bet. He fell right into his buddy’s broken-off whiskey bottle.”
“Sad,” Joe said.
“It’s always sad,” Frank said. “That’s the thing—death is sad. Except…”
Curiously, Joe turned back to him. “Except?”
Frank shrugged. “Every once in a while, I get someone in here who was dying of cancer or something. I cut them open, and it’s horrifying what disease does to them on the inside. But on the outside, hell, sometimes it’s as if they’re actually smiling. Like death was a release from god-awful pain.” He shrugged. “You get used to it. Then again—hell, you should know this—you never get used to it. And if you did, you’d suck at your job.”
“Dr. Arbitter?”
A young woman was standing in the open door.
“Connie?” Frank said.
“They need you in reception.”
“Be right back,” Frank told Joe.
Joe started to protest. He needed to get going. But Frank had already gone to see to whatever business had summoned him away.
Joe looked over at the body, and suddenly the corpse’s head turned, and the grizzled old man opened his eyes. Hey, you. Yeah, you, buddy. You can see me, and you can hear me. You tell Vinny I said fuck you! You tell him he’s going to get his. He can get that crack-freak friend of his to pay his bail, but he’s going to go down out on the streets. You tell him. He ain’t going to have a moment’s peace. You tell him, you hear me? Damn you, you hear me?
Joe felt frozen, staring at the corpse.
This was bullshit.
It was all in his mind.
Hell, he must have had even more to drink last night than he’d thought.
The door behind him swung open again. He spun around. Frank had returned, muttering. “With all today’s technology, these clerks still can’t spell. Who the hell mistakes the word breast for beast? ”
Joe looked back at the body.
It was just a corpse again.
Old Hank couldn’t get any deader.
“Joe? You all right?” Frank asked. “Hell, man, you’re as white as if you’d seen a ghost.”
Joe forced a laugh. “Like you said, Frank. Old Hank can’t get any deader. I take it the cops have whoever did this to him?”
“Dead to rights. A low-life drug dealer. Not that Hank was your model citizen. He bought it during a barroom fight with a guy named Vincent Cenzo.”
He’d just had to ask, Joe thought.
“So, Joe. I’m sorry, where were we?” Frank asked.
“Finished,” Joe said, offering his hand.
“Beers are on me,” Frank said as they shook.
“Sounds good. See you soon.”
“You bet. You need anything else, don’t hesitate to call.”
Call. Yup. Next time, he would just call.
“See you, Frank. Thanks.”
He felt like a swimmer who had seen a shark and needed to stay calm. He tried like hell not to go running out of the autopsy room.
He managed to push his way through the doors like a normal person, then walked quickly down the hall. He even managed a goodbye and thanks for Judy at the desk.
Then he burst out into the light of day and joined the throng of people rushing around in the Saturday afternoon sunshine.
He was almost running…
And then he stopped.
Because there was no way for a man to run away from his own mind.
What a beautiful day.
He walked and walked, wishing he had a hat to tip to passersby. It was nearly summer, but the usual heat and humidity weren’t plaguing the city today. No rain clouds marred the heavens. No unhealthy miasma hung around the buildings, and a pleasant breeze swept through the giant forests of concrete and steel. It was simply a perfect day.
He visited St. Mark’s Square, where he paused, thinking that politicians, stars, geniuses, men of letters, heroes, patriots and enemies of the state had once walked this way. He closed his eyes and imagined a long-ago city.
What a beautiful, beautiful day. It was just good to be out. To love New York. To love the world.
To bask in pleasure.
Someone walked by him with a boom box blaring, gold chains making a strange clanking