The Prof Croft Series: Books 0-4 (Prof Croft Box Sets Book 1) by Brad Magnarella (best business books of all time txt) π
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- Author: Brad Magnarella
Read book online Β«The Prof Croft Series: Books 0-4 (Prof Croft Box Sets Book 1) by Brad Magnarella (best business books of all time txt) πΒ». Author - Brad Magnarella
Wait β¦ blood? My bribe had gotten the guy killed?
βIf you donβt wanna join your friend,β the guard said, wrestling with my hand now, βyouβre gonna give this up.β I realized he was trying to pull Grandpaβs ring off my finger.
Arnaud, I thought. By his reasoning, I had entered his territory; ergo, he had rights to my ring. I balled my hand against the guardβs wrenching fingers. I was risking my life, yeah, but the ring seemed to be compelling meβit had some future role to play, and it wouldnβt do to be in a vampireβs possession. My hand balled tighter, gripped by the mother of all cramps. If my own life played a role, it appeared it was going to be as a footnote.
βTough guy, huh?β the guard said, ramming an elbow against my ear for leverage.
I was angling my cane toward him, wondering what the penalty would be for magic exercised in self defense, when his partner entered my peripheral vision.
βStand back,β he said, raising his rifle.
Before I could summon my light shield, a pair of explosions sounded. In the ringing aftermath, I recognized the register. I opened my eyes and blinked twice. The shots hadnβt come from an assault rifle.
βNYPD,β a familiar voice shouted. βGet the fuck away from him!β
I raised my face to find Detective Vega storming toward us. She lowered the nine millimeter sheβd fired until it was level with the nearer guardβs head. He backed away, palms showing. His partner adjusted his rifleβs aim from me to Vega, but he looked hesitant before the tiny tornado in a black suit.
βThis manβs wanted in an investigation,β Vega said, using her free hand to haul me up. The guard whoβd been grappling for my ring began to stammer. Before his words could take on intelligence, Vega was pulling me toward her sedan, which sheβd left idling at the auto checkpoint.
I wasted no time getting in. She joined me on the driverβs side and drove us from the Financial District.
βWhat in Godβs name are you doing?β she demanded.
βI was making friends,β I said. βSheesh. Now theyβll never call.β I was buying time until I could determine just how much she knew about my morning excursion.
βWere you at the church?β she asked.
The inflection in her tone told me it was an honest question. Iβd caught a break.
βUm, sorry, but were you not just witness to my near-execution?β I jerked my head back. βI was kidding about being pally-wally with those guys, in case you missed that, too.β
βYou were intending to go to the church, though.β
βCan you prove it?β I asked, raising an eyebrow.
Ripping off a string of Spanish curses, Vega accelerated around a line of cars, blooped her siren, and shot through a red light. βYouβre lucky I had business downtown,β she said when sheβd calmed down enough to return to English. βThose guys couldβve put two dozen bullets in you, and the NYPD wouldnβt have been able to do a damn thing.β
βWhy not?β
βOfficial immunity,β she grumbled.
I nodded in understanding. Probably one of Arnaudβs conditions for bailing out the city. Which also meant that if the guards had gotten it into their meaty heads to gun down Vega, they could have done so without fear of prosecution. Boy, did that make me feel like a dick.
βHey, listenββ
βSave it,β Vega said sharply. βThe next words I want out of your mouth are what you can tell me about the message. Todayβs the deadline. In case you forgot,β she added wryly.
βWellββ
She cut me off again. βNot here. My office.β
We emerged from underneath the off ramp for the Brooklyn Bridge and into view of One Police Plaza. I had a sinking sense of dΓ©jΓ vu. The last time Vega had driven me here, it was for processing.
She veered into a secure underground garage. We rode an elevator up in silence, stopping every floor or two for plain-clothed personnel and uniformed officers to get on and off. I caught more than a few sidelong glances. It was my six-foot frame, dark brown hair, and cane. I could all but feel my face being lined up with the police sketch and had a feeling Detective Vega was the only reason I wasnβt being slammed against a wall and cuffed.
I edged closer to her.
On the eighth floor, I followed her off the elevator and down a hallway to a busy workspace whose cluttered desks and colony of Styrofoam coffee cups shouted HOMICIDE. Of course, Iβd been here before, so I was cheating. Vega led me into a windowless officeβnot an interrogation room this time, thankfullyβrounded a desk with piled-up folders and an outdated computer, and sat down hard. I scooted up one of the folding metal chairs.
βSpeak,β she said as I lowered myself.
I had already decided to be as truthful as I could. I owed her that much.
βAll right.β I laced my fingers, save my splinted pinky, and bent them back until they cracked. βThe message on the rectorβs back translates to βBlack Earth.ββ
βWhat does it mean?β she asked, jotting it down on a notepad.
βI donβt know.β
She stared up at me as though there had to be more. I shrugged.
βI gave you three days for that?β She threw her pen at the pad.
The pen ricocheted and collided into a propped-up frame, knocking it onto its felt back. When I reached forward to right it, I saw it held a photo of a smiling Detective Vegaβwhite teeth and allβclutching a giggling boy of five or six, her chin propped on his feathery curls.
βYour son?β I asked.
βYeah,β she replied, her frustration seeming to have gotten lost for the moment. She took over the task of righting the frame, angling it toward her, where I could no longer see the photo.
βGood-looking kid,β I said. But then so was his mother. And Iβd been right about her smileβwow. I blamed Thelonious for flicking my
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