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The Mephisto Club

The Mephisto Club

Titel: The Mephisto Club Kostenlos Bücher Online Lesen
Autoren: Tess Gerritsen
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Foundation?” said Maura. “Is that what you’re talking about?”
    There was a silence. In the other room, a phone began to ring.
    Edwina suddenly laughed. “She’s one step ahead of you, Anthony.”
    “How did you know about the foundation?” he asked, looking at Maura. Then he gave a knowing sigh. “Detective Rizzoli, of course. I hear she’s been asking questions.”
    “She’s paid to ask questions,” said Maura.
    “Is she finally satisfied that we’re not suspects?”
    “It’s just that she doesn’t like mysteries. And your group is very mysterious.”
    “And that’s why you accepted my invitation tonight. To find out who we are.”
    “I think I have found out,” said Maura. “And I think I’ve heard enough to make a decision.” She set down her glass. “Metaphysics doesn’t interest me. I know there’s evil in the world, and there always has been. But you don’t need to believe in Satan or demons to explain it. Human beings are perfectly capable of evil all by themselves.”
    “You aren’t in the least bit interested in joining the foundation?” asked Edwina.
    “I wouldn’t belong here. And I think I should leave now.” She turned to find Jeremy standing in the doorway.
    “Mr. Sansone?” The manservant was holding a portable phone. “Mr. Stark just called. He’s quite concerned.”
    “About what?”
    “Dr. O’Donnell was supposed to pick him up, but she hasn’t appeared yet.”
    “When was she supposed to be at his house?”
    “Forty-five minutes ago. He’s been calling, but she doesn’t answer either her home phone or her cell.”
    “Let me try her number.” Sansone took the phone and dialed, drumming the table as he waited. He disconnected, dialed again, his fingers tapping faster. No one in the room spoke; they were all watching him, listening to the accelerating rhythm of his fingers. The night Eve Kassovitz died, these people had sat in this very room, not realizing that Death was right outside. That it had found its way into their garden, and had left its strange symbols on their door. This house had been marked.
    Perhaps the people inside it were marked as well.
    Sansone hung up.
    “Shouldn’t you call the police?” asked Maura.
    “Oh, Joyce may simply have forgotten,” said Edwina. “It seems a little premature to ask the police to rush in.”
    Jeremy said, “Would you like me to drive over and check Dr. O’Donnell’s house?”
    Sansone stared for a moment at the phone. “No,” he finally said. “I’ll go. I’d rather you stayed here, just in case Joyce calls.”
    Maura followed him into the parlor, where he grabbed his overcoat from the closet. She, too, pulled on her coat.
    “Please stay and have dinner,” he said, reaching for his car keys. “There’s no need for you to rush home.”
    “I’m not going home,” she said. “I’m coming with you.”

TWENTY-TWO
    Joyce O’Donnell’s porch light was on, but no one answered the door.
    Sansone tried the knob. “It’s locked,” he said, and took out his cell phone. “Let me try calling her one more time.”
    As he dialed, Maura backed away from the porch and stood on the walkway, gazing up at O’Donnell’s house, at a second-floor window that cast its cheery glow into the night. Faintly, she heard a phone ringing inside. Then, once again, silence.
    Sansone disconnected. “Her answering machine picked up.”
    “I think it’s time to call Rizzoli.”
    “Not yet.” He produced a flashlight and headed along the shoveled walkway toward the side of the house.
    “Where are you going?”
    He continued toward the driveway, black coat melting into the shadows. The beam of his light skimmed across flagstones and disappeared around the corner.
    She stood alone in the front yard, listening to the rattle of dead leaves in the branches above her. “Sansone?” she called out. He didn’t answer. She heard only the pounding of her own heart. She followed him around the corner of the house. There she halted in the deserted driveway, the shadow of the garage looming before her. She started to call his name again, but something silenced her: the creeping awareness of another presence watching her, tracking her. She turned and quickly scanned the street. She saw a scrap of windblown paper tumble down the road like a fluttering wraith.
    A hand closed around her arm.
    Gasping, she stumbled away. She found herself staring at Sansone, who had silently materialized right behind her.
    “Her car’s

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