Max Collins - Quarry's cut
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- Название:Quarry's cut
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Janet had stopped retching, now, and was sitting on the bed, her face turned away from Harry, and from me, as well. Both hands were dug into her hair and she was pulling it, hurting herself, out of some instinct or other, to keep her from going into shock maybe, or perhaps to distract her from what she’d just seen.
A light had gone on out in the hall, shortly after Janet had begun screaming, and now Castile’s wife was in the doorway, in her green terry-cloth robe, her hair in curlers, her face white with some facial treatment. She looked a little worse than Harry.
“My God,” she said, in a small voice, as she touched a large breast with a medium-size hand. “Is that…”
“Harry,” I said.
“What…?”
“His throat’s been slashed. Where’s your husband?”
“I don’t know.”
“What?”
“He heard something.”
“When? Where?”
“We were in bed… he heard something, he said… out in the hall… five minutes ago… ten minutes ago.”
“Shit.”
“He has a gun. He was nervous, went out to see what the noise was
… with the gun…”
“Shit. We have to find him. Where’s that kid Richie? Why didn’t Janet screaming get him out of bed, like it did you?”
“I don’t know. He must still be in his room.”
“Where’s that?”
“Couple doors down.”
“Let’s check on him.”
“I… I don’t…” Her eyes were staring to take on a glazed look.
“You’re coming with me, so snap out of it. You, too, Janet.” Janet was sitting on the bed, weeping. “Listen, Mrs. Castile… Millie.. your husband’s in danger. We all are, but especially him. It’s important we find him.”
She nodded. She was still in the doorway and I was over by the bed, by Janet. Harry was on the floor between. It wasn’t smelling good in there: Harry, like a lot of people, had shit his pants when he died; and then there was the stench from Janet puking.
“Let’s get out of here,” I said to Janet. She took my hand, and got on her feet, a little wobbly, but on her feet, and she carefully stepped around Harry, like somebody walking through a yard frequented by dogs. She got her jeans and sweater, slipped into them. I’d already made myself decent.
Once we were all in the hallway, Mrs. Castile said, “What about him?” She meant Harry.
“He’ll be fine,” I said, and closed the door.
And with the door closed, both women seemed relieved, but it didn’t last long: Janet soon spotted Waddsworth, doing his Naked and the Dead impression down at the bottom of the central shaft area, which this open hallway overlooked.
This time, however, Janet didn’t scream: she just pointed, her mouth open, but no words coming out, yet.
Mrs. Castile wasn’t reacting at all. Her eyes seemed glazed over again, or maybe she was getting numb. Or maybe she already knew about Waddsworth: maybe Castile hadn’t listened to my advice and had told his wife about Waddsworth’s fall.
“Is he…” Janet said.
“Yes.”
“When did this… happen?”
“Not long after you came down and asked me to come up to bed.”
“But you didn’t say anything…”
“I didn’t want to alarm you. We decided, Castile and I, when it happened, not to go waking everyone up and upsetting them.”
“But I was already awake… and we… we were together… when he was… down there, like that… and you… knew.. ” She shivered and turned away.
“There’s no time for that,” I said. “Waddsworth’s death could be an accident, but not Harry’s. I mean, he didn’t cut himself shaving. Somebody’s in this joint knocking people off, and we’ve got to get hold of ourselves and deal with that. Got me, Janet? Millie?”
Janet, still facing away, consented to nod.
Mrs. Castile said nothing; she just looked blank, remote in her white face and curlers and green robe, like an extra in a science-fiction film.
But she wasn’t entirely gone. When I said, “Lead me to the kid’s room. Richie,” she did, a room identical to the other bedrooms in the place, and it was empty: the rumpled sheets showed the bed had been used, for something, if not sleeping. But no Richie.
Something else, though.
“Blood,” I said, and pointed at a puddle of it near the doorway, sogging up the yellow shag.
“It’s out here, too,” Janet said, her anger with me making her more coherent, less prone to vomiting and weeping and such. “We’ve been… walking through it…” And she shivered again.
“Harry got his throat cut here,” I said, following the trail of blood Janet had indicated, which led back to where we’d just been. “He staggered down the hall to…”
And I cut that short, because I didn’t want to mention that the room Janet and I’d been in had originally been Castile’s, as that would mean explaining why we had been in that particular room to both Janet and Mrs. Castile.
Downstairs, a door opened and shut. Noisily. An outside door.
“Who’s down there?” I called. Yelled, my voice echoing.
“Me,” Castile’s voice echoed back, and in a minute he was with us.
He was in the DIRECTOR sweatshirt and jeans, still, and his cheeks were red and his breath heavy.
I told him about Harry and he said, “God, no… I was afraid of something like that,” and he asked to have a private word with me, and we moved away from the two women for a moment, and Janet watched us with suspicion. Mrs. Castile looked at the wall.
“I saw him,” he said.
“Who?”
“Turner.”
“What did you do, go after him?”
“Yes. I heard some noise in the hall, and when I stepped outside the room, I practically bumped into him. Then he ran. Saw my gun, I guess. I went after him, but stumbled on the stairs, and he was outside before I’d even got a real look at him… it was dark in here, no lights on at all… I looked around for him outside, and didn’t see him, and finally got a little scared… I mean, I got to thinking that even with a gun, I was out of my league… so I came back in.”
“That was very wise. Are you sure it was Turner? Could it have been Richie?”
“It didn’t look like Richie.”
“Bigger than Richie?”
“I think so. Not Richie. But I didn’t really see him. He was just a blur, a shape moving in the hall, running. He’d… just done that to Harry, hadn’t he…”
“Maybe. I don’t know. Maybe he didn’t do it.”
“What?”
“Maybe he was just in here to check out the situation, talk to his partner a second. Harry was his partner, you know.”
“Harry?”
“I’m pretty sure he was. I think Richie killed Harry. I think it’s a case of Harry pushing Waddsworth, and Richie knowing about it, and reacting to it. It’s the only way it makes sense to me.”
“What do we do now?”
“Richie isn’t in his room, so we better see if he’s anywhere in the lodge. Fuck. This is getting out of hand. I don’t like this at all.”
“What do we do when we find Richie?”
“We’ll worry about that when we find him. Here. Give me that gun.”
He did. It was a nickel-plated snub-nose. 38.
“Ladies,” I said, going over to where they were standing. “We’re about to have a tour of the premises. Stem to stern. Stay close together at all times.”
Janet had a look of anger on her face, mixed in with confusion, and both reactions were justified; but she went along on the search without a word of complaint.
Which was also true of Mrs. Castile, who allowed her husband to guide her by the arm, but she was going deeper and deeper into herself, into an almost catatonic state.
The search of the lodge took twenty minutes. Nobody home but us.
No Richie. No Turner.
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