Макс Коллинз - A Shroud for Aquarius

Здесь есть возможность читать онлайн «Макс Коллинз - A Shroud for Aquarius» весь текст электронной книги совершенно бесплатно (целиком полную версию без сокращений). В некоторых случаях можно слушать аудио, скачать через торрент в формате fb2 и присутствует краткое содержание. Город: New York, Год выпуска: 1985, ISBN: 1985, Издательство: Walker, Жанр: Криминальный детектив, на английском языке. Описание произведения, (предисловие) а так же отзывы посетителей доступны на портале библиотеки ЛибКат.

A Shroud for Aquarius: краткое содержание, описание и аннотация

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In Port City, Iowa, Mallory is a writer of detective stories, not a detective, but once again real-life crime comes to divert him from the fictional variety. In the middle of the night, he gets a call from Sheriff Brennan; the sheriff summons him to the outskirts of town to where Ginnie Mullens’s body has just been discovered.
Mallory and Ginnie had grown up together. After high school, however, Ginnie became a prototypical hippie, and when the wave of the sixties receded, she continued to live outside of convention. Ginnie made her own rules. “Best friends” since babyhood, she and Mal have grown almost completely apart. Brennan’s call now brings back a flood of old memories, old resentments, old regrets to Mallory.
The sheriff is not satisfied that Ginnie. as it appears, has killed herself; he suspects murder. Unable to act on his suspicion officially, he asks Mallory to sec what he can learn from the people Ginnie has been involved with. Soon, Mal finds himself questioning ex-flower children whose adjustment to the eighties has been to overlay activities like dope dealing with the material trappings of middle-class life.
Mallory also encounters Ginnie’s ex-partner and ex-lover, who has bought out her successful boutique; her estranged husband, a gentle poet who is caring for their four-year-old little girl; and some high school classmates in whom the fifteen years has made drastic changes — some for the better.
In his search for the real reason behind Ginnie’s death. Mallory comes to see that the dreams of the children of Aquarius have died. What he doesn’t expect to find is the cause of a very immediate threat to his own life as well.

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I said, “Pardon me, I...”

“Come in, come in.”

I shrugged and stepped inside. The living room went as high as the roof, with the second and third floors only half as wide as the house, their balconies looking at me from across the room. The walls inside were barnwood as well, but the furnishings were cool and modern and costly, everything appointed in white and beige and other almost-colors. The only splashes of real color were provided by a dozen meaningless paintings, spatterings of color on canvas. All, obviously, by the same artist — compared to whom Jackson Pollock was a realist.

“You’ll have to excuse me,” she said, gesturing to her paint-streaky self. “I’m in the middle of a canvas.”

I had a sudden image of her creating her masterworks by stepping on tubes of paint that had been scattered across a prone canvas. Like stomping grapes to make wine. Or, in this case, grape Kool-Aid.

But that obviously wasn’t her work method. In the middle of the living room floor a dropcloth spread like a rumpled stain; in its midst was a canvas on an easel. A work in progress. Yellow attacking a field of blue.

“You’re an artist,” I said.

“Yes,” she beamed, then turned. She was heading across the room.

I was still just inside the door. I said, “Excuse me.”

She stopped, looked back over her shoulder at me. Her jogging shorts had a few streaks of paint across them; the most attractive canvas in the house.

“It’s in here,” she said, pointing to a hallway below the second-floor overhang.

“What?”

She turned and looked at me with puzzlement and a little annoyance. “The softener!”

“Who do you think I am?”

“The Culligan man!”

I opened the door to leave, smiling, shaking my head. “I’m sorry to disappoint you. I’m not here to service your water softener.”

She looked me over, in my Bilko T-shirt and camouflage shorts, and said, “Then what are you doing in my house?”

There was no fear in it, or anger; it was just a question.

“I’m looking for Marlon Sturms. This is his home, isn’t it?”

“And mine,” she said; she didn’t cross to me — kept the room between us. “I’m Mrs. Sturms.”

“Pleased to meet you. My name is Mallory.”

“Is my husband expecting you?”

“Is he here?”

“Yes.”

Maybe he was, maybe he wasn’t; if I was in her shoes, having accidentally admitted a strange man to my house, I’d say he was home.

“He doesn’t know me,” I said, “but we had a mutual friend. Ginnie Mullens.”

“Oh, yes,” she said. Softening. She leaned against a white lounge chair, apparently not worried about getting paint on it. “She died, didn’t she? It was on the radio. ‘Gunshot wound, possibly self-inflicted.’ That’s sad.”

“Yes it is.”

“I knew Ginnie, but not very well.”

“Really.”

“Marlon thought highly of her. He was upset this morning, when we heard about it.”

“I’d like to talk to him about her.”

“Well...”

“Please?”

“Why don’t you step outside, and I’ll see.”

“Sure,” I said.

I stepped out on the porch.

A few minutes later she cracked the door open. The latch was in place again.

She said, “Marlon isn’t here, but I called the club. You know where the country club is? Across the river and up the hill?”

“Yes,” I said, resisting the impulse to add, “To Grandmother’s house we go.”

“You can meet him in the club lounge, in about an hour.”

“Fine. Thank you. How will I know him?”

“I told him what you’re wearing. He’ll find you.”

And he did. I’d been sitting at the bar on a high-backed stool in the small, not-very-busy lounge, working on a bottle of Pabst, for less than three minutes when he approached me. He looked tan, his lime polo shirt sticking to him a little after his eighteen holes, and very much over the shock of Ginnie Mullens dying.

He extended a hand and his grip was firm but disinterested. He had a crooked smile and a flat, broad nose in an otherwise handsome face, his hair short, brown, and styled, his build trimly muscular. He looked like the kind of man who reads Playboy.

I told him my name as we shook hands.

“I know who you are,” he said, sitting. His voice was tenor, and a little bored. Jaded. He nodded to the bartender, who knew what to bring him based upon the gesture.

“How do you know me?” I said. “I don’t remember that we ever met.”

“We haven’t.”

The bartender deposited a martini before him. The eye of its olive looked at me; Sturms didn’t.

“If we haven’t met, then...?”

He smiled at me with bland condescension. “You’re a mystery writer. I saw that article about you in the Des Moines Register.

“Why should you remember me from that?”

“I don’t. I know you from Ginnie. She used to mention you.”

“You were a friend of Ginnie’s.”

“We were friendly.”

“You don’t seem too broken up about her death.”

“How I feel about her death is my business. Why did you want to see me, Mallory?”

“I’m trying to put the pieces together. I want to know what happened to Ginnie, and why.”

“Researching another book?”

“No.”

He raised his martini, looked into it like a crystal ball. The olive eye looked back at him. Neither one of them gave a damn.

“Might be a book in it for you,” he said with empty cheer. Then, with mock pomp, went on: “ Whatever Happened to the Love Generation? You could compare the dreams and the platitudes of the sixties flower children with the disappointing realities and hypocrisies of their lives in the seventies and eighties. Ginnie might make a good symbol of that.”

“So would you.”

Without looking at me, he smiled, still contemplating the drink. “I was never a flower child.”

“Or a doper?”

“Or a doper.”

“No, I guess not,” I said. “I’ll bet you were a frat rat, in those days, weren’t you? Sigma something.”

He saluted me with his glass. “It’s Greek to me,” he said.

“You were never vaguely a hippie. You’ve been a capitalist all along.”

He turned in his seat, smiling. There was more warmth in the olive than in his smile. He said, “My father left me an insurance business. He was a bad businessman — a nice fella, but a bad businessman. I’ve made his business thrive. I’m a respected member of the community, Mallory. A member here at the club. A property owner. Whatever could you be implying?”

“Do you want me to say it?”

The lounge was almost empty, and the bartender was at the other end of the bar. Still, it was a public place.

Very softly, he said, “You think I’m a dealer. Let’s suppose you’re right. Let’s suppose I do have a... sideline. And let’s suppose further that Ginnie was in the same business. That we were business partners.”

“Let’s.”

“Fine. But Ginnie and I weren’t partners anymore. We stayed friends. I saw her from time to time. Strictly got together to... how did they put it in the sixties?” With heavy sarcasm, he said, “We’d... rap.

“I bet you majored in business.”

“That’s right, and all the sixties meant to me was business. Oh, yeah, and a few days of no classes after Kent State.”

“You started dealing back then, I’ll bet. Just helping out friends, and friends of friends. And like any good business, it grew.”

His boredom was turning to irritation. “Is there anything else? I’d like to get home to my wife.”

“Beautiful woman. She was working on a painting.”

“Keeps her off the streets.”

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