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Эд Горман: Murder on the Aisle

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Эд Горман Murder on the Aisle

Murder on the Aisle: краткое содержание, описание и аннотация

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Tobin, a five-foot-five, red-headed film critic — co-presenter of a syndicated movie-review TV show — is in trouble. He’s been found kneeling over the body of his dead partner, fingering the knife that’s sticking out of the dead man’s back, and it’s clear that the police are not going to look for any other suspects. Not when it’s Christmas. Not when they know that Tobin has been having an affair with his partner’s wife. Not when Tobin and his partner had been involved in an on-camera free-for-all just moments before the murder. Tobin didn’t kill bis partner — but will anyone believe him? Did anyone else have such clear motive? Did anyone else have the opportunity? Do Siskel and Ebert ever have problems like this?

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“I’m trying to settle your childish dispute once and for all.”

“You’re doing a rotten job of it. Anyway, you don’t have to worry about Richard and me anymore. Since he won’t sign the contract, there’s no reason we’ll have to be together under any circumstances.”

“But that’s one of the things I came up here to tell you.”

Tobin’s heart speeded up. “You mean he’s considering signing?”

“Possibly.”

But Tobin could see that Dailey was only doing one of his agent routines. “He hasn’t reconsidered, has he?”

Dailey was very good. Without in the least admitting that he’d just told a lie, he said, “I think he’d be so overwhelmed by an apology from you that he’d get swept up and sign the papers without thinking.”

Dailey had just finished his sentence when a young woman in her mid-twenties appeared at the top of the stairs, looked around, then came over to the men.

Sarah Nichols was a Ph.D. candidate who was also Richard Dunphy’s assistant, which translated into latest hump. She was a natural beauty with auburn hair that sparkled and cheeks that shone and teeth that gleamed. She was given to cardigan sweaters that took not a whit away from her wonderful breasts and long peasant skirts that thankfully hid nothing of her precious ankles. She had hazel eyes you could dote on for hours. She loathed Tobin.

“I need to see you, Michael,” she said. She made sure that her eyes never lighted on Tobin. He could have taken out his little dick and waved it at her, she would have favored him with nary a glance. “Downstairs,” she said to Dailey.

“Is something wrong?” Dailey asked.

“Everything’s fine. We just need to talk.”

“Hello, Sarah,” Tobin said as he usually did, mocking the fact that she would not lay eyes on him.

She slipped her arm through Michael’s. “Hurry.”

“Think over what I said,” Dailey called to Tobin as Sarah led him away.

5

7:45 P.M.

When the house lights went down for the first part of the show, Tobin experienced his usual moment of fear. Sometimes he even had a special dream about this particular part of the show: Here sat the two of them, Tobin and Dunphy, America’s favorite movie critics, being examined by Martians. Or Venusians. Or some-the-fuck-body like that. Because, see, when the house lights go down and the audience vanishes into the darkness, what happens is these rodent-like beings from outer space sneak in on kind of a sociological tour, to see why two grown men would sit facing each other in the darkness except for a cone of sterile white light encircling them, arguing vehemently about some colored images flashed on an otherwise blank white screen to their right.

But then the APPLAUSE sign came on and the film students did their part by smacking hands together and thus the show began.

Tobin leaned forward, stared into the beady red eye of camera 3, and said, “Whatever you’ve heard to the contrary, folks, we really do hate each other and we’re here tonight to prove it.”

Dunphy said, “That’s a really brilliant opening line. Really brilliant.”

That’s how it started.

How it finished was this: Although they had earlier agreed on the Sylvester Stallone movie (“Even by his Neanderthal standards, this is a low point in his mediocre career,” Dunphy said) and split only mildly on the new Alan Alda (“All that’s left for Alan to do is ascend into heaven and sit at the right hand of God,” Tobin said, laughing, speaking of Alda’s role as Albert Schweitzer), it was the third movie that gave them the opportunity to do what they wanted to do — find a film they could disagree about bitterly.

It was a “small” movie about a farm kid’s first leave as a sailor in New York City. In the course of it he encountered every possible kind of street person — from panhandlers to evangelists, from rough trade to rude shoppers — and about the impact it had on him.

Dunphy said, “You know, this is the kind of movie that just doesn’t come along often enough. It’s low-key, it has no pretensions about itself, it genuinely speaks to the heart of each and every American — and it accomplishes all this without a big budget, and without any special effects. I say this is the kind of movie that would make D. W. Griffith proud he was a motion-picture pioneer.”

Tobin shook his head. “Since this is a family show, I can’t tell you what I think D. W. Griffith would have done — but I can tell you what I did. Fell asleep.”

Dunphy said, “You sure that was the movie or your hangover?”

Tobin said, “Or it might have been from reading your column earlier in the morning.”

“Tell him, Tobin!” screamed a film student from the gloom.

Dunphy sighed. “You really didn’t like this movie?”

“No,” Tobin said, “I didn’t.”

“Then I’d say your tastes have seriously eroded.”

“You never had any taste, Richard!”

Whistles and catcalls came up from the audience.

Tobin was concentrating on these, which explained why he didn’t duck when Dunphy got up and crossed the small space between them and laid a good, if glancing, left hook on Tobin’s jaw.

“I owe you this from last night, you little jerk!”

Over the intercom you could hear the director shrieking “Stop tape! Stop tape!” as stagehands rushed to the raised platform where Tobin and Dunphy ordinarily sat.

But they weren’t sitting now.

After the punch, and only a bit groggy from it, Tobin tackled the larger man around the waist and hurled him to the floor.

A roller-derby audience couldn’t have been more appreciative.

Tobin sat on Dunphy’s chest and started pounding his fists into Richard’s face.

For his part, Dunphy squirmed and kicked beneath the yoke of Tobin’s body, finally bucking high enough to throw Tobin off and into one of the chairs, which promptly fell over.

The audience went berserk.

Now it was Dunphy, nose bleeding from several of Tobin’s punches, who was on top. He showed Tobin about the same amount of mercy that Tobin had shown him. Eight, nine, ten punches were placed on Tobin’s formerly “cute” but now swollen face.

That was when the stagehands descended on them like crazed dogs, pulling them apart.

The audience responded immediately, booing and covering the platform with half-eaten Big Macs, beer cans, Diet Pepsi cans, and even a gooey slice of pizza.

“Let ’em fight!”

But the stagehands paid no attention.

One group held Tobin by the arms and around the waist, while another restrained Dunphy.

“You son of a bitch,” Tobin said, “I should have killed you when I had the chance.”

Even in his rage he knew it was a stupid thing to say.

Frank Emory jumped on the stage then. He was as white as Joan Dailey usually was, and glistening with his own sweat.

“My God” was all he could say as he looked at the two of them, their faces bloody, their clothes in tatters. “My God.”

He really didn’t need to say more.

6

8:47 P.M.

Who would have thought that a candy ass like Richard Dunphy would have had the punch he did, Tobin thought as he lay back on the leatherette couch in the cheap upstairs dressing room.

One of the stagehands had gotten him the ice pack that now rode Tobin’s face like a hideous rubber growth.

But that wasn’t what was troubling Tobin. He’d been in plenty of brawls in his time. They only hurt for the first twenty-four hours; then they were just embarrassing. People got the wrong idea about you. Mistook you for a jerk. Gosh, who could ever think Tobin was a jerk?

No, what was troubling Tobin was the fact that he was thinking about Dunphy. Thinking fondly about Dunphy.

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