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Danger lurks during the holidays

in these two Military K-9 Unit stories

In Christmas Escape by Valerie Hansen, veterinary assistant Rachel Fielding and her niece spend the holidays hiding from a killer with her boss, Kyle Roarke, and a capable K-9. And in Yuletide Target by Laura Scott, someone’s gunning for Senior Airman Jacey Burke and her trusty K-9. But Staff Sergeant Sean Morris will do anything to keep her safe for Christmas.

Valerie Hansen was thirty when she awoke to the presence of the Lord in her life and turned to Jesus. She now lives in a renovated farmhouse in the breathtakingly beautiful Ozark Mountains of Arkansas and is privileged to share her personal faith by telling the stories of her heart for Love Inspired. Life doesn’t get much better than that!

Laura Scott is a nurse by day and an author by night. She has always loved romance and read faith-based books by Grace Livingston Hill in her teenage years. She’s thrilled to have published over twelve books for Love Inspired Suspense. She has two adult children and lives in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, with her husband of thirty years. Please visit Laura at laurascottbooks.com, as she loves to hear from her readers.

Military K-9 Unit Christmas

Valerie Hansen

Laura Scott


www.millsandboon.co.uk

ISBN: 978-1-474-08654-7

MILITARY K-9 UNIT CHRISTMAS

© 2018 Harlequin Books S.A.

Published in Great Britain 2018

by Mills & Boon, an imprint of HarperCollinsPublishers 1 London Bridge Street, London, SE1 9GF

All rights reserved including the right of reproduction in whole or in part in any form. This edition is published by arrangement with Harlequin Books S.A.

This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, locations and incidents are purely fictional and bear no relationship to any real life individuals, living or dead, or to any actual places, business establishments, locations, events or incidents. Any resemblance is entirely coincidental.

By payment of the required fees, you are granted the non-exclusive, non-transferable right and licence to download and install this e-book on your personal computer, tablet computer, smart phone or other electronic reading device only (each a “Licensed Device”) and to access, display and read the text of this e-book on-screen on your Licensed Device. Except to the extent any of these acts shall be permitted pursuant to any mandatory provision of applicable law but no further, no part of this e-book or its text or images may be reproduced, transmitted, distributed, translated, converted or adapted for use on another file format, communicated to the public, downloaded, decompiled, reverse engineered, or stored in or introduced into any information storage and retrieval system, in any form or by any means, whether electronic or mechanical, now known or hereinafter invented, without the express written permission of publisher.

® and ™ are trademarks owned and used by the trademark owner and/or its licensee. Trademarks marked with ® are registered with the United Kingdom Patent Office and/or the Office for Harmonisation in the Internal Market and in other countries.

www.millsandboon.co.uk

Version: 2018-10-01

Meet the soldiers

of the Military K-9 Unit series

and their brave K-9 partners

Officer: Rachel Fielding

K-9 Partner: Stryker the German shepherd

Assignment: Protect her young niece from her dangerous father with the help of her military veterinarian boss.

Officer: Jacey Burke

K-9 Partner: Greta the Belgian Malinois

Assignment: Stay one step ahead of the killer who’s threatening her—without falling for her childhood friend and fellow officer.

Table of Contents

Cover

Back Cover Text

About the Authors

Title Page

Copyright

CHRISTMAS ESCAPE

DEDICATION

DEAR READER

BIBLE VERSE

ONE

TWO

THREE

FOUR

FIVE

SIX

SEVEN

EIGHT

NINE

TEN

ELEVEN

EPILOGUE

YULETIDE TARGET

DEDICATION

DEAR READER

BIBLE VERSE

ONE

TWO

THREE

FOUR

FIVE

SIX

SEVEN

EIGHT

NINE

TEN

Extract

About the Publisher

Christmas Escape

Valerie Hansen

May God bless the men and women serving in our current military and those whose sacrifices in the past have kept us free. We are grateful beyond words.

Dear Reader,

Memories can cheer us or sadden us, as happened with Rachel and Kyle. Facts don’t change but our perception of them can, especially if we accept the past and leave it behind. We may not have control over the acts of others, yet the way we perceive people and events can have a huge effect on us.

Rachel had been abused. She could have withdrawn from life or perhaps repeated the same mistakes. Her faith in God and reliance on Jesus for strength and wisdom helped her break free.

Kyle felt robbed of happiness. He could have stayed bitter, dwelling on his losses, and missed seeing the good right in front of him. Because he trusted God and looked for His providence, he was able to open his heart and love again.

Moving forward is not simple. Sometimes the change seems to take forever. I don’t have all the answers but my heavenly Father does. I pray you will seek and find the peace He offers.

Blessings,

Valerie Hansen

And the light shineth in darkness...

—John 1:5

ONE

“I love my job,” Rachel Fielding murmured, smiling. “Who wouldn’t? I help brave members of the military and get all the free kisses from them I want.” She chuckled and blushed, checking her surroundings to make sure no one had overheard her silly musings.

Her patients might have four paws and wagging tails, but they were the dearest part of her job as a veterinary assistant. Sure, some could be hard to handle, but very few had proved impossible in the years she’d worked at Canyon Air Force Base in Texas. Since a blissful marriage and raising her own children didn’t seem to be in her future, she’d fill that void via her job. Thankfully, any time she got in a bind trying to tend to a sick or injured dog she could always count on fellow techs or Captain Kyle Roark, DVM, her boss for two of the past four years.

Rachel knelt to hug Stryker, a three-legged German shepherd who had had his front leg amputated after being wounded overseas. For a tough K-9 soldier who had taken down the worst of the worst in battle, he sure was a sweetie—once you gained his trust as she had.

The abrupt opening of a nearby door made them both jump. “Easy, boy,” Rachel said to soothe the dog. She smiled up at her boss. “I’ll be in soon. I was just socializing Stryker a little on my break.”

Captain Kyle Roark shook his head. “It’s not that, Fielding. There’s a personal call for you. They say it’s important.”

“Sorry.” Rachel got to her feet. Since her K-9 buddy immediately started leaning against her, looking up and pleading with his beautiful brown eyes, she asked, “Can I bring Stryker with me? You said he needs more casual exposure.”

“Fine.” Roark held the door open for them. “Take your call on the phone in my office.”

“Thanks.” Barking echoed in waves along the corridors when Rachel and the big shepherd passed by. Now that winter had brought a cooldown, the dogs housed at the training facility and animal hospital were more active as well as vocal. “Did the caller say what this was about?”

The captain paused at the entrance to his small office and gestured instead of replying. To Rachel’s surprise he followed her and the dog in, pulled out a chair and said, “Sit,” as he handed her the portable telephone from his desk. “Please.”

Both she and the obedient K-9 complied. Rachel was getting uneasy. Captain Roark had always been a perfect gentleman with all the enlisted personnel but he had never, in her memory, acted so solicitous. Her hands were trembling and she used them both to grip the phone.

“This is Airman Fielding speaking.”

A woman’s voice captured and held her attention. “I’m with Patient Services at Municipal Hospital in San Antonio. I have had a terrible time locating you, Ms. Fielding. Is your first name Rachel and do you have a sister, Angela?”

“Yes. But I haven’t seen...”

“Angela is here with us. She’s asking for you, Ms. Fielding.”

The unspoken meaning behind that statement weighed on Rachel’s heart as if a boulder lay atop her chest, making it hard to breathe. Stryker sensed her tension and pressed his good shoulder to her knee. “My sister? Are you sure?”

“Yes, ma’am. If it’s at all possible, I urge you to get here immediately.”

“Angela’s sick?”

“She’s been injured. I’m not authorized to go into detail. Everything will be clear once you’ve visited and spoken with her. You are coming?”

“Of course.” Rachel’s stomach knotted, and she tasted bile on her tongue. If her sister had been hurt in an accident there would be no reason to keep that information private. Therefore, there was a very good chance Angie’s live-in boyfriend was to blame. The mere thought of having to face that horrible man again gave Rachel discernible tremors. She had to ask, “Is her, I mean, is a guy named Peter VanHoven with her?”

“I’m sorry, I have no idea. I was told to contact you and relay your sister’s message, that’s all.”

“All right. Where do I need to go?”

The patient services spokesperson was in the middle of giving directions when Rachel realized she hadn’t taken in anything. “Wait. Please. I need...” With that she passed the phone to her captain.

Kyle Roark rose from his perch on the edge of his desk and circled it, picked up a pen and made notes. “Yes, I have it. Thank you. When are visiting hours?”

Although Rachel couldn’t hear the other end of the conversation, she read empathy and concern in the veterinarian’s expression. His dark eyes were resting on her as he nodded and said, “Yes. I see. All right. Tell her sister that Rachel is on her way.” He glanced at his wristwatch. “We should be there before fifteen hundred hours. Thank you.”

She stood as he ended the call, using the arm of the chair for added balance. “I’ll need to get permission to leave the base and be gone for who knows how long. And I’ll need to borrow a car.”

“Leave that to me. When you put Stryker back in his kennel, tell Sylvia to cover your duties while I make a few calls and adjust staffing.” He was stripping off his white lab coat to reveal a light blue shirt beneath.

Rachel was almost to the door when Roark stopped her by calling out, “Fielding. Change into the civvies you keep in your locker and grab a warm jacket in case we’re still gone after sunset. I’m going to contact my commanding officer, Lieutenant General Hall, and explain the emergency situation so there won’t be any misunderstandings about both of us being away.”

“Are you sure you want to do this?”

“Absolutely. You’re clearly in no shape to drive and I’m escorting you to the hospital to see your sister. Period.”

“It’s very kind of you to offer, Captain.”

“You’re welcome, Rachel. And please remember to call me Kyle while we’re away from the base.”

“Of course... Kyle.”

“Get going. We need to hit the road in minutes, not hours.”

“On my way.” So many poignant memories were whirling through Rachel’s mind as she changed into jeans, a T-shirt and a lightweight jacket that she hardly gave thought to anything but her sister.

Angela. Dear, sweet, clueless Angela. What a waste her life had been after she’d fallen for Peter. He’d been bad news from the beginning but Angie would never listen, never see him for what he really was: a mean, ruthless bully with a temper to match.

The difference between that man’s psyche and that of the trained attack dogs in their program was self-control. A K-9 could be called off by his handler. Once Peter lost his temper and began to inflict suffering, there was no stopping him until he was physically spent. She knew him well. She’d been on the receiving end of his wild temper and vindictive actions more than once.

The price she’d paid had been high. He had cost her the only family she had left in the world.

Kyle drove his military SUV as fast as the speed limit allowed, plus a tad more. The caller from the hospital had not minced words once Rachel had handed him the phone. Her sister was in critical condition with broken bones and a damaged heart and might not live long. He knew what it was like to be cheated of a chance to say goodbye. To express love and devotion one last time. He’d been too late to kiss his wife or his little girl and it still galled him, especially at this time of the year. Sadly, the anniversary of their deaths coincided with Christmas celebrations that were supposed to be joyous.

Well, they sure weren’t happy times for him. Not anymore. He didn’t try to fake it, either. There was no sense pretending to be having a good time when he wasn’t. He didn’t expect others to stop enjoying themselves, but he made it clear he did not want to be included. When Christmas Day arrived he was more than willing to take over kennel duties and give most of his enlisted staff the day off. No longer having a family of his own hurt worse on that particular day than at any other time.

Rachel said very little as they drove. Kyle saw her tense against the seat belt and pull her purse into her lap as he wheeled into the hospital parking lot and stopped. Before he could walk around to open the passenger-side door, she was out and jogging toward the front entrance. “Wait.”

Rachel didn’t even bother to shake her head; she simply kept going, making Kyle wonder if she’d heard him. He’d seen plenty of shocked reactions demonstrated by both humans and K-9s who had been traumatized in battle, and that was exactly how his vet tech was behaving. She was trapped in a zone between fight and flight, determination and panic, and that conflict had rendered her temporarily deaf and mute.

Catching up as she passed through the automatic-entry doors into the lobby, Kyle caught hold of her arm. She wheeled, wild-eyed, as if his touch was an attack.

He immediately released her, palms facing out, hands raised. “Simmer down. They told me your sister is in the ICU on the fourth floor.” He pointed. “Elevators are over there.”

Rachel stared at him for a moment before he saw recognition light her blue eyes. “O-okay. Hurry.”

“You need to act calm even if you don’t feel it. The last thing your sister needs is to see you in hysterics.” Kyle pushed the up button for the elevators. “Take some slow, deep breaths and get it together. What’s got you so spooked?”

“You wouldn’t understand.” The elevator doors swished open. Rachel jumped on ahead of him, faced front and repeatedly punched the button for the fourth floor.

“Try me.” He noticed she was focused not on him, but on the narrow slice of lobby she could see behind him. Worry masked her usually sweet expression, and panic dampened the spark in her eyes.

When she slammed the heel of her hand against the control panel, Kyle cautioned again. “Whoa. Beating those buttons to death won’t make them work any faster, you know.”

“We have to go! Now.” She was leaning to one side for a final glimpse as the doors slid smoothly closed. “I think I just spotted Peter.”

Whirling, Kyle took a defensive stance, but it was too late. The elevator was moving. “The guy you asked about on the phone? Why didn’t you say so?”

“It was just for a second. This guy was wearing a black T-shirt, jacket and a baseball cap so I couldn’t see if his long hair was pulled back, but everything about him fit what I remember.”

Her lower lip quivered when her gaze met Kyle’s. “What am I going to do? I want to be brave for Angie’s sake but the thought of facing that man makes me sick to my stomach. She must be in terrible shape to take the chance of sending for me.”

Take the chance? The more he learned, the less he liked it. “Why were you and your sister estranged?”

“It’s complicated. We don’t have time for the whole story.”

“Okay, fill me in later. Right now, the important thing is your reunion. Obviously, she wants to make peace or she wouldn’t have asked for you. So, make the best of it.”

The shiny metal doors slid open on their floor. Rachel stepped into the hallway, looked around and froze.

Kyle placed his hand lightly at her waist. “You can do this. Come on. ICU is this way.”

She didn’t move. “What if...? What if I was right and I did see Peter? He can be violent and he could be right behind us.”

“If he is, I’ll take care of him.”

“You’ll watch my back?”

“Of course. When you and your sister want privacy, just say the word and I’ll step outside.”

“Outside the room, maybe. Not outside the hospital. Not that far away. Promise?”

“I promise,” Kyle said, frowning.

Rachel blinked back tears. “I wish we had brought Stryker or another K-9 for self-defense. Peter VanHoven is more than Angela’s significant other. He’s also a sadist with a hair-trigger temper. I’m positive he’s the reason she’s in intensive care. If he is around here we won’t want to cross his path.”

“You’re that scared of him?”

“Let’s just say I’ve experienced Peter’s foul moods firsthand. And I have the scars to prove it.”

“I’ll stick close.” Kyle had already been entertaining an urge to protect and shelter her. Now, it blossomed. It had been a long time since he’d allowed himself to feel proprietary toward any woman, let alone a beautiful one. Why had he failed to notice how truly attractive this vet tech was before?

Kyle’s cheeks flamed. That kind of thinking made him decidedly uncomfortable. Rachel Fielding had always acted as if she was just as determined as he was to remain unattached. That constant standoffishness had puzzled him from time to time, but he hadn’t questioned her because he was comfortable with it. Now that he’d seen how afraid she was to face her sister’s boyfriend, her attitude was beginning to make perfect sense. The man had physically and emotionally injured Rachel in the past and now her poor sister was hurt, too. That was totally unacceptable.

Confounded by his innermost thoughts, Kyle clenched his fists as they made their way down the hallway. A part of him was wishing they would run into this Peter guy so he could tell him off—or more. It wasn’t an exemplary Christian attitude, but it certainly was human.

On alert, Kyle stood taller and braced himself to repel the unknown. No low-life abuser was going to get his hands on Rachel without going through him first.

TWO

Keeping watch behind and to the sides, Rachel let Kyle request admittance to the sealed-off ward via the intercom. Automatic doors swished open and her senses were assailed by pungent medicinal smells, beeping machines and an atmosphere so hushed, so heavy, it seemed tangible. If she had not yearned so strongly to be reunited with Angela, she would have turned and fled.

Up ahead, a woman wearing a mask, gloves and a long-sleeved disposable smock gestured to them and pointed. “Ms. Fielding is in the last bed in this row. Behind that curtain. We don’t usually allow more than one visitor at a time and a neighbor brought her daughter to see her, but under these circumstances you can go ahead, too.”

The extra strength Rachel needed came from the man beside her. She took a deep breath, steeled herself for what she might see and started forward. Off on her left and right, other patients were clearly struggling to survive. Most were elderly, but not all. Angela was barely thirty. This was so unfair.

As they drew closer, Rachel could hear a woman speaking to a child behind the partially drawn curtain next to Angela’s bed. When Rachel reached out and pulled it aside with a trembling hand, the sight of her sister’s swollen, bruised face and emaciated arms made her gasp. Tears immediately blurred her vision. She rushed forward as an older woman carrying a little girl backed away to make room.

“You came,” Angela whispered.

“Of course I did.”

“I was afraid you might not.”

Previously unshed tears began to slide silently down Rachel’s cheeks and she noted that her sister was also weeping. What could she do or say to help? Fond memories made her revert to a long-unused quip. “I had to see my favorite sister.”

To Rachel’s delight, the comment brought a slight smile to the badly beaten face. “I’m your only sister.”

“Picky, picky.” Rachel’s hands were clasping Angela’s on the side of the bed opposite the IV, and she could feel bones inside the painfully thin fingers. Beeping from a nearby machine increased in frequency, and she realized she was hearing her sister’s racing pulse.

Slowly, tenderly, Rachel reached to smooth Angela’s damp hair off her forehead. “Take it easy, sis. You need to rest so you can get better and take care of your daughter. This pretty little girl must be Natalie.”

“Yes. Natalie, this is your aunt Rachel. Maria Alvarez is my neighbor. She’s the one who called the police when I couldn’t.”

Not only did Angela’s weeping continue, she looked past Rachel and the others to focus on Kyle. “You’re her friend?”

“Kyle Roark. We work together,” he said.

“But you are friends, too?” She kept struggling to control her emotions enough to speak.

Rachel answered for him. “Yes. Kyle and I are friends. He drove me here.”

“He’ll stay?”

That question made Rachel stiffen and peer behind her. “I thought I saw Peter downstairs. Is he...?”

Attempting to shake her head, Angela winced in pain. “He’s in jail. The police arrested him for doing this to me.”

“Thank God for answered prayers,” Rachel confessed. “He’s the last person I want to run into. Ever.”

“That makes two of us,” her older sister admitted, sniffling and struggling to go on. “I’m so sorry, sis. I should have listened to you and left him years ago.”

“That’s all in the past.” Rachel stroked Angela’s forehead again. “Right now, you need to worry about getting better.”

Again, Angela focused on Kyle, then looked to Mrs. Alvarez. “Maria, can you and this gentleman take Natalie for ice cream or something? Please? I want to talk to my sister. Alone.”

“Sí.” The full-bodied woman lowered the child to the ground and clasped one of Angela’s hands. “Hold on to Senor Kyle, too, Natalie. We don’t want him to get lost.”

The child complied, slipping her small hand into Kyle’s and holding tight, then looking up at him in awe. “He’s real big.”

Rachel smiled and almost chuckled until her niece added, “I think he could beat up my daddy if he had to.”

Rachel’s heart clenched. Of course. Angela wouldn’t be the only victim of her live-in’s temper. Peter would have lashed out at anyone who displeased him. The way he had at Angela. And the way he had at her when he’d driven her out of her sister’s life that last time.

Returning her full attention to her weeping sibling, Rachel tried to apologize. “I’m so sorry. I should have found the courage to stay with you.”

“Nonsense.” Sniffle. “You begged me to go away with you and I was too stubborn and stupid to listen. That’s not your fault.”

“I wrote. You never answered.”

“I couldn’t. I just couldn’t admit what a horrible mistake I’d made. By the time I thought I was ready to leave Peter I’d lost touch with you.”

“You knew I was close by.”

“Not for sure. I’d had your unlisted cell number in my phone but Peter took it away. When your letters stopped coming I figured you had washed your hands of me.”

“No way. I didn’t stop trying to keep in touch,” Rachel vowed. “He must have intercepted my letters. I was only writing once a month or so after the first year. It would have gotten easier for him to destroy your personal mail before you saw it.”

Falling silent, Angela seemed to struggle to breathe.

“Do you want me to call a nurse?”

“No. No. Just give me a second.” She inhaled a little more deeply, wincing and groaning as her chest expanded. “I want you to promise me something.”

Rachel leaned closer. “Of course. Anything.”

“I want you to take Natalie, look after her and tell her about me so she remembers and knows I loved her.”

“I’ll be glad to babysit. You can tell her you love her, yourself.”

“Promise.”

“All right. I promise.”

Shuddering, Angela tightened her grip on Rachel’s hand. “Don’t let Peter get his hands on her, whatever you do.”

“How can I prevent it? He’s her father.”

“Not legally. I never put a father’s name on her birth certificate, and we never married. Besides, I have high hopes he’ll rot in jail after doing this to me.”

“From your lips to God’s ears,” Rachel quoted, meaning every word. “Is it all right if I take her to the base with me while you’re recuperating? I can’t be away from my duties too long, and there’s a good preschool there for when I’m working.”

“Did you take that veterinary aide course you kept dreaming about?”

“Yes. Kyle’s the head vet in the military K-9 training program at Canyon Air Force Base and I’m one of his techs. That’s what he meant when he said we worked together, although actually I work for him.”

Angela managed a lopsided smile. “Wonderful. You’ll be with all those protective dogs they train. Couldn’t be better.”

“And when you get well we’ll find you an apartment close to Canyon so we can see each other all the time.”

The dreamy, weary expression on her sister’s face comforted Rachel. When Angela closed her eyes and sighed, she did the same. Hands still clasped together, Rachel began to pray with her and for her. “Thank you, Father, for healing old wounds in our hearts and for the healing You are about to do in Angela’s body. Amen.”

Rachel watched Angela’s eyelids flutter. Her breathing had been noisy all along but now it began to sound labored even though the beeping machines kept up their even cadence. Rachel wanted to tell Angela how much she loved her but was hesitant to disturb her further. Time ticked past so slowly that every second felt as if it lasted minutes.

Praying silently, Rachel listened to the mechanical manifestations of her sister’s life until suddenly Angela was squeezing her hand. Rachel met her gaze, mirrored Angela’s smile and felt her heart breaking. An amazing peace and release settled over the bruised face. Angie’s pain and suffering were over. Her sister was finally free. Peter couldn’t hurt her anymore.

But what about Natalie? The little girl had never met her aunt Rachel before today and now she was going to have to take her away from the only home she’d ever known. How could she possibly make a child understand and accept the situation when she hardly could herself?

Three ICU nurses and a doctor had finished confirming Rachel’s fears and had left by the time she heard the sound of boots on the bare floor. Kyle was back. And Natalie was undoubtedly with him. Angela was positioned as if asleep, but Maria Alvarez guessed what had happened in their absence and gasped, beginning to mutter a prayer as she stepped ahead to block Natalie’s view.

Kyle, too, quickly closed the distance. He stopped behind Rachel and laid a hand of comfort on her shoulder. “I’m so sorry.”

Without hesitation she accepted his condolences by placing one of her hands atop his and saying, “Thank you.”

“I wanna see my mama,” the little girl whined. She was trying to wiggle past the adults.

“Let her come closer,” Rachel said, surprised at how calm and in control she felt despite everything. She held out her hands and Natalie let her pick her up. The urge to kiss the child’s hair and stroke her back as a mother would surged through Rachel and squeezed her heart. “I’ll take care of you now, honey. You can come and live with me.”

The big blue eyes, lashes wet with tears, looked up at Rachel as if she had just promised the world. “I—I don’t have to go back to Peter?”

Rachel pulled her close again and dried her cheeks. “No, baby, no. We’re not going to have anything more to do with Peter. I promise.”

As she comforted her niece and glanced at the others, she saw concern in Maria’s expression and disbelief in Kyle’s.

“What else can I do?” she asked him aside. “If I send Natalie with Maria, Peter will know how to find her and try to take her back. I have as much legal right to her as he does.”

“How do you figure?”

“Angela said they never married and his name is not on the birth certificate. He’d have to go to court to prove he actually is her father, and I’m sure a background check will show him as an unsuitable parent.”

“Then we should call the authorities and do this the right way, the legal way,” Kyle warned. “You can get in a lot of trouble if you just walk off with her.”

“I know, but...” Rachel looked to Maria for moral support and found the older woman staring out the window at the parking lot below. Nobody could blame her for turning away. She’d been sucked into this mess by being a Good Samaritan and probably feared and hated Peter VanHoven almost as much as Angela had.

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Umfang:
201 S. 2 Illustrationen
ISBN:
9781474086547
Rechteinhaber:
HarperCollins

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