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The Surgeon: A Rizzoli & Isles Novel: With Bonus Content

The Surgeon: A Rizzoli & Isles Novel: With Bonus Content

Titel: The Surgeon: A Rizzoli & Isles Novel: With Bonus Content
Autoren: Tess Gerritsen
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out. While there’s still time to save Bob and Barbara!
She punched through the last pebbly fragments of glass, sent them clattering onto the pavement.
    Two feet moved into view and halted in front of her. She stared up at the man who blocked her escape. She could not see a face, only his silhouette. And his gun.
    Tires shrieked as another car roared toward them.
    Claire jerked back into the Saab like a tortoise withdrawing into the safety of her shell. Shrinking from the window, she covered her head with her arms and wondered if this time the bullet would hurt. If she would feel it explode in her skull. She was curled so tightly into a ball that all she heard was the sound of her own breathing, the whoosh of her own pulse.
    She almost missed the voice calling her name.
    “Claire Ward?” It was a woman.
    I must be dead. And that’s an angel, speaking to me
.
    “He’s gone. It’s safe to come out now,” the angel said. “But you must hurry.”
    Claire opened her eyes and peered through her fingers at the face staring sideways through the broken window. A slender arm reached toward her, and Claire cowered from it.
    “He’ll be back,” the woman said. “So hurry.”
    Claire grasped the offered hand, and the woman hauled her out. Broken glass tinkled like hard rain as Claire rolled onto the pavement. Too quickly she sat up, and the night wobbled around her. She caught one dizzying glimpse of the overturned Saab and had to drop her head again.
    “Can you stand?”
    Slowly, Claire looked up. The woman was dressed all in black. Her hair was tied back in a ponytail, the blond strands bright enough to reflect a faint glimmer from the streetlamp. “Who are you?” Claire whispered.
    “My name doesn’t matter.”
    “Bob—Barbara—” Claire looked at the overturned Saab. “We have to get them out of the car! Help me.” Claire crawled to the driver’s side and yanked open the door.
    Bob Buckley tumbled out onto the pavement, his eyes open and sightless. Claire stared at the bullet hole punched into his temple. “Bob,” she moaned.
“Bob!”
    “You can’t help him now.”
    “Barbara—what about Barbara?”
    “It’s too late.” The woman grabbed her by the shoulders and gave her a hard shake. “They’re dead, do you understand? They’re both dead.”
    Claire shook her head, her gaze still on Bob. On the pool of blood now spreading like a dark halo around his head. “This can’t be happening,” she whispered. “Not again.”
    “Come, Claire.” The woman grabbed her hand and pulled her to her feet. “Come with me. If you want to live.”

O N THE NIGHT FOURTEEN-YEAR-OLD WILL Yablonski should have died, he stood in a dark New Hampshire field, searching for aliens.
    He had assembled all the necessary equipment for the hunt. There was his ten-inch Dobsonian mirror, which he’d ground by hand three years ago, when he was only eleven years old. It had taken him two months, starting with coarse eighty-grit sandpaper, and progressing to finer and finer grits to shape and smooth and polish the glass. With his dad’s help, he’d built his own alt-azimuth mount. The twenty-five-millimeter Plössl eyepiece was a gift from his uncle Brian, who helped Will haul all this equipment out into the field after dinner whenever the sky was clear. But Uncle Brian was a lark, not an owl, and by ten P.M. he always called it a night and went to bed.
    So Will stood alone in the field behind his aunt and uncle’s farmhouse, as he did most nights when the sky was clear and the moon wasn’t shining, and searched the sky for alien fuzzyballs, otherwise known as comets. If he ever discovered a new comet, he knew exactly what he would name it:
Comet Neil Yablonski
, in honor of his dead father. New comets were spotted all the time by amateur astronomers; why couldn’t a fourteen-year-old kid be the next to find one? His dad once told him that all it took was dedication, a trained eye, and a lot of luck.
It’s a treasure hunt, Will. The universe is like a beach, and the stars are grains of sand, hiding what you’re looking for
.
    For Will, the treasure hunt never got old. He still felt the same excitement whenever he and Uncle Brian hauled the equipment out of the house and set it up under the darkening sky, the same sense of anticipation that
this
could be the night he discovered Comet Neil Yablonski. And then the effort would be worth it, worth the countless nocturnal vigils fueled by hot chocolate and candy
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