Название: Phantom Evil
Автор: Heather Graham
Издательство: HarperCollins
Жанр: Ужасы и Мистика
isbn: 9781408935903
isbn:
“Amen,” Jackson told him. “Remember when we were talking earlier and you asked me if I believed that a ghost had pushed Regina Holloway over the balcony? Well, I said no, and I meant it. But I think that people can play on the emotions of others with the power of suggestion, and the history of the house is tremendously important in that respect. And the history of the New Orleans police force fits right in there, because everything written about Madden C. Newton suggests that he managed to get away with all those murders because the city was in such a knot—emotionally, socially and governmentally—when he was committing the killings.”
Andy nodded and pulled the car to a stop on the side of Dauphine in front of the house. “Best hamburgers in the world about three blocks from here on Esplanade,” he said. “A place called Port of Call. Seriously, best burgers anywhere, and best potatoes, go figure.”
“Thanks again,” Jackson said, exiting the unmarked police car.
Andy drove off.
Shadows had settled around the house. Though it was in excellent shape, it carried a poignant hint of the decaying elegance that made up so much of the city.
He walked up the steps to the porch—Angela Hawkins should have arrived by now. He unlocked the front door, calling out, “Hello,” as he did so, not wanting to startle anyone with his presence. He stepped into the grand ballroom or parlor. The great chandelier was lit, casting a haunting glow over the sheet–draped furniture.
“Hello?” he called out.
The woman was here; a big shoulder bag and a carry–on suitcase sat by the door. She traveled like a cop, he noted. Light.
“Miss Hawkins?” he said, his voice loud and strong.
Still, there was no answer. Of course, the place was huge.
He went up the stairs first, following the horseshoe, thinking she might be choosing a bedroom for the stay. But she wasn’t upstairs, so he came down to the kitchen. “Miss Hawkins?” he said again. She wasn’t there either, but she’d left a book on the table; an old one. He looked at the title. Madden C. Newton: The True Story of New Orleans’s Own Jekyll and Hyde.
He leafed through it. Interesting, and surely, almost impossible to acquire.
Where the hell was she?
The courtyard caught his eye, and he looked out, for a moment dreading the possibility that he might see a body smashed and broken on the ground. But there was no one outside—no bodies lay on the bricks.
“Miss Hawkins?”
As he spoke, he heard a whack. The sound was hard. Like an ax hitting wood, or…a pickax slamming into hard ground.
He hurried to the nearest door and threw it open, once again, strange and deadly visions coming to his mind despite his perpetual search for rationality.
She found the ghost of the ultimate evil in man. Madden C. Newton. And the ghost had taken form and shape, and was hacking up the elusive Miss Hawkins…
Whack, whack, whack.
“Miss Hawkins!”
Wooden stairs led down to a shallow basement. Someone indeed had a pickax, and looked as crazy as all hell.
Angela Hawkins was attacking the floor with a pickax and a vengeance. The dry dirt floor just beneath the staircase.
CHAPTER THREE
“What the hell are you doing?” He might have been a fool to race down the stairs to accost her—she knew how to hold an ax. The basement held an incongruous sight. Angela was about five foot eight and slender, though shapely. Despite her height, she was almost fragile in appearance. She paused for a moment, staring at him with enormous, bright blue eyes that belonged on an anime character.
Ah, great! He was being given the nut–job assignment. He should have said no. He should have just resigned, and headed off to work the casinos.
Angela remained frozen for a second longer, obviously a bit disconcerted by being discovered at her task.
“Um—hi! I’m Angela Hawkins. You must be Jackson Crow.” Maintaining a grip on the pickax with her left hand, she offered her right in a strong handshake.
“Yes, hi, nice to meet you.” The words seemed a bit ridiculous. At least she wasn’t swinging the ax at him.
He hoped he betrayed nothing in his expression. Did she know about him? That he had taken down the Pick–Man?
Was this a test?
He tried not to sound as hard and angry as he felt when he spoke.
“I’m Jackson Crow. And—sorry, excuse me, but what are you doing?”
She shrugged ruefully. Her soft–knit, cap–sleeved dress completed the perfect picture of sensuous femininity, which seemed so opposed to the strength of her handshake—and her prowess with a pickax. But then, she’d recently gone through the rigors of a Virginia police academy, so she must be in excellent physical shape. She’d been through a lot, the death of her parents, and the death of her fiancé. Maybe she had been through too much.
There didn’t seem to be a crazed light in her eyes. Which was a positive sign.
“I’m looking for a body,” she said.
“Dead—I’m assuming.”
She nodded. “Yes, or bones, I guess. I’m not sure what would happen to a body buried down here for over a hundred years.”
“And there’s a reason you think you’re going to find a body buried down here? The house has gone through a great deal of construction over the years. The bodies buried here were discovered over a hundred years ago,” he told her.
“Ah, some, but not all,” she said. “I’m looking for the body of a man named Nathaniel Petti.”
“Petti—the СКАЧАТЬ