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Connolly David - Deadline in Athens

Here you can read online Connolly David - Deadline in Athens full text of the book (entire story) in english for free. Download pdf and epub, get meaning, cover and reviews about this ebook. City: New York, year: 2007, publisher: Grove;Atlantic, Incorporated, genre: Detective and thriller. Description of the work, (preface) as well as reviews are available. Best literature library LitArk.com created for fans of good reading and offers a wide selection of genres:

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Connolly David Deadline in Athens

Deadline in Athens: summary, description and annotation

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When an Albanian husband and wife are found dead in their home, Inspector Costas Haritos, a veteran junta-trained homicide detective on the Athens police force, is called to what seems at first to be an open-and-shut case. For the Greek police, two dead Albanians are hardly a matter of concern. But when Albanias celebrity television news reporter Janna Karayoryi insists that the case was closed too early, Haritos becomes unnerved. He doesnt exactly like the ambitious young journalist, but could she be right in thinking the murder has something to do with babies?Before Haritos can find out, Janna is suddenly murdered, moments before she is to go on the air with a startling newsbreak. Did her mysterious report have something to do with the murdered Albanians? Who wanted her silenced, and why? Caught between a bumbling junior officer and higher-ups all too easily influenced by news executives determined to protect their own, Costas Haritos sets out to get to the bottom of the matter-and ends up neck deep in a dark form of capitalism that has emerged in Albania after the dictatorship.

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DEADLINE IN ATHENS

Petros Markaris

DEADLINE IN
ATHENS

Translated from the Greek by David Connolly

Deadline in Athens - photo 1

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To Sophia Rania Philippos albeit with some delay DRAMATIS PERSONI - photo 3

To Sophia Rania Philippos albeit with some delay DRAMATIS PERSONI - photo 4

To Sophia Rania Philippos albeit with some delay DRAMATIS PERSONI - photo 5

To Sophia Rania Philippos albeit with some delay DRAMATIS PERSONI - photo 6

To Sophia Rania Philippos

albeit with some delay

DRAMATIS PERSONI

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CHAPTER 1Every morning at nine we would stare at each other - photo 45

CHAPTER 1Every morning at nine we would stare at each other He would stand in - photo 46

CHAPTER 1Every morning at nine we would stare at each other He would stand in - photo 47

CHAPTER 1Every morning at nine we would stare at each other He would stand in - photo 48

CHAPTER 1
Every morning at nine, we would stare at each other. He would stand in front of my desk with his gaze fixed on me, not exactly at eye level, but somewhere between my forehead and my eyebrows. "I'm a moron," he would say.

He didn't say it with words; he said it with his eyes. I sat behind my desk and looked him straight in the eye, no higher and no lower. Because I was his boss and could look him in the eye, whereas he couldn't do the same with me. "I know you're a moron," I'd tell him. No word escaped me either; my eyes did the speaking. We had this conversation five days a week, every week of the year, excluding the two months that we were both on leave. From Monday to Friday, without our saying as much as a word, just through our eyes. "I'm a moron"-"I know you're a moron."

Every division has its share of losers. They can't all be high-flyers; you're bound to get stuck with a few dimwits like Thanassis. He entered the police academy but quit halfway through. With a great deal of effort, he managed to get to the rank of sergeant, and there he stopped. He didn't aspire to achieve anything higher. From his first day in the division, he made it clear to me that he was a moron. And I showed due appreciation, because his honesty saved him from difficult assignments, night duties, roadblocks, and car chases. I kept him in the office. An easy interrogation, filing, liaison with the coroner's office and the ministry. But because we had a chronic shortage of men on the force and simply couldn't deal with all the work, he made sure he reminded me every day that he was a moron, so that I wouldn't forget and assign him by mistake to a patrol car.

I glanced at my desk and saw that the coffee and croissant were missing. His only regular assignment was to bring me these every morning. I looked up at him questioningly.

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