Herbert Lieberman - City of the Dead

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City of the Dead: краткое содержание, описание и аннотация

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Most cops question the living. But New York City’s Chief Medical Examiner Paul Konig finds his answers among the dead. Now, after a lifetime of strangled whores and mangled corpses, Konig thinks he has seen it all—until he comes up against a series of brutal sex crimes that are carving a bloody path across the battered city.
Piece by piece. he begins to put together a picture of the killer, vowing that this case would be his last. But fate has one final nightmare in store for Paul Konig… forcing him into a desperate race against time to save the beloved daughter he thought was lost forever… and who now may be terror’s next victim.
Winner of the 1977 Grand Prix de Littérature Policière’s International Prize!

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“Deputy Mayor,” Carslin mumbles brusquely.

Just then a state troopers’ wagon turns into the auto path followed by a large black limousine.

“Ah,” Schroder sighs. “This should be him now.”

There’s a great deal of bustling and small chatter while introductions are made, greetings exchanged. Deputy Mayor Maurice Benjamin has a curt, hasty manner. A no-nonsense, take-charge sort of chap, intolerant of laxity, uneasy during a pause. But as he gets around to Konig, something almost shy and evasive comes over that superbly arrogant manner.

“Morning, Maury.”

“Morning, Paul. How are you?” Konig’s glance is so piercing that even the Deputy Mayor cannot confront him squarely. Instead, he veers sharply, moves on to shake other hands.

It’s a curious sight, this highest emissary of the Mayor’s office, glittering in an expensive hand-tailored suit, all puffing and swelling with self-importance having just alighted from a shiny black limousine bearing the large, imposing shield of the City of New York on its bumper, having to give quarter to a shabby, rumpled figure with tousled hair and the look of a demented Old Testament prophet.

“Well,” the Deputy Mayor blusters, “let’s get on with it.”

Carslin nods’ at the mound of fresh earth and the narrow trench with the two men, chest-high, grunting in it. At a loss for further conversation, the four men saunter back to the grave while the two state troopers lounge against the limousine.

Ashes to ashes ,” a voice chants softly inside Konig’s head as he peers downward into the freshly dug grave. “ Ida Bayles Konig. Beloved wife of Paul. Endeared mother of —”

The sharp chinking sound of metal impacting on metal. Then suddenly brass and wood coming into view.

“Ah—there we are,” says Schroder.

Ropes are quickly produced, and shortly, with more grunting, the coffin, rising, teetering slightly, is hoisted out of the damp rectangle of earth and edged to one side of the grave.

Carslin and Schroder move quickly to the box. Kneeling, Carslin dusts a few crumbs of still-clinging earth from the brass plate and reads:

LINNEL GAINES ROBINSON
May 6, 1954, March 7, 1974

Benjamin moves up quickly beside Dr. Schroder. “You officially acknowledge this to be—”

“I do,” Schroder murmurs, peering over Carslin’s shoulder.

“We’ve set up a small lab and a microscope over in the rectory,” says Carslin.

“Where’s that?” Benjamin asks.

“Just a couple of hundred yards back down the road,” one of the troopers calls from the limousine.

“Okay,” says the Deputy Mayor with the finality of a judge gaveling a portentous decision. “Let’s get on with it.”

Konig shuffles forward. “Before you do, I suggest you open the lid slightly.”

Benjamin glances queasily at Carslin.

“To release the gases,” Konig goes on.

“By all means,” Carslin replies, not to Konig but to the Deputy Mayor.

In the next moment the two Italian diggers have released thumbscrews and prized the lid slightly. There is a long, high hiss like the sound of a hermetically sealed jar of coffee being suddenly opened.

Moments later the box is hoisted onto the shoulders of the diggers and the two troopers. Carslin, Schroder, and the Deputy Mayor move out quickly behind the coffin.

“Aren’t you coming?” Benjamin turns and calls back to Konig.

“No,” says Konig, still hovering above the freshly dug grave. “I think I’ll wait here.”

Then, in a moment or so, watching the swaying procession wind its way down the auto path, he is alone there amid the chugging blackbirds, the chirruping of spring crickets, the long, neat aisles of placid stones.

When did you ever —” the fierce, condemnatory voice cries again. “ When have we ever been able to —”

The figure of a small girl, bangs, laughing eyes, dressed in kilt and knee socks, wheels toward him on a tricycle through the cluttered labyrinth of headstones.

Lolly .”

You killed her .”

Lolly.

You killed her.

I—

Yes, you did. You killed her—with that stupid, unfeeling arrogance of yours.

It is to the figure of the child he talks, but the fierce, strident voice that answers him is that of a young woman. “ Lolly—Mother was very sick.

Never mind. You —”

Incurably sick.

—rode all over her. You killed her just as surely as if—

He has no words for her grief. He can barely shoulder his own. “ Lolly —/—” His voice trails off even as the tiny kilted figure on the tricycle dematerializes. “ Lolly— ” he murmurs again but he is staring down into the hollow, gaping fissure of newly opened earth.

A short time later he sees the two troopers moving back up toward the limousine. They’re followed by Carslin and the Deputy Mayor, chatting solemnly. Schroder trails a few paces behind.

Something in the picture, something in the slope of their shoulders and the way they walk and chat quietly now beside the limousine, the Deputy Mayor’s head lowered, Carslin’s head tilted slightly toward him, lips moving as if they whispered words, tells Konig all he needs to know. Besides which, Maury Benjamin’s characteristically restive, ever-seeking eyes now appear to be assiduously shunning him.

Schroder, hands thrust deep in pockets, shoulders slightly hunched, comes shambling toward him. Their eyes meet. Konig feels a sickness in the pit of his stomach, but he is smiling broadly. “Well?”

“Leukocytic infiltration.”

“Ah?” Konig says, feigning surprise, but he’d known it all along.

“Quite pronounced,” Schroder offers sympathetically. “Want to see the slides?”

“No.” Konig shrugs wearily. “No need.”

The doors of the limousine and the troopers’ wagon swing open, bang shut, and without so much as a goodbye nod, the Deputy Mayor, preceded by the trooper escort, rolls imperiously past the place where Konig stands and down the auto path toward the exits.

Shortly after, Schroder too drives off, and Konig is left alone with Carslin, while about the open grave the two workmen, laughing and chattering in Italian, gather up their tools.

“Well, Charley,” says Konig with a burst of feeble cheer.

“Well?”

“What next?”

“Well,” Carslin sighs, somewhat ruffled, his eyes evading those of his old teacher, “I’ll have to file a complete report with the DA. Then I suppose—”

“A hearing,” Konig says, completing the sentence for him.

“No doubt.” Carslin’s eyes scan up and down the cluttered aisles of stones as if they were searching for something there. “Look here, Paul. You have to understand. There’s nothing—personal. It’s simply a straightforward matter of—”

Konig waves him to silence. “Spare me the lecture on ethics. No recitations of the Hippocratic oath, please.”

“I had no intention of—” Miffed, Carslin gazes into Konig’s haggard face, transfixed by something strange and awful that he sees there. “Are you all right?”

“Yes. I’m fine. Why?”

“I don’t know.” Carslin seems embarrassed. “Something about the way you were looking at me just then.”

“Oh?”

“I thought for a moment—”

“Yes?”

“I thought for a moment,” Carslin murmurs, obviously having a difficult time, “you were going to ask me to do something I couldn’t do.”

Konig smiles. “I was—but only for a moment. You know, Charley, I’d never ask one of my old students to compromise himself to save my neck. I’d be awfully pissed off with you if you did. Goodbye, Charley.” He thumps the younger man on the back, and as he weaves his way through the maze of headstones to his car, conscious of Carslin’s eyes still burning on his back, his knees momentarily buckle. He totters, slips, and very nearly goes down. Hearing a rush of movement at his back, coming toward him, he recoveres his balance, thrusts his shoulders back, stiffens his carriage, kicks out smartly with his aching leg, and with a million confluent streams roaring in his head with something like the sound of rushing water, his eyes swimming before him, he lurches blindly to his car.

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