Percival Everett - Assumption

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Assumption: краткое содержание, описание и аннотация

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A baffling triptych of murder mysteries by the author of I Am Not Sidney Poitier.
Ogden Walker, deputy sheriff of a small New Mexico town, is on the trail of an old woman's murderer. But at the crime scene, his are the only footprints leading up to and away from her door. Something is amiss, and even his mother knows it. As other cases pile up, Ogden gives chase, pursuing flimsy leads for even flimsier reasons. His hunt leads him from the seamier side of Denver to a hippie commune as he seeks the puzzling solution.
In Assumption, his follow-up to the wickedly funny I Am Not Sidney Poitier, Percival Everett is in top form as he once again upends our expectations about characters, plot, race, and meaning. A wild ride to the heart of a baffling mystery, Assumption is a literary thriller like no other.

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“You know I don’t need your charity,” she said, grabbing the money.

Ogden looked at the window. “I know you don’t. Consider that payment for the information.”

“And I ain’t no snitch.” She had fallen into something automatic and maybe safe for her.

Ogden didn’t press. “Thank you, ma’am.”

“You’re welcome, sir. Yes, sir. You’re welcome.”

“If it matters to you at all, I thought your friend Carol was all right. Until I found out she was lying to me.”

“She was a liar. What can I say?”

Ogden nodded. “Thanks again.” He started for the door.

“Try the Plank,” she said.

“What?”

“It’s a bar. It’s called the Plank. Hicks used to hang out there.”

Ogden nodded.

Ogden found his way downtown and into a restaurant. He ordered a burger with an enormously complex description and when it came it turned out to be a burger. It was large and with a few fries he could manage only half of the meal. He boxed the remainder and walked back toward his truck. He found a cop with his foot on his back bumper, looking at his license plate. Ogden put the food in his ice chest in the bed of the pickup and waited.

The square man looked over at Ogden. “Aren’t you going to whine or say something?”

“Meter expired,” Ogden said. “What’s there to say.”

“True.”

“From New Mexico?”

Ogden nodded.

“You know, I haven’t really started to fill this puppy in,” the cop said.

Ogden nodded, again. “It’s your job.”

The fat man closed his book. “I’ll let you off with a warning.”

“I appreciate it. You know a place called the Plank?”

“Yeah, I know it. It’s not far from the stadium. I think it’s on Wewatta. It’s a real dive; why do you want to go there?”

“Maybe I don’t.”

After a visit to his room at the Motel 6, Ogden found the Plank. It looked like the dive he expected it to look like. It was in a warehouse area and there were no other bars in sight, only long expanses of concrete buildings, loading docks, and semitrailers. It was dusk and there were a few cars parked in front. The only tree for blocks was in the center of the dirt parking area, a large chinaberry with a huge canopy. Ogden thought the tree almost gave the place some character. He walked in and stood at the bar.

“Whatever you have on tap,” Ogden said.

The bartender, a wide man with a blond crew cut, grunted an acknowledgment and grabbed a glass.

Ogden received the beer and looked around the room. Two bikers were playing pool. A tall man sat alone in a booth, his long legs crossed at the ankles and extended out to the nearest table. A couple sat in another booth, on the same side, not talking, just sitting. The bartender wiped his way down the counter.

“Any hookers ever come in here?” Ogden asked.

“Sometimes,” the man said. “How would I know a hooker if I saw one?”

Ogden smiled at him. “You know any of them?”

“I guess.” He stopped wiping and tossed his rag someplace Ogden couldn’t see. “Why you asking?”

“You know a woman named Carol Barelli?”

The man said nothing.

“Here’s her picture. She’s the one on the left. She also uses the name Destiny.”

“What’s your business, buddy? Are you a cop? You don’t look like no cop.” The bartender looked around the room.

“I’m just a friend of Carol’s.”

“You don’t look like no friend of Carol’s neither. Well, anyway, I don’t know her.”

“What about the other one. She goes by Petra.”

The bartender shook his head.

“And this one?” Ogden showed him the picture of the woman from the cabin.

“Nope, nope, and nope. You’re just shit out of luck.”

Ogden was taken by his failure to react to the photo of the dead woman. He looked at the picture himself. “Can you tell that the woman in this picture is dead?” he asked.

“What?”

“Does she look dead to you?”

“Maybe.”

“But you don’t care.”

“I don’t know her. I don’t know our friend Destiny either.”

“She’s dead, too,” Ogden said.

“It don’t pay to know you, does it?”

“Have you ever seen a guy around here with one hand?”

Ogden watched the man closely. He swallowed, he rearranged his shoulders and his chest ever so slightly, he glanced right. “No,” the man lied.

“So, you don’t give a shit about two dead women,” Ogden said. He set down his beer and looked over at the pool table.

“No, not really,” the man said.

Ogden turned back to look at his eyes. He was telling the truth this time, but he wasn’t that comfortable admitting it.

“People die,” he said.

“The woman Destiny was involved in some kind of drug deal with this One Hand.”

“You should write this all down.”

“You think so?”

“Oh yeah.”

“This guy with one hand put one in the back of Carol Barelli’s head. And you don’t care about that.”

The man bit the inside of his cheek.

“What about this woman?” He showed the bartender the picture of Carla Reynolds.

“Never saw her.”

“Thanks for the beer.”

Ogden was striking out. He’d only learned what he already knew. To make matters worse, the longer he drove around Denver asking his stupid questions, the less he knew what he was doing. And he’d only been there a day; how much could he not know in a week? Did he really expect to solve the murder of the woman in the cabin? That was the only one in his jurisdiction. Or was it some ego thing or, worse, some macho thing driving him? He’d been strung along by the now-dead Carol Barelli and he was determined to find some answers. Perhaps, just perhaps, in the process he would accidentally manage to find Carla Reynolds before she turned up dead.

Ogden’s cell phone rang as he sat down behind the wheel of his pickup. He looked at the phone. That it was ringing at all was disorienting. He reluctantly answered.

“This is Detective Barry.”

“Detective.”

“Can you meet me over at St. Joseph’s Hospital?”

“You bet. What’s going on?”

“I’ll tell you when you get here. Come to the emergency room.” She told him the address and hung up.

At the hospital, Ogden parked and walked into the emergency room as instructed. He recognized that it was a relatively slow night for the staff, but it seemed plenty busy to Ogden. He saw a uniformed cop by the door to the treatment area.

“Excuse me, I’m supposed to meet a Detective Barry here,” Ogden said.

“She’s back there.” The policeman stepped aside to let Ogden in. “You’ll see her.”

Ogden walked down the aisle between the rows of curtained examination stations, some occupied, some not, and just like the cop had said he saw Barry.

“Detective.”

“Deputy Walker.”

“What’s going on?” Ogden asked.

Barry pulled back the curtain and Ogden saw a badly beaten woman. It was the woman he’d talked to earlier that day, the one who had sent him to the Plank to look for Hicks.

“How is she?”

“She’s not going to die.”

“Who did it?”

“Don’t know. She managed to say that some cowboy came to see her.”

Ogden stepped into the examination room and looked over the shoulder of the attending nurse. The right side of her face was raw, bleeding, a mess. Her right eye was swollen shut and her left remained closed while he was watching.

“Is she conscious?” he asked the nurse.

“Barely.”

He walked back to Barry. “Whoever beat her only used his left hand,” Ogden said.

“Or only had a left hand.”

“She told me his name is Hicks. I have to think this is my fault.”

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