Ridley Pearson - The Art of Deception
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- Название:The Art of Deception
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Three kids in clothes too big for them went by on skateboards timed perfectly to catch the pedestrian crossing light.
“Never had the pleasure,” LaMoia said. “I came up gumming sidewalks.”
“The night Mary-Ann was killed you took forty minutes of personal time-”
“Killed? She was a jumper last I heard.”
“No way,” LaMoia said. “You were on that bridge. You knew we’d found the blood trail, knew what we were thinking.
You were there, Prair. We were all there together. Skip the theatrics. You’re ripping yourself a new one.”
“McD’s,” he said. “I went off the clock-eleven, eleven-thirty-for a quarter-pounder and fries.” Right or wrong, she read his face as truthful.
Whether Prair knew it or not, he’d just supplied the window of time suggested by the university’s oceanography department.
Neal’s claim of seeing 2:22 A.M. on the clock had proved far too late to account for the physical sciences of the ocean. Mary-Ann Walker had gone off that bridge before midnight. Matthews caught LaMoia’s eye and knew he was thinking the same thing.
LaMoia had his detective’s notebook out and in hand.
“Which McDonald’s?”
Prair buried his face in a large hand. “Shit.” He cleared his expression and supplied LaMoia with the address: Marginal Way at the turn for SEATAC.
Matthews asked, “Are we going to find you had a history with Mary-Ann Walker beyond this moving violation?”
“Excuse us a moment, would you?” Prair seized Matthews by the arm and led her out of earshot from LaMoia, who craned toward them as if hoping to hear. Seeing this, Prair moved her a little farther.
A couple of big, hefty women came out of The Rack carrying too many bulging plastic bags-they looked like elephants with saddlebags. Both talked at once, going on about the deals they’d just made and all the money they’d saved. Matthews thought: You’ve got to spend it to save it, does anyone see the irony?
He said, “Lieutenant, forgive me for saying so, but whatever was said in sessions with you was privileged and said in confidence, and is supposed to stay that way.”
“You have fantasies about having sexual relations with the women you pull over, Deputy. On several occasions those fantasies have had a direct influence on your behavior. Was that the case with Mary-Ann Walker?” Is that the case with me?
“That’s got nothing to do with this.”
“Prove it.” She was wondering if that was the case with her as well. Had Prair crimped her gas line in order to play the hero and save her? Had he hoped to win a roll in bed as her thank-you?
“I don’t have to. There’s nothing to prove. You’re coloring your opinion based on privileged information, Lieutenant. Never mind that there’s nothing to it-it wouldn’t hold up if there was.”
She broke his grip and stepped back. LaMoia moved in, ever the protector.
She said to Prair, “You should have come forward when the body was identified last week.”
“Would’a … should’a … could’a … let me ask you this: Would you have come forward if you’d been me? My history?”
She probably wouldn’t have, but she didn’t say so.
“That shooting colors every impression there ever is of me, never mind that it was ruled a good shooting. No one remembers that part. If I’d have come forward on Walker I’d have distracted the investigation-exactly what’s happening now-and that helps no one.”
“Especially you,” LaMoia said.
Matthews glanced over at the patrol car Prair was driving.
Registration plate: KCSO-89. She’d looked down at the rooftop of that same patrol car from the parking garage across from the Shelter. There was no room for coincidence in such matters. She felt the blood drain from her face.
“You just happened across me, broken down like that yesterday,” she said.
“What if I did?”
“I’m asking: Do you make a habit out of following women around in their cars?”
“It’s not like that.”
“Then write it up the way it is, the way it was,” LaMoia ordered. “Do it voluntarily, do it by tonight, or we’ll pass an official request through channels that’ll have you hoisted up a flagpole by your short hairs. Every meeting with Mary-Ann-chance encounter or not-every phone call, the four-one-one on your whereabouts every waking second the night she died. If so much as one comma is out of place, this thing is going to rain down on you, Nathan. We’re going to want your time sheets for the past month, we want copies of every moving violation you issued. If there are holes in your time sheet, we’re going to want detailed explanations of every missing minute. Witnesses to your whereabouts, you name it. You carried the gold shield once-you fill in the blanks.”
Prair’s eyes went icy. Knots formed like hard nuts at his jaw.
“That’ll be it for me. You two know that. My record? Time sheets? Ticket carbons? Are you shitting me? That puts me square in the crosshairs.”
“That’s where you are,” LaMoia informed the man. “Deal with it. Ten tonight, on my desk, or the shit starts raining down on you.”
With that, the skies opened up, as if on command, and dumped buckets. LaMoia and Matthews ran for the bus tunnel entrance. Prair headed for his patrol car. The seagull reappeared overhead, caught in the rain, barely able to fly. Matthews saw it struggling, and then it was gone, lost in the gray, along with hundreds of pedestrians scurrying for shelter from the storm.
Buried History
Boldt awoke to the sounds of Liz showering and the fish-eye distortion of his son’s peaceful sleeping face, nose to nose with him. He didn’t remember Miles having snuck into bed with them. For one blissful moment, he lay there staring at the little man, realizing this would likely be the best part of his day-then, like tiny sprouts ripping open the seed husk, thought began to penetrate that peace.
He had an appointment later in the day that might supply answers about both Chen’s death and possibly-he allowed himself to believe-the disappearance of Susan Hebringer. He had at least two administrative budget meetings on the schedule that he dreaded. Liz’s minivan needed to find its way from the bank’s underground parking to a body shop on Broadway. Sarah had after-school ballet, and if Liz’s car wasn’t out of the shop by then Boldt would need to arrange pickup by five.
“What’s your day look like?” Liz stood naked in the doorway, toweling off. She’d added back some of the weight the lymphoma had claimed, finally covering her skeleton again in delicious womanly flesh.
“Not too bad,” he said. “Looking up at the moment.”
“You want to lock the door a minute?” she asked.
“Yes, I do.” Along with her weight, some appetites had returned as well. Boldt slipped out of the covers so as not to wake Miles, crossed the room, and pulled the bathroom door shut behind himself. As he brushed his teeth, she undressed him, pulling down his pajama pants and helping his feet out the same way she did with the kids. He considered teasing her about this, but didn’t want to ruin the moment. He left the sink water running to cover their sounds.
Liz dropped the towel, pulled herself up onto the countertop, and turned to face him. “This okay with you?” she asked.
He stepped up to her, gently eased her legs apart, and they embraced. “Do you hear me complaining?”
Responding to his kissing, she eased her head back against the mirror. Drops of water raced down its smooth surface. Her fingers wormed into what remained of Boldt’s hair as he dropped to one knee. “Good morning,” she said in a husky, appreciative voice.
Starting out that way, Boldt was thinking.
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