P. Parrish - Paint It Black

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Paint It Black: краткое содержание, описание и аннотация

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The bearded man looked at Louis and extended his wrists. “Okay, take me in again. I don’t care. I’ll just find another place. This is public property. You can’t stop me from giving away food.”

“We’re not here to harass you,” Louis said. “We just need some help.”

The man stared at Louis and slowly let his arms fall. “Help,” he said with a snort. “Who doesn’t need help?”

“We’re trying to identify a man, a dead man, who might have been homeless,” Louis said. “Have you ever seen a man here with a tattoo on his left arm of a dog and the name Bosco?”

The Saint was staring at Emily now. “You really a cop, a little bitty thing like you?” he asked. He didn’t wait for her answer. He looked back at Louis.

“Bosco. .” he said. “Yeah, I know that tattoo.” He paused and looked at some kids playing in the surf. “Shit. You say he’s dead?”

Louis nodded. He was glad when The Saint didn’t ask for details. “Was Bosco his last name?” Louis asked.

The Saint shrugged. “Who knows? Lots of folks here don’t use their real names. It’s like a family, I guess. We just call each other by whatever name fits, you know?”

“You called him Bosco?” Emily asked.

The Saint eyed her, still unsure he should reveal much more. “Nope. We called him Harry.”

“Do you know where he was from, where he lived?” Emily asked.

“Lived?” The Saint gave a small smile. “Well, you could try behind that 7-Eleven over there. Other than that, I don’t know much about him. He always showed up for his food here. I haven’t seen him in weeks now. I thought he just moved on. Or disappeared. Most do.” He glanced back out at the ocean.

Emily reached in her pocket and pulled out a card and pen. She scribbled a number on it. “If you think of anything else, call, okay?”

The Saint took the card and slipped it into his shorts pocket. “Sure, miss.”

“Thanks for your help,” Louis said. He paused, then reached into his pocket and pulled out some bills. When The Saint saw the two twenties, he shook his head.

“I don’t need it,” he said. He smiled. “I’ve got plenty of my own money. I spent my share of time on the street but my brother left me a bundle when he croaked. Asshole never called me when he was alive but then. .” He gestured toward the sandwiches. “Sixty grand buys a lot of bologna.”

Louis and Emily left The Saint and trudged up the beach to the street. Louis waited while she emptied the sand from her shoes and they continued on to the 7-Eleven. The clerk had never heard the name Bosco or Harry and they had no photo to show her. But she said the management was constantly chasing away the homeless who slept behind the store near the Dumpster.

Behind the store, Louis and Emily discovered a heap of discarded boxes and dirty blankets, the remnants of a dismantled homeless camp.

“Lots of motor oil back here,” Emily said, nodding at the stained asphalt.

“Yeah. But whoever was here moved on,” Louis said. He kicked at an empty bottle of Mad Dog. “Let’s get out of here.”

They wound their way back through the tourists, toward the squad car. Louis climbed in and as soon as they were away from the crowd, he radioed in to Wainwright, telling him what little they had found. Wainwright’s response was clipped. Louis knew he was aware that Emily was listening.

“He doesn’t like me much, does he?” Emily said as they inched along in the traffic. She said it more as a statement than a question, but Louis sensed she wanted an answer.

“He was expecting the bureau to send an old friend,” Louis said.

“Malcolm Elliott retired a year ago,” Emily said. “They sent me instead.”

A tightness had crept into her voice. He wasn’t sure if it was defensiveness. Whatever it was, it made him uncomfortable.

“Look, Farentino,” he said, “Wainwright is kind of old school.”

“The good old boy network,” she said softly. “I know all about it.”

“Give him time.”

“I told you. We haven’t got time.”

She pulled her briefcase onto her lap and started rooting through it.

Louis stared at the cars inching along in the baking sun. He felt the need to say something conciliatory.

“So, how’d you come to work for the bureau?” he asked.

“I joined after getting my master’s degree at Stanford.”

“And before that?”

She leveled her eyes at him. “If you’re trying to find out if I was ever on the street, the answer is, no, I wasn’t.” She turned her attention back to the briefcase. “Except for the week they made us ride with the NYPD.”

Louis glanced at her. “I wasn’t-”

“Yes, you were,” she said quickly.

They crept along in silence. Emily rummaged furiously through the briefcase. She finally pulled out a file and tossed the briefcase to the floor with an impatient grunt. She started reading the file.

Louis kept silent. Great. Emily Farentino didn’t have any real experience. Wainwright was going to go nuts when he found out. He wasn’t exactly happy about it himself. Shit, he wasn’t happy about Wainwright retiring from some obscure division of the FBI, for God’s sake. He found himself wondering how long it would be before they were forced by public pressure to lateral the case over to the sheriff’s department. Wainwright would be back to busting shoplifters at the Sereno Key drugstore. And he himself would be on a plane back to Michigan.

He let out a sigh.

“What?” Emily asked.

“Nothing,” he said. They finally made it to the bridge. This was nuts. If he was going to have to work with this woman, he had to find a way to get through her armor.

“So, what division you work?” he asked.

“BSU.”

Louis glanced at her again.

“Behavioral Science Unit.”

“I don’t know-”

“Nobody does,” she said abruptly. She let out a sigh. “It’s new, the unit, and what we do. It’s. . new.”

Louis tried to recall what little he had read about serial killers. He had read something about how police departments were starting to use psychologists as consultants. They were calling them “profilers,” the idea being they could figure out the twisted minds of criminals by poking around in the messes they left.

“So you’re what’s called a profiler?” Louis asked.

She looked surprised he knew the term. “I prefer ‘forensic psychologist.’ ”

“Ah. A shrink,” Louis said.

She shook her head. “I’m not a doctor.”

You’re not a cop, either, Louis thought.

They were up on the bridge now, heading back toward Fort Myers.

“Wainwright doesn’t know any of this,” Emily said finally. “Unless he’s checked.”

“He hasn’t checked,” Louis said. “You going to tell him?”

She took off her glasses and began to clean them on the tail of her shirt. “I heard things about Dan Wainwright before I came. I think he is-” She stopped herself. “There are some people who aren’t open to new ideas.”

Louis let a few moments pass in silence. For a moment, he considered asking her what the hell OPR was. But he didn’t want Wainwright to think he was checking up on him. He also didn’t want to do anything to make this case harder than it already was. Men were dying and he didn’t want to waste time playing referee between Farentino and Wainwright. They needed to get going in the same direction.

“Listen, Farentino,” he said finally, “if I’ve learned one thing it’s that you don’t get much by muscling your way into things. We’re outsiders here, both of us. Wainwright is in charge, at least for now. You ought to respect that.”

She lasered her eyes back to Louis. “And how many more bodies do we bury while showing this respect?”

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