A Beautiful Corpse. Christi Daugherty
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Название: A Beautiful Corpse

Автор: Christi Daugherty

Издательство: HarperCollins

Жанр: Ужасы и Мистика

Серия: The Harper McClain series

isbn: 9780008238841

isbn:

СКАЧАТЬ I get you a table?’

      Her bright eyes skimmed Harper’s face, and took on a sympathetic glint. It occurred to Harper that she must look like hell. Her hair hadn’t been brushed since she left the house this morning.

      The waitress was young – her scarlet lipstick annoyingly perfect.

      She had no idea yet how hard a day could be.

      ‘I need food to go,’ Harper told her. ‘A turkey sandwich, no mayo, and fries. And the biggest coffee you’ve got, as black as you can make it.’

      ‘You got it.’ Pulling a pen from behind her ear, the girl scribbled the order down.

      ‘Take a seat,’ she chirped. ‘I’ll get it out to you in a jiffy.’

      When she’d disappeared into the kitchen, Harper sat on a padded bench by the door.

      The restaurant was mostly empty. The music played loudly for no one.

      The bench wasn’t that comfortable but, at this stage, she could have slept in the middle of the highway in rush hour. She leaned back against the wall, her eyelids drooping. Even her hands seemed to have weight.

      Feeling herself drifting, she jerked upright.

      Busy. She needed to stay busy.

      Pulling her scanner out of her bag, she plugged her earbuds in, turning it loud enough to hear it over the music.

      The usual chatter filled her head and she forced herself to listen. She was half-asleep when a female voice said, ‘Unit 364.’

      ‘Unit 364 go ahead,’ came the crisp voice of the dispatcher.

      ‘Signal 25 in the 34000 block of Abercorn Street. I’ve got a white Ford pickup, stand by for the license.’

      Signal 25, Harper thought, distantly, her eyes drifting shut. Traffic stop.

      Other voices came and went. Then, without warning, the female officer’s voice returned, breathless and high-pitched, words pouring out.

      ‘I need backup on Abercorn Street. Send them fast. I’ve got the River Street shooting suspect in a white Toyota pickup truck. He’s got a gun.’

       Chapter Six

      Harper jumped to her feet.

      ‘Copy, Unit 364,’ the dispatcher replied, in the same flat tone she’d used earlier to acknowledge another officer’s refueling break.

      The waitress was walking back now, a bag in her hand, that perfect, symmetrical smile already in place.

      The dispatcher put out the call. ‘All available units to the 34000 block of Abercorn to assist Unit 364 with a fugitive arrest. Be aware: Suspect is wanted for homicide. Suspect is armed and dangerous. All units Code 30.’

       Code 30: blue lights and sirens.

      The dispatcher was so calm, only someone who listened to this radio every day of her life could hear the tension in her voice.

      Pulling her keys from her pocket, Harper turned for the door.

      The waitress stepped smoothly in her path, blocking her.

      ‘I’m sorry, I have to go,’ Harper said, trying to push past.

      ‘It’s already made.’ The waitress – her smile disappearing – pressed her back against the door handle so Harper couldn’t reach it. ‘You have to pay or I’ve got to call the cops. Eddie’s got rules.’

      Harper had underestimated her. There was more to the perky girl than a smile.

      She didn’t have time to argue. Frantically, she dug in her pocket, pulling out a disordered pile of bills. She shoved them in the woman’s neatly manicured hands without counting them.

      ‘If it isn’t enough, call the Daily News, ask for Harper,’ she told her. ‘But not for another hour. I’ve got to go.’

      ‘What do you want me to do with the food?’ The waitress still clutched the bag.

      ‘Keep it,’ Harper said.

      As an afterthought, though, she grabbed the cup.

      ‘I’ll take the coffee.’

      The waitress stepped aside. Harper ran through the door and jumped into the car, pulling out her phone.

      Miles answered on the first ring.

      ‘I’m on my way to Abercorn,’ he said. She could hear his police scanners in the background. ‘You?’

      ‘Leaving now.’ She started the car. ‘I’ll call Baxter. See you there.’

      As the phone speed-dialed Baxter’s direct line, she backed out into the road.

      ‘Emma Baxter,’ the editor answered.

      Harper hated to admit it but there was something comforting about the way Baxter could always be reached when the shit hit the fan.

      ‘Traffic cops just pulled over Wilson Shepherd on Abercorn.’ Harper raised her voice to be heard above the scanner and the engine. ‘Sounds like he’s putting up a fight. Miles and I are en route.’

      ‘I’ll tell the copy desk,’ Baxter told her. ‘We’ll hold the front page. Don’t do anything stupid, McClain.’

      ‘Never,’ Harper said, hanging up.

      Dropping the phone, she pulled out onto the parkway so fast her tires squealed.

      She wasn’t tired anymore. Adrenaline raced into her system faster than caffeine possibly could.

      A story like this was as good as eight hours’ sleep. Better even. No drug ever invented could match it.

      Every cop in the city was going to the same place she was. There was no one to pull her over. The speed limit was forty-five but she hit a hundred and stayed there until she saw flashing blue lights ahead. Then she tagged along behind them.

      Abercorn carved a curving path across the edge of the city before pouring into the flat, coastal countryside. At the speed she was going it only took minutes before the crowded city streets outside the Camaro’s windows dissolved into lush green suburbs, scarred by strip malls and big box stores.

      The police standoff was easy to locate. A dozen patrol cars blocked the road, lights flashing.

      Harper slammed the car into park and jumped out, running through the haphazardly parked vehicles.

      Miles had positioned himself behind an empty squad car.

      ‘Have they got him?’ Harper asked, breathless.

      ‘They СКАЧАТЬ