David Duffy - In for a Ruble

Здесь есть возможность читать онлайн «David Duffy - In for a Ruble» 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: 2012, ISBN: 2012, Издательство: Thomas Dunne Books, Жанр: Триллер, на английском языке. Описание произведения, (предисловие) а так же отзывы посетителей доступны на портале библиотеки ЛибКат.

In for a Ruble: краткое содержание, описание и аннотация

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A pulse-pounding mystery featuring Russian-American detective Turbo Vlost, the deadliest ex-KGB operative to ever hit New York
Turbo Vlost is back. He’s depressed, drinking too much, and terrified that the love of his life is truly gone.
Hired to test the security of billionaire hedge fund manager Sebastian Leitz’s computer system, Turbo finds himself peeling back the fetid layers of an immigrant family living the American dream while unable to escape mysterious and unspeakable demons.
Turbo isn’t the only one interested in the Leitzs. The Belarus-based Baltic Enterprise Commission—a shadowy purveyor of online sleaze—has its claws in Leitz’s brother-in-law. So, it appears, does Leitz’s brother. And Leitz’s son, a teenaged computer whiz, is running his own million-dollar schemes.
Thanks to his legwork and his partner’s data-mining monster, Turbo can see all the cards. But to play the hand, he has to join the kind of game he recognizes from his childhood in the Gulag—one where the odds suddenly grow short and losers don’t always come out alive.
David Duffy’s
will enthrall fans of Martin Cruz Smith in this action-packed Turbo Vlost adventure.

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She looked around and nodded. “I… I don’t know why I didn’t tell him, except with everything else… he can be so controlling… I just didn’t feel like it, you know? He’s got his problems, I’ve got mine.”

“Sure. Everybody does. Who were they? What did they ask? This is just between us.”

“I don’t remember too much. They said it was some kind of background check. Everything… Everything’s been a bit of a blur.”

“That’s understandable.” The thing about people who withdraw into themselves, their universe of reference draws in with them. They don’t think about the rest of us—they assume we’re looking at the world from their point of view. Booze helps that process, of course. “What can you remember?”

She took a swallow from her cup. “Two of them, a man and a woman.”

“What did they look like?”

Another wave at the air. “Ordinary. Suits. Business looking. Ordinary looking.”

“Okay. What did they say?”

“Asked a lot of questions. About Sebastian… and the family. Who we were, what we did. It was strange, to tell you the truth. I didn’t say much. The questions… They seemed… intrusive.”

“Did they ask about your… situation?”

Pause, the brain cells trying to clarify. “What do you mean by that?”

My turn to wave at the dishes. “It’s been a rough few weeks, as you said.”

The eyes blurred. “Right. They asked about Sebastian, Jenny, Pauline, the kids, a little, and about Thomas and Julia, but no… not about Jonathan or our children.”

“Did they say who they were?”

“Some law firm. They gave me a card. Not at the beginning. Only when I pressed.”

“You still have it?”

“Somewhere…”

“It could be helpful.”

“Okay.”

She stood, took a minute to get her balance and went off rummaging through kitchen drawers. Partway through the search, she returned to the table for her cup, took it to a cabinet and refilled it from the bottle without bothering to add more coffee. I looked at my watch. 10:14. Even money whether she made it to lunch.

“Ah-ha!”

She returned from the far side of the kitchen, victorious. The card read, ELIZABETH ROGERS, LINDLEY & HILL, ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW, with a New York address and phone number, a Web site, and an e-mail address. I made a note of it all for form’s sake.

I wanted to ask an intrusive question of my own. Worst thing she could do was decline to answer, but I was banking on her drinking more now than when Elizabeth Rogers visited.

“How close are you all, Sebastian, your siblings, as a family?”

The eyes clarified again and narrowed. Not as soused as I thought. Her voice took a harder edge. “Why do you ask that?”

“Someone’s trying to hurt your brother—the same people who came to see you, I think. They found a way into his business and to do that they had help. You didn’t give it to them, so I guess I’m asking if there’s any bad blood elsewhere or anything else these people could have exploited.”

She watched me for a minute, stood and left the room. I could hear her voice from elsewhere in the house, talking on the phone. Checking with Leitz HQ.

She returned after a few minutes, sat, drank from her cup, and said, “Sebastian says you should call him.”

“I will, as soon as we’re finished. I’m only trying to help, as I said.” I hoped I sounded sincere.

Another swallow. “What was your question?”

“How do you all get on, the family? Any quarrels? Bad feelings? Ancient, unresolved feuds?”

“No feuds, no. Tensions, I suppose, like any family.”

“What kind of tensions?”

She thought for a moment. “Personality, mainly. We’re all pretty strong minded. Sebastian and Julia have their careers. Thomas has his… passions. Sometimes they go off in different directions. I’ve always been the easy-going one, willing to do whatever, if that kept the peace. But then, I always figured I was the one who had it all worked out—the marriage, the family…”

She banged her fists on the table in front of her and dropped her head on top of them, facedown. The cup fell on its side, spilling a puddle of brown liquid. She sobbed into balled fingers. I picked up the cup, wiped up the puddle with a well-used dish towel, found the brandy bottle in the cabinet—Presidente—and poured a few fingers. I felt no qualms about aiding and abetting. I wanted her to talk, and she’d be back at the sauce with or without my help. I put the cup on the table, reclaimed my seat, and took a chance.

“I’m sorry, Marianna. I know a little about your husband. Nobody should have to deal with what you’re going through.”

She kept crying. Two more minutes passed before she looked up, another second and half before she reached for the cup. She took two swallows before she straightened and looked at me, red-eyed.

“I’m sorry. I’m still not… It’s just so… Where were we?”

“You were talking about keeping the peace—in the family.”

She nodded, grabbing at something that wasn’t her own misery.

“Like I said, we’re all strong minded. The result of our parents dying when we were still young, I think. A car accident—you know that, right?”

I didn’t, but I’d accomplished getting on the inside of her story.

“Tell me.”

“I was fifteen, Sebastian was eighteen, Julia, fourteen, and Thomas, eight. Thomas suffered most, I think, the youngest—and a tough age. Anyway, we were a teenaged immigrant family, and we had to make do. We did, we all stayed in school, we all worked too. Sebastian was the oldest, so he was de facto head of household, and it suited him. He watched out over all of us, he always made sure we were okay, but… as we all grew older, became adults, he never backed off. He still treats us as if we’re teenagers cast adrift. He can be overprotective, and that can grate. Not his fault, he means well. Just the way it is, with everything that happened.”

“How does that manifest, the grating?”

She took a drink and stared out the window at the snow and the swing set.

“He smothers. He tries to control. It’s like, he thinks he’s still responsible for all of us, whatever happens. He can’t understand we all have our own lives now, we’ve made our own way, we’re responsible for our own…”

She stopped short, staring into her cup, realizing where she was going. “Anyway, you know what I mean.”

“Having a brother like that, who cares, isn’t necessarily a bad thing,” I said.

She shook her head, as if agreeing and trying to clear her mind at the same time.

“Not bad. But… It does lead to… tensions.”

“How does he get on with your brother and sister?”

“He and Julia spar all the time. They’re the most competitive. He’s never liked her husband, and he doesn’t approve of the way she takes care of their kids. Doesn’t take care of them, in his opinion. He tries to tell her, she objects, and they end up in a fight. Thomas… Thomas goes his own way, to put it mildly. Sebastian doesn’t understand him, and Thomas doesn’t want him to. Oil and water.”

No way to ask the next question without appearing intrusive, but I hoped she was beyond caring. “Does Thomas have financial problems?”

“What? Why…? How do you know…?” She shook her head. “I’m not going to talk about that.”

“I’m sorry. It’s a difficult subject, I know. I only ask because money—lack of money, debts—can make someone vulnerable. I think Thomas ran up some big debts. He could be desperate.”

She nodded slowly. “He’s always said it’s impossible to live in New York City on a teacher’s salary. And… have you met him?”

“Not yet.”

“He’s something of a clotheshorse—and he doesn’t shop discount, like Julia. I… I tried to help him out from time to time. But…”

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