Adrian McKinty - Hidden River

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Hidden River: краткое содержание, описание и аннотация

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Denver, Colorado: a pretty, clever young girl working for an environmental charity, Victoria Patawasti is sleeping peacefully, unaware that she has barely an hour to live. As her killer slips into her apartment and draws a revolver in the darkness, Alex Lawson wakes up in Belfast. Twenty-four, sickly, and struggling to kick his heroin habit after a disastrous six-month stint in the drug squad of the Northern Ireland police force, Alex badly needs a chance to get back on track. Victoria was his high school love, and when he finds out she has been murdered, he volunteers to help Victoria?s family hunt down the killer. But once in Colorado, Alex has a fight on his hands: wanted by both the Colorado cops and the Ulster police, and uncovering corruption at the highest levels of government, he can solve the case only if he manages to stay alive.

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“You ok?” John asked.

I looked at my shoulder, it was bleeding, but not deep.

“I’m ok,” I said.

We caught our breaths. The sidewalks were thronged and it was easy for us to blend into the masses of people.

“Just walk, don’t run, don’t run, I think we’re safe,” I gasped.

My shoulder was stiffening up but already the bleeding was less. No one was looking at us. No one paid us any attention at all.

After about five blocks we juked behind a car and took a check back. Peeler Pete scoping for us, inventive — standing on top of a parked car, looking everywhere, speaking into a radio. We were lost in the sidewalk crowd and backlit against the sunset.

“No chance, peeler,” John said with satisfaction.

“Yeah.”

“What now?” John asked.

“Hotel, get our stuff, leave town,” I said.

“Forget Victoria?”

I looked at him to see if he was fucking insane.

“Of course, forget Victoria,” I barked.

We walked all the way to the state capitol and downtown. We got back to our hotel. Desk clerk watching a game show. Ignoring us.

We entered the room. It hadn’t been cleaned. Our stuff was all still there. The beds hadn’t been slept in. We packed quickly, saying nothing. At one point John went to the bathroom and threw up.

“Ok, now, John, listen to me and listen good, you’re going to cut your hair short, just do the best you can, and I’m going to shave my beard off, ok?” I said gently.

He nodded.

I got my razor and clippers and trimmed the beard and then shaved the bastard. I had a quick shower and looked for something to use as a bandage on my shoulder. There wasn’t anything, so instead I stuck on four or five Band-Aids. When I came out, John had done a reasonable job on his hair. It didn’t look crazy, at least.

“John, you got any aspirin or anything?”

“No. How’s your shoulder?”

“Ok.”

“You took a spill.”

“I know.”

“I killed a man, Jesus Christ, Alex, I fucking killed somebody. Oh my God, oh my God, I can’t believe it.”

John put his head in his hands. He sat on the edge of the bed and started to cry. I let him get on with it for a minute or two. Good thing. Let him cry it out.

“Listen, John, he went for you, it was an accident. It was like a car accident. It wasn’t anybody’s fault. He wasn’t Mother Teresa, either. Remember, he was a bad man, he was an accessory after the fact to a murder, withholding evidence,” I said softly.

It wasn’t true, Klimmer was just scared and we really might have talked him into going to the peelers. John had fucked up big time.

“Yeah, I suppose,” John said.

“Ok, we have to get out of town.”

“How?”

“Greyhound bus, anywhere, now.”

We went downstairs and left the desk clerk our keys.

“Checking out?” he asked.

“Aye.”

“Ok.”

He didn’t seem a bit interested, so I didn’t spin him any kind of story. We walked out onto Broadway. Dark now. We asked the way to the bus station and someone told us it was downtown, but there was a free shuttle bus that took you there.

The outdoor Sixteenth Street Mall was stuffed with people. The Colorado Rockies were playing a baseball game. People kept bumping into our luggage on the free mall bus, giving us dirty looks. Final stop. Two coppers standing outside the bus station. Could have been there because of the baseball game, they could have always been stationed there. But we couldn’t take the chance that they had our descriptions. It had been well over an hour since Klimmer’s fall, plenty of time to get the word out.

“Fuck,” John muttered. “What now?”

We were concealed by the crowds going to the game but we couldn’t wait out here forever.

“Walk with the crowd,” I said, “follow them away from the cops.”

A lucky break. We walked nearly all the way to Coors Field and when we were close we saw a train waiting in Union Station.

“The train, John, we’ll get the train,” I said.

“Aye.”

We tried to cross the street with our backpacks, but traffic was again heavy because of the baseball game.

A loud air horn, a pause, and the massive train began to move.

“Holy shit, it’s leaving,” I said. When I’d come to America before, I’d traveled on Amtrak. I knew that the east-west trains were very infrequent. This might be the only train leaving Denver’s Union Station that day.

“John, we gotta get this train,” I said.

John nodded.

We ran across the street, dodging the traffic. Brakes squealing, people honking, swearing. We sprinted up the wheelchair ramp and onto the platform. The train was moving very slowly, but it’s hard to get onto any kind of moving thing with a backpack on your back and your shoulder hurting and exhaustion and jet lag eating at your coordination.

A really little guy in front of us hopped on one carriage down. John found an open door and jumped in. He put out his hand and pulled me on too.

* * *

Darkness. The train shunting out of Denver in big curves. It took me a while to realize we were heading west. I went to the bathroom and looked at my shoulder. There was a nasty scrape where the bone met the skin, the whole area an ugly scab of blood. The Band-Aids had fallen off. It didn’t hurt much, but there was always the possibility of infection. I stripped, scooped water from the sink, and bathed it. I cleaned the wound with soap and water and bandaged it with paper towels. Changed my T-shirt, put my jacket back on. We found a couple of seats in the bar car and ordered beers and a sandwich. We asked the barman what train it was and he was used to dealing with stupid questions and said it was the California Zephyr going to San Francisco — which suited us just fine. California was ok. We could fly from San Francisco to London or Frankfurt or anywhere, really, just as long as it was bloody miles from here.

The train climbed up into the mountains and the track went through tunnels and curved back on itself. On those big bends you could see the whole of Denver in lights all the way up to Boulder and down to Castle Rock. We had just finished our beer when the ticket lady came up to us. An Afro stood eight inches from her short frame and thick neck. Long lacquered nails — painted with the stars and stripes — were pointing at us.

“Where you sitting?” she asked.

“Here,” John said, not trying to be funny.

She took it the wrong way.

“Where are you sitting on the train?” she asked a little more sharply.

“We just got on, we’re not sitting anywhere.”

“Let me see your tickets,” she said, glaring at John.

“We don’t have any tickets,” John said.

“The train was just pulling out and they told us we could buy tickets on board, we’re tourists,” I said quickly and gave her a big smile.

“Who told you that?” she asked me.

“Uh, the man at the station,” I said.

“What man?”

“I don’t know, just the man, he was in a uniform, I don’t know,” I said placatingly.

“Well, I don’t know why he told you that because no one is allowed on the train without a ticket, this isn’t a commuter train, this is a transcontinental Amtrak, you’re going to have to get off at the next stop and buy a ticket at the station and then get back on again.”

“Ok,” I said.

“Ok,” John said.

“The next stop is Fraser, Colorado, get off there and buy your ticket,” the woman said curtly.

“Ok,” we both said again, smiling.

She wandered off down the car.

“Fucking bitch,” John muttered. “Bet she could have sold us a ticket if she’d wanted.”

“Aye, but it won’t make any difference,” I said. “We’ll just get it at the station.”

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