Читаем Alfred Hitchcock’s Mystery Magazine. Vol. 44, No. 6, June 1999 полностью

“Don’t tell me Clannahan buried the stuff with her?”

“No, no, Neva had already hidden it someplace. She was figuring to leave him soon. She drew a little map outlining where the gems were stashed and folded it up in this gold heart-shaped locket she always wore. Her goofy husband, of course, didn’t know about that and buried her with the dam locket still around her neck.”

“But your gum found out about this? How?”

“Alan Omony is a real film noir buff, and he bid on a lot of Neva Maxton’s effects at an auction in Pasadena five years ago,” she replied. “He has all kinds of detective movie artifacts, including one of the fedoras Dick Powell wore in Murder, My Sweet. The thing is, he knew that the secret to the location of maybe a million dollars in jewels was in Neva’s locket. But up until I went and blabbed what poor Dick Barnson had confided in me, nobody on the face of the earth had any idea what had become of her or the locket.”

“Okay, what’s been going on since you told Omony?”

“I haven’t got any real proof that he’s responsible, but he has to be the one behind all this.”

“All what?”

“Well, somebody has kidnapped Dick Barnson,” she said forlornly. “That has to be because they want him to take them to the spot where Neva’s remains are. Soon as I came home and realized what’d happened, I departed for elsewhere. That was yesterday and—”

“Where’ve you been staying since?”

“At another mansion, this one in Beverly Hills,” she answered. “A realtor friend of mine let me use a place they haven’t been able to unload for months. Oh, and he’s gay as a three dollar bill, so you don’t have to be jealous of him either.”

“But somebody found you there?”

“Two goons with knives broke in early this morning,” she said. “I was able to jump out the window and, in spite of really bunging up my damn ankle, get away in my Mercedes. I hadn’t even dragged my luggage into the new place, so that’s still all in my possession.”

Wes left the sofa, walked over to the windows to look out at the dark ocean. “What about Barnson? Shouldn’t you go to the police about what you suspect?”

“I don’t have proof of anything,” she said. “It looked to me like somebody broke into his mansion and carried him off after a struggle. But the cops could say he got drunk, smashed a few things, and wandered off on a binge.”

“Nobody followed you here?”

“Of course not,” she said. “I took a very circumspect route from the walk-in clinic in Santa Monica.” She gestured at the crutches. “Did you know you have to leave a fifty dollar deposit on those things?”

“If any of what you’ve told me is true, Casey, then I figure you’re working on some way of using me to go up to Lake Tahoe and find the remains of this long-gone actress. After a little grave robbing, I’ll probably end up helping you hunt for the jewels. Isn’t that so?”

“No, damn you.” She stood up, wobbling, and glared at him. “That’s not the scenario at all. I don’t want any further part of this mess. I hope they don’t hurt Dick Barnson too badly, but I don’t intend to do anything to stop that. The million dollars in loot can stay hidden for all I care.” She took a few limping steps in his direction. “I really have reformed, and what I’d like to do is stay here with you and work on the next issue of my independent comic book, Bertha the Biker. That is, if you’ll let me move back in, Wes.”

After a few silent seconds he nodded. “Sure, you can stay,” he said. “But for now, use the guest room.”


It was raining in Studio City. A warm, wind-tossed rain that spattered the windows of Wes’s middle-sized office at the Sparey Arts Animation Studios.

Not quite right, he thought, shaking his head and pushing back from his drawing board.

He was supposed to be designing a pair of tapdancing elephants for an upcoming thirty-second cartoon spot advertising the new Ginkgo Bar — The Candy That Helps You Remember!! But he concluded that his elephants didn’t have any grace and, worse, they didn’t look as though they possessed exceptional memories.

Nobody who wears a straw hat ever looks all that bright, he decided, picking up an eraser.

He dropped it, left his chair, and wandered to the window to stare out at the rainy afternoon. His brooding about Casey was probably affecting his creativity.

Normally he should’ve been able to turn out a pair of dancing elephants in a couple of hours. And both of them would have ended up looking as graceful as Fred Astaire.

Casey had been back living with him for four days now. In all that time he hadn’t detected any fantastic yams from her, not even a single small fib. She hadn’t tried to con him in any way, nor had she mentioned his helping to unearth that long-missing actress so they could locate the lost gems. It was very unsettling.

Could she really have reformed?

Перейти на страницу:

Похожие книги

Поиграем?
Поиграем?

— Вы манипулятор. Провокатор. Дрессировщик. Только знаете что, я вам не собака.— Конечно, нет. Собаки более обучаемы, — спокойно бросает Зорин.— Какой же вы все-таки, — от злости сжимаю кулаки.— Какой еще, Женя? Не бойся, скажи. Я тебя за это не уволю и это никак не скажется на твоей практике и учебе.— Мерзкий. Гадкий. Отвратительный. Паскудный. Козел, одним словом, — с удовольствием выпалила я.— Козел выбивается из списка прилагательных, но я зачту. А знаешь, что самое интересное? Ты реально так обо мне думаешь, — шепчет мне на ухо.— И? Что в этом интересного?— То, что при всем при этом, я тебе нравлюсь как мужчина.#студентка и преподаватель#девственница#от ненависти до любви#властный герой#разница в возрасте

Александра Пивоварова , Альбина Савицкая , Ксения Корнилова , Марина Анатольевна Кистяева , Наталья Юнина , Ольга Рублевская

Детективы / Современные любовные романы / Эротическая литература / Самиздат, сетевая литература / ЛитРПГ / Прочие Детективы / Романы / Эро литература
Девочка из прошлого
Девочка из прошлого

– Папа! – слышу детский крик и оборачиваюсь.Девочка лет пяти несется ко мне.– Папочка! Наконец-то я тебя нашла, – подлетает и обнимает мои ноги.– Ты ошиблась, малышка. Я не твой папа, – присаживаюсь на корточки и поправляю съехавшую на бок шапку.– Мой-мой, я точно знаю, – порывисто обнимает меня за шею.– Как тебя зовут?– Анна Иванна. – Надо же, отчество угадала, только вот детей у меня нет, да и залетов не припоминаю. Дети – мое табу.– А маму как зовут?Вытаскивает помятую фотографию и протягивает мне.– Вот моя мама – Виктолия.Забираю снимок и смотрю на счастливые лица, запечатленные на нем. Я и Вика. Сердце срывается в бешеный галоп. Не может быть...

Адалинда Морриган , Аля Драгам , Брайан Макгиллоуэй , Сергей Гулевитский , Слава Доронина

Детективы / Биографии и Мемуары / Современные любовные романы / Классические детективы / Романы