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Tác giả: Kathy Reichs
Thể loại: Trinh Thám
Biên tập: Bach Ly Bang
Upload bìa: Bach Ly Bang
Language: English
Số chương: 39
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Cập nhật: 2015-09-01 13:22:48 +0700
Link download: epubePub   PDF A4A4   PDF A5A5   PDF A6A6   - xem thông tin ebook
 
 
 
 
Chapter 33
STOOD PARALYZED WITH INDECISION. IF THE KILLER WAS STILL free, was I in danger? I continued to puzzle over Galimore. Ricinabrin would not be his thing, but had he been protecting others? As a member of a group? As a hired hit man?
That made no sense. Had he simply colluded years earlier to protect the shooter? What was going on today? Was there a new plot in the works that Gamble was going to stumble upon?
Meanwhile, the rain. Where to go?
The security office. Galimore might be there, but so might others. Besides, he knew where to find me. He was not likely to snatch me from his own office.
My sneakers were soaked. My jacket was molded to my torso and head. Though the night was warm, goose bumps puckered my neck and arms.
“Oh, shit.” Slurred, from my right.
The Danica Patrick girl was swaying drunkenly. Dropping her can of Miller High Life, she doubled over and moaned.
I tried shifting left. The shirtless guy was right at my shoulder.
Lightning streaked. Thunder cracked.
Vomit hit the ground at my feet.
Any place was better than here.
Lowering my head against the deluge, I set out for Joey Frank’s hauler.
I was halfway down the Nationwide row when my iPhone vibrated.
Finally. Slidell returning my call.
I stepped between two enormous transporters and dug the phone from my pocket. Tugging my sleeve as low as possible for protection against the rain, I raised the device to my ear.
“Brennan—”
Something ticked my exposed fingertips.
Instinctively, I shook my hand to dislodge the insect.
My thumb accidentally hit the disconnect button, ending the call.
I punched redial. My finger slipped on the wet screen. I noticed that my skin was burning where I’d been stung.
Shoving the phone inside my jacket, I wiped moisture off the screen with my shirt.
I heard movement to my left, glanced sideways. The upraised hood blocked my peripheral vision.
I was dialing again when footsteps squished in the muddy grass. Hurried. Close.
As I raised my head, a viselike arm wrapped my throat.
The phone flew from my hand.
My head was yanked backward. Something snapped in my neck. Rain pummeled my upturned face.
I struggled.
Rapid breathing in my ear blocked all other sounds. A noxious blend of oily hair, wet nylon, and stale cigarette smoke filled my nostrils.
Terrified, I kicked back with one heel. Connected.
The arm tightened, squeezing my trachea and cutting off air.
I gagged. Clawed.
I saw rain slicing diagonally across the sky. An antenna. A light on a pole.
Dark spots.
Lightning sparked.
Then the world went black.
The rain had stopped. Or had it?
Overhead I heard pinging, like nails hitting tin.
My mind groped for meaning.
I was inside. Under a roof.
Where?
How long had I been here?
Who had brought me to this place?
Angry vessels pounded the inside of my skull.
My mind offered only disconnected recollections.
Synapse: A narrow gap between haulers. Footsteps in the dark.
I raised my head.
My stomach lurched. I tasted bitterness and felt a tremor beneath my tongue.
I eased back down.
I smelled loamy earth. Vegetation. Felt cold hardness beneath my cheek.
Synapse: A body pressed tight against my back.
A real-time sensation intruded. Heat on my right ring finger.
I moved my hand. Tested the surface on which I lay.
Solid. Sandpaper-rough.
Concrete.
Synapse: A chokehold squeezing my throat. My fingers clawing, my lungs desperate for air.
I breathed deeply.
Opened my eyes.
Saw nothing but variations on darkness.
Using both palms, I raised one shoulder and shifted my hips.
Before I could sit, nausea overwhelmed me. I hung my head and threw up until my stomach muscles ached.
When I’d finished, I backhanded my mouth, rolled, and rose to all fours.
And vomited again until I could only spit bile.
I sat back on my haunches, listening.
Over the drumming rain, I heard what sounded like grinding gears, the thrum of an engine. Muffled by walls.
And another sound. Soft. Barely audible.
A moan? A growl?
Close.
Dear God!
Some other being shared my prison!
I felt a flutter in my chest, as if my heart had broken free and was beating at my rib cage.
I strained my ears. Heard no movement. No further sign of another presence.
Was I mistaken?
I rose to my knees and waited for my eyes to adjust. The only break in the inky blackness was a hairline strip of gray at floor level off to my left. Too little light to dilate my pupils.
I got to my feet. Paused again.
My gut cramped once more, but there was nothing left to purge.
Arms extended, I inched blindly toward what I hoped was a door.
My fingertips soon brushed something hard and smooth. Metal. Vertically ribbed.
I stepped to my right. The steel ribs now ran horizontally.
I felt around, found a discontinuity. Traced it up, over, down to the floor. A rectangle.
Aiming my shoulder at what I assumed was the rectangle’s center, I lunged.
Metal rattled, but the door held.
I tried again and again until my shoulder ached. Then I dropped to my back and kicked with my feet.
My efforts were useless. I hadn’t the strength of a toddler, and the door was metal.
I lay on the floor, limbs trembling, breath rasping in and out of my lungs.
My mouth was a desert. My head pounded. My gut was on fire.
Get out! Find the bastard who put you here!
The orders came from deep in my brain.
I rose again on rubber legs.
Dizziness sent the world spinning and triggered new nausea.
When I finished dry-heaving, I lurched forward once more.
And followed the wall. In ten feet, it met another. At the intersection, on the floor, slumped large plastic sacks.
I pressed my thumb to the nearest. The contents felt heavy but grainy, like oatmeal. I drew my nose close. Sniffed. Smelled a mixture of soil, clay, and dung.
Turning ninety degrees, I edged through the dark.
Two feet from the corner, a shovel hung from a hook roughly a yard above my head. Beside the shovel was a pitchfork. Then a hoe, another spade, a hand tiller, a hedge clipper, and a pruner. Below the tools were three coiled hoses.
My mind processed. An outdoor storage shed. Galvanized steel. One door. Bolted from the outside.
Tears threatened.
No!
The shed’s interior was relatively cool. I knew that wouldn’t last. When the rain stopped and the sun rose, the heat inside the windowless metal box would become unbearable.
Move!
Eight feet down, the second wall met a third.
I made the turn.
I’d taken two steps when the toe of my sneaker nudged an object on the floor. I prodded with my foot.
The thing felt firm. Yet yielding.
Familiar.
Another image fired up from my gray cells.
A corpse.
I shrank back.
Then, heart pounding, I squatted to examine the body.
Flash And Bones Flash And Bones - Kathy Reichs Flash And Bones