Stan książek
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Nowa
Książka nowa.
Używany - jak nowa
Niezauważalne lub prawie niezauważalne ślady używania. Książkę ciężko odróżnić od nowej pozycji.
Używany - dobry
Normalne ślady używania wynikające z kartkowania podczas czytania, brak większych uszkodzeń lub zagięć.
Używany - widoczne ślady użytkowania
zagięte rogi, przyniszczona okładka, książka posiada wszystkie strony.
Win
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Over two decades ago, heiress Patricia Lockwood was taken during a heist at her family's estate and confined in a distant cabin for several months. Although Patricia managed to escape, her kidnappers did as well, and the theft from her family's home remained unresolved. Now, new developments have emerged. On the Upper West Side of New York, a reclusive figure is discovered murdered in his luxurious penthouse, with two noteworthy items beside him: a Vermeer painting that had been stolen and a leather suitcase inscribed with the initials WHL3. For the first time in many years, these clues have given the authorities a new direction in Patricia's abduction case as well as in another unsolved FBI mystery, both now tied to a single individual. This individual is Windsor Horne Lockwood III, known to a few as Win. He is perplexed by the appearance of his suitcase and the purloined painting in the deceased's apartment. His curiosity is piqued further when the FBI informs him that the same person responsible for his cousin's kidnapping is linked to a domestic terrorism incident, suggesting that this individual might still be free. These intertwined mysteries have confounded the FBI for decades, but Win possesses three advantages the agency lacks: a personal tie to the case, substantial financial resources, and a distinct approach to justice.
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Over two decades ago, heiress Patricia Lockwood was taken during a heist at her family's estate and confined in a distant cabin for several months. Although Patricia managed to escape, her kidnappers did as well, and the theft from her family's home remained unresolved. Now, new developments have emerged. On the Upper West Side of New York, a reclusive figure is discovered murdered in his luxurious penthouse, with two noteworthy items beside him: a Vermeer painting that had been stolen and a leather suitcase inscribed with the initials WHL3. For the first time in many years, these clues have given the authorities a new direction in Patricia's abduction case as well as in another unsolved FBI mystery, both now tied to a single individual. This individual is Windsor Horne Lockwood III, known to a few as Win. He is perplexed by the appearance of his suitcase and the purloined painting in the deceased's apartment. His curiosity is piqued further when the FBI informs him that the same person responsible for his cousin's kidnapping is linked to a domestic terrorism incident, suggesting that this individual might still be free. These intertwined mysteries have confounded the FBI for decades, but Win possesses three advantages the agency lacks: a personal tie to the case, substantial financial resources, and a distinct approach to justice.
