Bücher online kostenlos Kostenlos Online Lesen
The Twelfth Card

The Twelfth Card

Titel: The Twelfth Card Kostenlos Bücher Online Lesen
Autoren: Jeffery Deaver
Vom Netzwerk:
of the African-American museum yesterday and told him to act concerned about a pile of garbage.
    How many sugars? . . .
    She blinked at the mirror image.
    “I’m Tony. Ron’s brother. Which you probably guessed.”
    “Hi, Detective,” Ron managed breathlessly. His voice wasn’t working right. It was slurred, sloppy.
    “How you feeling?”
    “How ish Geneva?”
    “She’s all right. I’m sure you heard—we stopped him at her aunt’s place but he got away . . . . You hurting? Must be.”
    He nodded toward the IV drip. “Happy soup . . . Don’t feel a thing.”
    “He’ll be okay.”
    “I’ll be okay,” Ron echoed his brother’s words. He took a few deep breaths, blinked.
    “A month or so,” Tony explained. “Some therapy. He’ll be back on duty. Some fractures. Not much internal damage. Thick skull. Which Dad always said.”
    “Shkull.” Ron grinned.
    “You were at the academy together?” She pulled up a chair and sat.
    “Right.”
    “What’s your house?”
    “The Six,” Tony answered.
    The Sixth Precinct was in the heart of west Greenwich Village. Not many muggings or carjackings or drugs. Mostly breakins, gay domestics and incidents by emotionally disturbed artists and writers off their meds. The Six was also home to the Bomb Squad.
    Tony was shaken, sure, but angry too. “The guy kept at him, even when he was down. He didn’t need to.”
    “But maybe,” came Ron’s stumbling words, “it took for time . . . took more time on me. So he didn’t get . . . didn’t get a good chance to go after Geneva.”
    Sachs smiled. “You’re kind of a glass-is-half-full sorta guy.” She didn’t tell him that he’d been beaten nearly to death simply so Unsub 109 could use a bullet from his weapon for a distraction.
    “Sorta am. Thank Sheneva. Gen -eva for me. For the book.” He couldn’t really move his head but his eyes slipped to the side of the bedside table, where a copy of To Kill a Mockingbird lay. “Tony’sh reading to me. He even can read the big wordsh.”
    His brother laughed. “You putz.”
    “So what can you tell us, Ron? This guy’s smart and he’s still out there. We need something we can use.”
    “I don’t know, ma—I don’t know, Detective. I wasssh goin’ up and down th’alley. He hid when I want to . . . went to the street. Came back to theback, the alley . . . I washn’t expecting hih. Him . He was around the corner of the, you know, the bidling . . . the building . I got to the corner. I shaw this guy, in a mask like a ski mashk. And then this thing. Club, bat. Came too fasht. Couldn’t shee it really. Got me good.” He blinked again, closed his eyes. “Careless. Washhh, was too close to the wall. Won’t do that again.”
    You didn’t know. Now you do.
    “A woosh.” He winced.
    “You okay?” his brother asked.
    “I’m okay.”
    “A woosh,” Sachs encouraged, nudged her chair closer.
    “What?”
    “You heard a woosh.”
    “Yes, I heard it, ma’am. Not ‘ma’am.’ Detective.”
    “It’s okay, Ray. Call me whatever. You see anything ? Anything at all?”
    “This thing. Like a bat. No, not Batman and Robin. Ha. A baseball bat. Right at my face. Oh, I told you that. And I went down. I mean, Detective. Not ‘ma’am.’ ”
    “That’s okay, Ron. What do you remember then?”
    “I don’t know. I remember lying on the ground. Thinking . . . I was thinking he was going for my weapon. I tried to control my weapon. Wash . . . was in the book, not to let it go. ‘Always control your weapon.’ But I didn’t. He got it anyway. I wash dead. I knew I was dead.”
    She encouraged softly, “What do you remember seeing?”
    “A tangle.”
    “A what?”
    He laughed. “I didn’t mean tangle. A triangle .Cardboard. On the ground. I couldn’t move. It was all I could see.”
    “And this cardboard. It was the unsub’s?”
    “The trangle? No. I mean, triangle. No, it was jusht trash. I mean, it’s all I could see. I tried to crawl. I don’t think I did.”
    Sachs sighed. “You were found on your back, Ron.”
    “I washhh? . . . I was on my back?”
    “Think back. Did you see the sky maybe?”
    He squinted.
    Her heart beat faster. Did he get a look at something?
    “Bluh.”
    “What?”
    “Bluh in my eyes by then.”
    “Blood?” his brother offered.
    “Yeah. Blood. Couldn’t shee anything then. No trangles, no building. He got my piece. He stayed neareye for a few minutes. Then I don’t

Weitere Kostenlose Bücher