"Assassins of Athens" - читать интересную книгу автора (Siger Jeffrey)12They arrived at the bar and parked up the street to wait for the place to open. Andreas wanted the undivided attention of the owner, unencumbered by the demands of a busy late-night crowd. From outside, the place wasn't large as bars go; no more than twelve feet wide at most, with just two small windows, one on each side of a single glossy black door that opened directly onto the street. The windows were done in an opaque, black and silver handcuff motif, leaving no doubt to the casual observer just what sort of place this was; even though no one could tell from the outside what actually was going on within THE RAMROD. That name was announced in all white letters on both windows. A man dressed in a business suit walked up to the door and went inside. 'Well, I guess it's open for business. Time to move.' Andreas opened his car door. Kouros was quiet as they walked toward the bar. He hadn't spoken for quite a while. When they got to the front door, Andreas put his hand on Kouros' arm to stop him. 'One thing, Yianni, I want you to keep whatever feelings you have about this sort of place in check. Do you understand?' No answer. 'I said, "Do you understand?"' Kouros exhaled. 'Yes, Chief.' 'Good, let's go in.' Andreas went through the door first. There was no one inside, and it was not what he expected. A light-colored, well-worn wooden bar with a brass footrail ran for about twenty feet along the left wall. It stood in front of an even longer mirror reflecting three ascending rows of liquor bottles. Four faintly glowing casino-style lights in amber-colored glass hung equidistant over the bar. A dozen matching wooden stools lined the bar. The floor was dark, likely old marble, and there were no tables to be seen. This was where customers mingled. For sitting and other nonvertical activities they had to find someplace else. At the back of the room were two doors. The one to the right was marked WC, the other unmarked, but if it led to the outside it should be marked with an exit sign. Just beyond the far end of the bar on the left was an open doorway leading to what looked to be a hallway. Andreas walked over and stared through the doorway. This place was bigger than it appeared from outside. There was a closed, unmarked door directly across from where he stood. The hallway ran for about thirty feet straight back to another door, this one marked EXIT. On the wall to the right was another unmarked door. From its location Andreas guessed it led to the same place as the unmarked door in the back of the bar room. Separate entrances for patrons trying to hook up discreetly with each other, perhaps. As for what went on once inside those doors- 'Excuse me, can I help you?' It was the voice of a man coming through the unmarked doorway next to the toilet. Andreas turned and smiled. 'I certainly hope so.' Andreas could tell the man was checking them out. Only natural. Andreas was doing the same thing. Hard not to: the man's appearance demanded attention. He was about fifty years old, five-foot-ten, stocky, but not fat, with a gleaming, bald head and jet-black handlebar mustache. He wore a silver velveteen shirt, embroidered in a white floral pattern set off by pearl buttons. A thick silver German cross on an even thicker silver chain hung around his neck. His pants were black leather, his shoes black Pumas with silver laces. This was a man in his element, and certainly not the man in the business suit, wherever he might be at the moment. 'Are you the owner?' Andreas asked. 'Who's asking?' The guy knew how to be belligerent. Andreas didn't answer, just pulled his ID out from beneath his shirt and showed it to him. Kouros did the same. 'Okay, yeah, this is my place. Name's Pericles. What can I do for you?' His tone hadn't changed. Maybe that's just the way he was. 'We're here about the body in the dumpster.' 'I already told the cops everything I know.' 'Well, we just have a few more questions. Mind if we sit down?' Andreas gestured toward the bar. Pericles grunted, 'Go ahead.' Andreas hoped he might be more comfortable talking to them across a bar, something, from the looks of the place, he'd been doing for decades. The man walked behind the bar and stood in front of them. 'Want something?' 'Just water would be fine, thanks,' said Andreas. 'And you?' He was looking at Kouros. No answer. He reached under the bar and handed Andreas a bottle of water. 'A glass?' 'No, thanks, this is fine.' He looked back at Kouros. 'You want a glass to share your buddy's water?' Again Kouros said nothing, but his facial expression tightened. The man didn't seem to notice, or maybe just didn't care. 'So, like I said, what can I do for you?' 'I was wondering if you noticed anything strange or out of the ordinary that night.' No need to tell him which night. The guy knew what this was about. He smiled. 'Strange and out of the ordinary happen here every night.' Andreas laughed. 'Okay, but you know what I mean.' 'No, it was just a typical Saturday night. No rowdies, no problems.' 'Any strangers?' 'Sure, it's the nature of the place.' 'What about when you were closing up? Anything different? Anybody come in, look around, and leave?' 'That happens all the time, too. I don't even notice anymore, except when they yell something. It's mostly kids who do that, just before they run out. Usually on some dare that if they hassle gays it proves their manhood. You know the type.' He looked at Kouros. Andreas looked down at the bottle of water and drummed his fingers on the bar thinking, this guy's picked up on Kouros' vibe and is into busting his balls. Better get out of here. He's got nothing to tell us anyway. He turned to Kouros. 'Anything to add?' Kouros was tight-lipped and gestured no. Andreas stood up and pulled a card out of his pocket. 'Well, thanks for your time, sir, and if you think of anything, please give me a call.' 'No problem.' He stared at the card. 'Hey, you know, come to think of it, there was one guy. But he didn't just come in and leave. He sat here for about two hours.' 'Was that unusual?' asked Andreas. 'Not really, he just sat quietly on that stool,' he pointed to the one closest to the front door, 'sipping a Coke and not talking to anybody. Once in a while he'd make a phone call on his mobile.' 'Then why him?' 'Well, it was late and I wanted to close up, but I had two regulars at the bar and this guy.' He pointed again to the bar stool by the door. 'They wouldn't leave.' 'What about back there?' Andreas pointed to the unmarked door next to the one for the toilet. Pericles hesitated. 'No one was in there. Besides,' he grinned, 'all we have to do to empty out that place is slowly turn up its lights. Anyway, my guy took out the garbage, mopped the floors, and I started turning out the lights in here. Finally, the two regulars got up to leave.' Andreas interrupted him. 'What about the other guy?' 'That's the strange part. He hadn't talked to anyone all night, but when the two headed toward the back door he ran after them and dragged them back in from the hallway as if they were old friends, saying "Let's have another drink on me." I was pissed. I wanted to close, but he gave me a hundred euro tip, so I stayed open another half-hour. He seemed an okay guy. Interesting, too.' 'What did he talk about?' 'That's what made him interesting, he had a real knack for getting everyone to talk about themselves without giving away a thing about himself. I overheard everything they said. I had nothing left to do but listen, and all I heard were stories my regulars had repeated a hundred times before. But that guy made them think it was the very first time they told them, and that he genuinely was interested in every single word.' 'Sounds like a guy trying to get laid.' It was Kouros. 'My god, you can speak.' Pericles smiled. 'Yes, I suppose it does, but if you ask me, this wasn't a guy looking for that. At least not in here, anyway.' 'He was straight?' Andreas didn't sound surprised. 'In my professional opinion, yes.' He smiled. 'How can you be sure?' 'Ahh, he speaks a second time.' Pericles smiled at Kouros. Andreas touched Kouros' elbow to remind him to keep his cool. Pericles looked at Andreas. 'I have great gaydar. I can tell who is straight and-' he shifted his look to Kouros, 'who's in the closet.' Kouros didn't budge. He just stared at Pericles, blew him a kiss and said, 'In your wettest, wildest dreams, old man.' The two glared at each other. 'Cool it, both of you. Yianni, this is Pericles' place, show some respect, and Pericles, stay serious, this is a murder investigation.' The glaring didn't stop. Andreas figured it was only a matter of seconds before World War III broke out. 'Yianni, wait in the car.' His voice was sharp. Kouros looked at Andreas. 'I said, wait in the car.' It was in the unmistakable tone of an order. Kouros gave a hard look at Pericles, slid off the stool, and left. Andreas decided not to ask any more questions until things cooled down a bit. After a few minutes, Pericles began wiping the top of the bar. 'Ever see the guy any other time?' 'No.' 'Happen to get a name?' He exhaled and put the rag under the bar. 'It was Niko or something, but I'm sure it wasn't real. Most don't use real ones in here.' 'Do you remember what he looked like?' Pericles shut his eyes. 'He was about five and a half feet tall, slim. Dark hair, dark eyes, and light skin. He was in his thirties, I'd say, but tried to look younger. Don't we all.' He opened his eyes. 'What do you mean "tried to look younger"?' 'He wore jeans and a tee shirt like kids do, and his hair was long, like a college student's.' 'Anything else?' Pericles shut his eyes for a few seconds and opened them. 'Yes. He had a beard. Well, not really a beard, I think it's called a chin strip.' 'A what?' 'One of those thin little things that run from here to here.' He pinched his fingers together just below the center of his lower lip and drew them down to the bottom of his chin. 'You might say it was a very gay-looking beard.' He smiled. Andreas smiled back. 'Anything else?' 'No. As soon as he got a phone call he was out of here.' 'That's it?' 'That's it.' 'Thanks,' said Andreas. Pericles smiled. 'I want to say thanks, too.' He put his right hand across the bar. Andreas nodded, shook the man's hand, and left – to deal with Kouros. The car was rocking from Andreas' anger. He was shouting, shaking his fists, and pounding on the dash. The bottom line: no matter how much Andreas liked him and respected his abilities, if Kouros couldn't control himself and keep his personal feelings in check, he couldn't work for Andreas. It made him too easy to manipulate. Andreas couldn't have made it clearer had he tattooed his words inside Kouros' eyelids, undoubtedly a far more pleasant experience than the one Kouros was enduring at the moment. 'This is your last chance! Do you understand me?' Kouros' chin hadn't left his chest since Andreas slammed the car door and started in on him. 'Yes, sir.' It was said in about as meek a voice as Andreas could imagine coming from someone Kouros' size. 'Good, then let's never talk about this subject again.' Andreas drew in a deep breath, exhaled and told Kouros to drive to headquarters. Kouros didn't say a word. The silence was uncomfortable. Andreas tried breaking the tension by filling him in on what Pericles had said after Kouros left the bar. 'Chief.' His voice was tentative. 'Yes.' 'That guy at the bar, the one who, uhh, didn't belong.' 'Yes.' Andreas wondered where this was headed. 'Doesn't he sound familiar?' 'Not particularly.' 'At the coffee shop, where Anna worked, the guy at that back table who said he saw the two who killed the boy. You asked me before to speak to her about him, and I planned on doing that first thing tomorrow. The description of the guy in the bar sounds just like him.' But for their recent conversation, Andreas would have kissed him. 'Damn it, Yianni, you're right!' He'd been so angry at Kouros, he'd missed it. 'Want to head over to that coffee shop and try to find him?' Andreas shook his head no. 'Not yet. I want to find out who we're dealing with first.' 'I have the information from his ID and prints back in the office.' 'Good, because if he was in that bar…' 'He was the lookout.' 'Explains the phone calls and why he stopped those two from going out the back door. The gorillas must have been in the middle of dumping the body.' 'That last phone call had to be the all-clear, telling him to leave! I'll get someone to pull his phone records. Maybe we'll get lucky and come up with something.' Andreas was happy to hear excitement back in Kouros' voice. He turned his head slightly toward him. 'Good thinking, Yianni.' 'Thanks, Chief.' Andreas noticed a bit of a smile. |
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