by Robin Cook
Werner emerged on schedule, turning to secure the door behind him. Philips leaned forward and shaded his eyes in the half-light to make sure it really was Werner. He had changed his clothes, and was now wearing a dark suit, white shirt, and tie. To Martin’s surprise the diener looked like a successful merchant closing his boutique for the night. His gaunt face, which had appeared evil within the morgue, now gave the man an almost aristocratic cast.
Werner turned and hesitated a moment, stretching out an upturned palm to see if it was raining. Satisfied, he set off toward the street. In his right hand he carried a black briefcase. Over his flexed arm dangled a tightly clasped umbrella.
Following from a safe distance, Martin noticed Werner had a strange gait. It wasn’t a limp; it was more like a hop as if one leg was much stronger than the other. But he moved quickly and at a steady pace.
Martin’s hopes that Werner lived close to the hospital were dashed when the man rounded the corner on Broadway and descended the subway stairs. Quickening his step, Philips closed the gap, taking the stairs two at a time. At first he did not see Werner. Apparently the man had had a token. Philips hastily purchased one, and went through the turnstile. The IRT elevator was empty, so Philips jogged down the sloping passage toward the IND platform. As he rounded the corner, he caught sight of Werner’s head just disappearing down the stairs to the downtown platform.
Pulling a newspaper out of a waste bin, Philips pretended to read. Werner was only thirty feet away, sitting on one of the molded plastic chairs, engrossed in a book on, of all things, “Opening Chess Moves.” In the pasty white subway light, Philips could better appreciate the man’s attire. His suit was dark blue, and Edwardian, cut in at the sides. His closely cropped hair had been freshly brushed; with his high-boned, suntanned cheeks, he looked like a Prussian general. The only thing that marred his appearance was his shoes. They were badly scuffed and in need of polish.
With the hospital shift just changing, the subway platform was crowded with nurses, orderlies, and technicians. When the downtown express thundered into the station, Werner boarded and Philips followed. The diener sat on the train like a statue with his book in front of him; his deeply set eyes darted back and forth across the pages. His briefcase, clasped between his knees, stood upright on the floor. Philips sat halfway down the car across from a handsome Spanish fellow in a polyester suit.
At each stop, Martin was ready to disembark, but Werner never budged. As they passed Fifty-ninth Street, Philips became concerned. Perhaps Werner was not going directly home. For some reason that possibility had never occurred to Philips. He was relieved when he finally followed the diener off at Forty-second Street. It was now no longer a question of whether Werner was going home or not. Now it was a question of how long was he going to spend wherever he was headed. Philips felt foolish and discouraged when he reached the street.
The night people were out in force. Despite the hour and the damp chill, Forty-second Street was ablaze with its garish sights. The nattily dressed Werner ignored the bizarre and grotesque people who jostled one another in front of the pornographic movie houses and bookstores. He seemed to be accustomed to the world’s psychosexual perversions. For Philips it was different. It was as if the alien world willfully impaired his progress, forcing him to twist and turn and even step into the street occasionally to pass clotted groups of humanity while he kept Werner in sight. Ahead he saw Werner abruptly turn and enter an adult bookstore.
Martin stopped outside. He decided he’d give Werner an hour of this nonsense. If the diener did not go back to his apartment within that time, Philips would give up. Waiting, Martin soon discovered he was fair game for a host of solicitors, peddlers, and outright beggars. They were an insistent lot, and to avoid their entreaties, Philips changed his mind and entered the store.
Just inside, situated in a pulpit-like balcony near the ceiling, sat a lavender-haired, hard-looking woman who peered down at Philips. Her eyes, deeply set above dark circles, wandered over Martin’s body as she assessed his suitability for admission. Averting his gaze, embarrassed for anyone to see him in such a location, he walked down the nearest aisle. Werner was not in sight!
A customer pushed past Philips with his arms limply at his sides so that his hands brushed across Philips’ backside. It wasn’t until the man was already past that Martin realized what had happened. It made him sick, and he almost shouted out, but the last thing he wanted to do was to call attention to himself.
He moved around the shop to make sure Werner couldn’t be hidden behind one of the bookshelves or magazine racks. The lavender-haired woman in her crow’s nest seemed to follow every movement Philips made, so to appear less suspicious he picked up a magazine, but he discovered it was sealed in plastic wrap and he put it back. On the cover were two men acrobatically coupling.
Suddenly, Werner emerged from a door in the back of the shop and walked past the startled Philips, who quickly turned away to fondle some pornographic video cassettes. But Werner looked neither right nor left. It was as if he were wearing blinders. He was out of the shop in seconds.
Martin delayed as long as he thought he could without losing Werner. He didn’t want it too apparent that he was following the man, but as he exited, the woman in the balcony leaned over and watched him go out the door. She knew he was up to something.
Reaching the street, Philips caught sight of Werner getting into a taxi. Frightened that he might lose him after all his effort, Philips leaped from the curb and frantically waved for a cab. One stopped across the street and Philips dodged the traffic to jump in.
“Follow that Checker cab behind the bus,” said Philips excitedly.
The cabby just looked at him.
“Come on,” insisted Philips.
The man shrugged and put the car in gear. “You some sort of cop?”
Martin didn’t answer. He felt the less conversation the better. Werner got out at Fifty-second and Second Avenue; Martin got out about one hundred feet back from the corner and ran up to the end of the block, looking after him. Werner entered a shop three doors away.
Crossing the avenue Martin looked over at the store. It was called “Sexual Aids.” It was very different from the adult bookstore on Forty-second Street with a very conservative exterior. Glancing around, Philips noticed that it was situated among antique shops, fashionable restaurants, and expensive boutiques. Looking up he could tell the apartment buildings were all middle class. It was a good neighborhood.
Werner appeared at the door accompanied by another man who was laughing and had his arm over the diener’s shoulder. Werner smiled and shook hands with the man before setting out, walking up Second Avenue. Philips fell in behind him, keeping a safe distance.
If he had had any inkling that following Werner was going to entail all these stops, he wouldn’t have done it. As it was, he kept expecting the odyssey to terminate. But Werner had other ideas. He crossed over to Third Avenue, making his way up to Fifty-fifth Street, where he entered a small building huddled in the shadow of a glass and cement skyscraper. It was a saloon that looked as if it stood in a 1920’s photograph.
After debating with himself, Martin followed, afraid that he might lose Werner if he didn’t keep him in view. To Philips’ amazement the establishment was jammed with animated customers despite the hour, and he had to squeeze inside. It was a popular singles bar, again unfamiliar turf for Philips.
Scanning the crowd for Werner, Philips was shocked to see him immediately to his left. He was holding a mug of beer and smiling to a blond secretary. Philips pulled his hat a little lower on his head.
“What do you do?” asked the secretary, shouting to be heard over the din of voices.
“I’m a doctor,” said Werner. “A pathologist.”
“Really,” said the secretary, obviously impressed.
“It’s got its good and bad points,” said Werner. “I usually have to work late, but maybe you’d like to have a drink sometime.”
“I�
��d love it,” shouted the woman.
Martin pushed up to the bar wondering if the girl had any idea what she was getting herself into. He ordered a beer, and worked his way over to the back wall, where he found a spot from which he could observe Werner. Sipping his drink, Martin began to appreciate the absurdity of the situation. After all his years of education, he was in a singles bar in the middle of the night, following a bizarre individual who looked frighteningly normal. In fact, when Philips glanced around he was impressed with how easily Werner merged with the businessmen and lawyers.
After taking the secretary’s phone number, the diener polished off his beer, gathered his belongings, and caught another cab on Third Avenue. Martin had a short argument with his taxi driver about following, but it was solved by a five-dollar bill.
The ride passed in silence. Philips watched the city lights until they were blurred by an abrupt downpour. The cab’s windshield wipers hurried to keep ahead of the rain. They crossed town on Fifty-seventh; went diagonally north on Broadway from Columbus Circle, then turned onto Amsterdam Avenue. Philips recognized Columbia University when they passed it on the left. The rain let up as suddenly as it had started. On One-hundred-forty-first they turned right, and Philips sat forward and asked what section of town they were in. “Hamilton Heights,” said the driver, turning left on Hamilton Terrace, and then slowing down.
Ahead, Werner’s taxi stopped. Philips paid his fare and got out. Although the cityscape on Amsterdam Avenue had deteriorated as they’d gone north, Philips now found himself in a surprisingly attractive neighborhood. The street was lined with quaint town houses whose varying facades reflected about every architectural school since the Renaissance. Most of the buildings clearly had been renovated, others were in the process. At the end of the street, facing down Hamilton Terrace, Werner entered a white limestone-fronted building whose windows were surrounded with Venetian Gothic decoration.
By the time Philips got to the building, the lights had gone on in the third-floor windows. Up close, the town house was not in such good condition as it appeared from afar, but its shoddiness did not detract from its overall effect; it gave Philips a feeling of tarnished elegance, and he was impressed by Werner’s ability to provide for himself.
Entering the foyer, Philips acknowledged that he was not going to be able to surprise Werner by knocking directly on his door. As in Denise’s apartment, there was a locked foyer with individual buzzers to the various apartments. Helmut Werner’s name was third from the bottom.
Putting his finger on the buzzer, Philips hesitated, not sure if he wanted to go through with the whole thing. He wasn’t even sure what he should say, but the thought of Kristin Lindquist gave him courage. He pressed the button and waited.
“Who is it?” Werner’s voice, laden with static, issued from a tiny speaker.
“Dr. Philips. I’ve got some money for you, Werner. Big money.”
There was a moment or two of silence and Martin could feel his pulse.
“Who else is with you, Philips?”
“No one.”
A raucous buzz filled the once sumptuous foyer and Philips pushed through the door. He headed up the stairs for the third floor. Behind the sole door he could hear multiple locks being released. The door opened slightly so that a sliver of light cut across Philips’ face. He could see one of Werner’s deeply set eyes looking at him. The brow was raised in apparent surprise. A chain was then removed and the door swung open.
Martin stepped briskly into the room, forcing Werner to back up to avoid a collision. In the center of the room Martin stopped.
“I don’t mind paying, my friend,” he said with as much assertiveness as he could muster. “But I want to find out what happened to Lisa Marino’s brain.”
“How much you willing to pay?” Werner’s hands were opening and closing rhythmically.
“Five hundred dollars,” said Philips. He wanted the amount to sound enticing without being ridiculous.
Werner’s thin mouth pulled back in a smile so that deep lines appeared in his hollow cheeks. His teeth were small and square.
“Are you sure you’re alone?” asked Werner.
Philips nodded.
“Where’s the money?”
“Right here.” Philips patted his left breast.
“All right,” said Werner. “What do you want to know?”
“Everything,” said Philips.
Werner shrugged his shoulders. “It’s a long story.”
“I got the time.”
“I was just going to eat. You want to eat?”
Philips shook his head. His stomach was a tense knot.
“Suit yourself.” Werner turned and with his characteristic gait, went into the kitchen. Philips followed, allowing himself a quick glance at the apartment. The walls were some sort of red velvet, the furniture Victorian. The room had a sleazy, heavy elegance, which was enhanced by the low-level illumination coming from a single Tiffany lamp. On the table was Werner’s briefcase. A Polaroid camera, which had apparently been in the case, lay next to it, along with a stack of photos.
The kitchen was a small room with a sink, a tiny stove, and a refrigerator, the likes of which Martin hadn’t seen since his childhood. It was a porcelain-surfaced box with a cylindrical coil on top. Werner opened the refrigerator and removed a sandwich and a bottled beer. From a drawer beneath the sink, he got an opener and removed the cap from the beer, putting the opener back where he got it.
Holding up the beer, Werner said, “Would you care for a drink?”
Philips shook his head. The diener came out of the kitchen and Philips backed up. At the dining-room table Werner pushed his briefcase and Polaroid to one side, motioning Martin to sit. The diener took a long draught of beer, then burped loudly as he set the bottle down. The longer he delayed, the less confident Philips felt. He had lost his initial advantage of surprise. To keep his hands from trembling, he put them on his knees. His eyes were glued to Werner, watching every move.
“Nobody can live on a diener’s salary,” said Werner.
Philips nodded, waiting. Werner took a bite of his sandwich.
“You know I come from the old country,” said Werner with his mouth full, “from Rumania. It’s not a nice story because the Nazis killed my family and took me back to Germany when I was five years old. That was the age I started handling corpses in Dachau . . . .” Werner went on to tell his story in grisly detail, how his parents had been killed, how he’d been treated in the concentration camps, and how he was forced to live with the dead. The gruesome story went on and on and Werner did not spare Martin a single repulsive chapter. Philips tried on several occasions to interrupt the ghastly tale, but Werner persisted and Philips felt his fixity of purpose melt like wax before a hot coal.
“Then I came to America,” said Werner, finishing his beer with a loud sucking sound. He scraped back his chair and went into the kitchen for another. Philips, numb from the story, watched him from the table. “I got a job with the medical school in the morgue,” yelled Werner as he opened the drawer beneath the sink. Below the bottle opener were several large autopsy knives Werner had spirited out of the morgue when autopsies were still done on the old marble slab. He grasped one of them, and point first, slid the knife up inside the left sleeve of his jacket. “But I needed more money than the salary.” He opened the beer bottle and replaced the opener. Closing the drawer, he turned and came back toward the table.
“I only want to know about Lisa Marino,” said Martin, limply. Werner’s life story had made Philips conscious of his physical fatigue.
“I’m coming to that,” said Werner. He took a sip from the fresh beer, then put it on the table. “I started making extra money around the morgue when anatomy was more popular than it is now. Lots of little things. Then I hit on the idea of pictures. I sell them on Forty-second Street. I’ve been doing it for years.” With one of his arms Werner made a gesture of introduction around his apartment.
Philips let hi
s eyes roam the dimly lit room. He’d vaguely been aware the red velvet walls were covered with pictures. Now when he looked, he realized the pictures were lewd, gruesome photos of nude female corpses. Philips slowly turned his attention back to the leering Werner.
“Lisa Marino was one of my best models,” said Werner. He picked up the pile of Polaroid shots on the table and dumped them in Philips’ lap. “Look at them. They’re bringing top dollar, especially on Second Avenue. Take your time. I’ve got to go to the bathroom. It’s the beer; it goes right through me.”
Werner walked around the stunned Philips and disappeared through the bedroom door. Martin reluctantly looked down at the sickeningly sadistic photos of Lisa Marino’s corpse. He was afraid to touch them, as if the mental aberration they represented might rub off on his fingers. Werner had obviously misinterpreted Philips’ interest. Perhaps the diener didn’t know anything about the missing brain, and his suspicious behavior was only owing to his illicit trade in necrophilic photos. Philips felt the stirrings of nausea.
Werner had gone through the bedroom and into the bathroom. He ran the water at a rate that sounded like someone urinating and, reaching into his sleeve, he extracted the long slender autopsy knife. He grabbed it in his right hand like a dagger, then moved silently back through the bedroom.
Philips was sitting fifteen feet away, his back to Werner, his head bowed, looking at the photos in his lap. Werner paused just beyond the bedroom doorway. His slender fingers tightened around the worn wooden handle of the knife and he pressed his lips tightly together.
Philips picked up the pictures and lifted them in preparation of putting them face-down on the table. He got them as far as his chest when he was aware of motion behind him. He started to turn. There was a scream!
The knife blade plunged down just behind the right clavicle at the base of the neck, slicing through the upper lobe of the lung before piercing the right pulmonary artery. Blood poured into the opened bronchus, causing a reflex agonal cough, which sent the blood hurling from the mouth in a ballistic arc over the top of Philips’ head, drenching the table in front of him.