The Final Twist Jeffery Deaver (ebook reader with android os TXT) đ
- Author: Jeffery Deaver
Book online «The Final Twist Jeffery Deaver (ebook reader with android os TXT) đ». Author Jeffery Deaver
No arrows had been launched, though the man might have gotten a piece of Shaw if heâd been inclined. Heâd moved the oil-drum barricades, as Russell had suggested.
Shaw said, âDroonâs dead. Braxton and Ian Helmsâre in jail, and the FBI and state police have locked down all the BlackBridge offices. ATF and SECâre after them too, I heard.â
âOkay, okay, given thatâs true, which I still have to confirm,â La Fleur offered by way of meager rebuttal, âwhat about the chief boilermaker, Devereux?â
Shawâs brow creased. âNothing to nail him on yet.â
âTold you. Manâs elusive as a drop of mercury and just as toxic.â
âEarnest,â Shaw stretched out his unusual name. âLet me in. And could you point the arrow elsewhere?â
âHowâd you know I was locked and loaded?â
Shaw exhaled loudly, not bothering to explain that heâd heard the creak of the bow once againâand not troubling either to correct the man, as he had others, by telling him that the âlock and loadâ phrase applied only to the M1 Garand rifle. And until you unlocked the weaponâwhich slipped a round into the chamberâit was only as dangerous as a baseball bat.
âAll right. Come on in.â
Shaw stepped into the manâs cluttered house, still redolent of ocean and pot.
The scrawny hermit, gripping the bow and a de-notched arrow, pushed past Shaw and strode into the yard. There he stood for a moment and then disappeared into the complicated growth of plants most of whose genus and species Shaw did not know. Beyond them, however, was a landscape of plants featuring rich green leaves pointing outward like splayed fingers. Shaw knew what this crop was.
Returning, La Fleur said, âYou mightâve been followed. It looked clear. But, listen to me: never assume youâre safe.â
Shaw nearly smiled. That was the last line of the letter his father had left in Echo Ridge.
La Fleur re-latched the door. There was a chainâthat most insubstantial of protective devices. But it wasnât alone. The other security mechanisms were a knob lock, a massive deadbolt, a crossbar like youâd see in a Middle Ages castle and an iron rod tilting upward at a forty-five-degree angle from floor to door. Shaw wondered if he had a rope ladder somewhere in the place for a fast emergency descent down the cliffside. As a matter of fact, he did: a glance toward the windows revealed a coil of rope, one end of which was tied to a radiator.
âYou want coffee, anything?â He was sipping from a chipped mug, as bulletproof as those in the diner where Shaw and his brother dissected the courier bag containing the mixtape and the ancient document that could change the face of American politics forever.
Shaw declined. âBrought you a present.â He handed over one of the envelopes he and Russell had taken from the BNG gangbangers at the site of the Urban Improvement Plan meeting in the Tenderloin. âTen K. Laundered and unmarked. Amos Gahlâs mother got one too.â
He peered inside and pulled the money out. âOkay, okay. Canât say I canât use it.â He walked to a painting of an old-time sailing ship and lifted it down, revealing a wall safe. After turning his back so Shaw couldnât see the combination, he opened the door and slipped the cash inside. Upon closing it, he spun the dial a number of times and reseated the painting.
âWell, thankee.â His face grew troubled. âSo that son of a bitch Devereux still got what he wanted. Corporations running for office? What does he want more power for, more money? Heâs got a company worth a couple trillion dollars.â
âJust one point two.â
âThis ainât funny, Shaw. Thatâs bigger than Spainâs gross domestic product. Banyan Treeâs going to run for office, and then the world goes to shit with his new policies you were telling me about: fucking the environment, civil rights, immigration. Jesus my Lord, just occurred to me: Devereux could start his own schools. They can teach what they want. Indoctrinate the youth. Hitler did that. âThe Future Belongs to Me.ââ
âThe man who would be king.â
La Fleur tilted his head slightly. âThat was quite a flick. There was justice in the movie. You remember how it ended? But not here. Devereux? Hell, if he gets enough power he could change the U.S. Constitution and a company could become president of the United States.â
âYou think itâd come to that?â
A smile, both coy and troubled, spread over La Fleurâs face. âBut you donât have to look back too far into U.S. politics to see that pretty damn weird things can happen.â He opened one of the metal blinds and looked out. The view of the city was indeed spectacular. And dominating the skyline was the massive office building that housed Banyan Tree. âItâs like the missiles have been launched. Iâm enjoying the last view of the country before the nukes hit.â He gazed back to find Shaw looking at the same scene.
La Fleur was sizing him up. âYou seem . . . whatâsa word Iâm looking for here, Shaw? Detached. Like you donât care about the cataclysm.â The man squinted. âYep, Iâm sure of it. De-tached. How comeâs that? Donât you care?â
âLetâs put on the TV. Something you might want to see.â
La Fleur nodded toward the ancient set. âThis oneâs safe, terrestrial. The only kind Iâd ever have. You canât work for BlackBridge and not get this sense of how efficiently electrons can fuck you.â
This was a man Ashton Shaw wouldâve counted as a friend.
Shaw clicked the unit on. It had to warm up before the picture crisped into view.
The crawl at the bottom of the screen said breaking news . . .
A brunette anchorwoman in a bright red dress was looking out at her invisible audience.
âRepeating this afternoonâs top story, three independent forensic examiners have concluded that a recently discovered California Constitution amendment, to allow corporations to hold office in the state, is a forgery. The
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