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Jonathan Kellerman: Bones

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Jonathan Kellerman Bones

Bones: краткое содержание, описание и аннотация

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When it comes to writing deftly layered, tightly coiled novels of suspense, #1 New York Times bestselling author Jonathan Kellerman reigns supreme as 'master of the psychological thriller' (People). Now, Kellerman has worked his magic again in this chilling new masterpiece. The anonymous caller has an ominous tone and an unnerving message about something 'real dead… buried in your marsh.' The eco-volunteer on the other end of the phone thinks it's a prank, but when a young woman's body turns up in L.A.'s Bird Marsh preserve no one's laughing. And when the bones of more victims surface, homicide detective Milo Sturgis realizes the city's under siege to an insidious killer. Milo's first move: calling in psychologist Alex Delaware. The murdered women are prostitutes-except the most recent victim; a brilliant young musician from the East Coast, employed by a wealthy family to tutor a musical prodigy, Selena Bass seems out of place in the marsh's grim tableau. Conveniently-perhaps ominously-Selena's blueblood employers are nowhere to be found, and their estate's jittery caretaker raises hackles. But Milo's instincts and Alex's insight are too well-honed to settle for easy answers, even given the dark secrets in this troubled man's past. Their investigation unearths disturbing layers-about victims, potential victims, and suspects alike-plunging even deeper into the murky marsh's enigmatic depths. Bizarre details of the crimes suggest a devilish serial killer prowling L.A.'s gritty streets. But when a new murder deviates from the pattern, derailing a possible profile, Alex and Milo must look beyond the suspicion of madness and consider an even more sinister mind at work. Answers don't come easy, but the darkest of drives and desires may fuel the most devious of foes. Bones is classic Kellerman-relentlessly peeling back the skin and psyches of its characters and revealing the shadows and sins of the souls beneath. With jolt after jolt of galvanizing suspense, it drives the reader through its twists and turns toward a climax as satisfying as it is shattering.

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Huck says, “All because you wanted the gold for yourself.”

Simone smirks. “I’ve got the gold. Loser.”

“A kid, Simone. You hugged and kissed him and played with his hair. You hugged Nadine. Now they’re gooks?”

“They were always gooks-”

“You kissed them.”

Simone laughs. “Like in the Mafia- The Godfather. You get kissed before you get blown away.”

“Was it easy, Simone? Did you look in their eyes-did you look in Kelvin’s eyes?”

Simone laughs louder. “What’s the big deal? Everyone dies the same.”

“Keep talking,” says Milo.

Huck says, “You looked into his eyes.”

“The eyes change,” says Simone, and her own orbs illustrate by taking on a dreamy look. “It’s like watching the light go out. There’s nothing like it.” Arching her back again. “I watched the light go out in her eyes and I came.”

Milo pumps a fist. “ Got her!”

She drops the bag on the sand. “Here’s what you want. Have a bad life.”

The camera doesn’t falter.

“What, you think I’m punking you, loser? C’mere, look.”

“What did you do with them, Simone?”

“Ate ’em,” says Simone. “With fava beans and Chianti… what did we do? We jammed dynamite up their asses-who cares? Take this and crawl like the maggot you are.”

She bends toward the bag, inserts her hand, comes up with a bound wad of bills.

Tosses it.

Huck doesn’t budge. The money lands on the sand.

Simone stares at it. “What?”

“It’s fine,” says Huck. “Leave it and go.”

Simone studies him.

“Leave it and go,” Huck repeats. “Have whatever life you think you deserve.”

“What’s that, a curse, some kind of hex?” says Simone. “From you, a curse is a blessing.”

She turns to leave. Stops, rotates. Jams her hand into the bag and comes up with something that isn’t money.

Long and thin; she holds it aloft.

“Oh, shit,” said Fox, as she charges Huck.

The camera captures her eyes, hot and frigid simultaneously. The blandness of her face as she thrusts the knife.

Huck’s hands shoot out into the camera’s eye as he grabs for the weapon.

Simone lunges, twists, grunts, blood spurts.

Huck says nothing as she continues to stab him.

Milo runs toward the deck stairs that lead to the beach, Reed races on his heels, overtakes him.

Aaron Fox gapes at the screen.

I catch the look on his face as I run after Milo and Reed.

See him right now, and you wouldn’t know he was ever a confident, elegant man.

The sounds from the screen, wet, thumping, insistent, fill my ears as my feet hit the sand and I’m well out of range and hearing is no longer relevant.

CHAPTER 42

When we get to the spot where Simone Vander has attacked Travis Huck, he is sitting on the sand, cross-legged, like a yogi. His face is calm as he watches blood rain from his hands and arms and chest.

Simone is stretched out several feet away, inches from the water’s edge, flat belly exposed to the moon, twin pierces winking.

The knife protrudes from the side of her neck. Long-bladed, wooden-handled kitchen utensil. Her body is twisted as if in escape. Her eyes are white and dull.

Moe Reed stoops on the sand, like a baseball catcher. Checks, needlessly, for a pulse.

He stands up, shaking his head, joins Milo at Travis Huck’s side.

The run has left Milo panting. Struggling to keep up with Reed, he managed to call for an ambulance.

He and Reed attend to Huck, tearing off their shirts to use as tourniquets. Within seconds Milo ’s undershirt and Reed’s broad, bare chest are slathered with blood.

Huck seems amused by the fuss.

Two bound packets of money lie on the sand. Later, we’ll discover both are bundles of singles covered by twenties at both ends.

Seventy dollars each.

Aaron Fox shows up, surveys the scene. Approaching Simone’s body, his look says she’s something alien and slimy, washed up by the tide.

A wave rolls over her, leaves a coating of foam on her face that dissipates as bubbles burst in the warm night air.

No lights have gone on in the neighboring houses. This is a haven for weekenders. By sunrise all blood will be laundered by the ocean, but now the sand is gummy.

Fox and I stand around as Milo and Reed, working silently, in perfect concert, reduce spurt to seep. Huck turns pale, then an odd off-white, begins to nod off.

Milo braces him and Reed holds his hands. The young detective says, “Hang on, pal.”

Huck looks at Simone’s corpse. Moves his lips. “Uh-ah-uh-”

Milo says, “Don’t talk, son.”

Huck’s eyes remain fixed on Simone. He shrugs. Leaks.

“Don’t move,” says Moe Reed.

Huck mutters something.

“Shh,” says Milo.

Huck’s head sways. His eyes close.

He forces himself to form words.

Says, “I did it again.”

I’m thinking about that as movement from the beach house grabs my attention.

Brief flash of activity below the house, where a bulb fastened to the bottom of the deck casts weak light on the pilings and the bulkhead beneath the main structure.

Something shifting. No one else notices. I go over.

A Zodiac raft hangs on chains from a rafter. Behind the boat is a door, slightly ajar, cut flush with the plywood that veneers the bulkhead.

No lock, some sort of storage space, it probably blew open.

But no wind, tonight. Maybe it’s been that way for a while.

I make my way between the pilings, smelling salt and tar and wet sand. Enter the cave-like space created by the overhang of the deck. The Zodiac is fully inflated. Other things dangle from the rafters, like sausage at a deli. A small metal rowboat, two sets of oars. An old Coca-Cola sign, rusted beyond easy recognition, nailed to a listing, warped crossbeam.

Things go better with…

I approach the door. Barely wide enough to squeeze through. No movement, no light from within, and unlikely to be deeper than the few feet allowed by the bulkhead.

Blown open, who knows how long ago.

I swing the door open, just to be sure.

Come face-to-face with a black figure eight.

Double shotgun barrel. Above the lethal tube, a face, slack in spots, unnaturally taut in others.

Hairless. No eyebrows, no lashes.

A visage turned mask-like by the tickle of indirect light.

Bald head, pale eyes. Dark T-shirt and sweats, dark running shoes.

Big diamond ring on one of the fingers gripping the trigger.

What I can see of the shotgun’s stock is shiny and burled. Engraved metalwork elevates the weapon to art. A whole different level from my father’s bird-slayer.

One of the pricey weapons Simon Vander got rid of when his new wife asked him to.

Buddy Weir’s diamond ring bounces as his finger tightens.

“Easy,” I say.

Weir mouth-breathes. It’s his turn to sweat.

A soft-looking, slope-shouldered man, stinking of sulfurous fear.

More dangerous than if he’d been angry.

Pale eyes look past me at the scene on the beach. He seems about to cry.

The ring bounces again. The barrel moves closer, stops inches from my nose.

A strange, wonderful numbness takes over as I hear myself speak.

I say, “Wrong eye.”

Confusion freezes Weir’s hand.

“You’re right-handed, but you might be left-eyed. Close one, then the other, see which one makes my face jump more. Also, you need to stop fighting the gun, guns don’t like to be wrestled with, lean in, embrace, be part of it-go ahead, blink, test your eyes.”

Weir’s look is scornful, superior, but his eyes effect unconscious compliance and the shotgun wavers.

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