"Mariah Stewart - Final Truth" - читать интересную книгу автора (Stewart Mariah)"Of course."
"Cross your heart and hope to die?" Lester Ray unexpectedly leaned across the table again, causing Booth to startle. "Right."Booth broke eye contact, pushed his chair back from the table, and began to stuff the folder into his black leather briefcase. He stood abruptly and signaled to the guard at the door that he was finished and ready to leave. "So I'll hear from you when?" Lester Ray stood as well. "As soon as I know something." "Next week. I want out of here, Booth." "Everyone wants out of here, Lester Ray." Booth left the room without a backward glance. "Yeah, well, for some of us, it's a matter of life and death." Lester Ray paused, giving thought to what he'd just said. "Life and death," he repeated softly. "Mine . . . " One Regan Landry sat cross-legged on the floor of her father's study and thumbed through the contents of a file, one of several she'd brought up from the basement in an unmarked cardboard box earlier that morning. Her father. Josh Landry, internationally renowned bestselling author of true crime books, had been the world's worst record keeper. Almost two years after his death, Regan was still sorting through the boxes of material he'd left scattered throughout his home outside Princeton, New Jersey. So far this past week, she'd uncovered newspaper articles in a box in the attic that related to cases chronicled in the file cabinets in the basement. Not for the first time, Regan rolled her eyes. The man had been the most unorganized person on the face of the earth. When her cell phone rang, she had to move several piles of newspapers to find it. A glance at the caller ID screen brought a smile to her face. "So what are you doing on this fine morning in May?" Mitch Peyton asked. "What am I always doing when I'm at my dad's?" She laughed good-naturedly. "Sorting through files and trying to organize the mess." "I'd think you'd be used to it by now." "You'd think." 12 MARIAH STEWART "I don't know why you don't just hire someone to do that for you." "How would someone else know what to do with all this?" She glanced around the room and frowned. "You'd tell them. You'd show them what you've done, point them in the direction of the materials that still need to be sorted through, and tell them to follow your lead. If a file exists, file the newly found material in it. No existing file, you make a new one." "I wasn't aware that the FBI taught a class in Filing 101." "You'd be surprised what they teach us down here." "I've seen you at work, Mitch, up close and personal. There's little that you do that surprises me." Regan could have replied that Mitch had been an open book right from the start, but she let it pass. As a special agent with the FBI, Mitch was a member of a distinguished team within the Bureau that sought out the best of the best. But when it came to Regan, there'd been no sign of the wily investigator with crack computer skills that had brought him to the attention of the team leader. Mitch was a man who wore his heart on his sleeve, and had since the first time they'd worked a case together. "Maybe you're right." She sighed. "Maybe I should just have someone come in and make a list of the files we already have, then go through the other boxes, check the list for duplicates ..." "There you go." He didn't wait for her to run through the entire process as he knew her mind was already starting to do. "You've spent enough time on cleanup. You have a book due." "Already turned it in to Nina last week, which is one of the reasons I'm here at Dad's now. I'm trying to decide what I want to do next." "No ideas?" "I have plenty of ideas, but none of them have struck my immediate fancy." She stood and went to the desk and flipped through one FINAL TRUTH 13 of the files she'd left out last night, thinking it might be a contender for the topic of her next book. "There are lots of possibilities, but nothing seems to be jumping out at me and demanding my attention." "I always wondered about the process you writers go through," he said. "How you decide on one idea over another." "The story that needs to be told decides for me. It's simply a matter of finding it. I'm just lucky that Dad did so much of the groundwork on several potential projects. There's no end to the number of books he'd wanted to write. Which, of course, explains why there's no end to the number of boxes and folders he left everywhere from the attic to the basement to one of the outbuildings." "But until some idea grabs you by the throat.. ." ". .. I'll be sorting through files, hoping something does, sooner rather than later." She sighed. "I get antsy when I'm not working." "I've noticed. While you're waiting for lightning to strike, move the search for an assistant to the top of your list of things to do. You know how things go with you: something lands on your radar, and you forget about everything else." "You know me too well, Agent Peyton. Once I get started, finding an assistant will be the last thing on my mind. I shall put an ad in this week's Princeton Packet and one of the Trenton papersтАФmaybe I should try New Brunswick, tooтАФand see what kind of response I get. It would make more sense to have someone else doing this"тАФshe stared around the room at the piles of files and boxesтАФ"so that I can focus on my next project." "Speaking of projects, anything new on your search for the elusive Eddie Kroll?" "Not really." Regan sat in her father's oversized leather chair and swiveled around to stare out the window. "Dolly Brown still not returning your calls?" "No. She called me back, left me a message saying, effectively, she's told me everything she knows and to stop calling her. I can't for the life of me figure out what she's hiding, but she's lying about some- 14 MARIAH STEWART thing." Regan paused. "I think if I work on her sister-in-law, Stella, I might be able to finally get some answers. But since her husband, Carl, died back in March, I've given Stella a pretty wide berth." "Carl was Dolly and Eddie Kroll's brother?" "Right. Stella always seemed to have something she wanted to say, but she was a bit wary of speaking up in front of Dolly, and Dolly was always around." Regan watched several ducks land feet first in the pond behind the old farmhouse. "Maybe I should make a quick trip to Illinois, stop in and see if Dolly feels like chatting. While I'm there, I can stop at Stella's as well." "Good idea. But put that ad for an assistant in the paper before you leave. Think you can be back in time for the weekend? I'm planning on a few days off, and I was hoping we could meet up at your place in Maryland. I miss you." |
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