John Lutz - Night kills
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- Название:Night kills
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- Год:неизвестен
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- Рейтинг книги:5 / 5. Голосов: 1
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Night kills: краткое содержание, описание и аннотация
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He was supposed to like fishing, too, but frankly some of the things he'd caught in the ocean while deep-sea fishing scared him. Not to mention the seasickness.
"Hit the damned ball, Larry!" Chet, one of his foursome, shouted.
Fedderman looked back at him and waved. His drive had taken him off the fairway and into the rough, which was to say high saw grass that would cut your hand if you tried to pull up a clump. It was a miracle he'd even found the damned ball.
Never a man whose clothes quite fit, Fedderman's tall and lanky yet potbellied form even made his golf outfit look like it belonged on someone else. One sleeve of his blue knit pullover seemed longer than the other, and his muted plaid slacks made him look as if he were standing in a brisk wind even though the weather was calm. And hot. And humid.
As he approached the ball, Fedderman slapped at a mosquito and missed. His seemingly mismatched body parts made for an interesting golf swing as he took a practice swish, then moved closer and slashed the ball out of the rough. It rose neatly toward the green, carrying Fedderman's hope with it, then suddenly veered right as if it had encountered the jet stream and landed among some trees.
"You missed the sand trap, anyway!" Chet shouted. Fedderman was learning to dislike Chet.
Fedderman's shot again. His three fellow golfers were already on the green. He was isolated in what seemed a forest of palm trees near a running creek. There was his ball. Not a bad lie, on a stretch of grass that wasn't so high, because the sun never reached it beneath the closely grouped palms.
Something moved near the creek. Fedderman stared but saw nothing in the tall grass. He'd heard about alligators on the golf course but had never seen one, even on his frequent journeys into the rough. Still, he was sure he'd seen some kind of movement not human and it gave him the creeps.
He quickly approached his ball and set himself. He'd have to keep the shot low and get the ball between the trunks of two palm trees if he even had a chance to get near the barely visible green.
"Shoot the ball!" Chet yelled. "Shoot the ball, Larry!"
Shoot you, you dumb bastard!
Movement again, in the corner of his vision. There sure as hell was something over there in the shadows.
Fedderman took a quick practice swing, then hurried his shot.
He really nailed this one. Solid. It felt great.
The ball flew about ten feet, bounced off a palm trunk, and rocketed straight back and hit Fedderman in the head.
He threw down his club and clutched his skull, then staggered out into the searing sunlight. His cleated golf shoes snagged in the tall grass and he almost fell. Chet was yelling something, maybe laughing.
Damn Chet!
Damn golf!
Damn Florida!
He had to get out of here! Had to!
Fedderman's cell phone chirped.
4
Two months earlier
Shellie Marston paced in the vast glass and marble atrium of the CitiGroup Building at Third Avenue and Fifty-third Street. She walked again past a display window and tried to glance at her reflection without attracting attention. She saw a woman in her late twenties with medium-cut blond hair, a definitely filled-out but not too fat figure in a new maroon Avanti sweat suit and startlingly white New Balance jogging shoes. She wore a white scarf around her neck. Too much? Not considering that she was wearing no jewelry other than small gold hoop earrings, and her very practical-looking wristwatch with its black Velcro band. This was supposed to be a casual first meeting with…David Adams. It took her a second to recall his name. A meeting in a public place arranged by E-Bliss.org.
The atrium wasn't very crowded, but all the hard surfaces created an echoing effect that made it seem that way. Voices and shuffling soles created a constant background buzz. New Yorkers and tourists alike were strolling along the lines of shops or hurrying to and from the escalators.
As she looked away from the display window, Shellie saw that one of the small round tables set outside the shops was available. She'd bought an egg cream in a foam cup so she'd have something to do with her hands. Carrying it carefully so it wouldn't spill, she quickly laid claim to the tiny table and sat down. She placed the cup just so on the napkin she'd been provided.
His first impression would be of her seated. Was that okay?
If she sat gracefully enough. She made sure her thighs were together and placed one New Balance jogger slightly in front of the other, rested her left hand in her lap. That should present a reasonably graceful picture.
She raised her left hand briefly to glance at the watch on her wrist. He was five minutes late. She nervously took a sip of egg cream. Was he actually going to show up? Or was she going to sit here another-how long-fifteen minutes? The two old men playing chess at the nearest table had stolen looks at her; they knew she was waiting for someone.
Shellie tried not to feel embarrassed. It didn't matter if she was stood up, she told herself, not in New York. This city was full of improbable and unpredictable characters.
None of whom she knew more than casually, however. Shellie had been in the city a little more than a month. She was still operating on the inheritance she'd brought with her from Bluebonnet, Nebraska. All her mother had in the world, plus her mother's life insurance money. Shellie's dad had died ten years ago. A distant aunt had died only a few months ago, and Shellie had no siblings. She was on her own in the world, which was one reason why she'd decided to start a new life in New York.
Why not the biggest, most interesting city in the country? Shellie had her nerve, and her college degree in general education. Always a loner, there was no one she was particularly friendly with in Bluebonnet. There was nothing in the romance area, certainly, now that she'd broken off her affair with Mark Drucker. Hulking and ever-smiling Mark. Big high school football hero, college dropout, and TV addict. All Mark wanted to do was have sex and watch movies and shows on TV. Old The Dukes of Hazzard episodes. My God! Well, Shellie hoped that by now he'd found someone to share his passions, both in front of the TV and in the backseat of his meticulously restored '69 Camaro (his real true love). For her it was time for something more challenging and promising. Time to see if she could make it on her own.
And she could-she was sure of it. But she was so damned lonely. New York could do that to you. There you were, swimming in an ocean of humanity, and if you knew no one well, you were as isolated as if you were a castaway on a remote island.
Shellie had finally given in to something she'd been long considering. Using a matchmaking service to alleviate her loneliness hadn't seemed like the best idea she'd ever had, but she'd finally decided to give it a try. Sometimes in life you had to take a chance.
After spending weeks visiting the website of E-Bliss.org, she'd filled out the detailed questionnaire that allowed the agency to match her with the best possible bet as a future mate. Then she'd waited.
After slightly more than a week, the nervously anticipated e-mail had appeared on her computer screen. The attached profile hadn't revealed much about her prospective soul mate, David Adams. It hadn't even included his photo. Well, that was okay. Shellie remembered how hesitant she'd been to send her photo to E-Bliss.org. After all, once your image was on the Internet, who knew where it might pop up? Someone might even superimpose her head on the body of another woman doing God knew what. Maybe even committing unnatural acts. Shellie had heard of it happening.
She'd been permitted to choose the public place that was to be the scene of their first meeting, so here she was at the agreed-upon time.
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