"Devil's corner" - читать интересную книгу автора (Scottoline Lisa)SIXTEEN"Vick, why is a black guy answering your cell? Are you cheating on me?" "No thanks." "Then call me, no matter how late. I want to talk to you. I don't like the way you sound. You're worrying me lately, with Morty and all." "Okay," Vicki said, touched. The man could read her like a book. "Gotta go." "No matter how late, call me." "Okay." "Swear?" "Swear." "Okay, good-bye, sweetie." She hung up, warm inside. Dan was truly worried about her. And he didn't bite. Vicki got back to her house around ten o'clock, where she ignored her bills, mail, e-mail, and phone messages, and tiredly headed straight for the phone in her bedroom, shedding her coat on the way upstairs, dropping her purse, and kicking off her wounded shoe. She couldn't wait to call Dan and tell him what had happened on Cater Street. He could help her sort it out. He'd been an AUSA so long, he'd have good ideas. Should they bust Mrs. Bristow's dealer? Should they get her into rehab? And Vicki wanted to work on some theories with him, about Shayla Jackson and Bristow. She flicked on the lamplight beside her bed, slid out of her suit jacket and blouse, then slithered out of pantyhose and her skirt, feeling better once she was home. She loved her bedroom. She had painted the walls a bright cobalt blue last year, by herself, and she had a big TV/DVD player on a white metal stand affixed to the wall. Her dresser, next to the closet, was a pine four-drawer she'd bought secondhand, and the room was neat, clean, and comfy. She undressed, slipped into an old Harvard T-shirt, and tucked herself under her puffy white comforter while she called Dan. "Hello?" a woman answered, confusing Vicki for a second. Of course, it was Mariella. She recognized the slight British inflection. Then Vicki heard masculine laughter in the background. "Mariella, oh, hi. It's Vicki." "Vicki, hey, you caught us at a bad time. A very bad time." There was more laughter, and Vicki realized that Mariella and Dan were in bed together. Dan was laughing, then Mariella started laughing. "No! No! Daniel, no tickling! Daniel!" Vicki felt a wave of shame, then didn't know why. What was she ashamed of? That she was dying to talk to a married man? "Daniel! Don't tickle!" "Mariella, sorry, I should go," Vicki said, but Dan's deep voice came on the line, breathless. "Vick, talk to you in the morning! Duty calls!" She was about to say good-bye, but Dan had already hung up. It left Vicki in her blue bedroom, alone except for the silence. She sat still for a minute, propped up by her pillows, trying to process what had just happened. Mariella must have taken a break and come home; she did that sometimes, at weird hours. Dan would have been delighted to see his wife, as he was for every drop of time she threw his way, as an afterthought or no. Vicki stopped feeling sorry for herself, at least temporarily, and picked up the phone. There was work to do. She had made a mental list of all her credit cards and spent the next half hour getting each toll-free number from 1-800 information, then canceling the cards. She ordered a new ATM card, rush delivery, and she'd still have to get a new driver's license and DOJ creds. She sighed and lay back in the pillows, to devise a good lie to explain how they'd been lost. She closed her eyes against the lamplight. Her mind wandered and her thoughts flowed where they would. She was still for another minute, then she reached over and picked up the phone, dialed a number, and waited. One ring, two rings, three rings, four. After five rings, the answering machine switched on and said: "You have reached Grandmaster Bob Morton, and, yes, I Vicki felt a wrenching deep within her chest. She listened to the song, then hung up, and dialed again. She did that four more times, and by the fifth time, she felt better just holding the receiver, listening to Morty, feeling connected to him, somehow. Tonight she didn't know what to do about his murder, but tomorrow she would. She had to. She couldn't help feeling she was on to something, and she couldn't leave it to the cops, ATF, or anyone else. Morty was her partner. Vicki hung on to the phone long after the song had finished, and when the tears came, she let them slide down her cheeks until she fell soundly asleep. "Vick." Dan, his voice unusually grave. "You near a TV?" "Uh, yes." "Turn it on. Right now." "Why? I'm asleep." "Just do it." Vicki reached for the remote on the nightstand and flicked on the TV, set to channel ten. Grisly images flickered across the screen: yellow crime scene tape, uniformed cops standing around a row house, a black van, and a low metal gurney on wheels, bearing a black body bag. In the next scene, a pretty blond reporter said: "Arissa Bristow was found dead this morning of multiple stab wounds. The body was discovered in Mrs. Bristow's West Philadelphia home, and police have no suspects at the present time." Then the screen changed to a commercial for I Can't Believe It's Not Butter. "Isn't Bristow your straw's last name?" Dan asked. "Think she's a relation?" "It's her mother." Vicki muted the commercials, numb. "Her mother killed, the night after Morty? Think it's a coincidence?" Vicki couldn't answer. Her head was spinning, tangling her thoughts. Dan didn't know what had happened last night. She hadn't had the chance to tell him. She didn't know where to begin. "Vick? You okay?" "I met her, I was there," Vicki started to say, but she couldn't finish. "Vick, what's going on?" "I wish I knew." "I'm coming over. I'll be there in fifteen minutes." "You don't have to," Vicki said, but she was interrupted by the ringing of her doorbell downstairs, followed by a loud pounding on her front door. The sound frightened her, unaccountably. "There's someone at the door. I have to go." "Vick?" "Hold on." Vicki shed the comforter and looked around the room for something to put on. She felt more naked than she was. Something felt very wrong. Suddenly, events were getting ahead of her, out of control. The knocking pounded louder on the door. She had to get dressed. She had to go. "Dan?" she heard herself say. "I'll be right over, baby," he answered, understanding instantly. |
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