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The Spy from Florida

Par : Dr. Wolfgang W. Ausserbauer, DocWolf
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  • FormatePub
  • ISBN8235069503
  • EAN9798235069503
  • Date de parution29/04/2026
  • Protection num.pas de protection
  • Infos supplémentairesepub
  • ÉditeurIoakim Ioakim

Résumé

The dog heard the danger before the humans did. Writer lifted his head from the woven rug, ears pricking toward the open window as the night air shifted, carrying with it the faint metallic tang of something that didn't belong to the quiet streets of Cedar Key. The house was still, the kind of stillness that settles only after midnight, when the last boat has docked, and the tide has stopped arguing with the shore.
Writer rose slowly, paws silent on the hardwood, his posture alert but not alarmed. He knew the difference. This wasn't a storm rolling in. This wasn't a raccoon testing the trash cans. This was human. Intentional. Wrong. Across the street, Dudley Kozonnoplach's porch light flickered once, then steadied. Writer watched it with the calm focus of a creature who had learned long ago that humans rarely noticed the things that mattered until it was too late.
A car idled somewhere beyond the bend, engine low, lights off. Writer's tail stiffened. He padded toward the front door, nose lifting to catch the scent threading through the night - cold metal, old oil, and the faint trace of a man who had been here before. Not often. Not welcome. Writer growled once, low and quiet, a warning meant for no one but himself. Inside the house, Jim Holden slept the way men sleep when they've spent too many years pretending they're not waiting for something to go wrong.
His breathing was steady, his posture relaxed, but Writer knew better. Jim never truly rested. Not since Florida. Not since the assignment that had ended without ending. Writer nudged the bedroom door open with his nose, the hinges giving a soft sigh. Jim stirred, one hand drifting instinctively toward the nightstand drawer before he even opened his eyes. "What is it, boy?" he murmured, voice thick with sleep but already sharpening.
Writer stepped closer, ears forward, gaze fixed on the window. Jim followed the line of his stare, the last remnants of sleep falling away as he listened. The night was quiet. Too quiet. He sat up slowly, the old instinct settling into his bones like a familiar weight. "Someone out there?" he whispered. Writer didn't move. He didn't need to. Jim swung his legs over the side of the bed, feet finding the floor with the soft certainty of a man who had done this too many times in too many places.
He crossed to the window, lifting the curtain just enough to see the curve of the street. -- Nothing. But nothing was often worse than something. Writer pressed against his leg, steady, grounding. Jim exhaled slowly, the breath leaving him in a long, controlled stream. "All right, " he murmured. "Message received." He let the curtain fall back into place, the room returning to darkness. "We're not done yet."Outside, the car engine faded into the distance, leaving behind only the whisper of the tide and the faint rustle of palm fronds shifting in the breeze.
Writer stayed at the window long after Jim returned to bed, his posture alert, his gaze fixed on the street as if memorizing the shape of the night. By morning, the danger would be gone. But the message would remain. And when Jim Holden boarded a plane to France two weeks later, Writer would go with him - not because the world was safer there, but because the world had decided it wasn't finished with 
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