William Monk 08 - The Silent Cry Read Online Free

William Monk 08 - The Silent Cry
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the attendant asked.
    “No,” Evan said miserably. “No idea, so far.”
    The attendant grunted. “Come in from St. Giles, didn’t ’e? Reckon as yer’ll never find out, then. Nobody from there says nothin’ on their own. Poor devil. ’Ad a few garroters in from there. ’E must ’a crossed someone proper ter get beat like that. Don’t need ter do that ter no one just ter rob ’im. Gambler maybe.”
    “Maybe.” The name of the tailor was on the inside of the jacket. Evan had made a note of that, and the address. It might be sufficient to identify the victim. “Where is Dr. Riley?”
    “Up on the wards, I s’pec, if ’e in’t bin called out again. Fair make use of ’im, you rozzers do.”
    “Not of my choice, I promise you,” Evan said wearily. “I’d much rather not have the need.”
    The attendant sighed and ran his fingers through his hair. He said nothing.
    Evan went up the stairs and along the corridors, asking, until he found Riley coming out of one of the operating theaters, jacket off, shirtsleeves rolled up, his arms spattered with blood.
    “Just taken out a bullet,” he said cheerfully. “Damn fool accident. Marvelous thing, this new anesthetic. Never saw anything like it in my youth. Best thing to happen in medicinesince … I don’t know what! Maybe it’s just the best thing—straight and simple. I suppose you’ve come about your corpse from St. Giles?” He shoved his hands into his pockets. He looked tired. There were fine lines crisscrossing his face, and a smear of blood over his brow and another on his cheek where he had rubbed his hand without realizing it.
    Evan nodded.
    A medical student walked past them, whistling between his teeth until he recognized Riley, then he stopped and straightened his shoulders.
    “Beaten to death,” Riley said, pursing his lips. “No wound from any weapon … unless you count fists and boots as weapons. No knife, no gun, no cudgel as far as I can judge. Nothing to the head more than a flat concussion from falling onto the cobbles. Wouldn’t have killed him, probably not even knocked him senseless. Probably just stunned and a little dizzy. Died of internal hemorrhage. Ruptured organs. Sorry.”
    “Could one man alone have done that to him?”
    Riley thought for quite a long time before he replied, standing still in the middle of the passage, oblivious of blocking the way for others.
    “Hard to say. Wouldn’t like to commit myself. Taking that body alone, without considering the circumstances, I’d guess more than one assailant. If it was only one man, then he was a raving lunatic to do that to another man. He must have gone berserk.”
    “And with considering the circumstances?” Evan pressed, stepping to one side to allow a nurse to pass with a bundle of laundry.
    “Well, the boy’s still alive, and if he survives tonight, he might recover,” Riley answered. “Too soon to say. But to take on both of them, and do that much damage, I’d say two assailants who were both big and well used to violence, or possibly even three. Or else again, two complete lunatics.”
    “Could they have fought each other?”
    Riley looked surprised. “And left themselves damn near dead on the pavement? Not very likely.”
    “But possible?” Evan insisted.
    Riley shook his head. “Don’t think you’ll find the answer is that easy, Sergeant. The younger man is taller. The older one was a bit plump; he was well muscled, quite powerful. He’d have taken a lot of beating, considering he was fighting for his life. And there was no weapon to give the advantage.”
    “Can you tell if the wounds were made attacking or defending?”
    “Mostly defending, as well as I can judge, but it’s only a deduction made from their position, on forearms, as if he were putting up his arms to protect his head. He may have begun by attacking. He certainly landed a few blows, judging from his knuckles. Someone else is going to be badly marked, whether it is anywhere
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