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The summons

Englisch · Taschenbuch

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Zusatztext “ The Summons ranks as my absolute favorite in many years...[with] an ending too delicious and morally instructive to give away.”— USA Today “A pleasure to read...a good yarn.”— The Washington Post Klappentext Once Judge Atlee was a powerful figure in Clanton! Mississippi--a pillar of the community who towered over local law and politics for forty years. Now the judge is a shadow of his former self! a sick! lonely old man who has withdrawn to his sprawling ancestral home. Knowing the end is near! Judge Atlee has issued a summons for his two sons to return to Clanton to discuss his estate. Ray Atlee is the eldest! a Virginia law professor! newly single and still enduring the aftershocks of a surprise divorce. Forrest is Ray's younger brother! who redefines the notion of a family's black sheep. The summons is typed by the judge himself! on his handsome old stationery! and gives the date and time for Ray and Forrest to appear in his study. Ray reluctantly heads south to his hometown! to the place where he grew up and now prefers to avoid. But the family meeting does not take place. The judge dies too soon! and in doing so leaves behind a shocking secret known only to Ray. And perhaps someone else. Chapter 1 It came by mail, regular postage, the old-fashioned way since the Judge was almost eighty and distrusted modern devices. Forget e-mail and even faxes. He didn't use an answering machine and had never been fond of the telephone. He pecked out his letters with both index fingers, one feeble key at a time, hunched over his old Underwood manual on a rolltop desk under the portrait of Nathan Bedford Forrest. The Judge's grandfather had fought with Forrest at Shiloh and throughout the Deep South, and to him no figure in history was more revered. For thirty-two years, the Judge had quietly refused to hold court on July 13, Forrest's birthday. It came with another letter, a magazine, and two invoices, and was routinely placed in the law school mailbox of Professor Ray Atlee. He recognized it immediately since such envelopes had been a part of his life for as long as he could remember. It was from his father, a man he too called the Judge. Professor Atlee studied the envelope, uncertain whether he should open it right there or wait a moment. Good news or bad, he never knew with the Judge, though the old man was dying and good news had been rare. It was thin and appeared to contain only one sheet of paper; nothing unusual about that. The Judge was frugal with the written word, though he'd once been known for his windy lectures from the bench. It was a business letter, that much was certain. The Judge was not one for small talk, hated gossip and idle chitchat, whether written or spoken. Ice tea with him on the porch would be a refighting of the Civil War, probably at Shiloh, where he would once again lay all blame for the Confederate defeat at the shiny, untouched boots of General Pierre G. T. Beauregard, a man he would hate even in heaven, if by chance they met there. He'd be dead soon. Seventy-nine years old with cancer in his stomach. He was overweight, a diabetic, a heavy pipe smoker, had a bad heart that had survived three attacks, and a host of lesser ailments that had tormented him for twenty years and were now finally closing in for the kill. The pain was constant. During their last phone call three weeks earlier, a call initiated by Ray because the Judge thought long distance was a rip-off, the old man sounded weak and strained. They had talked for less than two minutes. The return address was gold-embossed: Chancellor Reuben V. Atlee, 25th Chancery District, Ford County Courthouse, Clanton, Mississippi. Ray slid the envelope into the magazine and began walking. Judge Atlee no longer held the office of chancellor. The voters had retired him nine years earlier, a bitter defeat from which h...

Produktdetails

Autoren John Grisham
Verlag Dell Publishing Inc.
 
Sprache Englisch
Produktform Taschenbuch
Erschienen 17.12.2002
 
EAN 9780440241072
ISBN 978-0-440-24107-2
Seiten 373
Abmessung 106 mm x 172 mm x 26 mm
Serie Dell Paperbacks
Themen Belletristik > Spannung
Belletristik > Spannung > Krimis, Thriller, Spionage

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