Adrian McKinty - Fifty Grand

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Fifty Grand: краткое содержание, описание и аннотация

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This knockout punch of a thriller from a critically acclaimed author follows a young Cuban detective's quest for vengeance against her father's killer in a Colorado mountain town
A man is killed in a hit-and-run on a frozen mountain road in the town of Fairview, Colorado. He is an illegal immigrant in a rich Hollywood resort community not unlike Telluride. No one is prosecuted for his death and his case is quietly forgotten.
Six months later another illegal makes a treacherous run across the border. Barely escaping with her life and sanity intact, she finds work as a maid with one of the employment agencies in Fairview. Secretly, she begins to investigate the shadowy collision that left her father dead.
The maid isn't a maid. And she's not Mexican, either. She's Detective Mercado, a police officer from Havana, and she's looking for answers: Who killed her father? Was it one of the smooth- talking Hollywood types? Was it a minion of the terrifying county sheriff? And why was her father, a celebrated defector to the United States, hiding in Colorado as the town ratcatcher?
Adrian McKinty's live-wire prose crackles with intensity as we follow Mercado through the swells of emotion and violence that lead up to a final shocking confrontation.

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I entered the office.

“Miss Martinez,” the man said, not getting up from his desk.

“Mr. Jackson,” I replied with a smile and passed him the card with the fictitious name and cell phone number.

“I’m a very busy man, what’s this about?” he asked, taking the card Ricky had made for me, crumpling it, and throwing it in a wastebasket.

“The next piece of paper I’m going to give you will be a subpoena, I hope you take better care of that,” I said, annoyed but inwardly thanking him for letting me enter the role without the necessity of small talk.

“You can’t touch me, you’re not a cop,” he said with a little tremor.

“No?” I said with a look that told him I knew everything. Every little scam he’d pulled over the last five years. A bend of the law here, a few false accounts there. There wasn’t a garage in the world that hadn’t defrauded an insurance company at some point, and the Pearl Street Garage of Fairview, Colorado, was surely no different.

He grimaced. His mouth opened and closed like a dying snapper.

I sat back in the chair. Breathed. Watched.

The TV news tells us that Americans are all bloated capitalists but this was not the case in Colorado. The trophy wives on Pearl Street, the Hollywood types, the hardworking Mexicans in the Wetback Motel-lean. Mr. Jackson was no exception. Mid-fifties, but trim. Skinny arms, prominent Adam’s apple, dyed black hair, and dead, beady, blue-black eyes. Like those of a stuffed animal. I had the feeling that Mr. Jackson was one of those people undergoing a starvation diet in the hope of living longer.

There was certainly something not quite together about him.

Sweat on the temple. Tremble in the lip.

It made me depressed. Did everyone have a dark secret? Did everyone lie? No wonder cops got worse as they got older. Ten years in you’d need a machete to cut through the layers of cynicism.

I couldn’t bear to look at his face so I examined his clothes. A color-blind ensemble. Beige shirt, purple slacks, bright red tie with some kind of crest on it. After the clothes the room. Neat freak. A few landscapes on the wall. Empty desk. Phone. Pic of wife and four kids. A long sofa where he and Marilyn probably fucked.

Behind him, in the distance, I could see a ski lift carrying little empty chairs up a mountain. Empty because there wasn’t much snow, I assumed. I watched them for a while.

The silence cracked him, as I knew it would.

People, and especially people in sales, hate quiet. It reminds them of the eternity of lost mercantile opportunities under the coffin lid.

He fished the card from the trash. “Inez Martinez, Great Northern Insurance,” he read slowly. I nodded. “What can I do for you, Miss Martinez?”

“I’m investigating a fraudulent insurance claim,” I began. “I think you know what I’m talking about.”

His face whitened and he sat on his hands to stop them shaking. Christ, this character would last precisely thirty seconds in one of my basement interrogation rooms.

“I, I don’t know what you’re talking about,” he said.

“Mr. Jackson, let me put your mind at rest, this has nothing whatsoever to do with your garage or the work you’re doing.”

An all-too-visible sigh of relief. Come mierda, lela, you should be on the stage, you’d be too big for the movies, but perfect for the theater. Everything’s right there on your face.

“You’re not investigating us? But why would you? We run a very tight ship here. That kind of thing is a stranger to our… I mean, we’re not the… What I mean is, we always maintain the highest standards of…” He lost his train of thought.

“Mr. Jackson, my company’s experience with your garage has always been first-rate, so let me just say again that this is nothing to do with you or the work you’ve done for us.”

His smile broadened and I knew I had to hit him now while the relief endorphins were at full tilt. “It’s nothing major, but my supervisor in the fraud department asked me to come up here and ask you for a favor since he knew I was going to be in Denver for a quite different matter,” I said.

“Of course. What can I help you with?” he asked.

“Well, as you know, fraud is most common in cases of personal injury, but sometimes we do see it in fully comprehensive cases too. It’s unusual but it does happen.”

“Yeah, I guess it does.”

Thin smile, more sweat.

“Generally it’s not worth the risk unless you have double or even triple insured yourself. With different insurance companies, of course.”

Mr. Jackson nodded enthusiastically. “God, yeah, I see what you’re saying. Someone had an accident. We did the work and he claimed it off more than one insurance company, is that what you’re talking about?”

“Exactly.”

“So, like you said, this, uh, wouldn’t be a reflection on the work we’ve done. We’d be, uh, we’d be-”

“Tangential.”

“Yeah, yeah, tangential. Hit the nail on the head. Ok, what do you want me to do?”

“Since this is an ongoing investigation I am not permitted to reveal particulars of the case.”

“No, of course not.”

“What I need are your records for the last week of May.”

“Of this year? May 2007?”

“Yes.”

“No problem. Hold on.”

He pressed an intercom on his desk. “Marilyn, can you bring me the accounts book for May, the red one. The red one,” he said.

She brought the red book. The official book, not the real book with what things actually cost. I scanned the names.

The two names for the twenty-seventh and twenty-eighth were the same ones that Ricky had already found. I passed the book back.

Two minutes’ work. Two thousand miles. Two dead men.

“Is that it?” he asked.

That was it. Marilyn saw me out.

Pearl Street was busy. Zombie perras in high-heeled boots, bearded men in sandals and ripped jeans. Pepper-spray perfume. Mustard-gas aftershave.

I started to lose character. Shoulders drooped. Face relaxed.

“Miss Martinez?”

I turned. Marilyn.

“Yes?”

“Mr. Jackson remembered something else that might be of use.”

Back inside.

The office again. Stuffed animal eyes. Fuck sofa. Empty ski lift. His stomach making a rumbling noise.

“Yes?”

“Look, I don’t know if this is important or not.”

“Go on.”

He coughed. “Well, like I say, I don’t know if this is a big deal or not but two other people have been asking questions about our records for the end of May.”

“Have they?”

“Yes.”

“Do you mind if I-”

“One of them was a Latino reporter from Denver, a few weeks back, apparently he talked to one of our mechanics.”

Ricky.

“Who was the other?”

“Sheriff Briggs.”

картинка 3

The day departing behind mountains, saying goodbye with yellow hands and an orange-colored carapace.

Angela shook her head and dissolved in the lotus light. “It’s not just that Esteban pays shit and he’s unreliable. He drinks and he has a gun and he deals drugs.”

Paco looked at me with stupid, tired eyes. “What are you going to do, María?” he asked.

I was dead tired too. I didn’t want to make a thing of it.

“I’m staying,” I said simply.

The Volkswagen microbus honked its horn. Luisa slid open the side door and waved to hurry us up. I acknowledged her wave and shook my head.

“I don’t know,” Paco said.

“We’d like you to come,” Angela said, touching him on the arm.

“Jualo and all my crew are at the other motel on I-70, some of them are in Denver, are you gonna take those guys?” Paco asked.

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