Fatal Lies Frank Tallis (best fiction books to read txt) đ
- Author: Frank Tallis
Book online «Fatal Lies Frank Tallis (best fiction books to read txt) đ». Author Frank Tallis
âI know how to get to Professor Eichmann s office,â he whispered. âWe'll let this old fellow enjoy his beauty sleep, eh? You can question him later.â
Liebermann smiled, recognizing in Rheinhardt s small act of charity a justification for hope. Being a psychoanalyst, he saw the salvation of humanity not in great ideologies, religion, or political reforms but in everyday, barely perceptible deeds of kindness. He found this thought consoling, a counterbalance to his certain knowledge that they were about to find out how easily man becomes a thing of darknessâhow easily civilized values blacken and curl in the heat of primitive passions.
Professor Eichmann greeted them with frigid condescension.
âYou will forgive me, gentlemen, but I am extremely busy and cannot spare you much time.â
Liebermann promised the headmaster that he would be brief.
âTell me, headmaster,â he said softly, âwhen you entered the laboratory on the evening that Thomas Zelenka's body was discovered, did you smell anything?â
The headmaster wrinkled his noseâas if the mere mention of smell had triggered some form of malodorous olfactory hallucination.
âThe laboratory always smells a little unpleasant.â
âNothing struck you as unusual?â
âNo.â
âCould you describe how it smelled?â
âHerr Doctor, I cannot see how this line of questioning can possibly prove helpful. As I have already explainedââ
Liebermann raised his hands, arresting the headmaster's flow with an expression that begged indulgence.
âHeadmaster, I have said that I will be brief, and I promise you I will keep my word. With respect, could you please answer the question: what did the laboratory smell of?â
Eichmann shook his head, tutted, and said: âA little like bad eggs.â
Liebermann stared at the headmasterâan inquisitorial, ingressive stare that owed much to his acquaintance with Professor Freud. Then, quite suddenly, he said, âThank you,â and stood to leave.
The headmaster looked first at Rheinhardt and then back at Liebermann.
âIs that all you wanted to know?â Eichmann asked.
âYes,â said Liebermann. âI have no further questions. I trust you will concede that we have respected your convenience.â
The headmaster did not appear satisfiedâonly suspicious.
âWhere is Professor GĂ€rtner?â asked Rheinhardt.
âIn the staff common room,â said the headmaster.
He observed their departure with eyes that radiated contempt.
Liebermann and Rheinhardt found Professor GĂ€rtner sitting alone, ensconced in a fustian armchair and sipping brandy from a metal hip flask. The book on his lap was Thucydides's great History of the Peloponnesian War. After some introductory civilitiesâto which the professor responded with considerably more courtesy than the headmasterâLiebermann repeated his question: âTell me, Professor GĂ€rtner, when you discovered Thomas Zelenka's body, did you smell anything unusual?â
âUnusual?â repeated GĂ€rtner.
âYes.â
âI don't think so. To be honest, I don't have a very acute sense of smell. It's never been the same since the storming of Brescia back in â49. I was serving under Haynauâwith the first battalion, no lessâ and fell very badly ill. The regimental doctor didn't know what it was. He was mystified. I was sick and very weak for more than a month. When I recovered, I felt well enough. All my body parts were workingâjust as they did beforeâwith the exception of my nose! The sensation of smell was dulled, blunted. In order to detect the fragrance of a flower, I would have to hold it directly under my nostrils, inhaling deeply, and only then would I catch a hint of its bouquet. My sense of taste was affected, too. Subsequently, I've only ever enjoyed foods with very strong flavors. A good spicy goulash, for example.â
Liebermann attempted to interrupt the garrulous professor, but he failed.
âI once met a neurologist from Paris,â GĂ€rtner continued, âwho said that he'd heard of such things happening, and he spoke at some length about the bulbs that project from beneath the brain. A clever fellow if ever there was one. He had studied with Charcot and knew his Virgil as well as his anatomies. Apparently, there are some infectious organisms that attack nerve tissue, causing permanent damage; however, I should sayâif my memory serves me correctlyâhe associated such cases with tropical rather than Mediterranean diseases.â Professor GĂ€rtner took a swig from his hip flask, hummed pensively, and added: âI'm sorry, Herr Doctor. I seem to have forgotten your question. What was it you wanted to know?â
Liebermann and Rheinhardt made their excuses and left.
âWell,â said Rheinhardt, as they made their way down the stairs. âThis isn't going very well, is it?â
Liebermann shook his head. âNo, it isn't; however, at the same time, the science of hereditary constitution gives me good reason to remain optimistic.â
âMax, what are you talking about?â
âI will explain in due course. Now, let us return to the courtyard.â
Albert was still sitting in the same place, although the movement of his head suggested that he was now not sleeping but observing the spiraling of dead leaves in a vortex.
When Rheinhardt and Liebermann arrived, he rose to greet themâsaluting and clicking his heels together to produce a hollow knock.
âAh, my dear fellow,â said Rheinhardt. âThere you are. Allow me to introduce a colleague of mine, Herr Dr. Liebermann. He would like to ask you some questions.â
Albert smacked his lips.
âA doctorâŠâ
âYes.â
âPermission to reportâI'm as fit as a fiddle, sir. Haven't had a day's illness in years.â
âWell,â said Rheinhardt, âI'm very glad to hear it; however, the good doctor has not come to inquire about your health. He wants to ask you about the recent tragedy.â
Rheinhardt glanced at his friend.
âDo you remember the boy Thomas Zelenka?â asked Liebermann.
âPermission to report: yes, sir. The boy who died.â
âDo you remember the evening when his body was discovered?â
âI do, sir. He was found in the
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