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Oddly enough, I didn’t feel like arguing. The place was now so cold it was freezing my very core, paralyzing my reactions. Despite how surprised I was by the declarations of the woman standing before me, I could only think of getting a bite to eat and sinking into a bed. Tomorrow I could review the situation, look around the place, find police headquarters, and begin to adjust, so to speak.

I asked my hostess if she could have dinner brought to me in my room. She confirmed this. I took the key she gave me; it had the number 6 on it.

She had a last recommendation for me: “In the dining room, you must always sit at table number 6. It is reserved for you. At night, try not to make too much noise, so as not to disturb people in the other rooms.”

I was surprised at these precautions, since I hadn’t seen a soul in the place. I went out to get my bag and locked the car.

Room 6 had minimal furniture. A double bed that seemed fairly comfortable. A table with a reading lamp on it. Opposite the bed, there were armchairs on either side of a small round table. I found a few hangers in the freestanding wooden closet decorated with a long mirror. The bathroom was just as plain. A narrow shower, a sink, and a toilet. The towel was clean and the soap had not been opened. I took a shower; hot water flowed from the faucet. This hotel was surprising me at every turn.

I felt better after the shower. A pleasant torpor was invading my muscles and brain. I was surely going to fall asleep soon. The situation seemed less dramatic than I thought it would be. In my mind I was thanking my old friend Froset, who used to be my partner in my years as a detective. I had been stunned by the news of my imminent transfer to Gokal and called him up. Practical as ever, he’d given me the name of the Paradise Inn. It was known in high places. Froset had rapidly climbed the ladder because of his excellent service record and was now part of the high command. I wasn’t too worried, because Froset would surely not let me rot for a long time in this hole. Of course, when the top brass appoints you to a new place, they don’t care how you get there nor even where you’ll live.

I put on a loose undershirt and clean underpants. Then I took my cell phone to call my brother in Port-au-Prince and tell him I’d arrived safely. The screen of the phone showed the signal wasn’t getting through; there was no way to communicate. Not too surprising-that often happens in out-of-the-way parts of the country. I’d try later.

Someone knocked at the door. I took my weapon out of its holster and, holding it at arm’s length, opened the door halfway. A young woman stood there with a dinner tray. The mauve light from the corridor darkened her very black skin still more. All I could see of her was her white smock, her eyes, and her teeth. I waved her in and she set the tray down on the round table. In the light of the room, I could see she was a very young girl, no more than sixteen or seventeen. An oval face and big eyes that looked right through me. Her lips were thick and well defined: a mouth that ate up her face. Her kinky hair showed from underneath her scarf. Her breasts, firm as unripe fruit, pushed out at a little blouse cut off at the navel. A long filmy skirt covered her ankles. No jewel decorated her wild beauty. Once the tray was set down, I expected her to leave. But she didn’t. I looked at her more closely. She reminded me of someone-but who? Oh, yes! The woman at the reception desk. My landlady must have looked like this girl forty years ago. The presence of this adolescent disconcerted me. The aroma of the consommé stirred my hunger and reminded me that I’d had my last meal more than twelve hours ago. I swallowed with difficulty and finally sat down at the table to eat. She retreated and stood in a corner of the room, watching me stealthily. The soup was thick and tasty.

“The lady downstairs is your mother?” I asked the girl.

She nodded.

“What’s your name?”

“Josiane.”

“Your nickname is Jo?”

She smiled, and this gesture hollowed out two wonderful dimples that hung on to her smile.

“Sometimes.”

I kept on asking: “You’ve been working here for a long time?”

“Yes… I mean, no… I help my mother out from time to time.”

“Do you often serve guests in their rooms?”

“Yes.”

“Aren’t you at all afraid?”

“No… The guests are always nice to me. And then, before long they become harmless.”

I didn’t get the meaning of that remark. I was wondering if this child was really all right in the head.

“What do you mean, harmless?”

“Umm… Yeah, after a few days here, all they usually think about is resting. Yes, that’s what I mean. Are you going to stay in the hotel a long time?”

“I don’t know yet. Why?”

“You’re leaving tomorrow?”

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Тара Мосс — топ-модель и один из лучших современных авторов детективных романов. Ее книги возглавляют списки бестселлеров в США, Канаде, Австралии, Новой Зеландии, Японии и Бразилии. Чтобы уверенно себя чувствовать в криминальном жанре, она прошла стажировку в Академии ФБР, полицейском управлении Лос-Анджелеса, была участницей многочисленных конференций по криминалистике и психоанализу.Благодаря своему обаянию и проницательному уму известная фотомодель Макейди смогла раскрыть серию преступлений и избежать собственной смерти. Однако ей предстоит еще одна встреча с жестоким убийцей — в зале суда. Станет ли эта встреча последней? Ведь девушка даже не подозревает, что чистосердечное признание обвиняемого лишь продуманный шаг на пути к свободе и осуществлению его преступных планов…

Александр Иванович Алтунин , Андрей Истомин , Дмитрий Давыдов , Дмитрий Иванович Живодворов , Никки Ром , Тара Мосс

Фантастика / Карьера, кадры / Детективы / Триллер / Фантастика: прочее / Криминальные детективы / Маньяки / Триллеры / Современная проза