Death Night. Todd Ritter
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Название: Death Night

Автор: Todd Ritter

Издательство: HarperCollins

Жанр: Триллеры

Серия:

isbn: 9780008133191

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СКАЧАТЬ the damage would be worse.”

      “The doctors did what they could.” Henry took a sip of his coffee. It was piping hot and came close to scalding his tongue. His lips, however, felt none of it. The scar tissue there desensitized everything. “The rest I have to live with.”

      Kat stared into her coffee cup, suddenly unable to look him in the eyes. “Henry, I’m sorry I didn’t find you sooner. I’m sorry you had to go through all that.”

      Henry reached across the table and took her hands. They were soft and surprisingly delicate. He had expected someone as tough as Kat to have equally hardened hands.

      “I refuse to listen to an apology from you,” he said. “You helped save my life, and I will always be grateful for that. Besides, I had scars before all that happened.” He pointed to the mark at his temple before moving down to the long line that sliced through his lips. “Or don’t you remember these?”

      “I just wish that I could have done something to spare you from getting more of them.”

      “I prefer scars to death,” Henry said. “Besides, you have no idea how intriguing it makes me to the Italians.”

      That was probably the thing that surprised him most about living in Rome. Many women, and a good number of men, came on to him in bars, at work functions, on the street. It helped that he kept himself in peak physical condition. But he had a feeling that the scars, which made him feel like a freak and an outsider in the United States, gave him an air of mystery to the Italians. In a country full of beautiful people, he stood out by being the opposite. During his first week in Rome, a woman had approached him in the Piazza di Spagna, asking if she could paint his portrait. Henry declined the offer.

      “It sounds like you’ve created a good life there,” Kat said. “But are you happy?”

      She knew about Henry’s past. The wife who died when she was nine months pregnant. The car accident that had given him his first round of scars. The torture he had been subjected to at the hands of the Grim Reaper. More than anyone else, Kat Campbell understood his pain.

      “Yes, I’m happy,” Henry answered.

      He was lying but not by much. He wasn’t unhappy. He was content to live in quiet solitude—that hadn’t changed since his Perry Hollow days—and deep down he understood that’s how it was meant to be. Both times he had grown to love someone, they had been taken away from him in very different ways. He now knew it was foolish to fall in love a third time, so he didn’t even try.

      But the funny thing about living in Rome was that he was never truly alone. The ancient city was always bustling, filled with tourists and locals alike, all pressing up against each other in the squares, on the buses, in the restaurants still thick with cigarette smoke. Henry enjoyed that feeling of being by himself yet simultaneously being a part of something bigger.

      “Now another question,” Kat said. “The big one. Why on earth are you back in Perry Hollow?”

      “I’m on assignment.”

      “But you said you never leave.”

      “I don’t,” Henry said. “But something came up. A story. So my editor sent me here.”

      “What kind of story?”

      “You ever hear of a man named Giuseppe Fanelli?”

      Kat shook her head.

      “He’s an Italian businessman. Very rich. Worth billions. And very famous. He lives for publicity, good or bad. He’s like the Donald Trump of Italy. With better hair, of course. A few days ago, we got word that he was tied up in something in the United States.”

      Kat gasped. “The mafia?”

      “No,” Henry said dryly. “But great job stereotyping an entire nation.”

      “If I ever get to Italy, I’ll be sure to apologize.”

      “Fanelli’s reputation is clean. He’s a real estate developer. Over the summer, he formed a U.S. subsidiary of his European company. Fanelli Entertainment USA. It was registered in Philadelphia and created, we presume, for the express purpose of buying land and developing projects in America.”

      Kat straightened in her seat, suddenly—and seriously—interested. “What kind of projects are we talking about?”

      “Megamalls. Skyscrapers. Soccer stadiums. Fanelli never buys any land unless he intends to build something huge there.”

      “So I’m assuming he bought some land close to here.”

      “He did,” Henry said. “Closer than you think. As of two weeks ago, Giuseppe Fanelli is now the owner of one hundred acres of land in Perry Hollow, Pennsylvania.”

      Kat, who had been taking a sip of coffee as he spoke, swallowed hard at the news. “Where?”

      “A site you and I know all too well.”

      He didn’t need to give her another hint. Kat knew the town better than anyone. “The Perry Mill,” she said.

      Henry nodded solemnly. “It’s the first piece of land he’s purchased in the United States.”

      “What does he plan on building there?”

      “We don’t know,” Henry said. “But I was sent here to find out.”

      Kat stayed quiet, staring once again into her now-empty coffee cup. It was a lot of information for her to take in. But Henry knew her sudden quiet had more to do with concern than comprehension. She was worried about what Giuseppe Fanelli intended to do in her town.

      “It might be nothing,” he said.

      “But it’s something,” Kat replied. “You said yourself he only builds things that are huge. Now that he owns that land, God knows what he plans to put there.”

      “Just because he owns the land doesn’t mean he can build whatever he wants.”

      Henry had worked for the town’s newspaper once. Although his job had been writing obituaries, he was well versed in the workings of planning boards, zoning approvals, and building permits. Town officials had the ability to shoot down anything Fanelli proposed, a right Henry hoped they executed. Even if it was good for business, he wasn’t sure Perry Hollow could handle the type of gargantuan projects Fanelli specialized in.

      “How is Perry Hollow?” he asked. “Has it recovered since last year?”

      Kat reached for the pot of coffee and poured herself another cup. “It’s starting to. Business is picking up. Most residents are doing fine.”

      “And you and James?”

      “We’re getting there,” Kat said with a sigh. “It’s been a tough road.”

      Her son, one of the most charming boys Henry had ever met, had come face-to-face with the Grim Reaper, seeing things no child his age ever should. According to Kat, he was now seeing a therapist.

      “I should probably see one myself,” she said, “but СКАЧАТЬ