"The Cabinet of Curiosities" - читать интересную книгу автора (Preston Douglas)"The what?"
Brisbane opened the case and stretched a slender hand toward a cabochon emerald the size of a robin's egg. He plucked it from its velvet cradle and held it up between thumb and forefinger. "The Tev Mirabi emerald. It's flawless. As a gemologist by avocation, I can tell you that emeralds of this size are never flawless. Except this one." He placed it before his eye, which popped into housefly-like magnification. He blinked once, then lowered the gem. "Take a look." Nora again forced herself to swallow a rejoinder. She took the emerald. "Careful. You wouldn't want to drop it. Emeralds are brittle." Nora held it gingerly, turned it in her fingers. "Go ahead. The world looks different through an emerald." She peered into its depths and saw a distorted world peering back, in which moved a bloated creature like a green jellyfish: Brisbane. "Very interesting. But Mr. BrisbaneЧ" "Flawless." "No doubt. But we were talking about something else." "What do you think it's worth? A million? Five? Ten? It's unique. If we sold it, all our money worries would be over." He chuckled, then placed it to his own eye again. The eye swiveled about behind the emerald, black, magnified, wet-looking. "But we can't, of course." "I'm sorry, but I don't get your point." Brisbane smiled thinly. "You and the rest of the scientific staff. You all forget one thing: it is about show. Take this emerald. Scientifically, there's nothing in it that you couldn't find in an emerald a hundredth its size. But people don't want to see any old emerald: they want to see the biggest emerald. Show, Dr. Kelly, is the lifeblood of this Museum. How long do you think your precious scientific research would last if people stopped coming, stopped being interested, stopped giving money? You need collections: dazzling exhibitions, colossal meteorites, dinosaurs, planetariums, gold, dodo birds, and giant emeralds to keep people's attention. Your work just doesn't fall into that category." "But my work is interesting." Brisbane spread his hands. "My dear, everyone here thinks their research is the most interesting." It was the "my dear" that did it. Nora rose from her chair, white-lipped with anger. "I shouldn't have to sit here justifying my work to you. The Utah survey will establish exactly when the Aztec influence came into the Southwest and transformed Anasazi culture. It will tell usЧ" "If you were digging up dinosaurs, it would be different. That's where the action is. And it happens that's also where the money is. The fact is, Dr. Kelly, nobody seems terribly concerned with your little piles of potsherds except yourself." "The fact is," said Nora hotly, "that you're a miscarried scientist yourself. You're only playing at being a bureaucrat, and, frankly, you're overdoing the role." As soon as Nora spoke she realized she had said too much. Brisbane's face seemed to freeze for a moment. Then he recovered, gave her a cool smile, and twitched his handkerchief out of his breast pocket. He began polishing the emerald, slowly and repetitively. Then he placed it back in the case, locked it, and then began polishing the case itself, first the top and then the sides, with deliberation. Finally he spoke. "Do not excite yourself. It hardens the arteries and is altogether bad for your health." "I didn't mean to say that, and I'm sorry, but I won't stand for these cuts." Brisbane spoke pleasantly. "I've said what I have to say. For those curators who are unable or unwilling to find the cuts, there's no problemЧI will be happy to find the cuts for them." When he said this, he did not smile. Nora closed the door to the outer office and stood in the hallway, her mind in turmoil. She had sworn to herself not to leave without the extra money, and here she was, worse off than before she went in. Should she go to Collopy, the Museum's director? But he was severe and unapproachable, and that would surely piss off Brisbane. She'd already shot her mouth off once. Going over Brisbane's head might get her fired. And whatever else she did, she couldn't lose this job. If that happened, she might as well find another line of work. Maybe she could find the money somewhere else, rustle up another grant somewhere. And there was another budget review in six months. One could always hope . . . "Excuse me, but what are you doing in my office?" Nora asked. "Interesting," the man murmured, turning. "I'm sorry?" He held up a monograph, The Geochronology of Sandia Cave. "Odd that only whole Folsom points were found above the Sandia level. Highly suggestive, don't you think?" He spoke with a soft, upper-class southern accent that flowed like honey. Nora felt her surprise turning to anger at this casual invasion of her office. He moved toward a bookcase, slid the monograph back into its place on the shelf, and began perusing the other volumes, his finger tapping the spines with small, precise movements. "Ah," he said, slipping out another monograph. "I see the Monte Verde results have been challenged." Nora stepped forward, jerked the monograph out of his hand, and shoved it back onto the shelf. "I'm busy at the moment. If you want an appointment, you can call. Please close the door on your way out." She turned her back, waiting for him to leave. Ten percent. She shook her head in weary disbelief. How could she possibly manage it? But the man didn't leave. Instead, she heard his mellifluous plantation voice again. "I'd just as soon speak now, if it's all the same to you. Dr. Kelly, may I be so bold as to trouble you with a vexatious little problem?" She turned. He had extended his hand. Nestled within it was a small, brown skull. THREE NORA GLANCED FROM the skull back to the visitor 's face. "Who are you?" Regarding him more carefully now, she noticed just how pale his blue eyes were, how fine his features. With his white skin and the classical planes of his face, he looked as if he'd been sculpted of marble. He made a decorous gesture somewhere between a nod and a bow. "Special Agent Pendergast, Federal Bureau of Investigation." Nora's heart sank. Was this more spillover from the trouble-plagued Utah expedition? Just what she needed. "Do you have a badge?" she asked wearily. "Some kind of ID?" The man smiled indulgently, and slipped a wallet out of his suit pocket, allowing it to fall open. Nora bent down to scrutinize the badge. It certainly looked realЧand she had seen enough of them over the last eighteen months. "All right, all right, I believe you. Special AgentЧ" She hesitated. What the hell was his name? She glanced down but the shield was already on its way back into the folds of his suit. "Pendergast," he finished for her. Then he added, almost as if he had read her thoughts: "This has nothing to do with what happened in Utah, by the way. This is an entirely different case." She looked at him again. This dapper study in black and white hardly looked like the G-men she had met out west. He seemed unusual, even eccentric. There was something almost appealing in the impassive face. Then she glanced back down at the skull. "I'm not a physical anthropologist," she said quickly. "Bones aren't my field." Pendergast's only reply was to offer her the skull. She reached for it, curious despite herself, turning it over carefully in her hands. "Surely the FBI has forensic experts to help them with this sort of thing?" The FBI agent merely smiled and walked to the door, closing and locking it. Gliding toward her desk, he plucked the phone from its cradle and laid it gently to one side. "May we speak undisturbed?" "Sure. Whatever." Nora knew she must sound flustered, and was angry at herself for it. She had never met someone quite so self-assured. The man settled himself into a wooden chair opposite her desk, throwing one slender leg over the other. "Regardless of your discipline, I'd like to hear your thoughts on this skull." She sighed. Should she be talking to this man? What would the Museum think? Surely they would be pleased that one of their own had been consulted by the FBI. Maybe this was just the kind of "publicity" Brisbane wanted. |
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