Читаем Figure it Out For Yourself полностью

'Don't move. I'll join you in a whisky.' He consulted a narrow, gold wrist-watch, worn on the inside of his wrist. 'Quarter past six. I don't believe in drinking spirits before six, do you?'

I said it was a good rule, but rules should be broken now and then if one was to preserve one's sense of freedom.

He paid no attention to what I was saying. There was look of aloof disinterest on his face that hinted he seldom ever listened to anything anyone said to him.

'You're the chap who's going to pay them the ransom money,' he went on, stating a fact and not asking a question.

I said I was as he carried a fair-size snifter to an arm-chair opposite mine. He sat down and stared at me over the rim of the glass the way you would stare at some curious animal at the Zoo.

'She tells me she's going with you.'

'So she says.'

'I wish she wouldn't, but nothing I say makes any difference. He sipped the whisky, stared down at his white buckskin shoe. He had the smallest male feet I have ever seen. 'I never have been able to influence her one way or the other. A pity, really. Of course, old people are bores, but sometimes they are able to help the young if the young would only let them.'

I had the idea he was talking rather to himself than to me so I didn't say anything.

He brooded off into a silence that lasted some time. I helped myself to another of my cigarettes, kept an intelligent expression on my face just in case he might think it worth while to speak to me and resisted the temptation to fidget.

In the middle distance I noticed the two Chinese gardeners had decided to call it a day. They had been staring at the umbrella standard for some time without touching it; now, having learned it by heart, they moved off to enjoy a well-earned rest.

'Do you carry a gun?' Marshland asked suddenly.

'Yes; but I don't expect to use it.'

'I hope not. You'll see she takes as little risk as possible, won't you?'

'Of course.'

He drank half the whisky. It didn't do much to cheer him up.

'These fellows have pretty big ideas. Five hundred thousand is an enormous sum of money.'

He seemed to expect me to say something so I said, 'That's why they snatched him. The risk is enormous too.'

'I suppose it is. Do you think they'll keep their side of the bargain?'

'I don't know. As I explained to Mrs. Dedrick, if he hasn't seen them...'

'Yes; she told me. You're probably right I've been reading about some of the famous kidnapping cases of the past years. It would seem the higher the ransom the less likely is the chance of the victim surviving.'

I was suddenly aware that he wasn't mild or absentminded any more, and that he was staring at me with an intent, rather odd expression in his eyes.

'It depends on the kidnappers,' I said, meeting his eyes.

'I have a feeling we shan't see him again.' He got slowly to his feet, frowned round the room as if he had lost something. 'Of course, I haven't said anything to her about it, but I wouldn't be surprised if they haven't already killed him.' The white eyebrows lifted. 'What do you think?'

'It's possible.'

'More than possible, perhaps?'

'I'm afraid so.'

He nodded. The pleased, satisfied expression in his eyes jarred me to the heels.

He went out of the room, very spry and dapper, and humming a tune under his breath.

IV

It wasn't until the hands of my watch had crawled round to eleven that the telephone bell rang. The five-hour wait had been interminable, and I was so het-up I very nearly answered the telephone myself, but someone in some other part of the house beat me to it.

I had been pacing up and down, sitting on the settee, staring tout of the window and chainsmoking during those five long hours. I had seen Wadlock for a few minutes when he had brought me dinner on a wheel wagon, but he hadn't had anything to say and left me to serve myself.

I had been out just after eight o'clock to have a word with Kerman and to drop him a cold breast of chicken through the car window. I didn't stay more than a minute or so. I was scared anyone who might be watching the house would hear his flow of bad language.

Now at last something was going to happen. Although Dedrick meant nothing to me, I was nervy after the long wait. I could imagine what Serena must be feeling like. She was probably fit to walk up a wall.

A few minutes later I heard movements outside and I walked into the hall.

Serena, in black slacks and a short, dark fur coat, came hurrying down the stairs, followed by Wadlock, who was carrying three oilskin-wrapped packages.

She looked white and ill; there was a pinched, drawn look about her that told more clearly than words how she had suffered during those long hours of waiting.

'Monte Verde Mining Camp. Do you know it?' she said in a low, unsteady voice.

'Yes. It's on San Diego Highway. It'll take us about twenty minutes to get there if the traffic is light.'

Franklin Marshland appeared silently.

'Where is it?' he asked.

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Канун 1990 года. Военного полицейского Джека Ричера неожиданно переводят из Панамы, где он участвовал в операции по поимке диктатора Норьеги, в тишину кабинета американской военной базы в Северной Каролине. Ричер откровенно мается от безделья, пока в новогоднюю ночь ему не поступает сообщение, что в местном мотеле найден мертвый генерал. Смерть от сердечного приступа помешала ему исполнить какую-то сверхсекретную миссию. Когда Ричер прибывает в дом генерала, чтобы сообщить его жене о трагедии, он обнаруживает, что женщина убита. Портфель генерала исчез, и Ричер подозревает, что именно содержащиеся в нем бумаги стали причиной убийства.

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Фантастика / Крутой детектив / Триллер / Журналы, газеты / Триллеры / Любовно-фантастические романы / Детективы