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In Death 16 - Portrait in Death

In Death 16 - Portrait in Death

Titel: In Death 16 - Portrait in Death
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glance at the man under her foot. "Shut up. Name," she demanded, pointing at the shopkeeper.
     
     
"Remke. Waldo Remke." He fisted his bruised hands on his narrow hips. "I want to file charges."
     
     
"Yeah, yeah. This your place?" She gestured toward the deli behind her.
     
     
"Been mine for eighteen years, and my father's place before that. We pay taxes-"
     
     
"I heard that part. This your bin?"
     
     
"We paid for that bin twenty times over. Me, Costello, and Mintz." While sweat ran down his face, he jerked a thumb toward two men standing behind him. "And half the time it's broken. You smell that? You fucking smell that? Who's gonna come in our places to do business with that stink out here? This is the third time one of us has called for repair in the last six weeks. They never do shit."
     
     
There were mutters and murmurs of agreement from the crowd, and some joker called out: Death to fascists!
     
     
With the heat, the stink, and the blood already spilled, Eve knew the harmless neighborhood crowd could turn into a mob on a dime.
     
     
"Mr. Remke, I want you, Mr. Costello, and Mr. Mintz to step back. The rest of you people, get busy somewhere else."
     
     
She heard the rapid clop behind her that could only be cop shoes on pavement. "Peabody," she said without turning, "move this crowd along before they find a rope and lynch this guy."
     
     
A little breathless, Peabody jogged up beside Eve. "Yes, sir. We need you people to disperse. Please go about your business."
     
     
The sight of the uniform, even though it was already wilting in the heat, had most of the crowd sidling away. Peabody adjusted her sunshades and her hat, both of which had tipped during her jog up the sidewalk.
     
     
Her square face was a bit shiny with perspiration, but behind the tinted lenses, her dark eyes were steady. She shifted them to the bin, then to Eve. "Lieutenant?"
     
     
"Yeah. Name," she said and tapped her boot on the city worker's chest.
     
     
"Larry Poole. Look, Lieutenant, I'm just doing my job. I come out here in response to a repair call, and this guy's up my ass."
     
     
"When did you get here?"
     
     
"I ain't been here ten minutes. Son of a bitch didn't even give me a chance to look at the bin before he's in my face."
     
     
"You're going to look at it now. I don't want any trouble from you," she said to Remke.
     
     
"I want to file a complaint." He folded his arms, and curled his lip when Eve helped Poole up.
     
     
"They dump all kinda shit in here," Poole began. "That's the problem, see? They don't use the proper slots. If you dump organic in the nonorganic side, it stinks up the whole business."
     
     
He limped to the bin, then took his time strapping on his filter mask. "All they gotta do is follow directions, but no, they'd rather complain every five fricking minutes."
     
     
"How's the lock work?"
     
     
"Got a code. See they rent it from the city, and the city keeps the codes. My scanner reads the code, then... Crap, this one's busted."
     
     
"I told you it was busted."
     
     
With some dignity, Poole straightened, and stared at Remke with his blackened eyes. "The lock and seal's busted. Kids do that sometimes. It ain't my damn fault. Who the hell knows why kids do the shit they do? Probably busted it last night, dumped some dead cat inside from the smell of it."
     
     
"I'm not paying because your locks are defective," Remke began.
     
     
"Mr. Remke," Eve warned. "Save it. It's unlocked, unsealed?" she asked Poole.
     
     
"Yeah. Now I'm gonna have to call a crew down here for cleanup. Damn kids." He started to pry up the lid, but Eve slapped a hand down on his.
     
     
"Would you step back, please. Peabody?"
     
     
The smell was already making her queasy, but Peabody knew it was about to get worse. "Wish I hadn't had that egg pocket on the way here."
     
     
Eve got a grip on the lid, shook her head at her aide. "You eat that crap? What's wrong with you?"
     
     
"They're pretty good, really. And it's a quick fix." She sucked in a breath, held it. Nodded. Together they pushed up the heavy lid.
     
     
The stench of death poured out.
     
     
She'd been crammed into the organic side of the bin. Only half her face showed. Eve could see her eyes had been green-a sharp, bottle green. And she'd been young, probably pretty.
     
     
Death, spurred on by the heat, had bloated her obscenely.
     
     
"What the hell did they put in there?" Poole pushed up, looked inside. Then
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