Deceptions Anna Porter (top 100 books to read .TXT) đ
- Author: Anna Porter
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âWiped everything, and I touched him wearing gloves. I think maybe he arrived with the person who killed him. There was no sign of forced entry.â
âYou said you were there half an hour after he came home? There may be some prints. Anything else you noticed?â
âApart from the fact that he didnât seem to spend much time in his apartment, yes. His killer may have taken my photograph. Unless Berkowitz had pocketed it since the last time I was in his place, which is possible.â Since she had not told him about it in the first place, she didnât tell Attila that she herself had removed the photo of the Vaszarys.
âI will find out more about him. And please come back to Strasbourg tonight.â
âYou think itâs safer?â
âFor you itâs safer anywhere â except perhaps in Russia.â Attila was thinking about Alexanderâs warning.
He called Tibor to ask about Berkowitz. âAnything at all that you could find out,â he said. âThere is nothing about him online except a couple of photographs, and even in those he is not named.â
âWhat kind of photographs?â
âGovernment types standing at some sort of ceremony. He is in the background. He was killed last night.â
âNot a great loss to humanity,â Tibor said, âand good news for your friend, I would think. I assume the police will do their usual excellent job tracking down who did it. By the way, talking about public employees, I have a good idea who the geezer was in Biroâs apartment.â
âYou do?â
âSzabo, the parliamentary librarian. Donât know how he got mixed up in this mess, except he needed the money. Wife is ill and his job pays nothing. My sources tell me he took a part-time job with Industry and Commerce. Bit of extra for the private clinicâs bills. Only reason his wifeâs still alive . . .â
âNagy?â
âYes, the last time I checked, but portfolios donât mean much these days as long as you toe the chiefâs line, and Nagy does it well.â
Chapter Twenty-Five
Tibor called Attilaâs cellphone a little after six the next morning. âYou awake?â he asked.
âJĂ©szus Maria . . .â Attila grumbled when he had found his voice.
âJust asking. Because this is not my favourite time to call people. As it happens, itâs not my favourite time to be awake, but since itâs you, my friend . . .â He stressed friend, making it clear that he was delivering one more favour, a gift of friendship that they both knew had often been tested. Without Tiborâs fatherâs reach into the Communist power elite of the pre-1989 years, Attila would not have been able to qualify for the police academy, and without Tiborâs own spectacular connections to the current power elite, Attila would not have come by intelligence that saved his career as a detective. On the other hand, without Attilaâs interventions, Tibor would have been beaten to a pulp by a range of boys who liked to hit smaller boys. And, without Attilaâs advice, he might have married the woman next door who turned out to be some sort of American spy.
âThere are a few things you need to know about Gyula Berkowitz,â Tibor said, âand, given this manâs predilections and your own strange occupation, I am surprised you havenât come across each other already. The man is a thug-for-hire. Most of the time he works out of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, but he has done odd jobs for other ministries. He has been employed by, among others, ĂrpĂĄd Magyar, our minister of many portfolios and one of the prime ministerâs mouthpieces. Recently, some of the guys on the second floor of the gothic castle were amazed to see him coming and going through the parliamentariansâ exit as if he belonged. Why did you ask?â
âThey know him?â Attila asked, not answering Tiborâs question.
âSome do. He has worked for a number of our worthies, including NĂ©meth and Nagy and the deputy prime minister, but being a thug-for-hire would not, normally, offer such privileges.â
âHave you any idea where he lives?â
âHe has an apartment somewhere in Pest.â
âNot on RĂłzsadomb?â
âNot as far as my sources tell me. He lives closer to the gothic castle. But given how much he gets paid for his work, he could certainly afford a house on the hill.â
âDid he have any hobbies?â
âHobbies?â Tiborâs voice rose an octave. âIs this a trick question?â
âI mean hobbies like chess, or jogging, or card games . . .â
âOr archery?â Tibor asked.
âYes, like archery.â
Tibor laughed. âIf you knew that already, why in hell did you waste my time? Archery, as it happens, was his only hobby. Could have let me sleep in this morning and told me all this at the KirĂĄly on our usual day in the baths.â
âWe think he may be the man who shot the Vaszarysâ lawyer in Strasbourg last week.â
âWe?â
âThe art appraiser and I both think so, and I suspect the Strasbourg police will be able to identify him from photographs.â
âBut why would someone like Berkowitz kill that man in Strasbourg?â
âI have no idea, though I am beginning to guess that the minister and his ambassador to the EU may not see eye to eye about something. I think I am about to find out why it was the lawyer who got killed.â
Attila called Helena, but she did not answer her phone and this one took no messages.
Attila felt his way to the kitchen area of his Airbnb. After tapping the walls unsuccessfully for several minutes, he found the light switch and later, his cigarettes. The coffee makerâs ways were still a mystery, but he managed to boil water and pour it into a mug, adding a package of instant coffee. The sun had still not quite risen, but the sky had turned a soft pastel grey, so there was hope that the morning would arrive.
He called IrĂ©n next. âI will explain to Gustav,â IrĂ©n said, with a giggle. âHe has been waiting patiently by my door. We thought you would be here by now.â
Attila apologized. He said something
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