Читаем A Long Line of Dead Men полностью

It was just as well she hadn't called me. There wouldn't have been anything for me to do. There was little enough for me to do now, the morning after the shooting, except field the telephone calls that came in from Ray Gruliow and Lewis Hildebrand and Gordon Walser. I'd have to know more, I told each of them, before I'd know how to proceed.

By early afternoon they'd found the car, a 1988 Ford Crown Victoria with Jersey plates, registered to an ophthalmologist in Teaneck. The vehicle had been located in the pound where it had been towed from a no-parking zone in the midtown theater district. Identification was made on the basis of a partial plate number supplied by a witness, and confirmed by paint scrapings on the car and on Rakhman Ali's yellow cab. The ophthalmologist's wife told police that her husband was in Houston attending a professional conference; he'd flown there Friday from Newark, after having left his car in the long-term parking lot.

There were fingerprints on the steering wheel and the dash, but they turned out to be those of the traffic officer who'd opened the car door and put it in neutral so that it could be towed. There were no prints that could have belonged to the shooter, whom witnesses described as of average height and wearing a baseball cap and a glossy dark blue warm-up jacket with a name embroidered over the breast pocket. None of the witnesses had been close enough to read the name.

The incident looked ordinary enough, newsworthy in that one of the two victims had enjoyed a measure of local celebrity. Someone had stolen a car from an airport parking lot, probably with the intention of using it in the commission of a crime. Maybe he was chemically impaired at the time of the accident. Maybe he was just having a bad day. In any event, he'd reacted badly to an ordinary fender-bender. Instead of exchanging licenses and insurance cards, he'd pulled a gun and started blasting.

It could have happened that way.

Or he could have parked his stolen car where he could keep an eye on the entrance to Billings's building, could have tagged along after the cab that stopped for Billings, could have engineered the collision and its aftermath.

Nothing to it.

* * *

I was up all day, drinking too much coffee and fighting off exhaustion. At 8:30 I made myself go over to St. Paul's for my regular meeting, but I couldn't make myself pay attention, nor could I keep from leaving at the break. When I walked in the door, Elaine told me to take a hot bath and go to bed.

"Just do it," she said.

The hot water took away some of the tension, and when I got into bed I fell asleep almost immediately. I must have dreamed about Jim Shorter, because I woke up concerned about him. I said as much to Elaine, and she told me he'd called the night before, while I was at St. Paul's.

"He said it wasn't important," she said, "and not to call him because he was on his way out. So I didn't mention it."

I called him. No answer.

I listened to the news and there was nothing about Billings. I went out and bought the Times and all three tabloids and read four versions of the same story. The Times article jumped from the front page to the obituary page, where his obituary included a photo and six inches of text. I read the obit, and the half-dozen others. And then I went on to read the half-page of paid death notices. Fully a third of these were for a man who had died the previous week and who had evidently contributed heavily to a wide range of charitable endeavors; each was now taking pains to reward him with a paid announcement of their sorrow at his passing.

I raced through those, but read the others fairly closely, as is my custom these days. My attention slacked off some toward the end, as it generally does. Once I've made it past the S's without finding my own name, my appetite for the pursuit is a little less keen. But I stayed there right through the alphabet, and thus learned of the death on Monday of Helen Stromberg Watson, wife of the late Alan Watson, of Forest Hills.

It took a few calls before I found a cop who would talk to me.

"Accidental drowning," he said. "Coulda slipped, hit her head on the tile. Drowned right in her own bathtub. All you gotta do is lose consciousness long enough to fill the lungs with water. Happens all the time."

"Oh, really?"

Перейти на страницу:

Похожие книги

Полукровка из Дома Ужаса
Полукровка из Дома Ужаса

ОТ АВТОРА БЕСТСЕЛЛЕРА «ВНУТРИ УБИЙЦЫ».СПЛАВ ДЕТЕКТИВА-ТРИЛЛЕРА О ПРОФАЙЛЕРЕ ФБР И ОГНЕННОГО ФЕЙРИ-ФЭНТЕЗИ.Два самых древних чувства на земле – ужас и любовь. Они должны быть противоположны. Но на самом деле идут рука об руку…ГИБЕЛЬ НА ПОРОГЕВойна фейри уже началась, и я оказалась в ее эпицентре. Мой отец, жестокий король Неблагих, мертв. Его смерть должна была стать нашим триумфом… Но мы продолжаем прятаться в Лондоне от наших древних врагов, Благих. Чтобы дать им отпор, нам с моей назначенной половиной, фейри Роаном из Дома Любви, нужно объединить шесть домов Неблагих. К сожалению, многовековые кровавые распри делают это почти невозможным…МАГИИ БОЛЬШЕ НЕТЧто еще хуже, нет никаких веских причин, чтобы кто-то нас слушал. В конце концов я всего лишь полукровка из Дома Ужаса… Я уже говорила, что моя магия страха исчезла? Правда, пока об этом никто не знает… Более того, мне нужно решить, хочу ли я жить в мире людей – или остаться в мире фейри с Роаном. Да, он великолепен и любит меня, но хочу ли я провести вечность в этом хаосе?УЖАС И ЛЮБОВЬБлагие вторглись на нашу территорию, безжалостно уничтожая фейри и людей. Времени уже не осталось, и мне надо как-то вернуть свой магический дар, снова стать Повелительницей Ужаса. Если это произойдет, меня никто не одолеет. Тогда станет понятно, сможем ли мы с Роаном – Ужас и Любовь – вместе изменить этот мир…

Кристин и Ник Кроуфорд , Майк Омер

Триллер / Детективная фантастика
Адское пламя
Адское пламя

Харри Маллер, опытный агент спецслужб, исчезает во время выполнения секретного задания. И вскоре в полицию звонит неизвестный и сообщает, где найти его тело…Расследование этого убийства поручено бывшему полицейскому, а теперь — сотруднику Антитеррористической оперативной группы Джону Кори и его жене Кейт, агенту ФБР.С чего начать? Конечно, с клуба «Кастер-Хилл», за членами которого и было поручено следить Харри.Но в «Кастер-Хилле» собираются отнюдь не мафиози и наркодилеры, а самые богатые и влиятельные люди!Почему этот клуб привлек внимание спецслужб?И что мог узнать Маллер о его респектабельных членах?Пытаясь понять, кто и почему заставил навеки замолчать их коллегу, Джон и Кейт проникают в «Кастер-Хилл», еще не зная, что им предстоит раскрыть самую опасную тайну сильных мира сего…

Геннадий Мартович Прашкевич , Иван Антонович Ефремов , Нельсон Демилль , Нельсон ДеМилль

Фантастика / Триллеры / Детективы / Триллер / Научная Фантастика