Т Паркер - Pacific Beat

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Pacific Beat: краткое содержание, описание и аннотация

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As he did in Laguna Heat, T. Jefferson Parker once again combines his atmospheric style and unforgettable images of California to create a spellbinding mystery that continually anticipates your very thoughts, a novel in which each new revelation comes to you with the force and intimacy of a returning memory.
Pacific Beat begins on a May night in Newport Beach’s Back Bay, when the discovery of a brutally murdered woman with roses bound to her body sets off the kind of manhunt the police and their families dread. The victim, Ann Weir Cruz, is one of their own — and so, it appears, is her killer.
Ann was eight weeks pregnant with a child she and her police lieutenant husband, Ray Cruz, wanted desperately. The only clue to the outrage seems worse than no lead at all: A patrol car was spotted near the scene, disappearing into the fog.
Against a backdrop of corrupt city politics, the delicate and dangerous undercover investigation of the police department falls to the victim’s brother, former detective Jim Weir, who left the force respecting its many secrets and now must expose them one by one. Jim’s understandably fierce pursuit of his sister’s tormentor is a perfect cover, something credible to the cops he is secretly probing. But it is also his genuine debt to Ann. And soon it becomes an agonizing race against Ray, his ex-partner and brother-in-law — because Ray is trying to find the killer first, and execute him.

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Weir rolled down his window and let the air hit his face.

“I’m sorry.”

“Keep going.”

Robbins flipped a page and folded it under. “Semen inside the vagina and minor bruising of the mons and symphysis suggest that she was raped before she died. We found some abrasion of the vaginal canal, but not a lot, so she lubricated quickly. We found semen in the uterus, as well as on the labia and underwear — trace only, there. If she’d been found on dry land, we could guess how much time elapsed between the rape and death, but the seawater could have rinsed off a great deal of fluid, so we’re kind of stuck. We think between five minutes and half an hour. At least five minutes, though — we’re sure on that. The roses don’t tell us much. We’re tracking variety and supplier for Innelman. Ten in the waistband of her skirt, one inserted with some force into the vaginal canal... after death, we assumed. The other one probably floated away, or else he saved it.”

The road went blurry in Weir’s eyes; he turned on the air conditioner full blast and directed the stream onto his face. He was now on some side street in the barrio — no idea which one, and it truly didn’t matter.

“Pull over, Jim.”

“I think I will.”

He found a shady spot under a big olive tree. The curb was littered with the purple stains of crushed fruit. He breathed deeply and unwound his fingers from the steering wheel. Robbins offered him a cigarette, which he took. They both sat back and smoked. Weir watched the plume hesitate at the window, then rush out and up.

“What I’m about to tell you now isn’t going to make you feel better, Jim. She was pregnant.”

“I know.” Weir drew the smoke, felt the rush in his head, the warmth spreading down to his feet. He also knew something that Robbins wouldn’t understand, that even he, as a man, couldn’t fully comprehend — that Ann had wanted a child more than anything in the world.

“Seven weeks along, Jim. God, this is tough to do to you.”

Jim stared out the windshield and saw nothing. He could feel his heart pounding away in his ears, and his hands had begun to tremble. “Keep going, Ken. I’d like to get this over with.”

“Want to just read the report?”

“I said keep going.”

“Okay, the perp. He’s a type-B secretor, which means—”

“I know what it means.”

“Right-handed. From the angles of penetration, Yee figures five foot ten to six feet tall, if they were both standing on level ground. The first three penetrations were done when she was upright, like I said before. Yee’s good at his angles and estimates. We took a hair off her blouse — it was worked into the fabric. Two inches long, dark-brown, wavy. Prelim is male Caucasian, thirty-five to forty- five years old. Latents didn’t get much — the seawater saw to that. We took partial prints from the upper arms and face, nothing we can send through Sacramento. We combed her for trace and found some possibilities, but running through the samples will take some time.” Robbins was silent for a long while. “It’s also going to take some time to run the semen through the DNA lab. We’ve never tried it after seawater contamination. I wouldn’t hold my breath. That’s it, Jim.”

Weir stared out the window and finished the cigarette. A little girl in a pink dress with white ruffles kicked a ball down the sidewalk. Jim watched her black shoes pick their way through the olive stains. “Play it back for me, Ken. Put the pieces together.”

Robbins drummed his fingers on the briefcase. “I see it like this. First, what do we know? That she was raped, struck twenty-seven times with a knife, that eleven roses were... arranged on her person, that she was left floating in the Back Bay. All that and no signs of a struggle except the bruising of the mons area. We know she was killed a hundred yards up the bay from where they found her — a dark night, a remote region, not the kind of place she’d just happen to go to for no reason. Reason, then? He had a gun on her, maybe the knife. She was frightened, couldn’t resist until it was too late. But she managed to stand up after the rape, because that’s what the penetration angles tell us. The first stab could have killed her, any of the three while she was still upright. After she was down, he just kept at it.”

The scene played through Jim’s head with obscene clarity.

“What do you think?”

“Go on.”

“So, he pulled the gun, or showed the knife early, forced her into his car. Or maybe he was smoother than that. There’s a thousand ways to get a woman into an auto. I worked a case last year where a guy used his own baby daughter to lure a woman in — said he couldn’t figure out why the kid was crying. He raped her in the backseat. We matched seat belt material with what we took from under her fingernails. Anyway, Ann let herself be taken out to the bay, maybe even let herself be... presented with a bouquet of roses. He’s a sicko and she knows it by now. She plays along, trying not to make him furious.”

“There’s no evidence at all of a gun.”

“He raped her and she didn’t so much as get a fingernail into him. He threatened her with a gun, maybe the knife. Maybe with just his words, but he threatened her with something to which rape was a preferable alternative. She had her clothes on when they found her. They weren’t torn, they weren’t even radically disarranged. The skirt was short enough he could have just pulled it up. Her underpants were on. What’s that tell us? That he let her put them back on after he was finished. That was part of the deal: You lie back, let me do my thing, and you walk. Considering the knife — or the gun — Ann weighed the offer and took it. No resistance, even though the genital bruising indicates some pretty rough treatment. She took it, on the belief she’d be okay. She got up, put herself back together, and he killed her. Now sure, he could have put her clothes back on after he killed her, but why bother?”

Jim’s hands trembled. He laced his fingers together to stop it. He looked down to see them locked contritely in place, but still twitching.

“Account for the five minutes between the rape and the time she died.”

“It was at least five minutes. And remember, she was still lying down. Okay, try this: She thought he’d left. She lay there, heard him leave, thought she heard him leave. She was stunned, starting to go into shock. She lay there a long time — or what seemed like a long time to her — then she put her clothes back on. She stood up, she started to walk, but he wasn’t gone. He was waiting, and he got her before she could make a move.”

Weir watched the scene again in vivid detail. His hands were clenched now, and his ears rung with a wavering intensity, as if a siren was approaching fast. When he blinked his eyes to banish the vision, the barrio street asserted itself before him with strident, mocking clarity. He started up the truck again and pulled back onto the street.

“Who’s working this for Brian?”

“Dwight Innelman and Roger Deak.”

“Dwight’s good.”

Weir navigated back to the coroner’s building in silence. They got caught behind a transit district bus with a picture of Brian Dennison’s face on the back. The exhaust had left the interim chief tainted with black. Ken Robbins slipped his papers into a folder and set the folder on the seat beside Weir. “I probably don’t have to say this, but I will anyway. Twenty-seven wounds. Our man was in a rage. But he was cool enough to bring along a dozen purple roses.”

Weir considered the empty flower vase on Ann’s desk at the day-care center. “Maybe she was carrying them when he took her. Maybe he didn’t bring them at all.”

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