Heat Lightning

Heat Lightning by John Sandford Page A

Book: Heat Lightning by John Sandford Read Free Book Online
Authors: John Sandford
Tags: thriller, Suspense, Mystery, Adult
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learn that stuff. We've always got aches and pains."
    She was moving him toward the door, he realized. He wasn't going to get any further this night; better to go with shyness, or politeness, than to make a grab at her. "I appreciate it. Jeez, I'd like to take you dancing again."
    "Give me a call," she said at the door. She kissed a fingertip and pressed it against his nose, and closed the door.
    Second time that happened. Just like with the Vietnamese guys: don't let the door hit you in the ass, Virgil.
    He was back in his truck when he became aware of a kind of erotic warmth in his back and side muscles, where her butt and legs had weighed on him. Not a tease, because she hadn't been wiggling around or anything, but the feeling was there, and lingering.
    He thought about Janey, probably home alone and lonesome. And he thought, That would be wrong, Virgil.
    But would it really be wrong to bring a little warmth and comfort to a lonely woman? To help someone out who needed . . .
    What a load of self-serving, hypocritical BS.
    Mai Sinclair, he thought. Pretty damn good.

    Chapter 9
    THE SCOUT sat in the back of a two-year-old white Chevy van, in a cluster of cars under a spreading oak, on Edgecumbe down from the corner at Snelling, watching John Wigge's house.
    Waiting for the lights to go out. Waiting to go to bed. He'd been there waiting, for four hours, since Wigge got home.
    The house was a single-story brick-and-shingle affair surrounded by a close-cropped lawn. A tough nut to crack. Wigge was an ex-cop, now the vice president of a high-end private security agency, and he'd taken advantage of the job: there were motion detectors, glass-break alarms, magnetic window sensors that would start screaming with any movement at all. The security panel, set into the wall near the back door, looked like it could launch the space shuttle.
    Wigge had taken part in the meeting at Sanderson's, with Sanderson and Bunton and the unknown man in the backseat of Wigge's car. With Bunton on the run, Wigge was the next target--but he'd have to be taken outside the house. Inside the house, he had too many advantages.
    Now, if he'd just go to bed, they could start again tomorrow.
    THE SHOOTER was two blocks from the scout. He sat in silence, not moving. No iPod, no headphones, no book, though he couldn't have read in the dark anyway. He needed none of that, the artificial support, when he could simply run his memories, smile with them, cry with them, and all the time, all five senses could reach out over the landscape, looking for targets. . . .
    Though, when he thought about it, had he ever used taste? He reached back through his memories . . . and was still there when the light came on in Wigge's garage.
    That was one weakness in Wigge's security, and the scout had noticed it earlier and brought it to the shooter's attention. The garage was connected directly to the house, so Wigge could get out and into his car without being seen. But he had a garage door opener with an automatic overhead light. As soon as he touched the button to lift the door, the light went on. If he did that from the garage, rather than from inside the car, he'd be exposed, if only for a moment or two.
    The shooter was in the back of the van, in a legal parking space, with the rifle on the floor beside him. When the light came on in the garage, he reacted instantly, dropping the window with one jab of his finger, swiveling the gun up . . .
    The cell phone burped: no sign of life in the garage. The shooter picked up the phone, and the scout said, "He's in the car," and "He's moving."
    And here it came, a big black GMC sport utility vehicle with a ton of chrome and gray-tinted windows of the kind popularized by the Blackwater mercenaries in Iraq. Wigge backed out, paused, watched the garage door all the way down, then backed into the street, aimed at Snelling, and drove away. The shooter waited until it turned the corner, then started after it.
    His cell phone beeped, and he

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