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Until I Die

Until I Die

Titel: Until I Die Kostenlos Bücher Online Lesen
Autoren: Amy Plum
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important information from me?”
Everyone stared at her. Ambrose rolled his eyes toward me and mouthed the words, Drama. Queen .
She glanced around at us, as if she had just noticed we were all there, and then looked back at Gaspard. “I’m sorry,” she said. “I’ve just been trying so hard. Digging wherever I could, and hitting a brick wall everywhere I turn … when there’s information sitting right in front of us.” She stood and walked to Gaspard, placing a dainty hand on his arm and leading him away from the group.
“Now what did Charlotte say, exactly?” she quizzed him as they left the room.
On the other side of the hearth, at the edge of the group, Arthur sat in an armchair, shaking his head tiredly like the long-suffering husband of a temperamental spouse. He pulled a pen and notebook out of his jacket’s inner pocket and began to write.
I squeezed Vincent’s fingers. He was sitting in front of me on the floor, his elbow propped on the couch so that he could hold my hand. He glanced up, and I inclined my head toward Arthur. “Is he taking notes?” I whispered. Vincent’s eyes traveled across the room. “No, he’s writing,” he responded.
“What do you mean?” I asked, intrigued.
“He’s an author. Of novels.” Vincent laughed at the astounded look on my face. “What, you didn’t think we could have careers that didn’t involve saving lives? Arthur and Violette have to do something with their time. They don’t even own a TV.”
“What does he write?”
“Well, have you heard of Pierre Delacourt?”
“Yeah, the historical thriller guy? I actually think I read one of his books in an airport once. That’s Arthur’s pen name?”
Vincent nodded. “That and Aurélie Saint-Onge, Henri Cotillon, and Hilaire Benois.”
My mouth dropped open as I realized that the writer behind some of the most famous pseudonyms in French literature from the last couple of centuries was sitting across the room from me, scribbling in a notebook.
“This train wreck of a meeting is adjourned,” snapped Jean-Baptiste, drawing attention to the fact that no one was paying attention to him anymore. “I will speak to each of you individually about what I need you to do. Vincent,” he said, walking over to us, “I need you to fly to Berlin tomorrow. Talk to Charles’s source. Find out everything they know and where they’re getting their information.” Vincent nodded, and Jean-Baptiste moved on to Jules.
“Wow, just like that and you’re off,” I said. “How long do you think you’ll be gone?”
“I would guess a couple of days. It’ll depend on what I find when I get there. How much information there actually is. Although I have a feeling that part of the reason JB is sending me instead of just phoning is to have someone check up on Charles.”
I nodded, and although I felt a twinge of sadness that he was going away—so much had been going on that we had barely had time to catch up since he’d been dormant—I also felt a sense of relief. Because the only thing on my mind right now was when I could get to Le Corbeau.

TWENTY-SIX
     
    WHEN GEORGIA AND I LEFT OUR BUILDING THE next morning to see Jules waiting for us in his car, my heart did a little leap. Vincent must have already left. I checked my phone to see his good-bye text, and the heart-leap became a staccato patter. Today was my day.
“So what’s up with the chauffeur service?” I asked as I jumped into the front with him while Georgia settled in the back.
“Vincent would have been here this morning, but he had a flight at six a.m. Which means he was at the airport at five.”
“Good thing you guys don’t sleep,” I said.
From habit, Jules’s eyes flicked to the rearview mirror to see if Georgia had heard. And then I saw him remember— She already knows— and he relaxed again.
He does think of me as one of them now , I mused, and I smiled as I touched the pendant hidden under my shirt.
“That’s actually not my question. What have we done to deserve a ride to school? Were there more numa attacks during the night?”
I meant it as a joke, but Jules’s unchanged expression informed me that I had hit the nail on the head. “No!” I gasped.
“Yes, two other revenant homes in the Paris area were ransacked—one last night and the other early this morning, both times when the occupants were out.”
“So what’s that have to do with us?” piped up Georgia from the backseat. “Not that I don’t appreciate door-to-door

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