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The Vanished Man

The Vanished Man

Titel: The Vanished Man Kostenlos Bücher Online Lesen
Autoren: Jeffery Deaver
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happen to know where he might be?”
    “I mean, why are you asking me about him?”
    “We’d like to talk to him as part of a criminal investigation.”
    “Oh, my God. . . . About what? What do you want to talk to him about? ”
    “We just have some general questions,” Sellitto said. “Have you had any contact with him lately?”
    There was a pause. This was the part where the nervous man would either spill all or run for the hills, Rhyme knew.
    “Sir?” Sellitto asked.
    “That’s funny, okay. You asking me, I mean about him. ” The words clattered like marbles on metal. “Here it is. I’ll tell you. I hadn’t heard from Mr. Weir for years. I thought he was dead. There was this fire in Ohio, the last job we were working. He got burned. Real bad. He disappeared and we all thought he was dead. But then maybe six or seven weeks ago he called.”
    “From where?” Rhyme asked.
    “I don’t know. He didn’t say. I didn’t ask. It doesn’t occur to anyone to ask where somebody’s calling from. Not the first thing. You just don’t think about that. Do you ever ask that?”
    Rhyme asked, “What did he want?”
    “Okay, okay. He wanted to know if I still kept up with anybody at the circus where the fire happened. The Hasbro circus. But that was Ohio. It was three years ago. And Hasbro’s not even in business anymore. After the fire the owner folded it and it became a different show. Why would I keep up with anybody there? Here I am in Reno. I said I didn’t. And he got all ippity, you know.”
    Rhyme frowned again.
    Sachs tried, “Angry?”
    “Oh, hell-ooooh. Yeah, I’ll say.”
    “Go on,” Rhyme said, struggling against impatience. “Tell us what else he said.”
    “That was it. That was all. What I just told you. I mean, there were little things. Oh, he got his digs in like he always did. The claws. Just like old times. . . . You know what he did when he called?”
    “What was that?” Rhyme encouraged.
    “All he said was, ‘It’s Erick.’ Not ‘Hello.’ Not ‘Oh, John, how are you? Remember me?’ No. ‘It’s Erick.’ I hadn’t talked to him since the fire. And what does he say? ‘It’s Erick.’ All these years since I got away from him, working so hard to get away . . . and then it’s like I haven’t gotten away at all. I know I hadn’t done anything wrong. And here he’s making it sound like something’s all my fault. It’s like you take an order from a customer and then when you bring the food they claim it’s not what they ordered. But everybody knows what happened—they changed their mind and they’re making it sound like you got it wrong. Like it’s your fault and you’re the one who gets in trouble.”
    Sachs continued, “Can you tell us anything about him in general? Other friends, places he liked to go, hobbies.”
    “Sure,” came the snappy voice. “All of the above: illusion.”
    “What?” Rhyme asked.
    “That was his friends, places he liked to go to, hobbies. You get what I’m saying? There was nothing else. He was like totally absorbed in the profession.”
    Sachs tried again. “Well, what about his attitude toward people? His outlook? How he thought about things?”
    A long pause. “Fifty minutes, twice a week for three years I’ve been trying to figure him out and I can’t. For three years. And he still hurts me. I—” Keating broke into a harsh, eerie laugh. “You catch that? I said ‘hurts.’ I meant to say ‘haunts.’ He still haunts me. How’s that for Freudian? I’ll have something to share next Monday at nine A.M. , won’t I? He still haunts me and I don’t have a clue what his fucking outlook is.”
    Rhyme could see everyone on the team was growing frustrated with the man’s rambling. He said, “We heard his wife was killed in the fire. Do you know anything about her family?”
    “Marie? No, they’d only gotten married a week or two before the fire. They were really in love. We thought she’d calm him down. Make him haunt us less. We were hoping that. But we never got to know her.”
    “Can you give us the names of anybody who might know something about him?”
    “Art Loesser was first assistant. I was second. We were his boys. They called us ‘Erick’s boys.’ Everybody did.”
    Rhyme said, “We have a call in to Loesser. Anyone else?”
    “The only one I can think of is the manager of the Hasbro circus at the time. Edward Kadesky’s his name. He’s a producer in Chicago now, I

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