Чтение онлайн

на главную - закладки

Жанры

Шрифт:

“I see him.”

“Come here, you little bastard,” Ben said, the controller twisting in his hand. “Daddy’s gonna put you on a sailboat across the River Styx.”

“Did you just use Greek mythology to talk trash?” I asked.

Radar laughed. Ben started pummeling buttons, shouting, “Eat it, goblin! Eat it like Zeus ate Metis!”

“I would think that she’d be back by Monday,” I said. “You don’t want to miss too much school, even if you’re Margo Roth Spiegelman. Maybe she can stay here till graduation.”

Radar answered me in the disjointed way of someone playing Resurrection. “I don’t even get why she left, was it just imp six o’clock no dude use the ray gunlike because of lost love? I would have figured her to be where is the crypt is it to the leftimmune to that kind of stuff.”

“No,” I said. “It wasn’t that, I don’t think. Not just that, anyway. She kind of hates Orlando; she called it a paper town. Like, you know, everything so fake and flimsy. I think she just wanted a vacation from that.”

I happened to glance out my window, and I saw immediately that someone — the detective, I guessed — had lowered the shade in Margo’s room. But I wasn’t seeing the shade. Instead, I was seeing a black-and-white poster, taped to the back of the shade. In the photograph, a man stands, his shoulders slightly slumped, staring ahead. A cigarette dangles out of his mouth. A guitar is slung over his shoulder, and the guitar is painted with the words THIS MACHINE KILLS FASCISTS.

“There’s something in Margo’s window.” The game music stopped, and Radar and Ben knelt down on either side of me. “That’s new?” asked Radar.

“I’ve seen the back of that shade a million times,” I answered, “but I’ve never seen that poster before.”

“Weird,” Ben said.

“Margo’s parents just said this morning that she sometimes leaves clues,” I said. “But never anything, like, concrete enough to find her before she comes home.”

Radar already had his handheld out; he was searching Omnictionary for the phrase. “The picture’s of Woody Guthrie,” he said. “A folksinger, 1912 to 1967. Sang about the working class. ‘This Land Is Your Land.’ Bit of a Communist. Um, inspired Bob Dylan.” Radar played a snippet of one of his songs — a high-pitched scratchy voice sang about unions.

“I’ll email the guy who wrote most of this page and see if there are any obvious connections between Woody Guthrie and Margo,” Radar said.

“I can’t imagine she likes his songs,” I said.

“Seriously,” Ben said. “This guy sounds like an alcoholic Kermit the Frog with throat cancer.”

Radar opened the window and stuck his head out, swiveling it around. “It sure seems she left this for you, though, Q. I mean, does she know anyone else who could see this window?” I shook my head no.

After a moment, Ben added, “The way he’s staring at us — it’s like, ‘pay attention to me.’ And his head like that, you know? It’s not like he’s standing on a stage; it’s like he’s standing in a doorway or something.”

“I think he wants us to come inside,” I said.

13

We didn’t have a view of the front door or the garage from my bedroom: for that, we needed to sit in the family room. So while Ben continued playing Resurrection, Radar and I went out to the family room and pretended to watch TV while keeping watch on the Spiegelmans’ front door through a picture window, waiting for Margo’s mom and dad to leave. Detective Warren’s black Crown Victoria was still in the driveway.

He left after about fifteen minutes, but neither the garage door nor the front door opened again for an hour. Radar and I were watching some half-funny stoner comedy on HBO, and I had started to get into the story when Radar said, “Garage door.” I jumped off the couch and got close to the window so that I could see clearly who was in the car. Both Mr. and Mrs. Spiegelman. Ruthie was still at home. “Ben!” I shouted. He was out in a flash, and as the Spiegelmans turned off Jefferson Way and onto Jefferson Road, we raced outside into the muggy morning.

We walked through the Spiegelmans’ lawn to their front door. I rang the doorbell and heard Myrna Mountweazel’s paws scurrying on the hardwood floors, and then she was barking like crazy, staring at us through the sidelight glass. Ruthie opened the door. She was a sweet girl, maybe eleven.

“Hey, Ruthie.”

“Hi, Quentin,” she said.

“Hey, are your parents here?”

“They just left,” she said, “to go to Target.” She had Margo’s big eyes, but hers were hazel. She looked up at me, her lips pursed with worry. “Did you meet the policeman?”

“Yeah,” I said. “He seemed nice.”

“Mom says that it’s like if Margo went to college early.”

“Yeah,” I said, thinking that the easiest way to solve a mystery is to decide that there is no mystery to solve. But it seemed clear to me now that she had left the clues to a mystery behind.

“Listen, Ruthie, we need to look in Margo’s room,” I said. “But the thing is — it’s like when Margo would ask you to do top-secret stuff. We’re in the same situation here.”

“Margo doesn’t like people in her room,” Ruthie said. “’Cept me. And sometimes Mommy.”

“But we’re her friends.”

“She doesn’t like her friends in her room,” Ruthie said.

I leaned down toward her. “Ruthie, please.”

“And you don’t want me to tell Mommy and Dad,” she said.

“Correct.”

“Five dollars,” she said. I was about to bargain with her, but then Radar produced a five-dollar bill and handed it to her. “If I see the car in the driveway, I’ll let you know,” she said conspiratorially.

I knelt down to give the aging-but-always-enthusiastic Myrna Mountweazel a good petting, and then we raced upstairs to Margo’s room. As I put my hand on the doorknob, it occurred to me that I had not seen Margo’s entire room since I was about ten years old.

Поделиться:
Популярные книги

Бастард Императора. Том 11

Орлов Андрей Юрьевич
11. Бастард Императора
Фантастика:
городское фэнтези
попаданцы
аниме
фэнтези
5.00
рейтинг книги
Бастард Императора. Том 11

Изгой Проклятого Клана. Том 3

Пламенев Владимир
3. Изгой
Фантастика:
аниме
фэнтези
фантастика: прочее
попаданцы
5.00
рейтинг книги
Изгой Проклятого Клана. Том 3

Проводник

Кораблев Родион
2. Другая сторона
Фантастика:
боевая фантастика
рпг
7.41
рейтинг книги
Проводник

Последний Герой. Том 5

Дамиров Рафаэль
5. Последний герой
Фантастика:
попаданцы
альтернативная история
5.00
рейтинг книги
Последний Герой. Том 5

Товарищ "Чума"

lanpirot
1. Товарищ "Чума"
Фантастика:
попаданцы
альтернативная история
4.00
рейтинг книги
Товарищ Чума

Солнечный флот

Вайс Александр
4. Фронтир
Фантастика:
боевая фантастика
космическая фантастика
5.00
рейтинг книги
Солнечный флот

Последний Паладин. Том 14

Саваровский Роман
14. Путь Паладина
Фантастика:
аниме
фэнтези
попаданцы
5.75
рейтинг книги
Последний Паладин. Том 14

Найденыш

Шмаков Алексей Семенович
2. Светлая Тьма
Фантастика:
юмористическое фэнтези
городское фэнтези
аниме
5.00
рейтинг книги
Найденыш

Имперец. Том 1 и Том 2

Романов Михаил Яковлевич
1. Имперец
Фантастика:
попаданцы
альтернативная история
аниме
5.00
рейтинг книги
Имперец. Том 1 и Том 2

Мечников. Из доктора в маги

Алмазов Игорь
1. Жизнь Лекаря с нуля
Фантастика:
альтернативная история
аниме
фэнтези
фантастика: прочее
попаданцы
5.00
рейтинг книги
Мечников. Из доктора в маги

Матабар V

Клеванский Кирилл Сергеевич
5. Матабар
Фантастика:
фэнтези
5.00
рейтинг книги
Матабар V

Последний реанорец. Том IV

Павлов Вел
3. Высшая Речь
Фантастика:
фэнтези
5.20
рейтинг книги
Последний реанорец. Том IV

Вперед в прошлое 10

Ратманов Денис
10. Вперед в прошлое
Фантастика:
попаданцы
альтернативная история
5.00
рейтинг книги
Вперед в прошлое 10

Гримуар темного лорда III

Грехов Тимофей
3. Гримуар темного лорда
Фантастика:
фэнтези
попаданцы
аниме
5.00
рейтинг книги
Гримуар темного лорда III