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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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woman laughed. “ Y ou’ll be grit ,” she said to the child, who ignored her, and took another puff.
    The water in the kettle began to grumble in its depths.
    The woman, with her eyes still on the child, spoke to Quirke: “Did you ask himself about the sharog ?”
    “Packie, you mean?” he said. “Yes, I asked him.”
    The woman nodded. “That’s why the shade was here, I suppose?”
    “The shade ?”
    “The peeler,” she said impatiently, “the police fellow.” She stood up and opened a small cupboard on the end wall near the stove and took out a billycan and a Campbell’s yellow tea tin. She spooned leaves from the tin into the billycan. They did not seem to be tea leaves; they were of a lightish brown color and looked weightless and brittle. She poured water from the kettle over them, standing close by Quirke, and the odor of her unbathed flesh, biscuity and warm, filled his nostrils.
    The child, still smoking Quirke’s cigarette, was caught by a fit of coughing. She leaned forward, hacking and gasping, until her face took on a bluish pallor. The woman paid her no heed, and at last the attack passed, and the child leaned back again and sat with her head bowed, panting. Quirke took the remaining half of the cigarette from her fingers and dropped it to the floor and ground it under his heel.
    “He was killed,” he said to the woman, “murdered. The young man, I mean, the—what was the word?—the sharog .”
    “Was he now,” the woman said, showing no surprise. She went to the cupboard again and took from it two unmatched teacups and handed one to Quirke; he held it out to her and she filled it from the billycan. “Take a swallow of that,” she said.
    Quirke sniffed at the drink. It had a dry, bitter aroma, like wormwood. He sipped. A sharp taste, too, whiskeyish, slightly rancid, with a hint of peat in it. “What is it?” he asked. The woman did not answer, only watched him. He drank some more of the strange brew. The child’s eyes too were on him again now. Was this woman trying to poison him? It did not seem to matter, really. He leaned back on the bed, and only when the muscles of his back relaxed did he realize how tensely he had been holding himself since he had first sat down.
    He took another drink of the hot, bitter brew. The cup had things painted on it, figures in kimonos, a little lake with a crane flying over it, or a stork, perhaps, and distant, snow-fringed hills. All these tiny details—they had to be real. “Will you tell me about Jimmy Minor?” he said to the woman.
    “Tell you what about him?”
    “Someone, some people, murdered him, and threw his body in the canal.”
    The woman sat down again on the bed. She had poured a little of the stuff from the billycan for herself, but she had hardly touched it. She gazed before her, blank-eyed. “He was here, aye,” she said. “He come to ask about the other one.”
    Quirke waited a moment, then spoke. “What other one?”
    “The cuinne .”
    He drew in a deep, slow breath. “The cuinne ,” he said. “The priest, yes?” He had a swoony sensation, and something inside him seemed to dip and then right itself again with a soundless effort. He heard afar that music again, a soft lament on mouth organ or melodeon. Hohone, hohohonan … “What priest?” he asked. “Father Honan, was it? He came here too, didn’t he? Father Honan?” The name sounded strange to him; it had a soft, keening sound: hohonan, hohone . “Father Mick, they call him.”
    The woman, still gazing before her, now smiled an angry smile. “Aye,” she said, in almost a whisper. “Aye—Father Mick. The other sharog .”
    * * *

    Leaning for support against the wet railings Phoebe watched the man march swiftly away in the rain, swinging his arms, his cap pulled low and his sheepskin jacket drawn tight around him and his boot heels banging on the pavement. Later she remembered thinking that he must have been a soldier at some time. She saw him turn right and cross the little stone bridge, and then he was gone.
    She had thought he was going to kill her. He had seized her wrist and held it in his iron grip, crushing it, and put his face up close to hers and spoken to her in a low harsh voice. His breath was hot and had smelled of drink and of something meaty. She had not wanted to see his eyes and watched his mouth instead. He had a lantern jaw and as he spoke to her he bared his lower teeth. She could barely understand the words he was spitting

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