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Quirke 06 - Holy Orders

Quirke 06 - Holy Orders

Titel: Quirke 06 - Holy Orders Kostenlos Bücher Online Lesen
Autoren: Benjamin Black
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mustache twitching. “A ‘murder investigation,’” he said. “Jesus, Clancy, you’ve been working in newspapers too long, you’re beginning to talk like them.” He walked to the window and stood looking out at the river, his hands in his trouser pockets. “ Y ou know I almost missed it?” he said.
    “Missed what, Mr. Sumner?”
    “The report of this kid’s death. It was buried at the bottom of page five.”
    “Page three.”
    Sumner gave a harsh laugh. “So it was page three! Great.” He turned and came back and tapped hard on Harry’s desk with the tip of a thick, blunt, but perfectly manicured finger. “The point is,” he said, “why the goddamn hell wasn’t it on page one? Why wasn’t it all over page one? Why wasn’t it all of page one, period?”
    “This is a delicate one, Mr. Sumner,” Harry began, but Sumner pushed a hand almost into the editor’s face.
    “Don’t talk to me about delicate,” he said. “What do you think we’re running here? House and Garden ? The Ladies’ Home Journal ?” Now he jammed both elbows into his sides and splayed his hands to right and left over the desk, like an exasperated hoodlum in a gangster film. “It’s a newspaper, for God’s sake! We have a story! One of our very own reporters gets kicked to death and thrown stark naked in the river and you bury it on page five ? Are you a newsman, or what are you?”
    Noosman, Harry repeated to himself, and in his imagination curled a contemptuous lip.
    There was a brief, heavy silence, Sumner leaning over the desk with his hands held out in that menacingly imploring gesture and Harry looking up at him wide-eyed, his mouth open.
    “Canal,” Harry said, before he could stop himself.
    Sumner blinked. “What?”
    “It was the canal he was dropped into, not the river.”
    Sumner, frighteningly quiet, nodded to himself. He let his hands fall to his sides in a gesture of helpless resignation. He pulled up a straight-backed chair and sat down and planted his elbows on the desk. “How long have you been in this job, Harry?” he asked, purring, sounding almost friendly, as if he really wanted to know.
    “A year,” Harry said defensively. “Two, in September.”
    “ Y ou like your work? I mean, you get satisfaction out of it?”
    Harry’s mouth had gone dry again. “Yes, of course,” he said.
    Once again Sumner was nodding. “I’m glad to hear it,” he said. “I like to think the folk working on my newspapers are happy. It gives me satisfaction, to know that you ’re happy. Y ou believe that?” Harry only looked glum, and Sumner smiled, showing his big white teeth. “ Y ou’d better believe it, because it’s true. But you’ve got to realize”—he leaned back and brought out from the breast pocket of his jacket a box of cheroots and flipped open the lid—“I’m in business here. We’re all in business here.”
    The cheroots were of a blackish-brown color, obviously handmade; long and thin and misshapen, they reminded Harry of shriveled dog turds. Sumner selected one, held it up before himself between his fingertips, and gazed at it with satisfaction. Harry pushed a heavy desk lighter towards him but Sumner shook his head and brought out a box of Swan Vestas. “Lighters taste of gasoline,” he said. “A good cheroot deserves a match.”
    He lit up with a flourish, making a business of it, while Harry looked on in dull fascination. Sumner shook the flame until it died, then set the smoldering matchstick carefully on a corner of the desk, ignoring the ashtray Harry was offering, and exhaled with a soft sigh a flaw of blue, dense-smelling smoke. “The point is, Harry,” he said, settling back on the chair and crossing his left ankle on his right knee, “newspapers thrive on—well, you tell me. Come on. Tell me. What do newspapers thrive on, Harry?”
    Harry regarded him helplessly with a glazed stare. By now he felt less like a rabbit than a torn and bloodied mouse that a cat had been toying with for a long time and was about to eat.
    “ Noos, Harry,” Sumner said, almost whispering the word. “That’s what they thrive on— noos .”
    He smoked in silence for a time, smiling to himself and gazing at Harry almost benignly. Harry was bitterly reminding himself that although Sumner had taken over the Clarion less than a year before, obviously he saw himself as an expert at the business.
    Below them, deep in the bowels of the building, the presses were starting up for a dummy

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