Читаем Corpse on the Grill полностью

She rubbed thumb and forefinger together. “He’s broke. Greg used to make fair dough out of circusing with one of those cross-country wrestling troupes. But he strained his back; he couldn’t wrestle one of the Quints, now. So I give him a few pieces of change, now and then. I hate his guts, but I wouldn’t want to see anything happen to him.”

“No?” The Marshal heard a scraping noise from somewhere outside the living-room; it sounded like a dog scratching at a door. “Somebody did—. And gave your husband a workout on a butcher’s block. With a cleaver.”

<p>Chapter Four</p><p>The Skull Container</p>

She didn’t scream. She put the back of one hand to her mouth and squinted as if the light hurt her eyes. “Killed him?”

“Dismembered him,” Pedley said. “Burned his arms and legs in the charcoal fire at the restaurant. You wouldn’t know anything about that?”

“No.” She turned her back so they couldn’t see her face, but the Marshal didn’t miss her glance toward the bedroom. “Not a thing.”

Pedley palmed his automatic and approached the bedroom, cautiously. Five feet away he paused; a roomful of men were stepping toward him in the darkness. They were all alike; they were all like Pedley himself. Suzie’s bedroom was walled with mirrors. He switched on the light; saw his own reflection from a dozen angles. But there was no place to hide in that room. He stepped into the bathroom, shoved back the shower curtain. Nothing. There were two closets, both empty. He swivelled quickly to find Suzie watching him with fascinated intentness.

“I give you my word there’s no one hiding in my apartment,” she said, unsteadily. “And unless you want to ask me some more questions about Greg...”

Pedley tried the kitchenette. No dice. But there was another door opening out of the kitchenette. There was no keyhole under the knob. A fire door. Opening onto a flame-proof stairwell; a door knobless on the outside, so no intruder could get into the apartment from the internal fire escape. He yanked it open.

There was a movement in the gloom outside. The Marshal reached out, grabbed a coat lapel and jerked into the room a thin, bony man with pinched and harassed features set in hairless skull.

“Yeah?” growled Pedley. “And who in the hell are you? What are you doing out there?”

Suzie spoke up, sharply. “He’s my brother.”

The bald-headed man snarled. “I’m Jimmy Yalb. This is my sister’s home; I gotta right to step out on the fire stairs if I wanna.”

Pedley slammed the fire door, pushed Yalb roughly into the living-room. As he shoved the eavesdropper past Biddonay, the cafe man yelled:

“Suzie’s brother! He’s a lying so-and-so, Mr. Pedley. He’s the bake-chef at my restaurant, that’s who he is.”

Yalb tugged away from Pedley’s grasp, rushed belligerently at Biddonay. “Yes and no thanks to you, either, you big tub of lard.”

“Jimmy!” Suzie screamed.

“If it hadn’t been for Mr. Krass,” Yalb spat out, “I’d have been bounced a dozen times.”

The Marshal watched Biddonay redden with rage. “You bet you would, Yalb; I’ve never trusted you. And now I know you’re Suzie’s brother, I’ll trust you even less.”

Yalb rumbled hoarsely, deep in his throat; he twisted swiftly out of his coat, eluded the Marshal’s grip, lunged fiercely at Biddonay. There was a short-bladed knife in his hand. He struck once at the cafe owner before Pedley could stop the blow. Biddonay screamed fearfully, reeled back. He struggled desperately to defend himself with his bare fists. The blade of the knife licked out like a snake’s forked tongue. Biddonay clutched at his side, stumbled, pitched sideways against a heavy center table, went down to his knees and stayed there, squealing like a stuck porker. Pedley closed in on Yalb.

The girl kept shrieking at the top of her lungs: “Don’t, Jimmy, don’t! You can’t fight the law.”

But Yalb tried. He butted the Marshal’s chin with his hard bald pate; he kicked, gouged, used a knee where it would maim a man most easily. He dropped the knife and clawed at the Marshal’s eyes with vicious talons. Pedley clipped him across the side of his face with the barrel of his automatic. He had to hit the chef five times before Yalb let go his teeth-grip on the Marshal’s wrist. He sagged to his knees, clutching at the detective’s coat to keep from falling to the floor.

The Marshal gave him one extra belt with the gun-barrel, to make sure the man wasn’t possuming. Mr. Yalb wasn’t.

“Now then,” Pedley gritted. “Get up on your feet and let’s level on this.”

Biddonay rolled over on his stomach and got his knees under him, but remained with his head down, his chin touching the carpet.

“He cut me!” the fat man moaned. “He stabbed me. Look!”

Pedley got his arms under the restaurateur’s shoulders, hoisted him onto one of those underslung chairs. He ripped open Biddonay’s vest, pulled up his shirt. There was a crimson line about an inch long but the blood was merely oozing from it.

“That’s a belly wound,” the plump man blubbered. “I’ll get blood poisoning—”

Перейти на страницу:

Похожие книги

Невеста мафии
Невеста мафии

Когда сыщики влюбляются – преступникам становится некомфортно вдвойне.Буря чувств и океан страстей сметают на своем пути любые злодейские преграды, уловки и козни! Один минус: любовная нега затуманивает взгляд, и даже опытный опер порой не замечает очевидного…Так и капитан милиции Петрович, лежа в больнице с простреленной ногой, начал приударять за медсестрой Лидочкой. И думал он о чем угодно, но только не о последствиях этого флирта. И вдруг Лидочка бесследно исчезает. Похоже на то, что ее похитили торговцы женской красотой, на счету которых несколько убийств в подпольном стриптиз-клубе. И вот Петрович, как говорится, рвет чеку. Теперь его не остановит ничто. На розыски любимой он готов отправиться к черту на кулички – на сибирские золотые прииски, в самое разбойничье гнездо, где шансов остаться в живых – почти никаких…

Владимир Григорьевич Колычев , Владимир Колычев

Криминальные детективы / Детективы / Криминальный детектив
Свой — чужой
Свой — чужой

Сотрудника уголовного розыска Валерия Штукина внедряют в структуру бывшего криминального авторитета, а ныне крупного бизнесмена Юнгерова. Тот, в свою очередь, направляет на работу в милицию Егора Якушева, парня, которого воспитал, как сына. С этого момента судьбы двух молодых людей начинают стягиваться в тугой узел, развязать который практически невозможно…Для Штукина юнгеровская система постепенно становится более своей, чем родная милицейская…Егор Якушев успешно служит в уголовном розыске.Однако между молодыми людьми вспыхивает конфликт…* * *«Со времени написания романа "Свой — Чужой" минуло полтора десятка лет. За эти годы изменилось очень многое — и в стране, и в мире, и в нас самих. Тем не менее этот роман нельзя назвать устаревшим. Конечно, само Время, в котором разворачиваются события, уже можно отнести к ушедшей натуре, но не оно было первой производной творческого замысла. Эти романы прежде всего о людях, о человеческих взаимоотношениях и нравственном выборе."Свой — Чужой" — это история про то, как заканчивается история "Бандитского Петербурга". Это время умирания недолгой (и слава Богу!) эпохи, когда правили бал главари ОПГ и те сотрудники милиции, которые мало чем от этих главарей отличались. Это история о столкновении двух идеологий, о том, как трудно порой отличить "своих" от "чужих", о том, что в нашей национальной ментальности свой или чужой подчас важнее, чем правда-неправда.А еще "Свой — Чужой" — это печальный роман о невероятном, "арктическом" одиночестве».Андрей Константинов

Александр Андреевич Проханов , Андрей Константинов , Евгений Александрович Вышенков

Криминальный детектив / Публицистика