Читаем A Treasury of Stories (Collection of novelettes and short stories) полностью

That ended the incident. The pavement-rat promptly turned tail and scurried from sight through the sprinkling of people standing about.

Some of them were still staring curiously at Marie. She averted her gaze and said in a smothered voice, more to herself than to him, “Oh, let me get out of here!”

“Come on,” he said, taking her protectively by the arm. “I’ll walk you.”

From a safe distance, an epithet came zig-zagging back through the scattered people moving along the sidewalk. “Whoremaster!”

She heard it, and she shivered a little, defensively. She couldn’t tell whether or not he had too.

When they had reached the corner he stopped, as though he intended leaving her there. “Which way do you go now?” he said.

“As a matter of fact,” she told him lamely, “I live up the other way. The same direction he went in. But I was afraid if I went that way myself, I might run into him a second time.”

“I’ll walk back with you along the other side of the street,” he volunteered. “That way we can spot him if he’s still hanging around.”

“I’m giving you an awful lot of trouble.”

“No trouble,” he said reassuringly.

Along the way back, he remarked: “He got off easy, at that. Anybody else would’ve called the police on him.”

She dropped her eyes without answering. She knew why she hadn’t. Her own guilty conscience had kept her hands tied.

“This is it,” she said finally.

They both stopped uncertainly, not knowing how to bring the brief association to a deft close.

“You’ll be all right now,” he said.

“I hope so,” she said. “The only thing is. I come by this way every night on my way home from work. I hope he doesn’t find out about that.” A moment after it was out, she wished she hadn’t said it. It sounded as though she were looking for an excuse to see him again, and in all sincerity she hadn’t meant it that way.

“Well, look,” he said, “I could wait there by the bus-stop, walk you back to your door. The first night or two, anyway. Maybe after that you won’t have to worry about him any more. Around what lime do you usually get there?”

“No. Oh, no,” she balked volubly. “That would be asking too much. I couldn’t let you do that. That would be making a regular bodyguard out of you.”

He touched his finger to where his hat-brim would have been if he’d been wearing a hat. Somehow she knew he’d be there the next night.

He was.

Nothing memorable was said, but they were beginning to become better acquainted more by what was left unspoken than by the words they used.

She hadn’t had her meal yet when she met him, but rather than risk having him think she was trying to get a free meal out of him by referring to it, she refrained from mentioning it and did without it instead. After he’d left her at the door, she went upstairs and made herself a cup of instant coffee from a jar of it she kept there for use on Sunday mornings. She felt the alternative she had chosen to be the eminently more preferable one of the two: a full meal alone, or a cup of instant coffee with his company along the way home.

While she was drinking it, she sat there thinking about him.

Her thoughts were pleasant ones.

The following evening, the bus-stop again. This time he was the one who said: “I haven’t eaten yet. Have you?”

“No,” she said. “I’ll go Dutch with you.”

“I don’t do that,” he said firmly, but then he smiled to take some of the rebuke out of it.

At the table he told her, “I hadn’t eaten yet last night either when I met you, but I was afraid to ask you, afraid you’d turn me down. Would you?”

She thought back carefully. Then she said, “Yes, I would.”

“But you didn’t tonight,” he said.

All she said was, “I know you a day longer.”

She ordered frugally out of consideration for him, reading the menu-card from the right-hand side, where the price was, across to the left, where the item was. She received an impression that he was aware of what she was doing, and liked her all the better for it, though he wouldn’t have wanted to admit it.

Next, he picked her up at the candy-store at closing-time, instead of waiting for her at the other end of the bus-run. “Hello, Marie,” he said a little diffidently, as though wondering whether she’d approve his calling her by her first name.

She answered that for him forthwith. “Hello, Don,” she said. “Be with you in just a few minutes, as soon as I finish locking up.”

Acquaintanceship rapidly became friendship, friendship rapidly became fondness. Fondness started to ripen toward—

She realized he would have had to work terribly hard at disillusioning her to overcome the initial advantage he had started out with: her gratitude for the way he had taken her part and extricated her from her difficulty with the sidewalk-dizard.

Something he’d said kept coming back to her. It’s a lonely town when you’re by yourself.

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Татьяна Сергеева снова одна: любимый муж Гри уехал на новое задание, и от него давно уже ни слуху ни духу… Только работа поможет Танечке отвлечься от ревнивых мыслей! На этот раз она отправилась домой к экстравагантной старушке Тамаре Куклиной, которую якобы медленно убивают загадочными звуками. Но когда Танюша почувствовала дурноту и своими глазами увидела мышей, толпой эвакуирующихся из квартиры, то поняла: клиентка вовсе не сумасшедшая! За плинтусом обнаружилась черная коробочка – источник ультразвуковых колебаний. Кто же подбросил ее безобидной старушке? Следы привели Танюшу на… свалку, где трудится уже не первое поколение «мусоролазов», выгодно торгующих найденными сокровищами. Но там никому даром не нужна мадам Куклина! Или Таню пытаются искусно обмануть?

Дарья Донцова

Иронический детектив, дамский детективный роман / Иронические детективы / Детективы