• Complain

Reed Coleman - Innocent monster

Here you can read online Reed Coleman - Innocent monster full text of the book (entire story) in english for free. Download pdf and epub, get meaning, cover and reviews about this ebook. genre: Detective and thriller. Description of the work, (preface) as well as reviews are available. Best literature library LitArk.com created for fans of good reading and offers a wide selection of genres:

Romance novel Science fiction Adventure Detective Science History Home and family Prose Art Politics Computer Non-fiction Religion Business Children Humor

Choose a favorite category and find really read worthwhile books. Enjoy immersion in the world of imagination, feel the emotions of the characters or learn something new for yourself, make an fascinating discovery.

No cover

Innocent monster: summary, description and annotation

We offer to read an annotation, description, summary or preface (depends on what the author of the book "Innocent monster" wrote himself). If you haven't found the necessary information about the book — write in the comments, we will try to find it.

Reed Coleman: author's other books


Who wrote Innocent monster? Find out the surname, the name of the author of the book and a list of all author's works by series.

Innocent monster — read online for free the complete book (whole text) full work

Below is the text of the book, divided by pages. System saving the place of the last page read, allows you to conveniently read the book "Innocent monster" online for free, without having to search again every time where you left off. Put a bookmark, and you can go to the page where you finished reading at any time.

Light

Font size:

Reset

Interval:

Bookmark:

Make

Reed Farrel Coleman

Innocent monster

If only it was a matter of the innocent and the guilty. Too bad for us its usually a matter of the guilty and the more guilty.

Israel Roth

ONE

Katys blood was no longer fresh on my hands and after 9/11 people seemed to stop taking notice. I stopped trying to scrub it away. With all due respect to Lady Macbeth, there isnt enough soap or hot water to get those stains out and scouring brushes are impotent at guilt. Jews know from guilt. So do Catholics, but they know it differently. Jews know you cant pray it away or confess it away and that there is no number of good acts that will balance the ledger sheet. Guilt is a tattoo and, if youre lucky, it will fade. 9/11 faded my tattoo. Besides, in a world awash in blood, whats one life, give or take?

Even my daughter Sarah started talking to me again, if only once a week and then with a robotic detachment that hurt me more than her year of silence ever did. In the wake of 9/11 all of us New Yorkers were really just robots there for a little while. So it was that the pain of my divorce from Carmella and the dissolution of our partnership barely registered. It had taken twenty years of secrets to destroy my first marriage and about twenty minutes to destroy my second. I wondered if there were Las Vegas odds on how fast I could fuck up a third? I missed Israel, Carmellas son by another man and, for a very brief time, mine in every other way that mattered. But he was less than a year old when Carmella moved up to Toronto and I doubt he misses me. At my age, on the other hand, you start to spend a lot of your time missing people: some living, some dead, some just gone.

Although Carmella and I were no longer partners, I kept our firm, Prager amp; Melendez Investigations, Inc., open, at least until the end of our lease. And I couldnt see putting Brian Doyle and Devo on the street because my marriage fell apart. It turned out to be one of those rare things done with best intentions that paid unexpected dividends. Sometimes the road to profit and not just to hell is paved with good intentions. Business boomed in the months following 9/11, but it was an odd kind of business. Other than our contract insurance work, we continued looking for people. That hadnt changed. It was the nature of the people we were hired to find that had changed.

Suddenly our clients, especially the ones forty years old and up, had an urgent need to reconnect with people whod fallen through the cracks in their lives. We had a lot of jobs finding old flames and first loves, childhood friends, teammates and coaches, even black sheep relatives from the wrong side of the family. National tragedy fucks with peoples heads. And in those days when Chicken Little screamed that the sky was falling, no one seemed inclined to argue. But the sky didnt fall and, in terms of our once burgeoning caseload, the affection for reconnection waned.

That was six years ago now: our lease long expired, the office long closed. Brian Doyle and Devo have opened their own shop in lower Manhattan, scavenging off a better class of lice than on the Brooklyn side of the river. Currently, no one needs to pay to find anyone, not anymore. Well, at least not to find old flames or high school football heroes. You can find them where you find everything else in the world: on the Net. And if you dont find them, just count to ten, and theyll find you. Ah, the internet. Ten years ago I told Aaron to stop wasting our money on online advertising and building a topnotch website. He didnt listen. Now internet sales accounted for about twenty percent of our business. So much for my business acumen, but the Net wasnt all magic. If you want to find an ex whos skipped town and is two years in arrears on child support payments, you might still consider using a professional investigator.

These days I was a professional wine merchant. Period. I didnt even know where my PI license was or if it was still valid. Somewhere along the way I moved it out of my sock drawer and havent seen it since. I think I might hunt it down one day and make a collage of it and my equally valueless shares of Enron stock. But for now, I was too busy being bored numb and sleepwalking through preparations for the summer grand opening of our second Long Island store-Sunrise and Vine in Bridgehampton-to worry about the toys in my attic. Tucked away there in the basement office of my favorite store, Bordeaux In Brooklyn, I was so enraptured by the details of the local ordinances concerning exterior commercial signage that I nearly forgot to breathe.

Moe, pick up line one, a voice called to me from somewhere beyond the womb of my stupor. That it was the voice of the stores assistant manager on the intercom mattered little. To me, it was the voice of salvation.

Having depressed the speaker phone button, I said, Good morning, Moe Prager.

Dad?

Hey, kid-Sarah.

Are we on speaker phone?

Dont worry. Im in the office. No ones here. Whats wrong?

How do you know somethings wrong?

I dont want to fight.

Why would we fight? she asked.

Because if I answer your question about how I know somethings wrong, youll get pissy with me.

Risk it.

I know because youve called me once a week, every Sunday morning at eleven, for the last six years. Whenever you break that schedule, somethings wrong. That, and I can hear it in your voice. I guess there are still some things you cant hide from me.

She answered with silence, a noisy silence. I could hear her gears turning as she decided how to react. We had once been as close as a dad and daughter could be. No more. Sarah blamed me for her mothers murder. That made two of us. I hadnt pulled the trigger, but, in my way, I was just as guilty as the man who did.

She finally spoke. Can you meet me for lunch?

Sure, but whats wrong?

Im okay. Its not me. I swear.

Then who?

Ill see you at New Carmens on Sheepshead Bay Road in an hour and we can talk about it.

Click.

North Shore Herald, Friday, July 14,

Pint-sized Pollock Dazzles Locals

GABRIEL BYNUM

All of four years old, Sea Cliff s own Sashi Bluntstone is already a world-renowned artist. She first put paint brush to canvas at eighteen months of age and has yet to stop. She sold her first painting at age two to local collector and patron of the arts Sonia Barrows-Willingham of Glen Cove.

I paid a mere five hundred dollars for Pistachio Sprinkles, said Barrows-Willingham, gesturing at a canvas on the brick wall at the Junction Gallery in Sea Cliff. Best five hundred dollars I ever invested. Just last month, I was offered twenty-five thousand for it. But I wouldnt care if they offered me twenty-five million for it. I just love all of her work. Its marvelous. I have several of her works and plan to add more. Dont you just love them?

Four-year-old Sashi, busy chasing her friends around the gallery, seemed completely unfazed by all the hoopla surrounding her first big showing. An apparently normal kid in most ways, the green-eyed and russet-haired prodigy is shy with most adults, but when she opens up, her favorite subject isnt art, its her beagle puppy Cara.

The young Miss Bluntstone, whose work is most often categorized as Neo-Abstract Expressionism, is not without her detractors and doubters.

At best, the childs an unwitting shill for her ambitious parents. At worst I dont even want to consider it, says Wallace Rusk, curator at the nearby Cold Spring Harbor Museum of Modern Art. The child is being mercilessly exploited, which, if she were actually any good, might be understandable, if not forgivable. But its just so much kitsch and finger painting in the guise of high art.

Yet in the face of withering criticism, nothing could dampen the palpable excitement in the crowded gallery. If there were any Sashi doubters or detractors on hand, they werent very vocal. There were abundant smiles and sales seemed brisk as gallery owner and art agent Randolph Junction delighted in placing red dots-marking the pieces as sold-on the small, white name placards next to each painting.

Next page
Light

Font size:

Reset

Interval:

Bookmark:

Make

Similar books «Innocent monster»

Look at similar books to Innocent monster. We have selected literature similar in name and meaning in the hope of providing readers with more options to find new, interesting, not yet read works.


Reviews about «Innocent monster»

Discussion, reviews of the book Innocent monster and just readers' own opinions. Leave your comments, write what you think about the work, its meaning or the main characters. Specify what exactly you liked and what you didn't like, and why you think so.