"Smith, Martin Cruz - Wolves Eat Dogs" - читать интересную книгу автора (Smith Martin Cruz)The doorman on duty kept looking up. He said, "I was in Special Forces, so I've seen parachutes that didn't deploy and bodies you scraped off the ground, but someone coming out of the sky here? And Ivanov, of all people. A good guy, I have to say, a generous guy. But what if he'd hit the doorman, did he think about that? Now a pigeon goes overhead and I duck." "Your name?" Arkady asked. "Kuznetsov, Grisha." Grisha still had the army stamp on him. Wary around officers. "You were on duty two days ago?" "The day shift. I wasn't here at night, when it happened, so I don't know what I can tell you." "Just walk me around, if you would." "Around what?" "The building, front to back." "For a suicide? Why?" "Details." "Details," Grisha muttered as the traffic went by. He shrugged. The building was short-staffed on weekends, Grisha said, only him, the receptionist and the passenger elevator man. Weekdays, there were two other men for repairs, working the service door and service elevator, picking up trash. Housecleaners on weekdays, too, if residents requested. Ivanov didn't. Everyone had been vetted, of course. Security cameras covered the street, lobby, passenger elevator and service alley. At the back of the lobby Grisha tapped in a code on a keypad by a door with a sign that said staff only. The door eased open, and Grisha led Arkady into an area that consisted of a changing room with lockers, sink, microwave; toilet; mechanical room with furnace and hot-water heater; repair shop where two older men Grisha identified as Fart A and Fart B were intently threading a pipe; residents' storage area for rugs, skis and such, ending in a truck bay. Every door had a keypad and a different code. Grisha said, "You ought to go to NoviRus Security. Like an underground bunker. They've got everything there: building layout, codes, the works." "Good idea." NoviRus Security was the last place Arkady wanted to be. "Can you open the bay?" Light poured in as the gate rolled up, and Arkady found himself facing a service alley wide enough to accommodate a moving van. Dumpsters stood along the brick wall that was the back of shorter, older buildings facing the next street over. There were, however, security cameras aimed at the alley from the bay where Arkady and Grisha stood, and from the new buildings on either side. There was also a green-and-black motorcycle standing under a No Parking sign. Something about the way the doorman screwed up his face made Arkady ask, "Yours?" "Parking around here is a bitch. Sometimes I can find a place and sometimes I can't, but the Farts won't let me use the bay. Excuse me." As they walked to the bike, Arkady noticed a cardboard sign taped to the saddle: don't touch this bike, I am watching you. Grisha borrowed a pen from Arkady and underlined "watching." "That's better." "Quite a machine." "A Kawasaki. I used to ride a Uralmoto," Grisha said, to let Arkady know how far he had come up in the world. Arkady noticed a pedestrian door next to the bay. Each entry had a separate keypad. "Do people park here?" "No, the Farts are all over them, too." "Saturday, when the mechanics weren't on duty?" "When we're short-staffed? Well, we can't leave our post every time a car stops in the alley. We give them ten minutes, and then we chase them out." |
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