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Velocity

Velocity

Titel: Velocity Kostenlos Bücher Online Lesen
Autoren: Dean Koontz
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about Judi Kesselman that I know her better than a lot of people who’ve actually in my life.”
    “I see.”
    “She was a wonderful young woman.”
    “That’s what I hear.”
    “I talked to so many of her friends and family. Not a bad word about her from anyone. The stories of things she did for others, her kindnesses… y know how sometimes a vie haunts you, how you can’t be entirely objective?”
    “Sure,” Billy said.
    “I’m haunted by this one,” Ozgard said. “She was a great letter writer. Once someone entered her life, she held on to them, she didn’t forget them, she stayed in touch. I read hundreds of Judi’s letters, Deputy Olsen, hundreds.”
    “So you let her in.”
    “You can’t help it with her, she walks right in. They were the letters of a woman who embraced people, who just gave her heart to everyone. Luminous letters.”
    Billy found himself staring at the bullet hole in Lanny Olsen’s forehead. He looked toward the open door to the upstairs hall.
    “We’ve got a situation here,” he said. “I can’t spell it out in detail at this time, because we’re still working the evidence and we aren’t ready to bring charges.”
    “I understand,” Ozgard assured him.
    “But there’s a name I want to run by you, see if it rings three cherries with you.”
    “The hairs are up on the back of my neck,” Ozgard said. “That’s how bad I want this to be something.”
    “I Googled our guy, and the only thing I got was this one hit regarding the Kesselman disappearance, and even that was less than nothing.”
    “So Google me,” said Ozgard.
    “Steven Zillis.”
    In Denver, Ramsey Ozgard let out his pent-up breath with a hiss.
    “You remember him,” Billy said.
    “Oh yeah.”
    “He was a suspect?”
    “Not officially.”
    “But you personally felt…”
    “He made me uneasy.”
    “Why?”
    Ozgard was silent. Then: “Even a man you wouldn’t want to share a beer with, wouldn’t want to shake hands with—his reputation isn’t to be taken lightly.”
    “This is background, off the record,” Billy assured him. “You tell me as much as makes you comfortable and just how big a spoonful of salt I should take with it.”
    “The thing is, for the entire day when Judi had to have been snatched—if she was snatched, and I believe she was—for that entire day, for the whole twenty-four-hour window and then some, Zillis had an alibi you couldn’t crack with a nuke.”
    “You tried.”
    “Believe it. But even if he hadn’t had an alibi, there wasn’t any evidence pointing his way.”
    “Then why did he make you uneasy?”
    “He was too forthcoming.”
    Billy didn’t say anything, but he was disappointed. He was in the market for certainty, and Ozgard didn’t have any to sell.
    Sensing that disappointment, the detective expanded on what he had said. “He came to me before he was even on my scope. Fact is, he might never have been on my scope if he hadn’t come to me. He wanted so much to help. He talked and talked. He cared about her too much, like she was a beloved sister, but he had only known her a month.”
    “You said she was exceptional at relationships, she embraced people, they bonded with her.”
    “According to her best friends, she didn’t even know Zillis that well. Only casually.”
    Reluctantly playing the devil’s advocate, Billy said, “He could have felt closer to her than she did to him. I mean, if she had that kind of magnetism, that appeal…”
    “You would have had to see him, the way he was with me,” Ozgard said. “It’s like he wanted me to wonder about him, to check him out and find the airtight alibi. And after I did, there was this smugness about him.”
    Remarking on the quiet revulsion in Ozgard’s voice, Billy said, “You’re still hot.”
    “I am hot. Zillis—he’s coming back to me, the way he was. For a while, before he finally faded away, he kept trying to help, calling up, dropping by, offering ideas, and you had this feeling it was all mockery, he was just performing.”
    “Performing. I have a feeling like that, too,” Billy said, “but I really need more.”
    “He’s a prick. That doesn’t mean he’s anything worse, but he is a self-satisfied prick. The little prick even started acting like we were pals, him and me. Potential suspects, they just never do that. It’s not natural. Hell, you know. But he had this easy, jokey way about him.”
    “ ‘How’re they hangin’, Kemosabe.’”
    “Shit, does

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