Gold of Our Fathers - [26]
Bao Liu was not one of those corpses on the floor, and thank God, Dawson thought. Nkrumah took them into a smaller room where Bao’s body lay on a table more modestly with a sheet covering him from the chest down. He had turned a mottled gray, an awful hue under the fluorescent lighting.
Dawson moved around to Lian’s unsupported side just in time for what he had anticipated. After she had looked at Bao’s face for a few moments, Lian collapsed like a sack of cocoyams. Dawson grabbed her on his side, as did Wei on his. Huang hurried to help.
“Let her rest her head on your lap,” Dawson instructed him, as he and Wei let her down slowly to the floor.
Nkrumah, who had evidently seen this before, lifted Lian’s feet up and seconds later she opened her eyes, looked up with a bewildered expression, and murmured something.
“What did she say?” Dawson asked Huang.
“She ask if it all a dream.”
“Okay, let her rest there.” He looked at Nkrumah. “Let’s talk for a moment.”
The two men stepped outside.
“When do you think the postmortem might be done?” Dawson asked.
Nkrumah angled his head, considering. “Please, maybe in about… three weeks?”
Dawson had feared as much. “Can we do better than that?”
“If only you want to talk to our physician on duty, Dr. Prempeh.”
“Where is he?”
“He is in. I can take you to his office.”
“Okay-after we check how the lady is doing.”
They returned to the room to find Lian at least partially recovered. She was standing, leaning against Wei, and slowly he walked with her out of the room and the morgue, settling them on the two chairs in the hallway.
“I’ll be back,” Dawson told Huang. Nkrumah led him up the hall, knocked on a door marked dr. prempeh,and opened it. The room was full-Prempeh was at his desk addressing five other people, three standing, two sitting. He was in his early thirties with trendy glasses, a white shirt and checkered tie, and black slacks. He looked up at Nkrumah. “Yes?”
“Please, I have Detective Darko Dawson here regarding the Liu case.”
“Oh, yeah, come in.”
“It’s okay,” Dawson said hurriedly. The room was too crowded for comfort. “I’ll wait outside.”
Dawson thanked Mr. Nkrumah, and the tech went off about his duties. Dawson checked his phone messages to while away the minutes. Not too long after, the five people filed out. Two of them were women, one much older than the other, dressed in black; the men were in normal, rather tattered attire, and they appeared crestfallen. Dawson’s guess was they were having a difficult time getting their relative’s body released for funeral rites.
Prempeh’s head popped around the door. “Still there? Oh, good. Come in. Sorry about that.”
He and Dawson shook hands. “Please,” Prempeh said, “do have a seat.” He went back to his own and leaned back. “You said you’re Inspector who?”
“Dawson. Darko Dawson.”
“Okay, cool. How can I help?”
Dawson gave him a quick rundown of the case so far. “The problem is,” he said, to the doctor, “Mr. Nkrumah is saying it will be about three weeks before we can get an autopsy on Bao Liu.”
“Is that what he said?” Prempeh asked. “Ridiculous.” He sprang up, jumped to the door, and yanked it open, poking his head around the frame and bellowing, “Nkrumah!”
“Sir!” a voice answered from the distance, and Dawson heard footsteps running down the corridor. “Yes, sir?”
“Why is it going to take three weeks to do the post on the Chinese man?”
“Please, we are very backlogged.”
“We’re always backlogged, so what’s the difference? When is this alleged forensic expert coming from Accra to help us?”
“Please, I don’t know. The director says he’s working on it, please.”
“Okay, okay. Go back to work.”
“Yes, sir.”
Prempeh, looking annoyed, pushed the door closed and flopped down in his chair again. “Do you know why it is going to take three weeks?” he asked Dawson fiercely. “Disorganization, that’s all. Disorganization and inefficiency. All morning long I’ve been waiting for my cases to come up and they’re not ready.”
He looked up at a knock on the door, which opened to a woman and two men who slowly filed in and stood against the wall with hands crossed in front of them.
“Excuse me one moment, Mr. Dawson,” Dr. Prempeh said. “Yes, how can I help you?”
The woman was dressed in deep red. The older man, about sixty, was in traditional swaddling black cloth that covered the left chest and shoulder with the right exposed. Dawson guessed the younger man was a son or nephew. He was about twenty-six in calf-length cargo shorts and a sleeveless T-shirt that looked like it hadn’t been washed in several days.
Beginning with a salute of deference to the doctor and an imploring “mepa wo kyew,” the older man launched into a complicated explanation in Twi as to why they had come. It appeared to Dawson that they had been given the incorrect information that their relative, who had suffered a premature and unsuspected death, would not need an autopsy. The man was appealing for the release of the body, repeating his plea multiple times.
"Searing and original and done just right… Inspector Darko Dawson is relentless, and I look forward to riding with him again." – Michael ConnellyIn the slums of Accra, Ghana's fast-moving, cosmopolitan capital, teenagers are turning up dead. Inspector Darko Dawson has seen many crimes, but this latest string of murders – in which all the young victims bear a chilling signature – is the most unsettling of his career. Are these heinous acts a form of ritual killing or the work of a lone, cold-blooded monster? With time running out, Dawson embarks on a harrowing journey through the city's underbelly and confronts the brutal world of the urban poor, where street children are forced to fight for their very survival – and a cunning killer seems just out of reach.
At Cape Three Points on the beautiful Ghanaian coast, a canoe washes up at an oil rig site. The two bodies in the canoe – who turn out to be a prominent, wealthy, middle-aged married couple – have obviously been murdered; the way Mr. Smith-Aidoo has been gruesomely decapitated suggests the killer was trying to send a specific message – but what, and to whom, is a mystery.The Smith-Aidoos, pillars in their community, are mourned by everyone, but especially by their niece Sapphire, a successful pediatric surgeon in Ghana's capital, Accra.
Однажды в руки безработной журналистки Екатерины Голицыной и её друга Николая Артюхова попадает странная флешка с видеозаписью. Известный американский писатель Майкл Доусон просит помочь ему в поисках исчезнувшей жены, Лии, родители которой погибли от рук китайской секты «Чёрное Братство». Следы Лии ведут в Россию.Старая китайская легенда неожиданно оживает в наши дни. Маленький научный городок Техногорск становится центром борьбы добра и зла. Оборотни, карлики, московский вор в законе, всемогущий мэр города и сам Магистр «Черного Братства».Кто может противостоять им? К тому же Николай исчезает самым странным образом.
Ирину Александрову в последнее время преследовали одни несчастья: смерть дяди, гибель тети, странные голоса по ночам, толчок в спину под колеса поезда — все эти события были связаны между собой. Но как — ответа не было. А ощущение чего-то страшного, неотвратимого, что должно произойти, нарастало.
Заместитель командира воинской части в/ч № 755605 — собственно воинской частью был научно-исследовательский институт военно-морского ведомства — капитан первого ранга Гаврилов был обнаружен мертвым в своем рабочем кабинете. Прибывшая опергруппа не обнаружили каких-либо следов, отпечатков и других зацепок. Дело было поручено следователю военной прокуратуры Паламарчуку Василию Аполлинарьевичу.
From the international bestselling author, Hans Olav Lahlum, comes Chameleon People, the fourth murder mystery in the K2 and Patricia series.1972. On a cold March morning the weekend peace is broken when a frantic young cyclist rings on Inspector Kolbjorn 'K2' Kristiansen's doorbell, desperate to speak to the detective.Compelled to help, K2 lets the boy inside, only to discover that he is being pursued by K2's colleagues in the Oslo police. A bloody knife is quickly found in the young man's pocket: a knife that matches the stab wounds of a politician murdered just a few streets away.The evidence seems clear-cut, and the arrest couldn't be easier.
A handsome young New York professor comes to Phoenix to research his new book. But when he's brutally murdered, police connect him to one of the world's most deadly drug cartels. This shouldn't be a case for historian-turned-deputy David Mapstone – except the victim has been dating David's sister-in-law Robin and now she's a target, too. David's wife Lindsey is in Washington with an elite anti-cyber terror unit and she makes one demand of him: protect Robin.This won't be an easy job with the city police suspicious of Robin and trying to pressure her.
From the creator of the groundbreaking crime-fiction magazine THUGLIT comes…DIRTY WORDS.The first collection from award-winning short story writer, Todd Robinson.Featuring:SO LONG JOHNNIE SCUMBAG – selected for The Year's Best Writing 2003 by Writer's Digest.The Derringer Award nominated short, ROSES AT HIS FEET.THE LONG COUNT – selected as a Notable Story of the Year in Best American Mystery Stories 2005.PLUS eight more tales of in-your-face crime fiction.