muscleâas a good autopsiest will tell you, Nathan.â
âYou can as well wait outside, Alastair,â replied Kohler.
Tewes quickly added, âThe boy let go of this earthly coil believing himself reunited with loved ones on the other side.â
âIâm glad you think so, Dr. Tewes,â piped in the cynical and equally skeptical Carmichael. âReunited now in the celestial realms.â
âThat is correct.â
âAnd precisely what part of his skull told you this, Doctor?â asked Ransom.
âI see through touch, Mr. Carmichael, Inspector Ransom.â Tewes addressed the skeptics without looking away from the black orbs thatâd once been two distinct human eyes. âI saw what was in his heart moments before death.â
Carmichael vigorously pursued. âAnd just what sort of arrangement do you have with Chief Kohlerâs CPD?â
âI hired Dr. Tewes for his special talents, Mr. Carmichael!â announced Kohler. âAs Ransom has brought me no results!â
Tewes had gone back to reading the severed head.
Ransom frowned and thought Tewes a wily con artist indeedâsmart. Smart enough to know not to lock verbal horns with Carmichael. Ransom too thought of the corruption in the department, and the sleaze at all levels of city governmentâpolitics these days, synonymous with corruptionâinviting in every sort of hoax and con game and pork barrel, and hair-brained scheme imaginable, and some not so imaginable like this. He thought of the payoffs heâd himself made over the years to people like Carmichael to keep them in line, and he thought of the bribes heâd himself pocketed over the yearsâthe way of this place called Chicago by the indigenous Indian tribes like the Sauk, the Pottawatomie, and the Blackhawk, all of whom referred to the immense wild onion fields surrounding Fort Dearborn as Chicago ââland of mighty stench.â The stench of wildonion had been replaced by the stench of slaughterhouses and politics, so that Chicago remained apropos.
Certainly, the story of any cityâs development was, after all, a story of crime and corruption, but somehow Chicago had been born in a greater cesspool of greed and on a grander scale of graft than any other before or since. Perhaps it was due to having been reborn in fire in seventy-two in the thick of the Guilded Age.
Still, in all his years in the mud hole, Ransom hadnât a dime to show for it. He had always meant to rectify this with some large-scale land scheme or venture of his own, but nothing of this nature had ever come about.
Ransomâs thoughts drifted back now to the victim, and how many other ways the foolishly naive and innocent were routinely plucked in Chicago.
Stationmaster Parthipans said, âTrain schedules might indicate when the young man got off an inbound train, or if he were boarding an outgoing train, if we had a name.â
âHis name isâ¦was Clifftonâ¦Cliffton Purvis of Davenport, Iowaâ¦â said Tewes.
Griffin had stepped into the office at this moment, blinking dumbly, astonished at this assertion. In fact, the room erupted with a collective groan of wonder.
Ransom immediately challenged with, âAnd just how would you know that?â His mind raced with possible explanations: Tewes must have previous knowledgeâas the features were recognizable through the soot and burned portions of flesh, along with portions of clothing, or perhaps some item on the body? Certainly, the dead boyâs head hadnât imparted a name!
Tewes lifted his smut-covered white gloves and spread-eagled his fingers. âPhrenology told me so.â
âYeah, and I believe in the tooth fairy.â
Meanwhile, Parthipans had rushed to his records and had begun flipping through ticket stubs. âSorry, Dr. Tewes. Thereâs no Purvis purchasing a ticket either inbound or outbound according to records.â
âHe
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