"Harrington, Patricia - A Clean View On Murder" - читать интересную книгу автора (Harrington Patricia)= A CLEAN VIEW ON MURDER
by Patricia Harrington Published on the Web by About.com's MysteryBooks http://mysterybooks.about.com/ You wouldn't believe the things you see washing windows. Like murder. Can you believe it? I actually saw this guy bonk his brother over the head with a golf trophy. Then cool as you please, he looks at me through the window, tightens his raincoat belt and walks out of the office. It should have been easy to identify him. But it wasn't. I knew the dead guy was a brother. You see, he was one of three. Triplets! Identical, leastwise, they seemed that way to me. Over five years, I've seen the three of them together a lot. Even met them once at a building Christmas party. Usually, though, I was looking at them through safety glass ten stories up. I told the wife at dinner one time, "They look alike, they comb their hair the same way, got those same skinny, gold rimmed wire glasses, too. You'd think being grown men, they'd want to have their own identity. But, nope, they wear the same blue suits, same coats. About the only difference is that one of the Hallstroms--Bob--has a limp; I think one leg's shorter than the other. Oh, yeah, he's a lefty, too." The wife passed the potatoes and frowned. "I expect their mother took fertility drugs. You know they cause birth defects." * * * The one with the office at the far end was Dan. He used to rub his chin while he read his paperwork and had a nervous way of pacing. He acted like an absentminded professor in an old black and white movie. He sure focused quick, though, when it was mail delivery time. Blondie would come in, and he would grin like a ten year-old kid. Bob had the middle office. He liked to lean back in his chair, tapping a pencil on the desk top like he was thinking. He didn't seem to do much work, though. But when that pretty mail clerk walked in he always stood up. He was Mr. Polite. He'd stand until she left, then limp over to the door and touch the knob like he could still feel her warm hand on it. The last brother, Tom, was the one who had his head cracked like a gourd. He kept a string of golfing trophies on a table under the window. He had all kinds of awards on one wall, too. His brothers just had pictures. Most of the time, he hardly seemed to give Blondie the time of day. But I spotted him secretly watching her backfield in motion. A couple of times, she caught him staring, too, and smiled. She didn't tell him off, that's for sure. The you-know-what hit the fan before lunch. I was hurrying because the forecast said rain showers in the afternoon. I was doing Tom's window and Blondie was in his office with her little basket. Tom sat at his desk, and she leaned over him. Real close. Happened as natural as two birds on a spring day. He put his hand behind her head and pulled her down. She didn't struggle none. She sat in his lap and was giving as good as she got when the door opened and the brothers walked in. Well, Blondie jumped up, clutching her blouse and tugging on her skirt. She grabbed her basket and ran out of the office. Whew-ee! Did those three men get into it. They pointed and jabbed fingers at each other--yelling. I could almost hear them. Finally, Tom edges the other two toward the door. Dan twisted around in the doorway before he stormed out the door. He had pure hate on his face. Bob stood there for a moment, hangdog, like he'd lost his best friend. Tom had gone back to his desk and sat with his back to me. Bob shook his head at his brother, and I could read his lips. "How could you?" Then he limped out of that office like he was never going to come back. * * * First thing I did after the trophy made a mess of Tom's head was call my dispatcher to get building security and the cops. And pronto. As soon as I made my way down, a cop grabbed me, and we rode the elevator up to where the police were taking statements. We stepped out of the elevator and pulled up short by the mail chute because the two brothers were having a donnybrook in the hall. Dan said, "You fool, she wasn't worth it. Did you think she'd want a cripple like you?" Bob looked to come apart, and shook his fist. "You're the stupid one. You wouldn't have known how to give her a good time with a guide book." When the two began throwing punches, the cops hustled them down the hall to separate rooms. Bob's limp seemed a whole lot worse from the aggravation. |
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