Читаем Alfred Hitchcock’s Mystery Magazine. Vol. 34, No. 13 & 14, Winter 1989 полностью

“I guess I’ll never doubt you again when you say that they bring good luck.”

“Will there be others like Bates who come to kill you?”

“Perhaps.”

“What will you do now?”

He touched his side and winced. “I may not be able to handle the kite this evening. I’ll have to see if young Fleet can carry on for me.”

Fire Burning Bright

by Brendan DuBois

The first thing I did when the phone rang was to check the glowing red numerals of my bedroom clock radio, which told me it was four in the morning. Some people take a while to wake up when a loud noise — like a telephone — disturbs their sleep. Not me. Any loud noise at night is like a hand grenade rolled underneath my bed — it quickly gets my attention.

I swung around and switched on the side lamp, and by the time the third chime had rung. I had picked up the receiver and had a pen in the other hand.

It was Norma Quentin, night dispatcher for Franconia County. She didn’t bother apologizing for waking me up. She knows me too well.

“Thought you’d be interested,” she said, as she always does. “Purmort volunteer just responded up on Timberswamp Road — looks like a fire, suspicious origins and all the rest.”

“Jesus,” I murmured. “Tate Burnham?”

Her voice hesitated, just a bit. I’ll always remember that. “Don’t know, Jerry. They’ve been gone about ten minutes — it’ll take a while for you to get there, even if you hurry.”

I heard the crackle of static and I imagined her, sitting in a darkened cubicle, in the basement of the county courthouse, linked by telephone and radio to the rest of the county, the console lights making her skin look bloodless. I was sure her two stainless steel crutches would be there, at her side, along with a .38 caliber revolver.

“Gotta go,” Norma said. “Calls coming in.”

Soon I was dressed and in my Ford pickup, driving north along Route 3, my reporter’s notebook and camera bag on the cold and hard vinyl seat. The center of Purmort looked quiet enough — the few stores and two service stations darkened and empty — and in a few seconds I was back on Route 3, passing the small wooden building that held Justin’s Plumbing Supplies, and the offices of the weekly Purmort Sentinel (Jerry Auberg, editor).

It was cold, very cold for October, and the lights from the truck caught the bright colors of the foliage of the trees along Route 3, which each fall enticed tourists to drive for hours. On both sides of the two lane road, up beyond the trees and forests, were the ridgelines of the Purmort range. The mass of the mountains was impressive, like distant battleships sailing silently and without lights. I wondered what creatures lived up there at night and I shivered.

I missed the turnoff for Timberswamp Road and had to make a sloppy U-turn farther down. Timberswamp was a town-maintained road, unlike Route 3, which is maintained by the state. Purmort being Purmort, the road was cracked and bumpy and there were no streetlights at all. The few homes were set far into the woods, and all of them had bright and powerful yard lights on. I drove a mile and six-tenths by the truck’s odometer before I saw the flashing lights of the firetrucks and police cruisers. I pulled up behind another pickup truck — one belonging to a volunteer firefighter, no doubt, since it had a slap-on red strobe light on its roof — and stepped out, swinging my camera bag over one shoulder. The cold hit me like a wet towel against my face, and I saw my breath in the frigid air.

There were lights everywhere, blue ones from the two Purmort police cruisers and red ones from the two fire engines from the Purmort volunteer fire department. There was the loud crackling of radio static coming from the vehicles, and I walked along the road, nodding and looking at the huddled groups of volunteer firefighters, many in their nightclothes and wearing bunker jackets and heavy boots. It was then that an odd thing happened.

By that time, after all that had gone on over the summer, most of them had begun to at least accept me, if not quite trust me. But as I walked by none of them looked my way. They turned their backs and talked to one another, like tiny herds of animals in winter turning among themselves, protecting one another from an outside threat.

I walked up the road, a slight embankment of dirt and grass on the right, and that was when the smell of smoke and something else struck me, and I held onto the camera bag strap very tightly.


It began in spring, and innocently at first, with a few grass fires along some of the farms that dotted the outlying areas of Purmort. At first the firefighters and the chief of police, Randy Parnell, blamed the fires on kids smoking cigarettes or raising hell in preparation for summer vacation. Being the editor and sole reporter — and owner — of the Sentinel, I put the stories inside the paper. No cause for giving the kids publicity, I thought.

Перейти на страницу:

Похожие книги

Другая правда. Том 1
Другая правда. Том 1

50-й, юбилейный роман Александры Марининой. Впервые Анастасия Каменская изучает старое уголовное дело по реальному преступлению. Осужденный по нему до сих пор отбывает наказание в исправительном учреждении. С детства мы привыкли верить, что правда — одна. Она? — как белый камешек в куче черного щебня. Достаточно все перебрать, и обязательно ее найдешь — единственную, неоспоримую, безусловную правду… Но так ли это? Когда-то давно в московской коммуналке совершено жестокое тройное убийство родителей и ребенка. Подозреваемый сам явился с повинной. Его задержали, состоялось следствие и суд. По прошествии двадцати лет старое уголовное дело попадает в руки легендарного оперативника в отставке Анастасии Каменской и молодого журналиста Петра Кравченко. Парень считает, что осужденного подставили, и стремится вывести следователей на чистую воду. Тут-то и выясняется, что каждый в этой истории движим своей правдой, порождающей, в свою очередь, тысячи видов лжи…

Александра Маринина

Детективы / Прочие Детективы
Сразу после сотворения мира
Сразу после сотворения мира

Жизнь Алексея Плетнева в самый неподходящий момент сделала кульбит, «мертвую петлю», и он оказался в совершенно незнакомом месте – деревне Остров Тверской губернии! Его прежний мир рухнул, а новый еще нужно сотворить. Ведь миры не рождаются в одночасье!У Элли в жизни все прекрасно или почти все… Но странный человек, появившийся в деревне, где она проводит лето, привлекает ее, хотя ей вовсе не хочется им… интересоваться.Убит старик егерь, сосед по деревне Остров, – кто его прикончил, зачем?.. Это самое спокойное место на свете! Ограблен дом других соседей. Имеет ли это отношение к убийству или нет? Кому угрожает по телефону странный человек Федор Еременко? Кто и почему убил его собаку?Вся эта детективная история не имеет к Алексею Плетневу никакого отношения, и все же разбираться придется ему. Кто сказал, что миры не рождаются в одночасье?! Кажется, только так может начаться настоящая жизнь – сразу после сотворения нового мира…

Татьяна Витальевна Устинова

Остросюжетные любовные романы / Прочие Детективы / Романы / Детективы