Wednesday, February 1, 2023

A Stranger In Paris, an Inspector Gilles Maintenon Mystery #9, Pt. 30. Louis Shalako.

Wrong car, right place.

 





Louis Shalako.


 

“Well. There it is, then.”

Alphonse regarded Gilles, the light from the windows in the far end throwing everything into a weird light, backlit and foreshadowed and all of that sort of thing. At this time of year, a quarter to eight, the sun had barely shown up above the horizon, let alone really gotten going—yet it was there.

There were lights, metal pots hanging down from above. The light switch, to the right of the man door as opposed to the vehicle doors with their cables and springs and their overhead tracks. The lights worked well enough. There was still electricity, maybe even a trickle of heat. It was all very quiet, still, no one seemed to have noticed, or cared about them. They all had their own business to attend to, as a small forklift trundled past their open door. Another working class son of a bitch, working the weekend…

And then there was the car, and the first real sunlight in days breaking through the windows and the slot windows in a big overhead door on what had to be the northeast side of the building…walking over, looking out, there were ruts and weeds, but essentially nothing, any scrap tires and wheels, any parts or decrepit vehicles were long since gone.

And then there was the car.

The car was parked in the centre of a fairly large room, with benches and windows above, on the back wall, with skylights overhead and the floor bare but smooth concrete. There was an enclosed space to their left, with a door, two doors actually, more windows, this time on the interior, this would be the office where records were kept, and a service manager to write up the work orders, take the money and all of that. To direct the mechanics and the staff.

If only there had been anything to direct, but the space had been empty for a very long time. The only real odour was of mould, or must or mildew, words which all basically meant the same thing. There was a grill, a drain in the middle of the shop floor. It looked dry enough, but even so, there was that smell. There were all kinds of shelves from floor to ceiling along the inner walls. There was nothing on them except perhaps dust. Looking closer, on the smaller, narrower shelves were rings from leaky tins and bottles, on some of the wider upper shelves the marks of tire treads, mostly from a long time ago. Those would have been new tires.

As for the car—it was everything they had said it would be, and it was more, and it was less.

Long, low and lean, this one had been polished to perfection, which would tend to obscure any fingerprints and of course it was all just bullshit, as Alphonse had said, with Gilles standing there silently, sort of absorbing the atmosphere and drinking in the scene.

Listening, even, to the surroundings. It all seemed quiet enough out there.

“Gilles.”

“Yes, Alphonse?”

“This is not a Mercedes SSK.” He pointed. “There are no big, swoopy chrome exhaust pipes…”

His instincts were in full cringe mode.

Merde.

Gilles shrugged. More bullshit...

He shook his head—the coincidence was just too much, and yet it was the wrong car—maybe, at least one witness had been dead sure. No, but how in the hell were they going to explain this.

He gave Gilles a chastened look. And damn it all, he’d been right, after all. Here was the big car, right where he’d figured it ought to be—perhaps true strong a term, but he’d been right.

“Sorry, Boss. I guess we’d better wait for the forensics boys, and our warrant…before we go too much further.” He was just dying to open up the desk, or the drawers under the long counter in the office area…there appeared to be a back door and some kind of open space out there, and he was tempted to go out there and really look.

Gilles shrugged.

“Well. How much do you want to bet?”

Alphonse nodded.

How much do you want to bet.

“Er—I think I’ll pass on this one.”

It was a very good question, wasn’t it.

“Should I get on the radio?”

Gilles nodded.

“Yes. And tell them we need another of the, er—let’s call them one of the open warrants.” The problem with the radio was that the press had their own and paid someone to just sit there and listen. “Make sure it’s Levain or somebody that knows what we’re talking about.”

Call the Unit, and not the dispatcher.

“Yes, sir.” He turned and moved off, never in a hurry and yet never late, either.

Good old Roberval, he might not have thought of everything, but he’d thought of a few things and that was interesting, in and of itself. Alphonse had wondered about the blank warrants.

***

It was inevitable that such a case must, eventually get pushed to the back burner. They had new cases, there were always new cases. Virtually all of them, almost any of them, had a better chance of being solved. There were victims and witnesses, persons-of-interest, suspects, even people in custody. Fuck, the bodies had at least been properly identified. There was the chance, perhaps some very good chances, of getting a conviction in a court of law. The resources had to go where they would do the most good, and that was just professionalism. That didn’t mean you had to like it, it was just good policy.

There were times when good policy really sucked.

This was just one of those times.

It was getting near quitting time, and the initial report on their mystery car had just been sent up.

Alphonse was not in the garage, but responded to radio calls after a while, having nipped out to grab a sandwich or two, an apple and a banana, a carton of milk. He’d agreed to work an afternoon shift for an old friend whose kid was sick and in the hospital. This would be a giveaway shift, rather than a mutual which would have to be repaid...

Good old Alphonse, racking up the hours as usual.

Back in the Unit, spectacles sliding down his nose, the man in question finally looked up.

“Jesus, H. Christ.”

“I agree, Alphonse.” Gilles wondered where he might find some aspirin—surely there must be someone in the building with a few aspirin, but his headache showed all the signs of getting worse, and possibly a long one—

He’d have to wait.

Their car, a Bugatti, had fake license plates. Not stolen, but fakes, and good ones too. Not pasteboard or painted wood, these had been stamped out of thin metal plates with an actual die.

No identifying documents, ownership or insurance, or anything useful inside the vehicle. Wiped down for fingerprints. The vehicle identification tag had been removed. The carpet had been cleaned, the windows as well. Not a speck of dirt on the thing…major serial numbers ground off, on the frame for example, and of course it would take real time to dismantle such a machine…there were only a small number of such cars. It was a beautiful car. There had been one thing: a roll of tooth floss in the glove box, no kidding, and that was all that had been found.

“Gilles. Somebody took that thing apart. Took off all the serial numbers, and then put it back together again.” It was as much a question as a statement.

He shook his head, getting no response from Maintenon other than a small shrug.

Playthings of the very rich, such vehicles tended to be scattered all over the planet. Such people liked their privacy, and the actual company was not being all that helpful, although it was only day one on that subject. Considering the actual machine, someone over there should be able to identify it. It would take some persuading to get them involved or so it seemed. The company was known for their persistent money problems, and perhaps that had something to do with it. Also, the publicity would be unwelcome under the circumstances.

No one had reported any such vehicle missing or stolen.

Officers had chased down two or three of their witnesses, quick work as the photos had to be printed and distributed. It took time to locate such witnesses, and it took time to go across town, to their home, to their work, their place of business. A team effort, and all for what? It was the wrong car.

The wrong car—

Theoretically.

But one could see what anyone else would see, in that any advocate for the defense, hell, even the prosecutor, the judge, the jury, any idiot—anyone could see that it was the wrong car.

Funny thing was, they might even be right.

And yet it was only half the story.

Then there was the space itself. According to the landlord, it had become vacant four or five months earlier, and had not been let out since. As surmised, it had been an automotive shop. Leaving it in the same condition was a condition of the lease, and the previous firm had in fact cleaned up the rear yard, and no, there had been no big black car in there on his most recent inspection of about a month previously.

The phone company confirmed this. No phone for the last few months. As for heat and light, it was useful when showing to prospects, as the landlord said, and with a whole row of units, it was easy enough to allow just enough heat to keep the pipes from freezing. A small price to pay, as he said.

As for the lock, Alphonse had his theory.

“They did what I did, Gilles. They cut it off, or picked the lock. Considering who, or what they are, that last part is not out of the question. All they have to do then, is to go off up the street to the nearest hardware store and buy another lock.” Five or ten francs would do it.

Five or ten francs would do it.

“I would have bought the lock beforehand, somewhere far off across town.”

Alphonse nodded at the logic.

“True.”

To pull up and do the lock would take a minute. It would be better than walking up with bolt cutters inside a long coat. The vehicle itself would give good cover. All it took was balls…and a reason. Small, lock-picking tools could go down the nearest sewer, something not as easy with bolt-cutters.

“It’s not like they actually had to do anything there. It would be the work of five minutes just to stash the car.” After killing Vachon.

He didn’t say it.

“Or, the car might have been there for some time.” The problem there, was how or why to lead the cops to it—unless they had known ahead of time. “The street door has a spring latch…”

Set the lock and slam it behind you, and that was about it. There was a keyed deadbolt above it, a separate installation, but their perpetrators hadn’t been too worried about security. But when and why? The window of opportunity was pretty long in this event, as he called it.

If they had known about the lunch date in time, for example. It was possible Vachon had been frequenting the place, but why him? Unless it had something to do with Gilles—

“Ah.” It still all came down to the question of why.

“Here’s another thing. Assuming they drop the car, how do they get away? Now we’re looking for witnesses, we’re looking for any clue as to some other vehicle…” Alphonse trailed off.

It was all just more bullshit.

Gilles grunted.

“Sure. You pull up, open the lock, park inside. Jump in a similar car. Go out, lock up, and drive away.”

“Okay. I’ll buy that.” Alphonse was sort of impressed, but Gilles had a damned quick mind.

“Hmn.” Gilles thought.

It was the right people—he knew that. It was the right people, planting the wrong car, as for why, or why not, that was hard to say. But they seemed to have a pretty good handle on how the police worked, how they thought. What they might be likely to find out, sooner or later. They knew who his friends were, maybe.

If nothing else, they seemed to have a pretty good idea of how to beat a court case, if it ever really came down to that.

If only they had the time—

If only they had the time.

If only he had the patience.

Patience is a virgin, as Hector had once said.

***


Alphonse in full cringe mode.

 

END

Chapter One.

Chapter Two.

Chapter Three.

Chapter Four.

Chapter Five.

Chapter Six.

Chapter Seven.

Chapter Eight.

Chapter Nine.

Chapter Ten.

Chapter Eleven.

Chapter Twelve.

Chapter Thirteen.

Chapter Fourteen.

Chapter Fifteen.

Chapter Sixteen.

Chapter Seventeen.

Chapter Eighteen.

Chapter Nineteen.

Chapter Twenty.

Chapter Twenty-One.

Chapter Twenty-Two.

Chapter Twenty-Three.

Chapter Twenty-Four.

Chapter Twenty-Five.

Chapter Twenty-Six.

Chapter Twenty-Seven.

Chapter Twenty-Eight.

Chapter Twenty-Nine.


 

Louis has books and stories on iTunes.

 

See his art on Fine Art America.

Check out the #superdough blog, for example, Grocery Flyers and Price Pulsing: an Analysis.

 

Thank you for reading.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


Thursday, January 26, 2023

A Stranger In Paris, An Inspector Gilles Maintenon Mystery #9, Pt. 29.

That ain't a Mercedes, Boss.





Louis Shalako



It was Monday morning, and any resultant hangovers from Saturday night had hopefully run their course.

A half a dozen of them, at their desks, on the phones, at the coffee machine, and now there was a knock at the door. No one ever knocked, so this could only be—

Roger.

“Ah, Gilles, people.” He grinned, almost as if he were happy to see them.

He might have caught a guilty look from one or another of them.

Gilles picked up his pen, sighed and looked at Joseph, who was on the phone. Joseph looked back, one eyebrow raised.

“Uh, huh.”

“Well, Gilles. It’s just that Cariveau, or at least his passport, and a face that is a reasonable facsimile of the photo therein, has arrived in Valparaiso.”

“Okay.”

“It gets weirder from here, ah, Gilles.”

“So.”

“Gilles. None of the young men, quite a few of them, have returned to their homes, their jobs, or the usual haunts.” This included Baille, as he said.

This included the one in holy orders…a half a dozen other missing young males, about the right age group if nothing else. Those ones had at least stayed missing.

“Think about it, Gilles, None of them has been killed, none of them is really a suspect, not in any sense, in spite of their political activities. The relationships seem fairly tame if not entirely innocent. None of them in any sort of money problems, girl problems, stuff like that.” The room was very quiet, in spite of them all appearing to be doing something else. “It’s a list of names, and four anonymous dead bodies.”

“Er.” Joseph cleared his throat.

“Yes?” Roger turned, regarding the little man.

“Gilles thought he saw that Schleicher character. At the, er, party, sir. Yeah, other than that, and, uh, other than that, if the truth be told, we all had a really good time.” He cleared his throat. “So. Thanks for the tickets.”

And the overtime—

Jesus. All that overtime: Roger.


Maintenon explained. One problem, was the angle and the distance—Gilles couldn’t really be sure, as to whether the person had entered the men’s or the ladies…it had been kind of a dark corner back there, and worse, there was a back door—a fire exit onto an alley.

Roger turned back from LeBref for a better look. He couldn’t help but laugh, but this was a serious business. He shook his head.

“I mean.” Gilles began to darken in the face. “I mean, considering Alphonse’s, ah, Amazon.”

For all he knew, it might just have been an unusually tall woman in odd-ball clothes, going in to powder the nose. They might, have gone into the ladies room. Interestingly, all of the officers present had mingled, thoroughly, and no one recalled seeing such a person. Negative evidence, and he was already doubting his own sanity. Gilles was as fallible as any other witness.

Roger nodded.

“Sir?”

Roger uncrossed his arms.

“It might be better if we could talk in private. I really am trying to help, you know.”

It’s not like he wasn’t the chief of police, or something. Maybe Roger was going insane as well.

***

The meeting went on, with the air filling with smoke, someone in the background making a fresh pot of fairly bad coffee, and the phones ringing here and there, and it was the usual mess.

“So, of our young men, Saulnier, or a facsimile, has reappeared at least once. Cariveau, for all intents and purposes, has safely arrived in Valparaiso, ostensibly to join the family business of a great uncle according to our inquiries, all very confidential of course…”

The authorities were cooperative, and would follow up in due time. Valparaiso was a port of entry, the actual family business was in another, much smaller town in the interior.

Way, way up in the interior…

Nothing real fast was going to happen there.

“Baille, at least, isn’t dead yet, at least the last time you saw him…”

Roger went on.

“…of the ladies. Yes, this part is really interesting. Madame Daniau, Rosine…hasn’t paid the rent. Mailbox overflowing…maid let go some weeks ago, and no one knows her name anyways…” The people next door were new, hadn’t really spoken to too many people. “…they say the maid was shy, kept to herself and didn’t talk too much.”

She hadn’t received any personal mail. One room might have been occupied by a servant…

Hmn.

One could theorize endlessly.

New neighbours. Just getting to know the place. Uniformed officers were making routine inquiries, just curious, as it were. Chat them up, see what they might spill, sort of thing.

“If she was going on a world cruise or something, she would have made proper arrangements…” One must assume.

As far as had been determined, she hadn’t been killed, knocked over by a bus or whatever. No one of that name had been recently admitted to hospital. Authorities had red-flagged the name, and if anything—or any one, turned up, the cops, would be the first to know.

“Wasn’t that the one who came in and showed the passport, ah, sort of first thing, Gilles?”

Gilles nodded, sighed, made notes…yes, this was all very suggestive.

“Madame Bernier. Interestingly, she’s disappeared as well. Oh, both apartments are still furnished, and in good repair, and with a bit of rotten food and all of that. The landlords are cooperating…” Roger looked up.

“Just going on the notes, none of them seems to have owned a pet…other than a certain archetype, of, uh, young man…” Pets complicated matters when you wanted to pull up stakes in a hurry.

Young men, of a certain age and type were disposable, as he sort of saw it…

“Argh.”

“Yes, I understand.”

Roger flipped a page.

“Then there is—or was, Mademoiselle Robert. Er, the male was, theoretically, one Jules Lalonde. Who has not reappeared, neither has any dead body, or the remains thereof, been positively identified as him, well, now she seems to be rather scarce, and at this point, one begins to wonder if she ever existed at all.” The rent was good until the end of the month.

Paid by cheque, a whole year’s worth at once according to the landlord, and officers were inquiring. The cheques hadn’t bounced. Not yet, anyways.

“Hmn.”

“Here’s one, Gilles. D’Aubreuil. Never returned to his monastic cell. Never returned home, never had a phone or an address or a bank account, what with being destined for Holy Orders. That’s an enigma, for all we know he’s joined a fucking pirate ship in the South Seas…”

And it went on. And on. And on, and on, and on.

Roger flipped through the notes.

“Oh, yes, what was that other lady’s name…”

Claire Laurent, and he seemed to have missed one somewhere in there. He had too many pages. The fingertips were too dry to separate the pages. It was like Maintenon said. It was all just bullshit after a while, one that might eventually take up an entire filing cabinet, or more likely, a whole bank of them.

Argh.

There was a pause and this seemed like a good time.

 “Speaking of Alphonse.”

Now it was Roger’s time to blink, owlishly, looking up from his own voluminous files.

It was a bit of a story all on its own.

***

Gilles had not been hungover in the classic sense, although he’d had a lot to drink the night before. It was more a kind of buzz, even now, first thing in the morning. The alcohol hadn’t quite worn off yet, not completely. Perhaps a little dehydrated, but nothing more. Other than that, he’d suffered a bit of dry-retching, when brushing his teeth. He’d lit up, and suffered a hacking cough that resulted in a fair bit of phlegm, but they’d been up very late the night before…way too much tobacco for one day.

It was perhaps for that reason, what with a slight fuzzy feeling and a bit of pain in the lower right rear of the skull, it had taken some little time to realize that Alphonse was taking all the wrong turns, leading in all the wrong directions.

As it turned out, Alphonse had been reading the reports, looking at the maps, and they were clearly going somewhere else.

“Okay, sir. Now. Take a look at this.” Down low, the radio slung under the dashboard squawked and muttered and he reached over and turned it down even further.

He handed over a map.

“It’s not exactly a cul-de-sac, not quite. You can get out the back way, following down an alley, all light industry and bins overflowing with stuff. All too easy to get a puncture, right.” A roofing company, light industry, mechanical services, and machine shops, all strung out in a line.

The alley just led to more industrial areas, bisected by railroad tracks, and there were only limited places to cross the tracks. Alphonse built up a picture in words.

Gilles looked at the fairly large scale map, folded just so, to show this part of the city, an industrial section in the southeastern suburbs.

After an initial pinch-point, turning in off the actual street, there was a kind of plaza, lined on each side with small store-fronts, some with fading signs and some with a different kind of sign, activity, an open door, a vehicle parked with engine idling out in front as someone came and went.

Wrong car, and yet here it is, right in the right place.


And then there was this one, where Alphonse and Gilles and their vehicle also idled. No one looked, no one cared. No one gave a damn—it was all pretty anonymous.

“Anyhow, sir. I asked around. My guess is, that the big black car is sitting right behind…door number four.”

Gilles snorted; it was a good a guess as any.

Those tired old eyes, big and brown and beautiful, like some sad old hound-dog, regarded Gilles over the right shoulder.

“So. How much do you want to bet?”

Gilles shook his head.

“Nope.”

Alphonse nodded.

He had a pair of bolt-cutters in the trunk.

This would be just a little bit unorthodox, as he put it.


END


Chapter One.

Chapter Two.

Chapter Three.

Chapter Four.

Chapter Five.

Chapter Six.

Chapter Seven.

Chapter Eight.

Chapter Nine.

Chapter Ten.

Chapter Eleven.

Chapter Twelve.

Chapter Thirteen.

Chapter Fourteen.

Chapter Fifteen.

Chapter Sixteen.

Chapter Seventeen.

Chapter Eighteen.

Chapter Nineteen.

Chapter Twenty.

Chapter Twenty-One.

Chapter Twenty-Two.

Chapter Twenty-Three.

Chapter Twenty-Four.

Chapter Twenty-Five.

Chapter Twenty-Six.

Chapter Twenty-Seven.

Chapter Twenty-Eight.

Chapter Twenty-Nine.

 

 

Louis an audiobook, Speak Softly My Love. That’s free with a trial membership.

 

See his art on Fine Art America.

 

Thank you for reading.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Friday, January 20, 2023

A Stranger In Paris, An Inspector Gilles Maintenon Mystery #9, Pt. 29.

Thank you, my dear.












Louis Shalako


In the end, the people had been amiable, the conversation had been tolerable, the intro from the head table interminable, and the dancing something of a revelation.

They were learning, again, together. He wondered just how long it had been for her—dancing, just dancing. For him, at least fifteen or twenty years. A shitty little thought.

Margot had leaned in, on the first dance, a slow waltz and informed him that her son was bugging her to take music lessons. Her daughter had just been confirmed into the Roman Catholic Church. The youngest had been taking Catechism, and was just about ready for her First Communion—which required some kind of informed consent, as he recalled, whatever that meant at that age. She was trying to tell him to loosen up and that she was a professional.

There was nothing to worry about.

That, well, it had been enough, and it was like some small and insignificant elastic little band, a little red band, barely go around your little finger twice sort of band, had snapped inside of him.

Fuck, it was just duty and any embarrassment at the current situation would sort of dissipate, if not Monday morning, then surely by Tuesday, or by Wednesday at the latest.

She’d laughed upon hearing that, and Gilles had sort of settled into it, and at least he had remembered enough footwork to get by—there had been a time, quite some time ago, when he might have been a little better at it. He and Ann would have been a lot younger, perhaps a little more sober, and that was pretty much it, perhaps a little more practiced.

The music ended, they shuffled back to the table, and it seemed as if the executive committee had made up their minds; even though their minds must have been made up a long time ago, considering the fact that the trophies had to be engraved ahead of time and all of that sort of a thing.

Someone had to know what was going on.

Someone had to know what was in that envelope.

***

Roger slipped into the seat beside him, ignoring Margot.

“Gilles, I’ve had a brainstorm. I’m thinking of talking to the manager, sort of seizing all the passports, and shit like that—”

“Who? Why. This is all bullshit.”

Langeron’s breath stank of alcohol, but then Maintenon’s probably did too.

“…that way, we get at least half of them…”

Gilles laughed out loud.

Yes, but only half—for whatever reason.

“Let’s not and say we did.”

“What?”

“Why don’t we just get them to make us a list. We can always shut them down before they leave town.”

He waited.

“All you have to do is talk to the Minister of the Interior.”

Roger sat, considering it. Well, it was an idea—

The other folks at the table were more interested in other things, and in fact one of their married couples were rising, making their goodbyes and obviously interested in leaving, above all else.

“But—but.”

Let's not, and say we did.

The man at the microphone stopped talking and right about then, Roger’s voice seemed very loud.

Looking around, no was paying the slightest attention.

The band was striking up a polka.

Gilles rose, extending a hand in Margot’s direction.

“My dear? I may be a bit creaky, but I honestly believe I can do this—”

She laughed, but she pushed the chair back and they were on the floor in a minute…following along, in a short queue between the tables. Poor old Roger was sitting there looking flabbergasted, or nonplussed, or maybe just underwhelmed. Fuck, it was still an idea.

“I suggest we sort of pick a dark corner…we’ll end up there, dance our way over, and then, if necessary…” They could abandon the attempt.

Margot was willing enough. They’d both had a few drinks, and that helped. She stuck her lips up close to his ear. Chin to chin, ear to ear and pelvis to pelvis. She had nice bone structure.

“My husband’s working overtime at the munitions plant again.” She gave him a little poke in the ribs.

He grinned from ear to ear. He stuck his mouth up close to her ear—

“Thank you for that, my dear.”

Her chuckle was low and throaty and as long as they went along with the crowd and didn’t trip over anyone, they might even get through this. Turns out, he still remembered it; that and the feel of hot, wet perspiration dripping down the inside of the shirt. It was a brand-new shirt, but fuck the cost anyways. He’d gotten all the straight pins out of the packaging, and that was really something these days.

It was better than a sharp poke to the old jugular.

He wondered if she was sweating too.

He leaned in and told her all that and she gave him another poke.

After a while, he noted Levain and his wife, dancing along and doing quite a good job of it, she was pregnant as things stood. He did listen, of course, but after a while, it all went in one ear and out the other. They’d been friends for many years, and it had all come down to that. With a start he recognized another officer, companion unknown, and they were good enough to ignore him…that one was from the traffic department. They were all volunteers, here.

Margot gave him a look of one sort or another, when he told her that Nichol had been pregnant for the last thirteen months and people were beginning to wonder…

“Now, now, Gilles.” She did laugh, though.

He grinned over her shoulder, studiously ignored by the male of another nearby couple, his eyes wide open but the lady clearly in some kind of physical trance-like state…one could sort of see where this was leading.

Good luck with that one, sir.

She’ll pass out first, or she’ll puke in your lap…

He’d seen it happen before.

The next dance was another fast one, and maybe he should have known better. There was some sort of formula for this sort of thing, and of course they were bound to play a nice, slow and romantic one sooner or later.

It was funny, how all of that had become so much clearer, thirty or forty years later.

He thought of Ann, he thought of Esther. So many years ago. Both of them dead, both of them painful memories in their own degree. Ann was his wife and his first love. Esther had been an accidental fling, yet not without emotion, even real affection. If only he hadn’t come along, she might still be alive. Things might have been different, with Esther—something else he had just seen clearly. Perhaps not for the first time, but clearly.

They got about halfway through it when Margot gave his upper arm a quick squeeze and it was time to break off from the action for a while. There was a tap on the shoulder.

They stood back.

“…so…”

Steve, from Vancouver—

“May I cut in, my good man…?”

Hell, why not, it was as good a time as any.

She tipped Gilles a wink…

As someone had once put it.

***

Steve, from Vancouver.

Gilles watched as Steve from Vancouver swept Margot up in his arms and the pair danced away.

He’d had a brainstorm of his own, and just when he thought he might get away unscathed, he found his way blocked by a stout young woman who had been eyeing him from a table across the centre aisle…he had wondered what that was about.

She was bound, bent and determined to get a dance, why him in particular, was something of a mystery—

Damn.

With shoes about two sizes too small for her, the only one she was fooling was herself.

“Well, just this one, my dear.” Suppressing any signs of irritation as best he could, as they took up their stance, he was bemused to see a vaguely-familiar figure…Schleicher.

Merde!

Like a punch in the guts…

From behind, he hadn’t actually seen the face, but the figure was tall, built about the same way, and dressed in the first Sherlock outfit they’d seen so far other than LeBref. A door opened and the person was gone into the rest room, and here was poor old Gilles, looking around for Levain, Roger, Joseph, Margot, anyone at all would have done.

She looked up with shining eyes, giving him a quick and playful bat on the shoulder.

“You haven’t heard a word I’ve said.” True enough—

“Oh, ah. Terribly sorry, my dear.” Merde.

He was tempted to march her straight backwards across the floor, keeping an eye on that door, but to do so would have been to risk disaster…the throng were going counter-clockwise in some internal and infernal herd instinct.

Fuck, there was nothing to do but dip, and twirl, and float around the room, and this just kept getting better and better, all of the fucking time.

And of course by the time Gilles shook the lady off, ah, Millie from Birmingham, with two novel-manuscripts under her belt and another one coming out soon. Which was a real big break according to her, from a very reputable publisher. Of course the washroom was empty, one solitary tap dripping the only sign of recent occupancy. That and a faint smell of urine.

Fuck.

Schleicher.

And of course, the lady was waiting for him. Right outside the door.

The next musical piece was a foxtrot, and the thought crossed his mind. What the hell, why not.

She smelled vaguely floral, face-powder and hair spritz; arm-pit powder and God knew what else. He was rediscovering something, and he wished he wasn’t—maybe he just needed the experience.

“So. You’re the great Gilles Maintenon.” She laid her head on his shoulder.

His mouth opened, and closed.

“Don’t worry. I won’t tell.” She looked up, biting a corner of her lower lip. “Honestly, you must think us a bunch of proper fools.”

He took a better look at the young lady.

“No…not at all.” He thought. “There…there must have been some reason, way back…way back when. Way back, when I first thought of becoming…you, know, a detective, a cop…a police officer.”

One had to choose, and to move on that goal, and the books had at least stimulated such thoughts.

It might have turned out worse, after all.

“Some of the best criminal minds in the world are in this room, right here, and right now.” He smiled. “They simply chose a better path, over an actual criminal career. Which is, quite frankly, not quite so glamorous as some books and films would imply—”

It was her turn to take another look.

“Yes. I can see why, now.”

They had underestimated each other.

He could have been a criminal, after all, and he told her so. And so could she—

Perhaps it was the wine.

It’s not like he didn’t have the mind for it, and she laughed when he said it.

And of course, he had already forgotten her name.

Millie. It was Millie—he was almost sure.

She was a student, a fan of books and reading, and she’d been in Paris for months. She’d recognized him from the paper. She’d always wanted to write a book…lots of people tried and failed, she’s at least finished a couple, thought Gilles. Hell, they might even be good.

Fuck.

***

END

Chapter One.

Chapter Two.

Chapter Three.

Chapter Four.

Chapter Five.

Chapter Six.

Chapter Seven.

Chapter Eight.

Chapter Nine.

Chapter Ten.

Chapter Eleven.

Chapter Twelve.

Chapter Thirteen.

Chapter Fourteen.

Should have brought that thing after all...

Chapter Fifteen.

Chapter Sixteen.

Chapter Seventeen.

Chapter Eighteen.

Chapter Nineteen.

Chapter Twenty.

Chapter Twenty-One.

Chapter Twenty-Two.

Chapter Twenty-Three.

Chapter Twenty-Four.

Chapter Twenty-Five.

Chapter Twenty-Six.

Chapter Twenty-Seven.

Chapter Twenty-Eight.

 

Louis has books and stories on Kobo.

 

See his art on Fine Art America.

 

Thank you for reading, ladies and gentlemen.