"Kristine Kathryn Rusch - Incident at Lonely Rocks" - читать интересную книгу автора (Rusch Kristine Kathryn) Maybe the guy didnтАЩt have time. Maybe he had run inside, the killer had
grabbed the door and stabbed him, and then left while the poor victim flailed about inside, trying to pull the knife free and failing. Although, shouldnтАЩt a knife hold the blood in? HadnтАЩt Oscar read somewhere that a stabbing victim should never remove a knife, that the knife would keep him from bleeding to death? Oscar was breathing hard. He flipped open his cell and stared at the reception bar. Nothing. He shouldтАЩve remembered that. One reason he loved this route was that his boss couldnтАЩt call him and make him veer off it, not without exquisite timing and a lot of luck. тАЬDamn,тАЭ Oscar whispered. But he slipped the phone onto his belt clip and walked back to the scene. He was already thinking of it as a crime scene. How TV of him. He wasnтАЩt any kind of detective, and he couldnтАЩt figure things out. He had just stumbled on something awful, and now, it seemed, his brain wasnтАЩt working quite right. He had to get calm before he took the next step, whatever that would be. He walked away from the truck and headed toward the guard rail. Maybe the Lonely Rocks would know. Maybe they would help him remember where the cell reception started again or where the nearest police station was. Or ranger station. Or some kind of coast guard unit. Any place with someone official. The ocean was bright blue with a topping of snow-white foam near the rocks. In the distance, the horizon blended with the ocean, looking like the kind of smudge an artist would deliberately make with chalk by rubbing his finger along a firm line. trying to remind himself that this was just a blip in his day, a bad event, one that he could cope with if he only tried hard enough. He just didnтАЩt want to be alone with it, nor, for some reason he didnтАЩt fully understand, did he want to leave the poor victim alone. The guy had been alone long enough already. The far edge of the guard rail was battered, and a section was missing. Oscar frowned. He hadnтАЩt noticed that before, but it meant nothing. He hardly ever came this far down the parking lot, both because he never needed toтАФyou could see the ocean from the roadтАФand because the sliding earth made him nervous. The asphalt already had big cracks in it, and he, with his oversize footballerтАЩs frame, didnтАЩt want to be the guy to send another section tumbling toward the sea. He stopped, his heart pounding. He needed to leave this all for the experts. But he couldnтАЩt. He needed to go forward, to see if the break in the rail had something to do with the poor slob in the portable toilet. Cautiously, he took the next few steps, putting a foot down, then easing his weight onto it, then taking the next step. The ground felt stable enough. There hadnтАЩt been a lot of rain, so the ground shouldnтАЩt have been saturated. And there hadnтАЩt been a lot of wind or high surf, so nothing should have been eroded from underneath. In other words, he had nothing to fear. Except that hole in the guard rail and that body in the toilet. He squared his shoulders againтАФa trick, he realized, heтАЩd learned from his old coachтАФand continued forward, reaching the middle of the still-intact guard rail and peering over. |
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