Kathy Reichs - Bones to Ashes
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- Название:Bones to Ashes
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Bones to Ashes: краткое содержание, описание и аннотация
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“Not kids. I never agreed to kids.”
“They want to be stars. I give them their dream.”
“You promised me you cut that shit out. I believed you. Now I learn you been lying all along.” Sweat dampened Bastarache’s hair. His shirt was plastered to his chest.
“Easy.” Ryan tried to defuse Bastarache’s anger.
Bastarache jerked the Sig Sauer toward Ryan. “From the questions this guy’s asking, I’m guessing you killed some kids.”
“That’s ridiculous.” Malo gave a nervous laugh.
“Look at me, ass wipe.” Bastarache leveled the Sig Sauer on Malo’s face. “You’ve brought a murder investigation down on me. I’ve had cops up my ass for days.”
Raising both palms, Malo reoriented toward Bastarache.
My mouth went dry with shock.
Though older, artificially tanned, and more fit, Malo bore a striking resemblance to Bastarache. A resemblance that could only be explained by genes.
Bastarache continued his harangue.
“You killed those girls. Admit you did it.”
“That’s—”
“No! More! Lies!” Bastarache’s face was raspberry.
“They were sluts. I caught one stealing from me. The other was a junkie.” Malo swallowed. “You’re my brother, Davey. Take this guy out.” Malo made a nervous gesture toward Ryan. “Take him out and we’re home free. We find another place—”
“You draw attention to me. To my business. To people I care about. You’ve lost every bit of your brain. Cops been tailing me since Quebec. Something happens to this one and they’ll know who to look for.”
“She’s fine.”
“Your deviant shit threatens everything. You polluted my father’s house. That’s why I drop-kicked you the first chance I had.”
Bastarache was moving the gun with sharp, jerky motions. “You’re just like your whore mother.”
“Lay your gun on the floor, Dave.” Ryan, the negotiator. “You don’t want to hurt anyone.”
Bastarache ignored him.
“You care about nothing but money and your own sick pecker. But now you threaten my house. People I care about. Because of you they’re gonna find her and lock her away.”
“You’re a head case,” Malo scoffed. “You live in the dark ages.”
“Head case?” The gun was trembling in his hand. “I’ll show you a head case. Your head all over that wall.”
A woman spoke from just below the window. Her voice sounded wheezy and winded.
“If you hurt him, it harms us.”
I strained to see the woman, but the chair back blocked her from view.
The sirens were now screaming down Rustique. Tires screeched, doors opened, feet pounded, radios sputtered. A man’s voice called out, another answered.
Bastarache’s eyes darted to the woman. In that instant, Ryan tossed the Winchester behind him and sprang.
The shotgun skidded across the floor and ricocheted off a baseboard. Malo spun and bolted from the room.
I turned and yelled, “Coming out the front!”
Three cops raced up the driveway. One shouted, “ Arrêtez-vous! Freeze!”
Malo cut toward the garage. The cops overtook him, slammed his body to the brick, and cuffed his wrists.
Bounding into the house, I hooked a right through a set of double doors into the parlor. A cop followed close on my heels. I heard Ryan tell him to radio for an ambulance.
Bastarache was down on splayed knees, hands cuffed behind him. The woman crouched by his side. Her arm circled her waist. One hand lay on his shoulder. A hand that possessed only three knobby fingers.
“I’m such a fuckup,” Bastarache mumbled. “Such a fuckup.”
“Shhh,” the woman said. “I know you love me.”
A shaft of fast-dropping sun flamed the dark curls framing the woman’s head. Slowly, she raised her chin.
Agonizing realization curdled my innards.
The woman’s cheeks and forehead were lumpy and hard. Her upper lip stretched to a nose that was asymmetrically concave.
“Évangéline,” I said, overwhelmed with emotion.
The woman looked my way. Something flashed in her eyes.
“I’ve seen the Queen of England,” she rasped, chest heaving, tears snaking serpentine trails through her flesh.
Contents
Acknowledgments
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Chapter 20
Chapter 21
Chapter 22
Chapter 23
Chapter 24
Chapter 25
Chapter 26
Chapter 27
Chapter 28
Chapter 29
Chapter 30
Chapter 31
Chapter 32
Chapter 33
Chapter 34
Chapter 35
Chapter 36
Chapter 37
Chapter 38
Chapter 39
Chapter 40
Chapter 41
41
AWEEK PASSED. SEVEN DAYS OF RECOVERY, CELEBRATION, PARTING, revelation, confession, and denial.
I slept for twelve hours following the incident at Malo’s house, awoke rejuvenated and harboring no grudge against my sister. Harry had survived her escapade in the park. One Jimmy Choo leopard thong sandal had not. Gull guano.
Harry explained that she’d driven to see Flan O’Connor in Toronto. She wanted to surprise me with a scoop on Obéline and the poetry. Her big discovery was that O’Connor House had only operated from 1998 until 2003. Ironically, the information turned out to be merely cumulative to what we already knew about time frames.
Harry flew home to file for divorce and sell her house in River Oaks. Having enjoyed downtown living, she’d decided to search for a condo that would allow her to live car-free. I suspected her plan was unworkable in a town like Houston. I kept it to myself.
The feast of Saint John the Baptist, la fête nationale du Québec, came and went. City crews swept up, the fleur-de-lis flags came down, and Montreal’s citizenry turned its attention to the annual rites of jazz.
Through conversations with Ryan and Hippo, I learned many things.
The man slumped by the tree was a Malo thug named Serge Sardou. When Sardou challenged Bastarache’s charge up the driveway, Bastarache shot him. The wound caused a lot of bleeding but only minor muscle damage. Sardou started bartering as soon as the anesthesia wore off.
Turned out Mulally and Babin had been smitten with the Escalade, not with Harry and me. It was Sardou who’d threatened me by e-mail and phone. And, my personal favorite, thrown me down the stairs. Malo had asked him to recover the contact sheet of Évangéline, and to back me off. Sardou decided to double-task at Cormier’s studio.
Bastarache and Malo both went directly from Rustique to jail. Bastarache claimed self-defense, saying Sardou had threatened him with the Winchester. A lawyer had him out on bail the next day.
Based on statements from Sardou and Kelly Sicard, Malo was charged with three counts of homicide and a zillion counts of offenses involving kids. Unlike Bastarache, Plucky Pierre was going nowhere soon.
Wednesday, June 27, I was in my lab at Wilfrid-Derome. Five boxes lined the side counter, remains packaged for release to next of kin.
Reading my handwritten labels, I felt a bittersweet sense of accomplishment. Geneviève Doucet. Anne Girardin. Claire Brideau. Maude Waters. LSJML-57748.
Cause of death would never be determined for Geneviève Doucet. No matter. Poor Théodore was beyond understanding. Or blaming. Maître Asselin would be collecting her great-niece’s bones.
There would be no justice for little Anne Girardin, Ryan’s MP number three. Daddy had died of a self-inflicted bullet to the brain. But Adelaide had been located and could now bury her daughter.
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