Читаем Crimson Shore полностью

Shielding the candle, Gorman walked out of the bar and down the hall, a wavering point of light in the darkness.

A moment of silence — and then a piercing scream came from the hall. Adderly almost dropped his own mug in surprise and swung around, staring down the black corridor. Everyone rose at once. Gorman’s candle seemed to have gone out: the hall was black. The storm shook and rattled the old structure.

People exchanged glances. “What the hell?” someone said after a moment.

“Andy? Andy!

At that moment, a smell rolled out of the hall: a stench of death and rot and fecal matter that overwhelmed Adderly’s nostrils. All was silent; no one moved. And out of that silence, over the rattle of the storm, Adderly heard the rapid, breathy sound of animal panting.

* * *

In his room on the top floor of the Inn, Pendergast sat up in bed. He listened intently, but the scream from downstairs had abruptly cut off and he heard nothing more save for the storm. The celebratory noise from the bar had also ceased.

He slipped out of bed, swiftly donned his clothes, grabbed a flashlight, and strapped on his Les Baer. He ran down the hall, descended one flight, and then — after the briefest of pauses — grasped the doorknob to Constance’s room. When he found it locked, he rapped on it.

“Constance,” he said. “Please open this door.”

No response.

“Constance,” he repeated. “I’m very sorry for what happened, but this is no time for melodramic gestures. Something is—”

Even as he spoke, he heard a sudden chorus of cries erupt from downstairs, a cacophony of shrieks mingling with the sounds of a ferocious stampede, the crashing sound of chairs being overturned, glassware breaking, and feet thundering on the wooden floor.

Without waiting any longer, he turned his shoulder to the door and, in one blow, broke it down.

The room was empty, the bed still made. There was no sign anywhere of the flashlight he had given her.

Pandemonium had broken out downstairs. He scrambled down the stairs, pulling out his weapon as he did so, to arrive in the front hall. His flashlight revealed the front door yawning wide and swinging in the howling wind. A body lay sprawled over the threshold.

He turned and ran down the hall into the bar, where a scene of extreme violence greeted his eye: a second eviscerated figure lay on the floor, while half a dozen others were crouching, terrified but unhurt, behind the bar.

“What was it?” Pendergast rapped out.

“God help us, help us!” a man shrieked, triggering a storm of wild importuning from the huddled group, with the words monster and demon and

ape and hound mingling unintelligibly with the cries of the terrified patrons.

“Where did it go?” Pendergast said.

A man pointed out the door.

Pendergast turned and raced back down the hall and out into the storm, leaving the patrons crying futilely after him for protection. He could see bare footprints crossing the porch and the sandy walk beyond, already being erased by the rain. He hesitated, peering into the storm in the direction the creature had gone: southeastward, into the salt marshes. Whatever it was, it had wreaked havoc and then escaped.

His mind shifted. Constance was missing. She hadn’t retired — she must have left the Inn some time ago, perhaps immediately after the abrupt conclusion of their conversation. He passed a hand across his forehead.

Where did they go?

she had asked. What happened to them? The only place south of the site you discovered in the marshes is Oldham.

That, Pendergast felt certain, was where she had gone: Oldham, the long-abandoned town that, for reasons he could not fathom, she had focused on. Not two hours before, she had all but implied that the heart of the mystery remained unsolved. Even as he considered this, he felt a twinge that perhaps he had dismissed her concerns too readily — that her intuition had told her something that his own cold analysis had overlooked.

The killer was barefooted, in a storm, with the temperature dropping into the forties. That fact, more than any other, profoundly disturbed him, as it indicated there was something about the case he had missed completely — something fundamental — just as Constance had insisted. And yet, even as he pondered the mystery of the bare footprints, he couldn’t find even the glimmer of a solution.

With a burning sense of chagrin, he set off into the storm, following the faint and quickly disappearing marks in the sand.

47

The house burned brightly as Gavin stared down Main Street. This couldn’t be happening. He could see, in the light of the fire, the bodies in the street: people he knew, friends and neighbors. The door to another house stood open… and he had a terrible feeling there would be another body inside it, as well.

That… demon had rampaged through town in minutes and had then seemingly vanished, leaving behind a scene of mayhem. How could this have happened?

Перейти на страницу:

Похожие книги

Сходство
Сходство

«Сходство» – один из лучших детективов из знаменитой серии Таны Френч о работе дублинского отдела убийств. Однажды в уединенном полуразрушенном коттедже находят тело молодой женщины, жившей по соседству в усадьбе «Боярышник». На место убийства вызывают Кэсси Мэддокс, бывшего детектива из отдела убийств. Кэсси в недоумении, она уже давно ушла из Убийств и работает теперь в отделе домашнего насилия. Но, оказавшись на месте, она понимает, в чем дело: убитая – ее полный двойник, то же лицо, фигура, волосы. Как такое возможно? И возможно ли вообще?.. Однако бывшему боссу Кэсси, легендарному агенту Фрэнку Мэкки, нет дела до таких загадок, для него похожесть детектива на жертву – отличная возможность внедрить своего человека в окружение жертвы и изнутри выяснить, кто стоит за преступлением. Так начинается погружение детектива в чужую жизнь, и вскоре Кэсси понимает, что ее с жертвой объединяет не только внешнее сходство, но и глубинное сродство.

Тана Френч

Триллер