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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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empty. He frowned.
    “Oh, the Gradys aren’t here,” Bell said, as if it were obvious.
    The man closed his eyes and rested his head on the threadbare carpet. “How? How did you figure it out?”
    Sellitto supplied an answer of sorts. “Well, guess what? There’s somebody who’d love to answer that question for you. Come on, we’re going for a ride.”
    •   •   •
    Looking over the shackled killer standing in the doorway of the lab, Lincoln Rhyme said, “Welcome back.”
    “But . . . the fire.” Dismayed, the man looked toward the stairway that led up to the bedroom.
    “Sorry we ruined your performance,” Rhyme said coldly. “I guess you couldn’t quite escape from me after all, could you, Weir?”
    He turned his gaze back to the criminalist and hissed, “That’s not my name anymore.”
    “You changed it?”
    Weir shook his head. “Not legally. But Weir’s who I used to be. I go by something else now.”
    Rhyme recalled psychologist Terry Dobyns’s observation that the fire had “murdered” Weir’s old persona and he’d become somebody else.
    The killer now looked over Rhyme’s body. “You understandthat, don’t you? You’d like to forget the past and become somebody else too, I’d imagine.”
    “What are you calling yourself?”
    “That’s between me and my audience.”
    Ah, yes, his revered audience.
    Double-handcuffed, looking bewildered and diminished, Weir wore a gray businessman’s suit. The wig he’d worn last night was gone; his real hair was thick, long and dark blond. In the daylight Rhyme could better see the scarring above his collar; it looked quite severe.
    “How’d you find me?” the man asked in his wheezing voice. “I led you to . . .”
    “To the Cirque Fantastique? You did.” When Rhyme had out-thought a perp his mood improved considerably and he was pleased to chat. “You mean you misdirected us there. See, I was looking over the evidence and I got to thinking that the whole case seemed a bit too easy.”
    “Easy?” He coughed briefly.
    “In crime scene work there’re two types of evidence. There’re the clues that are inadvertently left by the perp and then there are planted clues, ones that are intentionally left to mislead us.
    “After everyone ran off to look for gas bombs at the circus I got this sense that some of the clues had been planted. They seemed obvious—the shoes you left at the second victim’s apartment had dog hairs and dirt and trace that led to Central Park. It occurred to me that a smart perp might’ve ground the dirt and hairs into the shoes and left them at the scene so we’d find them and think about the dog knoll next to the circus. And all the talk of fire when you came to see me lastnight.” He glanced toward Kara. “Verbal misdirection, right, Kara?”
    Weir’s troubled eyes looked the young woman up and down.
    “Yep,” she said, pouring sugar in her coffee.
    “But I tried to kill you,” Weir wheezed. “If I’d told you those things to lead you off I’d need you to be alive.”
    Rhyme laughed. “You didn’t try to kill me at all. You never intended to. You wanted to make it look that way to give what you told me credibility. The first thing you did after you set the fire in my bedroom was to run outside and call nine-one-one from a pay phone. I checked with dispatch. The man who called said he could see the flames from the phone kiosk. Except that it was around the corner. You can’t see my room from there. Thom checked on that, by the way. Thank you, Thom,” Rhyme called to the aide, who happened to be passing the doorway at that moment.
    “ Nada, ” came the harried reply.
    Weir closed his eyes, shaking his head as he realized the depth of his mistake.
    Rhyme squinted, staring at the evidence board. “All of the victims had jobs or interests reflecting performers in the circus—the musician, makeup artist, horseback riding. And the murder techniques were magic tricks too. But if your motive really was to destroy Kadesky you would’ve led us away from Cirque Fantastique, not toward it. That meant you were leading us away from something else. What? I looked at the evidence again. At the third scene, by the river, we surprised you—you didn’t have time to pick up your jacket with the press pass and hotel key card inthe pocket, which meant that those couldn’t’ve been planted clues. They had some legitimate connection to what you were really up to.
    “The hotel card key was from

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