad. But bad was the small, spiked metal ball her fingers found embedded in the rubber — and worse was the truck, its headlights on bright, pulling off the two-lane highway and onto the shoulder twenty yards behind her Jeep.
    The tyre iron in her hands rattled against the one lug nut she’d had time to crack loose. She hadn’t even raised the jack yet, it lay on the icy asphalt behind the flat front tyre.
    No, not much time had passed at all. He must have been waiting off the road for her to drive by, his truck concealed by the dark and the snow.
    Don’t panic, Emma told herself, and pulled in a long breath between her chattering teeth Now was definitely not the time to panic.
    Still gripping the tyre iron, Emma rose from her crouch. The rattling rumble of his diesel motor cut off. The pounding of her heart filled the sudden, snow-muffled silence.
    Stay calm. She tugged open the front door of her Jeep, slid into the driver’s seat and hit the locks.
    Emma had been living in Seattle the past five years, but she’d kept up on the local news. In the last eighteen months, four vehicles — each with flat tyres - had been found abandoned on this rural stretch of Oregon highway. Each time, searchers recovered the body of a woman from the surrounding woods. Each woman had been raped and strangled.
    The truck door slammed shut. Oh, God. She squinted against the glare of headlights in the rear-view mirror, but couldn’t see anything. With her right hand, she rummaged blindly through her purse on the passenger seat and found her cell phone.
    It had been years since she’d dialled the number, but she still knew it by heart. Nathan Forrester answered on the third ring. She spoke over his sleep-roughened greeting.
    “Hey, Sheriff Studly.” Emma could see the dark figure in her side mirror now. The silhouetted shape was tall, and wearing a thick coat and a cowboy hat. She couldn’t tell if he carried a gun. “I’m on the side of the highway with a flat tyre, and I could really, really use a lift.”
    “Emma? Oh, Christ. Emma, listen - don’t accept any help.”
    “I didn’t plan on it.” She stared at the mirror. He’d walked half the distance to her Jeep. Her fingers tightened on the tyre iron, her nails drawing blood from the heel of her palm. Stay calm. “But I think he plans to offer help anyway.”
    She heard Nathan swearing and running across a wooden floor. “Where are you? You still have your Jeep?”
    “About ten miles before the Bluffs turn-off. And, yes, I still have it.”
    “OK, Emma, I’m on my way, but you’ve got to drive. Stay in low gear. The flat tyre will pull hard at your steering wheel, but your Jeep will go. So you start it now and get the hell out of there.”
    Emma jammed the phone between her cheek and shoulder, turned the ignition key. The engine fired up. A shadow darkened her window.
    She looked over just as he swung her jack through the glass.
    It was worse than the others had been — the window shattered, the door hanging open, blood splashed in the snow. Gun in hand, Nathan jumped from his Blazer, his unlaced boots skidding on the icy road. He slid into the side of the Jeep, glanced inside.
    The seats were empty.
    The breath he drew to roar her name felt like the first he’d pulled into his aching chest since he’d heard the breaking glass and her aborted shriek.
    “Emma!”
    The echo faded, leaving the whisper of falling snow and the low growl of his truck engine. A trail of blood and thrashed snow led behind the Jeep. Nathan followed it, the freezing air biting at his face, his uncovered ears.
    From the pine trees alongside the road came the snap of a breaking branch. Nathan swung around, scanning the night. The light from the half-moon barely pierced the treeline, and the shadows between the pines danced in the flashing red and blue lights from his truck. His muscles tensed; something was moving through the woods, its eyes reflecting the strobe lights like a cat’s. He aimed his flashlight, switched it on.
    The high-powered light flooded Emma’s pale face before her hand flew up, shielding her eyes.
    Oh, thank God. Thank God. His knees almost gave out, but through some miracle, he remained standing. He skimmed the light down her body, and his heart lurched. Blood stained her sweater and jeans. He pushed into the snowdrift on the highway shoulder, began to wade towards

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