The Hard Bounce - [16]
Just before the crack disappeared again, I could have sworn I saw veins bulging in Barnes’s ears. I was driving him batshit, but he still wasn’t going to give anything away.
Barnes shut the ignition and unlocked the doors. Until then, I hadn’t realized I was locked in. The lock pulls fell completely into the hole when they were engaged. That bugged me. I don’t like knowing flight isn’t an option, even if I find out after the fact.
Fuck, who am I kidding? I wouldn’t know flight if I fell off a cliff and grew wings.
I opened the door and got out. Another black sedan sat idling in front of us.
Showtime.
Barnes opened the door to one of the loft complexes. Kelly was close behind him. I lagged back a bit. Try as I might, I couldn’t figure out what would put those two together in a zip code, much less connect them to the girl.
I gave the names on the door buzzer a quick look-see, in case I needed to know later. Loft one was scratched off. Two was Carbon Graphics. Three, David Pfeiffer Photography. Four through six were for Infonet Streaming. None of the names meant anything to me. Barnes walked to door number one.
The loft with no listing.
Perfect.
The loft was cavernous, dimly lit, and very empty. A painter had used it at one point, but not in a while. Dried paint in varying hues was smeared along the floor. Bolts of canvas stood by the door, and paint cans covered in thick dust sat next to a mural that read Andrew Lipp-Murals and Painting Gallery. This detective shit wasn’t going to be all that hard. Not with my steel trap of a mind.
Kelly and Barnes headed toward a lone man silhouetted in the yellow streetlamp light coming through large windows facing the street. He wore a dark suit that looked tailored for his broad shoulders. I didn’t recognize him from the suit, the salt and pepper crewcut, or his ass, which were all I could see. Then he turned and the gears clicked into place, even if the machinery wasn’t running yet.
I suddenly knew the reason for the secrecy and hush-hush.
And it was a fucking doozy.
“Mr. Donnelly,” I said, extending a hand that had gone clammy.
“You must be William Malone,” Donnelly said in a rich bass, taking my hand in his own. His grip was firm and strong. I suddenly worried about the moistness and limp weight of my own. Jack Donnelly does a lot of hand shaking. I’m more of a smack on the back or punch in the arm kind of guy.
“You know who I am.” It was a statement.
“I pick up a newspaper now and then.” And on the occasions that I did, Jack Donnelly would inevitably be in there, often on the front. Big Jack Donnelly they called him.
District Attorney Jack Donnelly.
Mayoral candidate, district attorney, Big Jack Donnelly.
“Then you understand the sensitivity of the… issue with my daughter. The reason behind all of this ‘cloak and dagger bullshit.’”
“Yeah,” I said. “I understand the papers would go ballistic if they knew the frontrunner for the mayor’s seat misplaced his young daughter.”
He bit the inside of his cheek, but didn’t bite at my snark. “She didn’t come home from her theater camp a week ago.”
“You send her to theater camp?”
Donnelly shook his head, confused. “Yes. Why?”
“And you’re wondering why she ran away?”
Donnelly’s eyes narrowed to dangerous slits, but he took my jab right in stride. “May I continue?”
“Please.”
“I’ve neither seen nor heard from her since. Mr. Barnes and Ms. Reese informed me that you actually saw my daughter yesterday afternoon.”
“She was at the club where I work.”
“You know that she’s underage.”
“It was an all-ages show. No alcohol.”
What the fadge? Just like that, he’d put me on the defensive.
I lit a smoke, trying to head off my simmering temper. “Look, I’m not an asshole, Mr. Donnelly. You’re the DA. You’ve got as much mojo in this town as anybody if you need somebody found.”
He nodded.
“Your daughter’s been gone a week. That means I’m not your number-one candidate to head the search party. Now, I’m sure Barnes here dusted off the old badge and came up zero. Maybe a few of your other buddies around the force gave it a shot, too. Thing is? They all stink of cop. Cop walks into a location where cops aren’t in the highest regard-which, frankly, seems to be every place your girl is hanging-nobody would tell them shit if they stepped in it. I’m guessing you figured that much out and that’s why you sent the piece of ass to talk to me first instead of Barnes.” I waggled my finger at Kelly, but kept my attention on Donnelly. “You knew I wouldn’t have a thing to say to him either.”
Silence.
I waited, wondering if I’d pushed too hard.
Donnelly rolled his neck like a prizefighter, as if his necktie was suddenly too tight. “I’d like to speak with Mr. Malone in private for a moment.”
“Jack…” Barnes was definitely in favor of Plan B, dumping my carcass off the Tobin Bridge.
“Please, Danny.” There wasn’t as much a request as a command in the tone.
Barnes wasn’t happy and Kelly was redder than a baboon’s ass, but both of them turned and walked. Barnes yanked the door open with enough force to send a canvas bolt toppling to the floor. Kelly stormed out right behind him, her heels clicking an angry cadence on the concrete floor.
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На этот раз следователь по особо важным делам Клавдия Дежкина расследует дело проститутки, обвиненной в краже у иностранцев крупной суммы в долларах. К тому же девушка оказалась причастна ко всему, что происходило в притоне, организованном в квартире одного известного актера, убийство которого считалось уже раскрытым. Именно в этой квартире находился тайник со свинцовыми стенками, содержащий видеокассеты с компроматом. Следы ведут в саму городскую прокуратуру.
Плохо, если мы вокруг себя не замечаем несправедливость, чьё-то горе, бездомных, беспризорных. Ещё хуже, если это дети, и если проходим мимо. И в повести почти так, но Генка Мальцев, тромбонист оркестра, не прошёл мимо. Неожиданно для всех музыкантов оркестра взял брошенных, бездомных мальчишек (Рыжий – 10 лет, Штопор – 7 лет) к себе домой, в семью. Отмыл, накормил… Этот поступок в оркестре и в семье Мальцева оценили по-разному. Жена, Алла, ушла, сразу и категорически (Я брезгую. Они же грязные, курят, матерятся…), в оркестре случился полный раздрай (музыканты-контрактники чуть не подрались даже)
Действие романа сибирского писателя Владимира Двоеглазова относится к середине семидесятых годов и происходит в небольшом сибирском городке. Сотрудники райотдела милиции расследуют дело о краже пушнины. На передний план писатель выдвигает психологическую драму, судьбу человека.Автора волнуют вопросы этики, права, соблюдения законности.
From the international bestselling author, Hans Olav Lahlum, comes Chameleon People, the fourth murder mystery in the K2 and Patricia series.1972. On a cold March morning the weekend peace is broken when a frantic young cyclist rings on Inspector Kolbjorn 'K2' Kristiansen's doorbell, desperate to speak to the detective.Compelled to help, K2 lets the boy inside, only to discover that he is being pursued by K2's colleagues in the Oslo police. A bloody knife is quickly found in the young man's pocket: a knife that matches the stab wounds of a politician murdered just a few streets away.The evidence seems clear-cut, and the arrest couldn't be easier.
A handsome young New York professor comes to Phoenix to research his new book. But when he's brutally murdered, police connect him to one of the world's most deadly drug cartels. This shouldn't be a case for historian-turned-deputy David Mapstone – except the victim has been dating David's sister-in-law Robin and now she's a target, too. David's wife Lindsey is in Washington with an elite anti-cyber terror unit and she makes one demand of him: protect Robin.This won't be an easy job with the city police suspicious of Robin and trying to pressure her.
Частный детектив Андрей Шальнев оказывается вовлеченным в сложную интригу: ему нужно выполнить заказ криминального авторитета Искандера - найти Зубра, лидера конкурирующей группировки. Выполняя его поручение, Андрей неожиданно встречает свою старую знакомую - капитана ФСБ Кристину Гирю, участвующую под прикрытием в спецоперации по ликвидации обеих банд.