Manhattan 62 - Reggie Nadelson - E-Book

Manhattan 62 E-Book

Reggie Nadelson

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Beschreibung

During the stifling autumn of 1962, NYPD detective Pat Wynne catches the hardest case of his career. A young Cuban man's body has been found on the High Line freight railroad, mutilated beyond recognition. His is the second Cuban murder in New York that year - both bodies displaying the same tattoo of a worm and the words Cuba Libre. Meanwhile, international tension is mounting and missiles are trained on America. The city is terrified. Pat is not only investigating a disturbing, politically sensitive case: there may be a spy on his own doorstep. Are his instincts correct, or is he about to commit the ultimate act of betrayal?

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Veröffentlichungsjahr: 2014

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Also by Reggie Nadelson

Artie Cohen series:Red Mercury BluesHot PoppiesBloody LondonSex DollsDisturbed EarthRed HookFresh KillsLondongradBlood Count

Other novels:Somebody Else

Non-fiction:Comrade Rockstar

 

 

First published in hardback in Great Britain in 2014 by Corvus, an imprint of Atlantic Books Ltd.

This paperback edition published in Great Britain in 2015 by Corvus, an imprint of Atlantic Books Ltd.

Copyright © Reggie Nadelson, 2014

The moral right of Reggie Nadelson to be identified as the author of this work has been asserted by her in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act of 1988.

All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without the prior permission of both the copyright owner and the above publisher of this book.

This novel is entirely a work of fiction. The names, characters and incidents portrayed in it are the work of the author’s imagination. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, events or localities, is entirely coincidental.

10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1

A CIP catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library.

Paperback ISBN: 978 1 84354 840 9E-book ISBN: 978 1 78239 134 0

Printed in Great Britain.

CorvusAn imprint of Atlantic Books LtdOrmond House26–27 Boswell StreetLONDONWC1N 3JZ

www.corvus-books.co.uk

For Vladimir Pozner, a GreenwichVillage guy, and true friend, with muchgratitude and affection

Contents

Prologue: New York City, 2012

Part One

Chapter One: October 16, ’62

Chapter Two: October 17, ’62

Chapter Three: October 17, ’62

Chapter Four: October 17, ’62

Chapter Five: October 18, ’62

Chapter Six: October 18, ’62

Chapter Seven: October 18, ’62

Chapter Eight: October 19, ’62

Part Two

Chapter One: October 19, ’62

Part Three

Chapter One: October 22, ’62

Chapter Two: October 23, ’62

Chapter Three: October 23, ’62

Chapter Four: October 23, ’62

Chapter Five: October 23, ’62

Chapter Six: October 23, ’62

Chapter Seven: October 23, ’62

Chapter Eight: October 23, ’62

Chapter Nine: October 24, ’62

Chapter Ten: October 24, ’62

Chapter Eleven: October 24, ’62

Part Four

Chapter One: October 24, ’62

Chapter Two: October 25, ’62

Chapter Three: October 25, ’62

Chapter Four: October 25, ’62

Chapter Five: October 26, ’62

Chapter Six: October 26, ’62

Chapter Seven: October 26, ’62

Chapter Eight: October 26, ’62

Chapter Nine: October 27, ’62

Chapter Ten: October 27, ’62

Part Five

Chapter I: October 28, ’62

Chapter Two: October 28, ’62

Chapter Three: October 28, ’62

Chapter Four: October 29, ’62

Chapter Five: October 29, ’62

Chapter Six: October 30, ’62

Epilogue: New York City, 2012

Acknowledgments

 

 

 

 

The story of what would later become known as the Cuban missile crisis is replete with accidental figures whose role in history is often overlooked: pilots and submariners, spies and missileers, bureaucrats and propagandists, radar operators and saboteurs.

Michael Dobbs, One Minute to Midnight

The city, for the first time in its long history, is destructible. A single flight of planes no bigger than a wedge of geese can quickly end this island fantasy, burn the towers, crumble the bridges, turn the underground passages into lethal chambers, cremate the millions. The intimation of mortality is part of New York now; in the sounds of jets overhead, in the black headlines of the latest editions.

E. B. White, Here is New York

Before him lay Washington Square. Only eighteen hours in New York and he loved everything, every inch of it. Ah, the square!

Dawn Powell, The Golden Spur

PROLOGUE

New York City, 2012

WHEN THESOVIETUNION finally fell apart, in the aftermath, there was a trickle of information, then a stream, then a tidal wave. It was the big story for a while, this tale of the goddamn Cold War, of them and us, politics and war, gulags, massacres, nukes, the KGB and CIA, and of the Cuban Missile Crisis. The truth—some of it—about the main actors and the accidental spies, the betrayals and lies; there was plenty of it, God knows, even here in New York City. But also about ordinary things, the stuff about the Russians—what they felt and secretly thought, ate, desired, the music they loved—that most of us had never been told. Most of us; I already knew some because of Maxim Ostalsky.

Still, in all that flood of information, there was nothing at all about my old friend Max. I did my share of looking. I even thought about going over to Moscow. But he had disappeared into thin air, as if he had never existed, like smoke from those Lucky Strikes he learned to love so much.

Max Ostalsky had been my friend, once. He was the most interesting man I’d ever met, different from anyone else, and there are times I still miss him. If he’s alive, wherever he is, I can only hope he’s forgiven me.

PART ONE

CHAPTER ONE

October 16, ’62

TOMMYPERINO,WHO LIVED upstairs from me on Hudson Street, was twelve and small for his age. A skinny kid with a tuft of dirty blond hair sticking up from his head, he peered out at the world through narrow, wary blue eyes. Tommy didn’t give much away. He lived with his father in two rooms, where they had made a life after the mother just took off and left them.

The old man worked the night shift at a cement plant by the river. The Perinos couldn’t afford a television set and I had given Tommy a key so he could hang around my place and watch a ball game, maybe raid the refrigerator if he wanted. Some of the time he’d just show up out of the blue and scare the living daylights out of me like he did that Tuesday night in October when I was sweating out a bad dream.

It was the kind I had been having on and off since I came home from Korea, a messed-up kind of dream: somebody punching me in the face over and over, the stink of blood, somebody screaming my name out, in English, or that Gook language they had, somebody else singing Russian songs, and James Brown moaning, “I lost someone, my love, Someone who’s greater than the stars above”, the 45 going around and around on my phonograph, “I’m so weak. Don’t take my heart away.”

I was getting sick, the weather changing, a bad cold making me hack like an old man. Only James Brown seemed real.

I pushed my way to the surface. Tommy was standing over me, his face streaming with blood. He was bloody and scared, and I crawled out of bed and pulled on some clothes.

“What happened? Tommy?” First thing I thought was that his pop got injured; the old man was a scrawny bastard to be lifting cement blocks. “But it wasn’t his old man,” Tommy said, and I got him into the bathroom, cleaned him up as best I could. It was only a scalp wound, lot of blood; nothing serious, except the kid was howling like a wounded animal. I had never seen him cry.

“What is it?”

“A body on the pier, out by the Hudson, the pier you took me to, Pat,” he kept saying. Blurting it, almost incoherent. “I saw him. I wish I didn’t see nothing. It didn’t have almost no face, like they sliced it off.”

“What time is it?” I looked at my watch: 11.27 p.m. “Stay here.”

“I’m coming with you.”

Jesus, I thought. OK. The kid was scared as hell. I grabbed sweaters for both of us. “Let’s go. What the hell were you doing out there?”

“Nothing.”

“Tell me.”

“You told me you did it when you was a kid, you hung out on the piers, maybe find some salvage.”

“It’s dangerous. The Mob uses those piers for payback, you hear me? How often you been out there?”

He looked down. “Most nights. OK, I heard there’s spies coming in on them salvage boats, you know, I heard those guys that look for old metal, chains, anchors, that stuff, and they been running in spies now. Reds. Fucking Commies. Russkis. Cubans. Gonna kill us all.”

“Spies, my ass. Come on, Tom, there’s no damn spies on the Hudson River. Chrissake, this is New York City, so we’re going to take a look, then we’ll get you to St Vincent’s, get your head looked at.”

Truth was, I didn’t know anything about damn spies. I was a cop, a homicide detective. But the kid had seen something, and I got my car and we drove out to Pier 46 near the end of Charles Street, between Charles and Christopher, in fact, two minutes by car; three tops. I parked. We ran. Some of the boards on that pier were rotten; you stuck your foot through those soft planks, you broke your ankle. A sharp wind came off the river.

“Take it easy,” I said to Tommy. “Where is it, this thing you saw?” Right then, I was more worried about the kid than what he said he had seen. He saw too many movies, always pestering me for some change to go to the pictures. When he was a little kid back when we figured the Russkis were gonna nuke us for sure, every time he heard a plane flying low at night, he’d run down to my place and bang on the door until I woke up and let him in.

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