Понятно
Понятно
Для того чтобы воспользоваться закладками, необходимо
Войти или зарегистрироваться
Отмена
Для того чтобы воспользоваться озвучкой предложений, необходимо
Войти или зарегистрироваться
Отмена
Озвучка предложений доступна при наличии PRO-доступа
Купить PRO-доступ
Отмена
331
"
Lady
,
I
don
t
talk
to
strangers
.
So
leave
me
alone
.
"
332
For
the
next
fifteen
minutes
she
tried
to
draw
him
out
,
but
"
Tommy
"
remained
sullen
.
333
When
she
left
the
Franklin
County
Jail
,
Dorothy
Turner
stood
on
Front
Street
for
a
while
,
dazed
,
thinking
about
"
Christopher
"
and
of
her
promise
to
"
David
"
never
to
reveal
the
secret
.
Now
she
was
tom
between
her
promise
and
her
realization
that
Milligan
s
attorneys
had
to
be
told
about
this
.
Later
she
phoned
the
public
defender
s
office
and
asked
for
Judy
Stevenson
.
Отключить рекламу
334
"
Look
,
"
she
said
when
Stevenson
got
on
the
line
,
"
I
can
t
really
talk
with
you
about
it
right
now
,
but
if
you
haven
t
read
the
book
Sybil
,
get
yourself
a
copy
and
read
it
.
"
Judy
Stevenson
,
surprised
by
the
call
from
Turner
,
bought
a
paperback
copy
of
Sybil
that
evening
and
began
to
read
it
.
Once
she
understood
where
it
was
going
,
she
lay
back
in
bed
and
stared
at
the
ceiling
,
thinking
:
Oh
,
come
on
!
A
multiple
personality
?
Is
that
what
Turner
was
trying
to
tell
her
?
She
tried
to
visualize
the
Milligan
who
had
trembled
so
badly
at
the
line
-
up
;
she
thought
of
the
other
times
he
d
been
talkative
and
manipulative
,
trading
jokes
,
quick
-
witted
.
She
d
always
attributed
his
changed
behavior
to
depression
.
And
then
she
thought
of
the
stories
Sergeant
Willis
told
about
the
slippery
character
who
could
get
out
of
any
strait
jacket
,
and
medic
Russ
Hill
s
comments
about
the
superhuman
strength
he
showed
at
times
.
Milligan
s
words
echoed
in
her
mind
:
"
J
don
t
remember
what
they
said
I
did
.
I
don
t
know
anything
.
"
335
She
thought
of
waking
her
husband
and
talking
to
him
about
it
,
but
she
knew
what
Al
would
say
.
336
She
knew
what
anyone
would
say
if
she
tried
to
tell
them
what
she
was
thinking
now
.
In
more
than
three
years
in
the
public
defender
s
office
,
she
d
never
come
up
against
anyone
like
Milligan
.
She
decided
to
say
nothing
to
Gary
yet
,
either
.
She
had
to
check
it
out
for
herself
.
337
The
next
morning
she
called
Dorothy
Turner
.
"
Look
,
"
she
said
,
"
the
Milligan
I
ve
met
and
talked
to
for
the
past
few
weeks
has
acted
strange
at
times
.
There
have
been
changes
of
mood
.
He
s
temperamental
.
But
I
haven
t
seen
the
major
differences
that
would
lead
me
to
conclude
it
s
like
the
Sybil
case
.
"
Отключить рекламу
338
"
This
is
something
I
ve
been
struggling
with
for
days
,
"
Turner
said
.
"
I
promised
not
to
tell
anyone
and
I
ve
stuck
to
that
.
All
I
told
you
was
to
read
that
book
.
But
I
am
going
to
try
to
get
him
to
agree
to
let
me
tell
you
the
secret
.
"
339
Reminding
herself
that
this
was
a
psychologist
from
Southwest
from
the
prosecutor
s
side
Judy
said
,
"
You
take
the
lead
.
Let
me
know
what
you
want
me
to
do
.
"
When
Dorothy
Turner
came
back
to
see
Milligan
for
the
fourth
time
,
she
met
the
frightened
little
boy
who
had
called
himself
David
that
first
day
.
340
"
I
know
I
promised
never
to
tell
the
secret
,
"
she
said
,
"
but
I
ve
got
to
tell
Judy
Stevenson
.
"