Linwood Barclay - Trust Your Eyes
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- Название:Trust Your Eyes
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I liked it. Harry had credibility. He was a trusted member of the community. I might not get far trying to tell this tale to Duckworth, but Harry’d be able to get the whole thing out before Duckworth hung up on him, or threw him out the door. And Duckworth, in turn, would have credibility with another police department.
“Yeah,” I said. “Okay.” I suddenly nodded with enthusiasm. A heavy weight began to lift from my shoulders. “I appreciate this, Harry. I do.”
“No problem.”
I stood, but something was holding me there.
“Something else on your mind?” Harry asked.
“I don’t even know whether to mention it,” I said. “But maybe Dad said something to you about this sometime.”
“Go ahead.”
“Thomas said to me-I’m trying to remember his exact words-but he said something like ‘things happen in windows.’ And then, when he was pissed with me, when he didn’t think I’d done a very thorough investigation in New York, he said I was acting the same way I had before when someone in a window was in trouble.”
Harry pressed his lips together. “Sounds like he was talking about himself,” he said.
“Yeah,” I said. “And there’s another thing. Something Len Prentice said.”
“Yes?”
“Len came by the house when I was in the city. He got Thomas riled up. Tried to get him to leave the house for lunch and Thomas refused to go, and he kind of hit Len. Struck him.”
Harry’s eyes widened. “Oh my.”
“Nothing really happened, and Len isn’t pressing the point. But he said Dad told him Thomas had pushed him down the stairs, and when I talked to Thomas about it, he more or less admitted it.”
“Your father never mentioned anything about that to me,” Harry said.
“Thomas said Dad was trying to tell him he was sorry, about something that had happened to Thomas when he was thirteen, but Thomas said he didn’t want to talk about it, and that’s when he pushed Dad. He landed on his back.”
“Dear God,” Harry said.
“But Dad wasn’t angry. Or so Thomas says. Dad supposedly said he’d understand if Thomas couldn’t forgive him.”
“Did you ask Thomas what it was?”
“I tried, but he’s not saying,” I said. “I’ll try again, when the time seems right. What could Dad have done to Thomas that he’d feel the need to apologize for, after all these years?”
I caught Harry looking at the clock.
“I’m sorry,” I said. “I’m like an episode of As the World Turns. Thanks for everything, Harry.”
I was walking to the car when my cell rang.
“Me,” Julie said.
“You still at the house.”
“Yeah.”
“Thomas okay?”
“Yeah. I went upstairs, asked him to go on Whirl360 and show me my sister Candace’s place. All I had to do was tell him the name of it and that it was in New York and he found it.”
“What place?”
“She runs a bakery, specializing in cupcakes, in Greenwich Village. Lives over her shop.”
“ That cupcake place? The famous one everyone’s always lined up for? The one that was in Sex and the City?”
“You watched Sex and the City?”
“Uh, maybe a couple of times.”
“It’s not that cupcake place. It’s another one. Anyway, he found it on West Eighth just like that. It’s called Candy’s, in case you ever want to go there. So, how’d it go at the lawyer’s?”
I told her how Harry Peyton was going to act as an intermediary between the police and myself.
“Sounds good,” Julie said. “I know Duckworth. I’ve gotten quotes from him a few times. Listen, Ray,” and her voice went very serious, “I found out something else. I did a news search on Allison Fitch this morning and came up with nothing, and decided to try it again this afternoon, on your dad’s laptop, and I got a hit.”
“You did?”
“Yeah. Just a short story, out of Tampa. A woman with that name was found dead at a hotel there.”
Not again. Every time Julie started looking for people attached to this mess…
“You there, Ray?”
“Yeah. Yeah, I’m here.”
“Can I tell you something, Ray?”
“Sure.”
“I think this whole thing is getting really fucking weird.”
FORTY-EIGHT
“Hello?”
“Thomas, it’s Bill Clinton.”
“Hi.”
“How are you?”
“I’m very good, sir.”
“Thomas, I wanted to remind you how valuable you are to us. Do you know what the phrase ‘black ops’ means?”
“Those are secret missions?”
“That’s right. Covert operations run by the CIA and other government agencies. Operations that the White House has to be able to deny any knowledge of should they somehow become public.”
“Okay.”
“When we have operatives in the field, conducting black ops-style missions, they can run into trouble, the kind where they have to slip away in a hurry. That’s why you’re so important. Not just if all the online maps disappear one day, or there’s another earthquake or tornado. So you never know when we’ll call, asking for your suggestions on an escape route.”
“I understand.”
“The reason I’m calling is to tell you, again, that there are things in your past you shouldn’t be talking about, or else the folks at the CIA are going to lose confidence in you. You’ll look weak. Or worse, like a tattletale. You understand?”
“I do.”
“Good. That’s good to hear.”
“Can I ask you something…Bill?”
“Go right ahead.”
“My brother and I, well, mostly me, but we were talking about aliens the other day, and I wondered, when you were president, did you find out what really happened at Roswell? Do they have an alien spaceship there?”
“Thomas, you fulfill your mission successfully, and I’ll tell you everything.”
FORTY-NINE
Nicole called Lewis in the morning from Florida and told him it was done. Lewis told her to catch the first flight north that she could. She’d found Allison Fitch, and he’d found the man who’d paid a visit to her apartment. Together, they were going to retrieve him. A man named Ray Kilbride.
“Retrieve?” Nicole said.
“We have to know what he knows. We have to know why he was there. My employer wants to talk to him.”
“Whatever.”
“And you’re not flying to New York,” Lewis told her. He gave her another destination, closer to where they’d find Kilbride. “I’m heading up that way now.”
“Fine,” she said, and ended the call.
Then Lewis contacted Howard Talliman.
“She’s been found. And she’s no longer a problem,” Lewis said. He felt safe discussing these things with Howard, knowing that the man had a security expert who swept his office every morning for listening devices.
“That’s a great relief, Lewis.”
“And I’m heading north to deal with our other problem.”
“It’s still too early to relax.”
“I agree,” Lewis said.
“We have to know why Kilbride had that printout. We have to know why he was there. Have you any reason to believe he’s anything other than what he purports to be?”
“He’s an illustrator. Plain and simple.”
“Not everyone is who they appear to be, Lewis.”
“I know. But I’ve torn his life apart since finding out he’s our guy. I’ve got his Social Security number. He’s got fifty-four bucks charged to his Visa card. He lives frugally. He’s paid off his mortgage. Last year he reported an income of $73,675 to the IRS. He drives an Audi Q5. He’s gotten four speeding tickets in the last ten years but other than that his record is clean. Never been married. Got a brother named Thomas who lives with their father in Promise Falls. That sound like some undercover CIA guy to you?”
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