Saturday, May 2, 2015

Speak Softly My Love, Chapter Twenty-Two.


Part One
Part Seven 
Part Eight 
Part Nine
Part Ten
Part Eleven
Part Twelve
Part Thirteen
Part Fouteen 
Part Fifteen
Part Sixteen 
Part Seventeen
Part Eighteen 
Part Nineteen
Part Twenty
Part Twenty-One

Louis Shalako


Speak Softly My Love


Chapter Twenty-Two


All three of their warrants were to be executed at once. For reasons that were rather more political than practical, it was anticipated that Gaston e Cie would cooperate willingly. As it was, their name should be kept out of it as far as that was possible. Before approaching the firm, some solid information would be helpful.

Levain and Tailler had been elected for the house in Paris. Gilles and LeBref were to search the house in Lyon, while Firmin and Hubert were in Molsheim.

“Are we ready?” There were six hulking cops on the sidewalk.

Levain gave Emile a nod.

“Go for it.”

Tailler pushed the button beside the street level door labeled Godeffroy.

“Yes, hello?”

It sure sounded like Monique; but then how the hell would he know…

“Madame Godeffroy?”

“Yes, who is it?”

“This is Detective Emile Tailler. I have a warrant, duly signed and issued by a competent authority, to search these premises for evidence related to a homicide.”

There was a long pause.

Tailler looked at Levain and bit his lip. He caught Sergeant Richard’s eye, as he stood with the axe casually over his shoulder. They had a master key from the landlord, but there were interior doors and closets as well. It would be interesting to see how she handled it.

Tailler was just about to speak when the latch clicked.

“So. She’s going to be sensible, then.” Levain grabbed the knob, whipped the door open and then they were all clattering up the stairs.

A lot could happen in thirty seconds when people were desperate and the jig was up.

***

They had been very patient.

With the chase most definitely on, Gilles as senior member of the unit had taken the simple precaution, once Didier’s (the real one presumably) location was firmly nailed down, of dispatching a pair of plain-clothes officers to shadow him. Once their shadows called in and confirmed that they had him under proper surveillance, Gilles had given the boys the go-ahead for the operation.

If Didier ran or went to ground in a major city, they might have one hell of a time catching up again. In order to avoid arousing his suspicions, they couldn’t even freeze his bank accounts. In what was very odd, phone taps to all three households indicated he wasn’t calling them and they weren’t calling or trying to call him. It might be hard for a wife or spouse to locate him on impulse. One would think he would call home once in a while, and let them know where he was, and how he was doing.

Their monitoring of the lines at Gaston e Cie had recorded several long and involved business conversations that left little doubt they were dealing with the real Didier.

That was an interesting moment.

Days had passed and the tensions mounted.

Now it was different.

With regular updates from their officers calling in from stations on the way, it was clear that Didier was finally heading home for Paris. He could still branch off at almost any point along the way, almost up to the last minute. The wine-producing regions of France were diverse and scattered all over. It was only when he got up in the morning, left his hotel, took a cab, made his way to the station and bought a ticket for Paris, that’s when they knew for certain he was really coming.

More than anything they wanted Didier to come home. The timing and execution of their warrants was predicated upon the fact that Didier’s train came in at approximately ten-forty-two a.m. from points south and west.

Once he bought that final ticket, his fate was more or less determined. One of their field officers called in hurriedly. Their quarry had actually boarded and one of them was on the train with him. As soon as the second shadow hung up, there would be two of them on the train with Didier…

They were coming home.

Any change in plans, even one unexpected move on his part, and his shadows would grab him and slap the cuffs on him without hesitation. They would grab him and drag him in by the scruff of the neck if that’s what it took.

Lucinde let them in without a problem and quickly stood aside as they went to work.

“What is this all about, gentlemen?” Her dignity was tragic, her countenance stern, although her lips trembled.

Gilles looked her in the eye.

“I may have a few questions for you. In the meantime, please sit down on the end of the couch and don’t move, Madame.”

Her face white with suppressed emotions, the lady had turned and did exactly what she was told. The redoubtable Jeannine stood there, arms crossed, keeping an eye on her.

***

In Molsheim, Detective Etienne Hubert stood looking around the room. They were accompanied by a detective and a sergeant from the local detachment. They would of course receive all due credit in any subsequent news conferences. Inspector Descamps hadn’t stinted them a bit of manpower. The thought that their detachment would share in any glory probably didn’t enter into it—not too much, anyways.

The air in Zoe’s flat was stale but relatively odorless. Her houseplants were definitely getting dry when he pulled off a glove and stuck a finger into the soil. It was very quiet and all the windows were tightly shut. There were no pets. She had a little milk in the fridge. When Hubert smelled it, it was sour. There were perishable items, looking pretty limp by now, and the potatoes when he found them were spotted and beginning to smell.

He wandered the place in his cotton gloves as the technical guys, local people, went about dusting for prints.

He raised his voice.

“Look for anything masculine. Anyplace where a guest, especially male, might have touched.”

He thought about it. Fingerprints were the most damning evidence. The bathroom, the bedroom…which side would the woman sleep on?

She would shove further in from the side they got in on, and that would put the male beside the bedside table and the telephone.

“Check the alarm clock and the telephone.”

The fridge, maybe. Not the stove. She had a little bar alcove at one end of the salon, mostly for show thought Hubert.

Someone knocked at the door and the men inside Zoe’s apartment froze for a second as if stricken by the most abject guilt. With a look at Firmin, Hubert went to the door.

It was Ada Bellerose.

“Can I help you?”

Her face was flaming.

“You! You bastards. What’s going on in there?”

Hubert shrugged.

A uniformed sergeant appeared at his shoulder.

“There is no need for alarm. Other than that, you can read about it in the papers, Mademoiselle.”

Gently, ever so gently, Hubert shut the door in the young lady’s face.

“Sir?”

A little thrill ran through Detective Hubert.

“Yes?”

“I think we’ve got something.”

Following the voice, he went into the bathroom, a small but attractive little room up under the back eaves.

“What have you got for me?”

“It looks like a man’s shaving kit.”

Hubert grinned.

He gave the sergeant a look.

“Okay, men. We’re looking for fingerprints, strands of hair, dead whiskers in the brush, and fibres from the man’s coat. Mud from his shoes. Male personal hygiene items, cigarettes, pipes, a gross of condoms, you name it. Leave no stone unturned.”

“What about the rug?” The grinning young gendarme, crowding in for a look, had a point, thought Hubert.

“Pull it up when we’re done and look for money—stuff like that. Right?” He gave the sergeant a quick look.

The grizzled veteran nodded.

“You heard the man.”

Firmin gave Sergeant Paquet a wink, receiving a blank look in return. Hubert was so wound up, it was like the poor guy just couldn’t stand still.

***

Didier Godeffroy, every inch the picture of the perfect businessman, la parfait négociant, stepped off the train into the shrill babble of the platform crowd, and was immediately confronted.

A perfect cliff of a man in big shoes, grey trousers and a long black raincoat stepped directly in front of him. A wide-brimmed fedora shadowed his eyes from the hot glare above. A sturdy woman with a face like a potato was at his side. Her hair was in a tight bun and her cap hung half sideways, pinned on a precarious angle. Their eyes bored into his as others crowded him from behind.

“Didier Godeffroy?”

“Yes?”

The woman held up a shiny official badge while the man-ape stood there watching his reaction carefully, arms held loosely at his sides.

“There’s not going to be any trouble here, is there sir?” The deep rumbling voice matched the man.

“No, no, of course not.” Didier stared in apparent confusion at the badge. “Who are you people? What is this about, please?”

The lady officer spoke.

“If you would come with us, sir, we would just like to ask you a few questions.”

People eddied and swirled around the three, Didier with his baggage at his feet and the other two oblivious to all around them. Their focus was entirely on him.

His eyes flickered left and right. He became aware that he was under scrutiny from certain other rather cold-looking ladies and gentlemen. They stood off to each side, cold in the sense of being watchful, motionless and emotionless, rather than from the temperature. He tore his eyes away.

“Where are we going?”

“Leave the bags, sir. Please, sir, just turn around and put your hands on your head.”

Didier’s jaws dropped as the big officer spoke and the female stepped slightly off to one side, pulling her coat back and it was obvious that she had her hand on the butt of a weapon.

“Whoa.” He gulped. “Okay, okay—no problem.”

He raised his hands, nice and slow and then he was quickly spun around by the clamp of a hand on his collar bone area. An iron grip took hold of his right wrist as the emotions ran through him. For a moment there it looked like, it sure felt like, he would bolt. The steel ring snapped on his wrist.

He sagged at the knees and then fought for composure, his posture straightening in spite of all odds. He took a long, hard breath, his darting, shocked eyes seeking something above the level of their heads.

“Ah…”

“Keep that left hand up there.” The lady was the total professional.

There was the momentary gleam of a wedding ring.

He gave her the look of a frightened rabbit confronted by the fox. His eyes were everywhere, the heart-rate shooting skywards and the adrenalin making his knees knock.

His body gave one massive twitch, but he remained in some semblance of control over himself.

The opportunity passed, and he never would have made it anyway.

There was nowhere to run. There were trains before and behind his narrow platform. All avenues were blocked by officers in bulky shoes, ill-fitting trousers, and shapeless jackets and coats. The cuff was on his right wrist. His left wrist was seized and brought down.

His hand was yanked into position and then he was secured.

“Who do you people think you are—”

“Look on the bright side, Monsieur Godeffroy. You won’t have to carry your own bags. You won’t even have to tip us.”

The lady gendarme waved off a porter as he came along, recognizing Monsieur Godeffroy perhaps and not seeing that there was some action here he might not want to be involved in.

It all clicked in and he sought their hard eyes in confirmation—he knew cops when he saw them. The old fellow, all dressed in blue and with the regulation cap, stood there gaping, hands clasping the handle of the cart. Another impatient traveler plucked at his elbow and dragged him rather unwillingly off. Clouds of steam and gaggles of tired travelers straggled past in the light breeze.

“I want to speak to my lawyer.”

“You’ll have all the time in the world, sir.”

The big male gendarme leaned across in front of the prisoner, turned his head and gave Jeannine a quick and admiring glance.

The arresting officers, taking an elbow each, his arms cuffed behind him, frog-marched an ashen-faced Didier Godeffroy down the platform, through the concourse and out into the bright, marvelous autumn day.

It really was perfect weather for September.

***


With one prisoner in custody, the woman calling herself Monique and the one calling herself Lucinde had been ordered not to leave town. They were under non-stop surveillance by teams of officers working in shifts.

On their own, Hubert and Tailler never would have been able to pull it off, but with Maintenon and Inspectors Delorme and David pulling for them, they had gotten all the resources they needed.

Monsieur Godeffroy had been allowed to call his lawyer. He had been booked and processed and was sitting in a holding cell.

Their teams in Lyon and Molsheim had, essentially, twenty-four hours to get the goods and return to Paris, although the public prosecutor was good for one twenty-four hour extension. 

After that, they would have to go to the judge and show cause for holding Monsieur Godeffroy any longer.

The team from Molsheim having returned triumphant, Maintenon had pulled more strings.

They had taken over the biggest conference room they could find, luckily on their own floor this time. All the desks and tables had been pushed together in two lines, tables in one, all about the same height, and the desks in the other line. Each subject and each aspect of the case got their own big table as detectives wandered up and down, organizing everything they had. Tailler had a big blackboard with a time-line on it, and references to railway schedules, salient events, eye-witness reports and ticket stubs seized so far…it was all coming together beautifully.

They had their exhibits lined up, neatly tagged, bagged, labeled and identified. When the team from Lyon came bounding down the hallway with their boxes and materials, they were rapidly redirected by Firmin to the appropriate room.

Tailler had taken to calling it a think tank.

Gilles and Levain were off on a case of their own, but after a noisy greeting, the small group settled down. There were just Hubert, Firmin, and Tailler. The gendarmes had been sent back, with some effusive thanks, to whatever duties they had originally been pulled from.

Now it was just a case of making sense of what they had.

Tailler stood awed for a moment as Firmin and Hubert hunched over the phone, and mumbled away at their one and only clear desk in the corner.

With fingerprints, hairs, shaving kits, bloodstains, bodies, time-tables, railroad and the killer’s as well, it had become fairly overwhelming.

“Oh, boy.”

This was going to take some doing—he knew what must have happened, what could have happened, what might have happened. Now they just needed to prove it.

First things first.

Fingerprints.

***

It was time for les enfants terrible to spell it out.

“Are you ready to tell me what happened yet, Emile?”

“Yes, Inspector.”

Hubert nodded firmly.

Sure. Why not.

Hubert began.

“Well, sir. We have Didier Godeffroy’s fingerprints all over, all three domiciles. We have hairs from his head, most likely, according to preliminary analysis. It’s difficult to see where else they might have come from. We’ve asked around and there are no other interesting males in any of the women’s lives. We have Didier’s whiskers from the razors. What’s interesting, is that with the decedent from the river, the look-alike, we can’t find his prints anywhere in any of the premises.”

Reports stated the unidentified victim’s whiskers, were in general thicker and perhaps a bit darker than the real Didier’s. This part did sort of throw doubt on all other evidence regarding whiskers, as it was simply not possible to be conclusive. All their experts agreed on that.

“I see.”

“Okay. This is where it gets fun, Inspector. I have to admit, it took me a while to figure it out.”

Hubert raised his hand like a schoolboy.

“I give Emile full credit for that—this is all his idea, Inspector.”

Gilles snorted gently, as Levain grinned and Firmin gave Hubert a blank stare. The young detective coloured slightly and shut up.

Tailler looked shy for a moment, but then plunged on.

“Okay. The lady in the Rive Gauche—her prints are all over the Paris residence of Didier Godeffroy. And the hotel room—and nowhere else. Yet they were on the ticket stub, although the ladies of a certain class still favour gloves, and the weather was cool that day. They were on the letter.” He cleared his throat. “So—she had gloves with her. She came in wearing a spring and fall jacket. I noticed it at the time. The stations are cold inside, and she would have bought the ticket and stuck the stub in her purse. She might have been wearing gloves—or, more usually people just toss them.”

Train stations and the sidewalks around them were littered with just such cancelled stubs.

Gilles pursed his lips and even Firmin looked impressed.

“Go on, my dear boy. Go on.”

Tailler stammered and cleared his throat.

“What’s interesting is that the prints from the body in the Rive Gauche don’t match any of the prints in the Zoe passport. But all the passports are a mess of mostly unidentifiable smudges. When we look further, we can match up prints from Zoe’s house, to fragmentary prints on the Zoe passport. Did I get that right?”

He was pretty sure he had. He glanced through his notes, but that was what it said. He tried again.

“Now, eliminating the maid and the cook and one or two prints that clearly don’t belong to anybody—I’m a bit unsure there, but surely Monique, and even Lucinde, couldn’t have been that isolated. The most perfect servant will miss the odd print when cleaning, waxing and dusting. But they can linger for quite a while—”

Gilles coughed and he broke off.

“…getting right to the point, sir, is that the prints of the lady calling herself Monique appear in the Paris household and the Lyons household.” His eyes went far away. “What’s interesting is that the servants haven’t been seen in a while. The theory is that they’ve been let go and any documents are missing somehow…”

With none of them talking under advice of cousel, it would take some time to find them.

Levain nodded, a quick little jerk of the head.

“And the fingerprints of the lady calling herself Lucinde are found in the house in Lyon as well as the house in Molsheim. It’s a regular fucking shell game going on here, sir.”

Gilles exhaled in a kind of admiration.

“The body in the park really did get up and walk away. In the absence of other leads, other reports, it’s the only sensible explanation. Following Didier’s movements, and we have hotel confirmations going back quite a ways, there are a couple of big gaps. There are two big, beautiful windows of opportunity, one for the Rive Gauche killing. Also. He was out of the house for the body you found, Inspector. The time frame is perfect. We have officers interviewing station attendants all up and down the line, and we expect to get their reports. It would be nice to know exactly when he left town. So far we’ve turned up nothing. Part of the problem is that he was actually fairly well-known. He ditched most of his own ticket stubs—a sensible precaution. Honestly, he would have had a handful, and that’s just from his regular job. People are saying that they saw him come and go—can’t remember when, but he was a regular customer. Maybe we’ll get lucky there.”

Tailler tailed off. The truth was, he still had questions.

“So.”

“So, ah, sir. The theory is that the look-alike gentleman was blackmailing Didier.” He cleared his throat. “That’s probably where the idea originally came from—he remarked upon the resemblance. Obviously, he had a real thing for blonde women of a certain height and build.”

Hubert spoke.

“The blackmailer may have actually contacted the wife—Monique. That would precipitate events. He didn’t have to tell her anything, in fact he probably didn’t. But she took the call. The guy got pushy and called there—and she picked up. It’s all she had to do. It would put a hell of a lot of pressure on Didier. It would show that the blackmailer meant business—or else.”

“Very well.”

Maintenon looked at Hubert.

“And that’s our motive?”

“Oh, yes, sir. Ah…the guy is demanding money. He might have phoned the house. It’s a big threat. Didier arranges to go and have a drink with him. That’s what he tells Monique—the real one. It’s just a guy from work, Honey. He’s changed clothes, he’s all set to do his gambit in the park—that shows real inspiration, Gilles. He’s got some crazy old stiletto—none of them are going to tell us that, are they? That’s because he had it, a souvenir or something, and of course Monique is dead. It was from the house in Paris. She can’t tell us anything now. So. Someone reports a body in the park. Off he goes. The suit is dark enough, he can go into a bar if needs be, but I think he met the victim near the river. The guy’s waiting for a payoff. One quick stab in the guts and in he goes. Didier dumps the body off the bridge. He could never carry a body there. We might look for car rentals, certainly no taxi would have taken him. Not with a dead body, and remained silent. We could ask around, but dead drunk passengers, ah…maybe. But he could walk to the Pont Tolbiac, or get there by cab fairly quickly. Keep his appointment.”

“I see. So he arranged to meet the blackmailer near the point of disposal. What then?”

“Well, sir, he did have a railway locker key in his possession upon his arrest. The locker was empty—he probably had a fresh suit in there. He changed in the rest room, and either ditched the black suit he was wearing, or took it with him on the train for disposal somewhere more suitable.” A dark suit wouldn’t show the blood.

It was night and the light in train stations often pretty garish. He could change in the restroom and sling it out the window, once on the train and out in the countryside between stations.

“That explains why our dead man was wearing a different colour of suit—according to Monique.” There were bloodstains on it, but mostly washed out by the cold water. “If the guy showed up in a blue suit, it wouldn’t make much difference to Didier.”

“Ah, yes, Monique.” They were doing well. “Tell me more about her.”

“Okay. She’s the dead one at the Rive Gauche—”

Firmin’s left eyebrow, unseen by Tailler and Hubert but definitely in Maintenon’s field of vision, was climbing higher and higher.

“Ah.”

“Yes, sir. It has to be her. One thing we noticed, but didn’t properly remark upon, was how drawn she was the second time we saw her. But by this time it wasn’t her at all—it was Lucinde.”

Firmin laughed. He shook his head, and picked up a few papers, still listening though.

Emile shrugged, face reddening.

He gave Firmin a look.

“Yeah, but think. Every time we turn around, we’re being presented with another beautiful blonde—we’re so busy staring at their tits and their asses, we can’t see the forest for the trees kind of thing. No wonder we missed it.”

“Keep going, gentlemen.”

“And here’s another thing. Didier was just praying that body never surfaced. It’s his bad luck  that it did, or his plan might have worked fairly well.”

It was true enough, that bodies went into the river and were never seen again.

Maintenon had to admit, it was ingenious. And they were right—the blanks could be filled in with some intensive investigation, now that they knew exactly what they were looking for.

“Okay, sir. Interestingly, because we took the case over from Delorme, those boys never had the chance to show Didier’s picture around the hotel. They’ve never even seen it, although I’m sure they got the bulletin. It’s just one of those things. It would appear completely unrelated to them. Nothing but another pain in the ass missing-person report. And we were so excited, so busy, I guess, we never even thought of it.”

There was a long silence. Gilles closed his eyes, he appeared to be thinking deeply.

“So who is our mystery man?”

“I’m thinking someone connected to Lucinde. That whole set-up in Lyon stinks to high heaven. Since she is so obviously not his wife, and the other one wasn’t claiming to be, I have to wonder if we’ll ever know her real name. She had the newspaper clipping. I’ll bet that’s Monique in the picture—and she knows it, too. Zoe, on the other hand, good question. But think about it. This bozo, our mysterious victim, goes out of the country for a while. Maybe he’s in jail or something. He and Lucinde—I don’t know what else to call her, they’re estranged. But they’ve never really gotten divorced. Years later, he comes back, and he’d dead broke. Goes back to the old home town, you know. He probably wonders about the ex-wife. He’s hungry, he’s hurting. He makes inquiries. He sees them around. He learns they’re living as husband and wife…and he knows that just can’t be.”

“He was killed in Paris.”

“True—but that just shows he knows who Didier was. It shows that Didier was a good target for blackmail—Didier was a successful man with a good reputation. A guy with a piss-pot full of money. Life must have seemed very unfair to our blackmailer. Didier had a lot to lose, Inspector.”

Gilles looked at Tailler and Hubert.

“And how would you gentlemen like to proceed?”

Tailler looked at Hubert, who sat up straight and glanced down at his briefing notes.

“Let’s bring the ladies in on charges and see if we can shake anything loose. Hopefully, if they’re innocent, and yet know something, anything, they’ll talk. If they’re any kind of accessory, we’ll have them in custody. Let them feel the pressure for a while. They’ll talk.”

Levain piped up for the first time.

“Here’s what gets me. The ladies. How do you figure that part worked?”

Hubert nodded.

“He’s got all that figured out.”

Tailler glowed a little.

It shone out of him.

“Ah, yes, Andre. Monsieur Godeffroy could have told the one in Lyon that he and Monique were getting a divorce—he would say that she had gone to live with her mother or something like that. The wife went nuts. I stuck her in the asylum. My uncle Albert left me some money, but he’s strict Catholic, and if he hears I’m divorced, he’ll cut me off. Whatever. He would have told them whatever they needed to hear. He is nothing if not subtle. He would have ideas, this man. He might have suggested that he had to sell the place in Lyon to pay the ex-wife off. A lady living in Lyon might have been happy to move to Paris. A man like that would have thought of something convincing. She already knew she had a false passport, she was already in that so-called marriage, one she knew to be bogus. He would have been able to pull it off.”

“And the one known as Zoe, and now, as you say, claiming to be Lucinde?”

“Pretty much the same deal, Inspector. He would tell her, ah, that his wife had left him and why not come to Lyon? He would give her another big story. See, Inspector, she, she thinks he lives in Lyon. The guy lies like a rug. Seriously. Her employer says she just stopped coming to work one day. This was before, a few days before all of this started to happen. How much she knows, is anybody’s guess. The neat thing, Inspector, is that neither one of them really had to know anything.” He went on. “Psychologically, they were sort of screwed, sir. They knew what they were doing was somehow not quite right, in the social sense. It was not so much criminal in their eyes, it was merely unconventional, something of a potential embarrassment. This would leave them, especially women of a certain class, a certain mindset, a kind of mental hostage to Didier. I suspect a very controlling influence. As soon as we started sniffing around, they knew something was up. But they had no choice but to keep playing their parts. Soon as they saw the body in the morgue, they must have been shitting bricks and wondering what the hell was going on.”

 “The fact that they are lying about their names suggests something, otherwise. You still haven’t tied up all the threads yet, gentlemen. Although I admit you’re doing well.”

“So. We figure Didier had the germ of an idea. When the crunch came, he initiated a plan that was so crazy, so absurd, that it might have actually worked. More than anything, I think he just decided to kill the guy. And then make it work, somehow. Once Monique—the real Monique, saw the papers, she must have wondered. She must have seen the papers. She never let on to us, which was what killed her. At that point, she became a threat. There are two separate bodies, and we have two separate motives. Didier was just making it up as he went along, sir. Psychologically, there may be a term for it. Whatever it was, he must have had it real bad.”

Tailler stared at Gilles, who grinned slightly under the gaze.

“What was the clincher for me, sir. Didier nipped back to Molsheim, did some business—all confirmed by Gaston e Cie. He bought a shit-load of product, and in a very short time, apparently. He bought a ticket to Paris, and with a bit of quick thinking, called ahead and got Monique to meet him downtown for a romantic getaway. We’ve got the day, the time, the ticket-clerk, and the conductor. He had to get her out of the way first, then get the other ladies to move on short notice.”

They were convinced the ladies knew something.

“Well?” Hubert was on pins and needles.

“Well. Well, what?”

“Can we bring them in, sir?”

Maintenon tipped his head on an angle and gave Levain and Firmin a look. There was a kind of unspoken consensus visible in their faces. Firmin shrugged and then shrugged again. Levain chewed on that blasted pencil…

He caught Gilles’ eye on him and stopped.

“Sure. Why not.” Maybe they could get to the bottom of this thing after all. “Let’s see what they have to say for themselves.”

A coffin only needed so many nails. As for the guillotine, that only took one little trip of the lever, and the sometimes surprisingly cheerful acquiescence of a jury of one’s peers.

“Hopefully you gentlemen can connect a few more of the dots.”

“Yes, sir.” Hubert grabbed the phone.

His first call would be Lyon. He and Tailler would pick up so-called Lucinde personally.

Gilles sat there watching through lidded eyes, hand clasped across his belly, which was beginning to rumble.

Both of them were very highly-talented detectives. They had a lot of potential. Talent was no substitute for hard work, observing proper procedures and that painstaking attention to detail.

Their case, while coming together, was messy—very messy.

Attention to detail had saved his own ass more than once.

It was a lesson that once learned, would never leave them.


END 

Blessed Are the Humble is available from Barnes & Noble in ebook and paperback.

Thank you for reading.


Speak Softly My Love, Chapter Twenty-One


Part One
Part Seven 
Part Eight 
Part Nine
Part Ten
Part Eleven
Part Twelve
Part Thirteen
Part Fouteen 
Part Fifteen
Part Sixteen 
Part Seventeen
Part Eighteen 
Part Nineteen
Part Twenty

Louis Shalako


Speak Softly My Love


Chapter Twenty-One



The next afternoon Gilles, Levain and Firmin were all in the office. The two younger detectives arrived and quickly unloaded their briefcases. Having come by taxi straight from the station, they still had their overnight bags. These were dumped at the end of their respective desks. Gilles was on the phone taking notes and asking questions. Levain nodded pleasantly. Firmin gave them a blank look, and then a wave and a grin. He typed for a moment, and then looked up again, as if only now remembering who they were.

They hung up coats, put their hats on the rack, and got cups of the rather cold coffee that was left in the pot.

Hubert took his chair and Tailler glanced through his notes.

He looked at the room and cleared his throat.

Maintenon beat him to it.

“So.”

“Yes, sir. We spoke to an Ada Bellerose. The address from the passport in the Rive Gauche killing was correct. The lady in the Rive Gauche was—near as we can make out—the real Zoe Godeffroy. Ah…maybe.” Hubert continued as Gilles gave a quick and approving nod. 

“Ada knows quite a lot about Zoe, as they are best friends. She says, Zoe hasn’t been out of the country in five or six years. That’s confirmed by the stamps in her passport. Why she had it in Paris, we don’t know. Here’s the really neat thing, Inspector. Ada knew exactly who Didier Godeffroy is. She says the pair met at some function somewhere and they had some kind of relationship. She was holding a few things back, for the sake of her friend’s reputation if nothing else. She used the term lovers. There was nothing we could safely tell her. There’s some love or affection there, at least on Zoe’s part. She had the same last name, pure coincidence, but it probably led to their original conversation. I mean, when he picked her up. Didier was nothing if not a quick study.”

“So the basic premise is that Didier stole the passport—or someone who knew something about them, Inspector. The real question there is why Zoe herself, would bring it to Paris. We figure Didier brought it and left it there.” Tailler had a thought. “The victim’s fingerprints are on the ticket stub. We really ought to get one of Zoe’s kin to have a look at the body.”

“I see.”

Tailler looked up from his notebook.

“Ada didn’t have all the intimate details, but she says Didier always called ahead. Zoe knew when he was coming to town. He sent her letters, flowers once or twice. When we asked if Zoe had a home phone number for him, that’s when Ada dried up.” That part was understandable enough. “We asked if they had ever spoken of marriage, whether there was any kind of commitment, and that’s about the time Ada began to tire of us.”

She simply wasn’t telling one way or another.

The odds were that both Zoe and Ada knew about, or even just suspected the existence of a wife, in Paris or elsewhere. Zoe might tell Ada everything. Ada was only going to tell them so much. Didier would of course be feeding Zoe a story. The trail of lies could be revealing, or so Tailler saw it. By the time they were done, the young lady was becoming quite fearful for her friend. News of the killing would break her up.

She had two cops grilling her and after a while she was pretty upset with them.

“She knew Didier was in Paris a lot and didn’t see Zoe much. Once or twice a month, sometimes for pretty short stays. We asked that question early on, then dug deeper. She says Zoe and Didier were very good friends for about the last two, or two and a half years.”

“So what’s your plan?”

Gilles’ eyebrows rose as Hubert passed the buck by turning and looking at Tailler.

“Well, sir. We want to get search warrants. For both Godeffroy households, as well as Zoe’s place. Ada might have a key. She probably does, but she wasn’t about to just let us in so she played dumb. As to whether we can include his business premises in there, that’s a tough call. It would be tough to establish a connection to Gaston e Cie except for the fact that he’s employed there. The real question in a warrant is what do we expect to find there? My guess is nothing. It’s difficult to see how anyone at work might have benefited from his demise. The whole thing is just too complex for someone bucking for a promotion. Why not just rat him off? Surely the boss, the firm, would absolutely hate employing an infamous bigamist. That, is a question we haven’t really asked. It’s a question of do we have enough? Sometimes it’s just the judge you get, sometimes it’s just the way you say it. I would sure as hell prefer not to lie to a judge, and claim a lot more than I really have. But this is by no means clear-cut.”

“So what do you hope to find?”

“So far, we have the fingerprints from the body in the river and the body in the hotel room.” 

They had little bits of evidence from here and there.

Gilles nodded sharply.

“I would very much like to clearly establish who’s who—and who’s what.” Emile thought further, as long as one must have a wish list. “We can set our people to tracing Didier on the train. I would like to see some confirmed hotel stays. Real sightings from real people, people who know him well. The train schedule can’t prove his guilt. What I expect to find there—hopefully—are some pretty big gaps when he could have been in Paris. When he shouldn’t have been.” Like for example the Rive Gauche case. “I’d shit bricks if we could find someone who saw Didier and Zoe together on the train, coming to Paris when he should have been somewhere else.”

“Ah.” Levain’s eyes glittered at the prospect. “Now we’re cooking with gas.”

“The odds are the girl never received any letter. It’s a prop, pure and simple. He wrote it wearing gloves and brought it along in a pocket.” The killer would have used the lady’s dead hand to put her prints on there, while wearing gloves himself.

You put on the gloves, peel off a dozen sheets right off the top, and then write your little note. Same thing with the envelope. If there even was one. A fresh box would be opened, wearing gloves, the same procedure basically. Tailler could see it in his mind’s eye well enough.

That’s how the trick was done.

“Yes. I’ll tell you what. Take an hour or so, longer if you need it. Your little staff on the third floor have nailed Didier’s whereabouts. He is in fact in Bordeaux. It took him a while but he got there, and we have his hotel room and everything…”

“Yes, sir.”

“Write it up as best you can, and I’ll have a look at it.” He gave Tailler a look. “What’s our theory of the crime?”

“Damned if I know. We need to know who’s who—and who’s what, before we can go much further.”

“Okay. Off you go, then. And Hubert—you might want to let the hired hands go back to wherever, unless you feel they might be needed?”

Hubert chewed on that for a second.

“No, sir. Let’s give them some legwork—we’ll start at the local train stations. If we don’t get anything, we can think it over and decide again. Because honestly, when you think of his travel itinerary, his history I guess, there’s just a shit-load of places to canvas. And let’s leave Didier out there for a while.” When the time came to bring him in, Hubert wanted something tangible to bonk him over the head with.

***

Tailler had typed it up as best he could.

“This is not going to wash, Tailler. I asked you, what is the theory of the crime?” They were usually so much better than this.

Gilles let the application for a warrant fall to the desk.

It was a big case, a complex case. Tailler he could almost understand, but Hubert had more experience and even he had been loose, too loose in the questioning, too loose in the thinking.

Tailler pursed his lips. Hubert looked worn out, a man with no ideas.

“I don’t really have one. But bigamy is a crime, and abandonment is a civil crime. The man had two wives, God knows how many affairs, girlfriends, one-night stands probably, and sooner or later his luck had to run out.”

Tailler was struck by an inspiration.

“I got an idea, boss.” He went to their pile of exhibits.

He pulled out three passports.

“Okay, boss. According to the ladies, each of whom knows about one passport, these both belong to Didier. Right?”

Gilles shrugged.

“Now you are at least thinking, Tailler—that’s what I want to see.”

Tailler picked up the phone.

Hubert looked mystified.

“What are you doing?”

“It’s just that I don’t believe anything anymore.”

Tailler’s forefinger spun the dial.

“Hello? Who is this?”

Hubert stood waiting, Gilles went back to reading files.

“Ah. Can you send a fingerprint technician up to Maintenon’s office?”

Hubert listened open-mouthed.

“Thank you.” Tailler hung up. “We’re lucky, they have someone available right now. He’s coming right up.”

***

Their fingerprint technician was done working. He looked up from the passports, frowning.

“Well, we have a couple of good prints from each one. They are from the same person.” He handed over the big magnifying glass. “This is our male subject.”

Next it was Lucinde’s passport and the prints from the body in the Rive Gauche.

Tailler had a look, Hubert had a look, and then Maintenon had a look. They compared the prints on the passports with the enlarged reproductions of the prints taken by the examiner, Dr. Guillaume at the city morgue.

“They are not a match.”

“Are you sure?” Tailler was a little upset, although it was definitely a long shot…

The technician shrugged.

“It’s the best I can do, anyways you can see for yourself.”

The technician had carefully examined the passport from Lucinde. There were good prints, many of the same person, but obviously some from customs officials as well. With an anonymous print, there was no way to determine gender.

The technician, a man named Proulx, next compared them to the prints taken from the woman in the Rive Gauche. There were only so many ways he could say it.

“Well. There you go. They are not a match—none of them.”

“Hmn.” Tailler and Hubert were mystified.

“Okay, so that didn’t prove a damned thing.”

“You’re wrong, Emile.” Maintenon chuckled.

All of this was in the written reports. Tailler doubted everything, which was an interesting state of mind. He would go over it and over it until he dropped if he had to—

 “It sort of indicates the man in the river was not Didier—and the woman in the hotel was not Lucinde.”

“Well. Since you put it that way—”

Tailler beamed at Maintenon, and then Levain.

“All right, thank you.” Gilles dismissed the technician, who put his brushes and powder bottles back in the briefcase and departed.

Maintenon looked at Emile Tailler.

“Sit down, please, gentlemen.”

The pair reluctantly did so.

“You had an idea there, Emile.”

“Ah, yes I did, sir.”

“Care to tell us what it is?”

Tailler bit his lip. He looked doubtfully at Hubert, who looked at Gilles and then Levain.

“I have no idea what he’s on about.”

“It’s a process of elimination…” Emile heaved a deep sigh. “Okay. I think I know what happened. They’ve done a nice job on us. We desperately need search warrants, for three premises at least—otherwise we are never going to get them.”

“Who’s them, Tailler.”

Tailler’s eyes were far away.

“Inspector.”

Maintenon was the most patient man Levain had ever met. These young guys had potential, but not much discipline. Their minds were all over the place—especially when you let them go off on their own. There were one or two holes in the training that needed to be filled. Yet Tailler was clearly chewing on something. It was the old problem.

They needed to get their ducks all in a row.

“Yes?” There was nothing there but gentle amusement.

“When you stumbled on that body in the park…that was Didier.”

“Well. I have been sort of wondering.”

Hubert made a little snork sound. Maintenon wasn’t trying to be funny.

“All he had to do was to be tripped over. All he needed was for someone to report a body. The odds were they would head for the nearest phone. Almost anyone would have done the exact same thing.”

“You’re saying he was alive then?”

“Yes. He cut the coat, and probably made some little nick in his arm, or something. The coat had to have blood on it. There was a lot of blood according to the lab report. That’s great if he was actually stabbed. But what if he wasn’t? It was merely for effect. If he was waiting for you, specifically—and he lived right in the neighbourhood, Inspector. He might have seen you around. And you’ve got a hell of a lot of credibility. His wife says he was wearing a black suit. Yeah, they have a bit of a fight. But before leaving, he nips into the bedroom. Changes clothes…and the brown suit already had the cuts in it. He might have even provoked a fight. It would take less than a minute. All he has to do was to put fresh blood on there.” Tailler would bet on it, the man would have a big, half-healed gash on him somewhere. “He’s on the way to the park and he sees you going into the store—yeah, that’s it.”

He might have even had a minute in the darkness to freshen up the blood.

“And what did all of that accomplish, Emile?”

“It convinces the great Gilles Maintenon that there is a body in the park—a body that was subsequently removed by means unknown.”

“And why would he want to do that?”

Hubert and Levain stared at each other. There was a simultaneous shrug. Gilles’ eyes were on Tailler, not without signs of amusement.

“Confusion. Mystification, so his wife could call in a missing-person report, and then, not too long after, good old Didier comes walking in the door, very much alive. Because he was planning to kill another man—one who, just by the luck of the draw, resembled him well enough.”

Gilles nodded.

“Go on.”

Tailler shrugged.

“I can’t. We don’t know enough. We don’t have a motive. We still haven’t identified the body in the river—my sense is that we never will, not the way we’re going at it. Because we’re actually pretty good at that sort of thing. Those bulletins are all over France—and we’ve already had our one good hit. And that, sir, was in Lyon. Didier’s second spouse. And it wasn’t even a picture of Didier. The resemblance must be pretty close and we can see that for ourselves.” Tailler took in some air and went on. “If we take a photo of the river victim and show it to the neighbours—what are they going to say?”

He waited. Gilles shook his head.

“I don’t know, Tailler—” There was promise here nevertheless. “And who, Emile, was the blonde woman in the Rive Gauche?”

Emile Tailler turned and found his desk. He sat heavily on the seat, staring up and out of the window for a while.

With a sigh, Maintenon was about ready to get back to his own files.

“Ah.” Tailler sat up. “Ah!”

“Well, Tailler?”

Tailler locked eyes with Maintenon.

“If I tell you, will you get us those warrants? I mean, you can do it, right?”

There was such a thing as a friendly judge, and Maintenon had been around a lot longer than either Tailler or Hubert.

“Yeah—I might.”

“Okay, boss, then listen. Listen good. You are really going to like this one.”

Levain chuckled softly, giving Emile an admiring look. The guy had only been with them for three or four months, for crying out loud.

Persistence was better than nothing. The boy certainly had his share.


END 


Architect of His Own Destruction is available for Kindle.

Thank you for reading.