Wednesday, December 11, 2024

Dead Reckoning, Chapter Four. An Inspector Gilles Maintenon Mystery. Louis Shalako.

Emanuelle, seven months pregnant and a newlywed...









Louis Shalako




Seven months pregnant, still very much the newlywed, Emanuelle was having a hard time coming to terms with being the wife of a police officer. Normal routine was all right, but this one was different. He’d be gone for a few days at the very least. Maybe as much as a week, although he had downplayed that part.

She’d taken some convincing. It was almost impossible to explain. It was only when he’d literally broken down into tears that she understood. She had held him in her arms as he sobbed…still, not quite understanding, but then who would. Even now, he could see the difference between the objective and the subjective, the trouble was, that he just didn’t care.

This one was important to Hubert, and in that sense it had been educational for the both of them—but there were times when the job, or honour, the duty, or something very much like it, came first. It was personal loyalty to Gilles and perhaps a few things he stood for as well. She would just have to work it out, and so would he. They would work it out together, and he told her all that. They had their whole lives ahead of them.

One way or another, he was going, and that was that, although he was smart enough not to put it in exactly those terms…

She’d only met Maintenon once, for about three minutes, when he’d attended the wedding, something else she hadn’t truly understood the significance of…at least not at the time.

And—

With a big whack of cash, an envelope literally stuffed with bills, with tickets waiting for them at the station, Hubert and LeBeaux had flashed their badges, stated their names, gotten their tickets, and hustled their luggage onto the all-nighter heading down south.

The Paris Metro was famous, the Orient Express, Paris to Istanbul, with its lavish décor, plush seats and private compartments, and a world-class dining car, deservedly so. The reality, certainly on the unglamorous southern routes was something just a little bit different. Two and a half days, with overnight stops in cities big and small along the way, it all seemed like such a waste of time, even to Hubert. It had been his idea, after all, and regrets were useless. It was only now, that he realized what he had been asking for. It was a marvel that he had gotten it—

Really. He could only hope to make something out of it, and yet that seemed pretty unlikely too.

It was a good thing they were going south, the northbound trains probably stopped at every station, picking up hundreds of cans of fresh, raw milk for processing as they went along. It was only later when they found out that this worked both ways, north and southbound. All those cities and all those towns after all, all of them thirsty and hungry for milk, cream and cheese…butter and eggs.

Perhaps that was being unkind, as he nodded at LeBeaux across from him and glancing around at the bored, the weary, and the downright sleeping passengers lining the rows of seats. He wasn’t quite ready for that yet.

“They say railroad coffee is the best in the country.”

“It had better be—” The smile belied the words. “As they say. An army marches on its stomach, after all.”

No, LeBeaux wasn’t exactly stupid, having a charm all his own and this after a very short time. Quick on the uptake, he’d accepted the assignment (which was purely voluntary), without a lot of bitching or whining, no excuses, no reservations, and the fact that he hadn’t had time to get all that close to Gilles, would give him a certain perspective.

Well, the luggage was locked up in the baggage car, and the briefcase could go along with them to the dining car.

“They might have sandwiches and things like that.”

Hubert nodded and grabbed his hat.

“I’m game if you are.”

***

Tired of all the mourners.

Andre was getting tired of all the well-wishers, all the mourners as he was beginning to think of them, all the folks from all over the building, from all over town, really, stopping in and offering condolences. Thankfully, it had begun to peter out, but it still wasn’t completely over either, apparently.

It was disruptive, it was irritating, no matter how well meant, and too many of their sudden influx of visitors had some terrible urge, to unburden themselves. To reminisce in maudlin tones, about Gilles, intersecting with their own personal stories, and in some cases, to merely indulge in long sessions of what could only be described as gossip—old, tired gossip that somehow gone off on a tangent, and didn’t even involve Gilles. More than anything they wanted to talk. It rubbed the meat raw, rubbed salt into an open wound, and other metaphors, if that was the right word, or some other one that he couldn’t think of right away.

So, when a uniformed gendarme stuck his head into the room a little diffidently, casting his glance around the otherwise empty room, and finally settling up on Andre, he bit back a growl, settling for a dark but quiet scowl which was rapidly becoming habitual…

“Yes?”

The officer entered the room, committed now and perhaps regretting it—

“Yes. Sir. Ah, it’s just that we have something, hopefully, on Maintenon’s deep freezer case.”

“Ah.” More receptive now, Andre reached for the proffered report.

Sitting up, he opened the file but remained engaged for the moment.

“Ah, yes, sir. I am in the northwestern part of the city.” He mentioned the name of the Arrondissement, which was on the file anyways. “We had a report of an abandoned vehicle and I was on the call. Sure enough, a dark blue delivery van, common enough, and yes, there were signs on the side. It had rained, and the signs were…not in good shape, and it occurred to me that they were just thin pasteboard sheets, with hand-painted lettering on them, glued or pasted on to disguise the real origin of the vehicle…”

“Go on.” Hmn.

“Ah, yes. Ah, we recovered the vehicle and took it to the technical branch. They have carefully soaked off the labels, with sponges and hot water, basically, and now we have the real name of the company…who have, in fact, put in a complaint regarding the theft of the vehicle. It’s a little village about fifty kilometres east of the city limits—which explains why we didn’t hear about it initially.”

Andre nodded. The time, the date, the names, the location were all right there for him.

“Understood.” The report would have been made to the local constabulary, and yet the Paris papers were popular enough all over the country…homicide bulletins were nation-wide.

Someone had put two and two together and sent their own bulletin right back.

“Understand, ah, Detective Levain, that the area is a bit of an industrial wasteland, with vacant lots and patches of scrubby forest, railroad tracks, small farms, crossroads with the beginnings—or, or, the endings, of a village, some private estates which tend to be walled and gated. The vehicle was driven off of the road, down a farm laneway and stuffed, nose-first, into the bushes, just before it opened up into a bean-field.” They’d left the key in the ignition, and the vehicle was essentially undamaged. “It might have been there for quite a few days, near as anyone can make out.” Rain showers and road dust left their own signs, and that was for sure.

As for fingerprints, there were all kinds of them, and the techs were working on that, but odds were the basic bits, the door handles, the steering wheel, had been wiped, or the thieves had simply worn gloves throughout that part of the operation.

“And what are the people saying about the vehicle?”

“Stolen from their own yard, over the weekend. They do carpets and flooring, and they say there were some tools and stuff inside. That must have been dumped somewhere. So, they had the machine for a few days before it turned up at Maintenon’s door. The theft seems pretty professional in that sense.” Going on, he explained that the fake signs had been a buffy, off-white colour, big chunks of card-stock, with the lettering in black and gold, and the name, Montgolfier Brothers on the side was clearly bogus but they were still digging into that…with all the resources available.

The Montgolfier brothers had built the first hot-air balloon, just to be clear…that might have some significance.

As for himself, he didn’t see much in it, but one never knew.

“So, we have the initial theft, the dumping of the tools, the actual job, and the housekeeper is fairly firm on the number—four males. Oh, driving across town in mid to late afternoon, Friday night traffic, and then dumping the vehicle. One must assume a pick-up, a second vehicle already in place, or someone there with another vehicle to bring them home so to speak. That isn’t to say that the other three males couldn’t have been dropped off along the way.” They could always throw an old bicycle in the back end, and take off that way…one or two perps, on bicycles maybe.

So, they were looking for anything up to five individuals, perhaps more.

One or two people could simply step out at a red light, for example, slam the passenger door and disappear into the throng. It happened all the time, and no one would remark upon it. If two was company, and if three was a crowd, five people might just imply some kind of gang involvement—

“That freezer could have come from anywhere in France, at the very least.”

His thinking seemed fairly thorough, noted Levain, mentally filing all that away.

Andre nodded.

“Thank you.” He nodded, again. “Well, it’s a lead, anyways.”

“Ah, yes, sir. Everything we have is in the file. Including photos of the fake signs. Ah—”

“Yes?”

“Is it true that we still don’t have any identification on the bodies?”

Andre grunted.

“No—I mean yes. Ah, hell, yes; that is true. We do not have identification on the bodies…” Yet there was much food for thought here. “What we do have is this. One male, about forty, medium height, weight and build, one female, approximately mid-twenties, blonde, slim but fairly well-built, and one male, early thirties, of a foreign race, not exactly black but not exactly white either. Neither skinny nor fat. Nothing really outstanding there. Uh. Do you have any ideas on that one, constable?”

The man had clearly been reading the bulletins.

“Er, no. No, sir.” The implication was there, and if the man really did have an idea, hopefully he would share it with them…

“What did you say your name was?”

“Ah, Martin Garnier. Constable first-class.”

“…and who is your supervisor?”

“Sergeant Roche, sir.”

“Thank you.”

That was on the report too, but it was good to be sure.

“Thank you for bringing this all the way over here, Martin. We appreciate this very much. Oh—and next time, call me Andre.” It was as much of a reward as he could give.

“Ah, yes, sir.” The constable straightened up, gave him a proper salute, and turned for the door.

Andre’s eyes dropped to the file.

Perhaps there was hope here after all—

 

END

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Chapter One, Scene One.

ChapterOne, Scene Two.

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Chapter Three.



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Monday, December 9, 2024

Dead Reckoning, Chapter Three. An Inspector Gilles Maintenon Mystery. Louis Shalako.

Down in the catacombs, were you...














Louis Shalako





After an hour and a half in the catacombs, looking up various facts and doing more thinking than so-called work, Hubert returned to the room, as those in the know called the Special Homicide Unit.

To find Roger Langeron there was one thing, to find Inspector Delorme there was something else. To find that Levain was essentially being bumped and that Delorme was now appointed acting head of the unit was even more something else…his heart sank.

Hubert had the rank of detective, but his seniority was middle of the pack, and department heads were known to salt their own favourites into the mix, and there were plenty of guys who would bump him in a heartbeat if they saw an opportunity…and this was clearly an opportunity in a small, tightly-knit, but very prestigious unit.

“Ah, Hubert.” Roger, he could handle—

“So, here’s the young man with all the bright ideas.”

Yes, that was Delorme all right, complete with the fucking deer-stalker cap, admittedly not on his head but hanging on the rack along with the tweed Macintosh and a knitted scarf of many colours.

It was June, for crying out loud, but to some the image was everything.

If Delorme is the new Boss, then I am out of here anyways—that’s what he was thinking.

In which case, he had nothing much to lose.

“Yes, sir.” Showing a coolness he did not feel, Hubert took his desk and opened up the steno pad. “So. The river Pique has its source high in the Pyrenees above the town. Fed by multiple side-creeks, it starts off small, shallow and rapid, and then as it goes along, it gets much wider, with waterfalls, rapids and boulder-gardens for much of the way.”

There would be deeper pools and eddies, and gravel beds, and places to do a little fly-fishing. The town lay at an elevation of only six hundred-thirty metres above sea level, but the valley was surrounded by real mountains. Hubert had been doing his homework, all right.

As for the fishing, Gilles wasn’t exactly known for it, but then he’d hardly been down there in years, and maybe it had been the nephew’s idea. Or maybe he really was getting back into some youthful experiences or something—back to his roots.

“Gilles…Gilles was hardly the sort of man that would take a rod and reel down to the Seine and pass the time of day with all the other wharf-rats…” He certainly wasn’t known for it. “Right?”

Langeron nodded, sort of impressed. This young man at least asked questions, and satisfied his curiosity, even at the expense of the company so to speak, but then it was his job after all. These were special circumstances.

“Go on.”

Delorme nodded alongside Langeron.

“Very well, sir.” Hubert threw down the pad and the pen. “I want to go down there. I want to see it for myself. I want to talk to the people.”

Maintenon had all kinds of friends and relatives down there, surely someone would talk to him.

“And surely they have their own people, whom, I am sure, are very professional.” Delorme wasn’t saying no, he wasn’t saying yes either.

“I’ll take a leave of absence if I have to.” Hubert looked him, then both of them, in the eye—both eyes, all four eyes at once, sort of. “Gilles deserves that much. And you might have to fight a few other people as well.”

“So, it’s like that, is it?”

“Yes.” There was a pause. “Sir.”

It was calculated.

Maybe even perfectly calculated, but he could get another job. Somewhere, something, whatever, but another job never the less—

And God-damn them all to hell, anyways.

It was anything but an afterthought, that sir. No, that was purely calculated.

Langeron cleared his throat.

“Well, that seems clear enough, then.” The political chef to the last, or so it would seem.

Delorme fought back a faint grin, going all wooden for a moment. He’d never been that close to Gilles, but then no one really was. Except for these people. It was a consideration.

His eyes dropped, he thought it over, and then the eyes came up again.

There's got to be a hot babe, somewhere in this book... - ed.

“All right, Detective Hubert. Who would you suggest should go along with you.”

Sacre, merde. Hubert had just won one for the Gipper, to borrow a phrase from the Yanks, and without even hardly trying.

He did not hesitate, for he who hesitates is lost.

“LeBeaux. Éliott. He’s the most available, without disrespecting someone who isn’t in the room at present.” The new guy, and now it’s my turn to train him a little. “Firmin is on vacation, when he gets back he can pick up some of the load…”

And maybe get a little training of my own, insofar as how in the fuck do you ever train anyone? Not that LeBeaux was bad, far from it—he was here for a reason. He just hadn’t been there for very long. This might be a very good time to get to know the man.

Hubert gave his reasons in logical order.

Not without his own perspective, Delorme nodded firmly.

“Done. Take all the time you need. Draw some cash, get your tickets. Make your domestic arrangements and get on down there. I want to know everything, Detective Hubert. Everything.”

“Sir.”

All dried up in terms of words, it was all Hubert could do, to wonder when LeBeaux would be back. What in the hell do I tell him, and what is the first step in whatever it is that he was supposed to do next.

He opened up the notebook and began making a list. Cops were famous for lists, timelines, a series of events in chronological order; and chalk diagrams in several colours. It gave them time to think. It was a visual aid, it said so in the manual. Hopefully, something would come to him.

He was as qualified as anybody, and this was important.

The senior men were muttering between themselves and somehow fading away from his attention, but they had been through all of this sort of thing before, and it seemed like every year they lost someone, some years more than that. Best let the boy get on with it, in other words…

And if Delorme and Langeron would just clear the room and get the hell out of there for a while, he might feel one hell of a lot better about things. Sooner or later, Delorme would have to claim Maintenon’s desk, which was not the best of thoughts. Then there was Levain, almost worse in some ways, due to his close relationship with Gilles. He’d have to explain to Levain most of all, and he might be, indeed was, tougher than most. Levain was tougher than whale-shit and that was without even half trying. He wasn’t even obeying an order, not really—this was high-level wangling, and they would have a word for it in pretty much any language.

And then there was Gilles—gone, under mysterious circumstances. Right now, my responsibility is to Gilles. The unfamiliar sting of tears came to his eyes, but he was busy enough and hopefully they wouldn’t see all that…

Maybe Delorme wasn’t such a dink after all.

Maybe.

Maybe—maybe not.

Neither am I, on some level—now, there was a thought.

It never pays to underestimate anyone, not even yourself.


END

 

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Chapter One, Scene One.

Chapter One, Scene Two.

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Friday, December 6, 2024

Dead Reckoning, An Inspector Gilles Maintenon Mystery, Chapter Two. Louis Shalako.

Hubert.












Louis Shalako




A couple of weeks had gone by, with the workload about the same as usual, and with Andre Levain taking over in Gilles’ place. Senior man, he had plenty of experience and word was, he could probably go anywhere in the force, perhaps even taking on his own department—if only he had wanted it.

Andre was happy enough where he was, and while promotion might bring in a little more money, always important to a family man, it was a kind of trap in that you ended up with a much bigger pile of responsibility. A big, steaming pile, sometimes. At some point, you could be held accountable for the mistakes of the people under you, and that was always a consideration. You’d be dragging a briefcase full of work home every stinking night and every stinking weekend. He’d be competing for the best and the brightest people, going up against a bunch of other department heads, playing office politics, and accounting for the budget and the overtime, and answering to the more political brass-hats, whereas under Maintenon he was more or less insulated from all of that. Maintenon could defy them, upon the proper occasion, and somehow, make it stick. Now that, took not just nerve but real talent, and he wasn’t too sure he had that, or if he ever would.

There was a subdued knock at the door and he looked up from a file he and Hubert had been going over.

“Yes, yes.”

The door opened and a somber looking Roger Langeron entered, his mouth tight, eyes down and dark-looking, and Andre wondered if someone had fucked up real bad. He had a couple of flimsy sheets in hand.

“People.”

Two or three others, Margot, LeBref, and the new guy, LeBeaux, froze for a second and then all eyes swung to the Chief.

“Sir?”

Roger stood there, and uttered a long, deep sigh.

“Merde. Well, there’s no making this easy…Maintenon is missing, presumed dead—”

What?

The silence was pressing, all eyes on him and all mouths open as the significance of the words sank in and hit bottom.

“…Gilles and his nephew Guillaume were fishing a river not far from the original family home, down there in Bagneres de Luchon. They say it’s very remote, with hilly country, forest, and, ah, ah, the river runs in a gorge.” Choking up, Roger looked down at the paper in his hands. “The body has not been recovered, and he is presumed dead…due to the current, rocks, waterfalls, the temperature of the water…”

The amount of time that had passed, the rugged terrain.

There were tears in his eyes, and Margot was openly sobbing.

“How?”

“They don’t say—they’re not sure. Apparently, Gilles went downstream a ways, looking for a better pool or whatever…it’s a mountain stream. He was going for some of those exquisite little brook trout. Guillaume stayed where he was, or so it says in the report. When he finally went looking, Gilles was gone…just gone.”

They stared at Roger, and he reached for a handkerchief. His eyes came up, looked around and he headed morosely for the chair—Maintenon’s chair. He landed with a firm thud, as if the knees had given way. Roger dabbed at his eyes.

Heaving another sigh, mostly in control of himself, he kept going.

“They say Guillaume found a few things, his fishing rod, a creel, that’s like a wicker basket they put their fish in…that famous chirper cap of his. The one he got when he was in England that one time.” That hat came out about twice a year, spring and fall in a kind of ritual.

Roger had to stop for moment, perhaps blaming himself in some ways.

“I suppose there’s more. I only got the message this morning. I will follow up, but I thought you should be the first to know.” He’d have to call the Minister in a few minutes.

The news would be going around like wildfire, and the rumours, and it was better if the Minister heard about it from Roger first—

The rumours wouldn’t be too far behind the news.

There were other thoughts, a funeral, or some kind of a memorial perhaps. The next of kin would take care of the arrangements, presumably, and yet they would all want to be there—but what if it was down there, in the freaking Pyrenees. As he recalled Maintenon’s late wife was buried in a cemetery here in the city. They wouldn’t all be able to go, especially if it was down there, and yet someone should—probably him, and he wasn’t quite ready to get into that just yet. He just didn’t have the information.

“Fuck.” That sounded like LeBref, the near midget, Joseph, who had known Gilles as well as, and as long as, anyone.

It was like the people just couldn’t find the words.

Margot wiped her eyes and blew her nose one more time, keeping the crumpled tissues in her hand for now.

Roger cleared his throat and tried again.

“They have search parties out, in the faint hopes that he might be clinging to a log somewhere down in the gorge, but it’s been almost two days and no sign of him.” Up in the mountains, even in June, the nights were very cold and the water near-freezing from the snow-melt. “I have a phone number for the chief down there, and I will be calling him as soon as I get back down to my office.”

Levain nodded, his head was down, but still listening nevertheless…

Roger bit down hard, and there was a long silence.

“Sir.”

“Yes, Andre?”

“Was there any indication of foul play…?”

Roger stared at him.

“Now that, is one very good question.” There was that crazy freezer thing, to his knowledge the police inquiries were generally getting nowhere. “Without a body, how could we possibly know…”

He trailed off, looking lost.

“Not that I am aware of, Andre.”

There was a long sigh from Hubert, shaking his head…looking at the clock on the wall, and then eyes drifting inevitably towards the coffee-pot, and then tearing themselves away in a kind of self-disgust.

He and Roger exchanged a look of understanding: life must go on, no matter how unpalatable the thought. The work would never end. Hubert’s eyes dropped.

Merde.

Maintenon. Dead.

It was all too much to comprehend.

***

A couple of hours later, the detectives, pressed for time and results, and with little more to be said, had more or less gotten back to work. Levain had to leave, taking the new guy with him on their latest case, which had some hopes of being solved…

Margot was off to court.

Hubert, for one, was finding it hard going. It was just the three of them now, in between phone calls and other interruptions.

“I just can’t believe it.” He shook his head. “Gilles—fishing, no less. What, was he going back to his youth or something. Okay, he was an older man, the banks are quite steep. Maybe he slipped on mud or wet grass and hit his head. But then there’s that fucking freezer in his kitchen, with three fucking dead bodies in it. If he really is…gone, I find it very hard to believe that this is a complete coincidence.”

There were no takers for this conversational gambit, and one could hardly blame them.

Even so, his instincts were killing him—just as poor old Gilles would have said.

It was just too much of a coincidence.

“What’s the name of the river down there?”

LeBref looked up from his phone-work, and shook his head. He put his hand over the mouth-piece.

“Look it up.” That was it.

Archambault, a little late for work this morning but having been briefed on the situation, and wrought with his own emotions, barely looked askance, busy with his own telephone, his own notes. One quick glance out of one fairly jaundiced eye, and that was about it for him—

Still, it was a kind of support, if not exactly encouragement, and Hubert resolved to do just that.

The bullshit piled up on his desk would just have to wait.

Mind made up, Hubert was just rising, heading on down to the research library in the basement, which was universally referred to as the catacombs, when LeBref covered the phone again and spoke.

“While you’re at it, get the number of that fucking cop-shop down there.”

Archambault covered his own telephone mouth-piece.

“Get every bit of God-damned information they have.” It was gruff, but the man was a veteran, perhaps even a legend in his own right.

“…sorry about that, can you repeat that last line…?” Archambault, in control of himself, nothing but pure professionalism.

Back to work again.

Hubert, bit his lip in cold emotion and nodded sharply. No, it wasn’t over yet, with all due respect to the locals…back on the job, and with a real vengeance this time.

“Will do.”

The rest of them could get on with the work.

And tomorrow was another day, as they often said in the homicide business.

It could hardly be any worse than this one.

 

END

 


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Sunday, December 1, 2024

Brainstorm: On Radio Control Drones, Helicopters, Planes, Boats, Dune Buggies, Tanks. Louis Shalako.

Approx. 1/5 scale Fleet Finch. #Louis








Louis Shalako




Brainstorm. I had just spent $134.00 on a drone that I can fly in my living room.

It is fun, and that’s all very well. I needed to do something different, for just this once.

Then I got curious. I was looking at these teeny-tiny little helicopters for, literally, $29.95 on Amazon, (exactly 3 1/2" long.  ed.) and that’s when it hit me. What if I looked—just looked, at a proper transmitter…some kits, some ARFs, (almost-ready-to-fly) model aircraft…???

Real, fucking aircraft—in purely relative terms.

Down below, we’ve linked to a four-channel transmitter, and it’s only…(drum roll please), $135.00, or about what I paid for the drone.

You see, I also have a 36” wingspan Fokker D-VII in the closet. It's built, it has a brushless motor, I have two Li-Po batteries for it. It has servos. The old FM transmitter was obsolete. I took the batteries out before they gooped out and rotted the innards of the transmitter. What I need is a new transmitter, a new receiver, and a 12-volt power supply, or I could just charge off the battery in the vehicle. I need to upgrade to the 2.4 Ghz, modern tech, just for the sake of safety.

I mean, if you're going to do it, why fuck around.

Electronics are ridiculously cheap these days. I was looking at CB radios one day, which would run right here in my apartment off of a 12-V power supply, and you can literally set up for about a hundred bucks with a cheap radio and a cheap antenna.

And.

I have done all this before—

A simple bench in the spare bedroom, and I would have the nucleus of a pretty darned good hobby at minimal cost. Maybe even two hobbies.

***

Click to enlarge.

I am kind of pleased to see that I held onto that old 12-V/6-V power supply. Lower left foreground, a pair of Li-Po batteries...a little above that, a portable charger compatible with Li-Po. There are some old Ni-Cd batteries, a desktop vice, some meters, a battery cycler/discharger (in red), the obsolete FM Ch. 28 transmitter, and of course my Fokker D VII. This is equipped with a Frio-10 brushless motor, mini-servos on elevator, rudder, ailerons, and an ESC, electronic speed control on the throttle. What I need, is a new transmitter/receiver, and some kind of benches. Better lighting. I don't know how badly I need to be dragging model aircraft up and down the stairs, and there is the question of where in the hell do we fly it.

(Area 52. – ed.)

Looking at the pictures, we can see a long skinny battery pack that appears to be for the transmitter. What I can try, is to dig out a trickle charger, plug the battery into the transmitter, and plug the charging jack into the transmitter and just see if it takes a charge.

I do not plan on flying with this radio, but I could at least turn on the radio, plug in the power battery and discharge the Li-Po batteries. We can run that quiet little electric motor right in the spare bedroom. I could try charging them, as I purchased that charger when I went to the brushless motor and Li-Po batteries. I might want to read up on it first. That only makes sense.

If I dig deep enough, I might even be able to come up with the manuals.

I have never flown this aircraft, but all the stuff in the photos has been paid for. There is some food for thought here. The machine is very dirty after seventeen years of storage. It will take some time to clean that up. The covering could use a little tightening. There is a hole in the bottom of the lower left wing. The aileron hinges are not secure. I need to cut open the covering, align the hinges and glue them properly. I do have covering of one colour or another, a heat iron, so all of that is no problem. We can check for warps in the wings while we’re at it. By the time I take it apart and put it back together again, some of those long-buried memories might resurface, and the truth is, I actually do know a fair bit about building and flying R/C aircraft. 

***

So, we have an Apollo 25-amp speed control, and there must be a receiver buried in there somewhere. You can see all the screws and access panels.

One of the things I might consider is to get a soldering iron, some solder, some soldering paste, and I could simply buy Ni-Cd cells and assemble my own batteries. I have some reservations about any transmitter that accepts dry cells—the old Futaba sets came with rechargeable batteries, along with the trickle charger and three servos when you bought the four-channel radio.

With a transmitter, and a place to work, we can drive electric dune buggies or pickup trucks, tanks, we can drive an R/C boat, and while I’ve never done a tank, that might be interesting if it was fairly large, and not too expensive. What the hell, right. It would look good in the photographs…I could blog about it.

We can always dream.

***

Background. My old man was in his mid-fifties when he got the itch to fly a radio control airplane. He’d grown up with rubber band models. He’d built free-flights with Cox .049 motors on them. We had control-line airplanes that we flew in Germain Park, at least until the noise complaints started and the cops started showing up…

I stopped in to see the father figure one day, and I found him down in the basement working on a .40-powered trainer aircraft. He had all the equipment, brand-new, all kinds of tools. It was fascinating to watch a person with some experience, and it wasn’t very long before I was building one of my own.

We flew together as often as not, for about fifteen or twenty years, and it was something very precious in that we shared that passion.

I learned at my father’s knee, ladies and gentlemen, not even so much as an adult, but as a very small boy. That kind of thing doesn’t happen so often anymore…that kind of relationship really is special, when you think about it.

Dirty. Where there is an antenna, there must be a receiver...???

Frank was a very neat builder, but we might also consider the hundreds of models he’d covered using tissue paper and dope. Heat-shrink covering was a revelation, for a guy like that, someone who’d never had any money way back when. For Frank, with the house paid off, a good job, a little money in the bank, and a club full of pretty good guys to refer to, it must have been the dream of a lifetime—a humble kind of dream, but a dream nevertheless.

 

END


Learning to Fly the Chubory F-89 Drone.

Cheap Four Channel Transmitter and Receiver.

Bluewater R/C Flyers.

The Model Aeronautics Association of Canada.

CB Radio.

Slinger at 3,000 Feet. Pilot in command, MDW 216. Photography/Sound by Louis.

 

Here’s my WW I Royal Flying Corps Memoir, Heaven Is Too Far Away.


Thank you for reading, and keeping that dream alive.

Note: these links are for info only, as I am not into affiliate marketing.

Experiment 1: plug in dedicated Futaba wall charger and attempt to charge Ni-Cd transmitter and receiver packs. After four hours of charging, there was zero charge. Tags on the batteries read 2001 and 2005, so that seems to be that. I can buy a replacement battery at a later date, assuming I wanted to use that transmitter for a boat or dune buggy. To fly at the local club or M.A.A.C. events, one would need a current spec radio system.

Experiment 2: assuming we get any charge at all in the transmitter, plug a power battery into the plane and see if we can get the motor to turn, actuate control surfaces. Bearing in mind the results listed above, this experiment is on hold.

#Louis


Tuesday, November 26, 2024

Dead Reckoning, Chapter One. Scene Two. An Inspector Gilles Maintenon Mystery. Louis Shalako.

Roger Langeron: separating the wheat from the chaff.











Louis Shalako


Chapter One

Scene Two


After one hell of a weekend, Monday morning was predictable enough. Roger Langeron, head of the Sûreté here in Paris, sat across from Gilles, pausing for a moment as another of the crew shuffled in. He’d heard the news.

“As police, we can separate the wheat from the chaff, and ignore the irrelevant. It’s a good thing the average juror doesn’t get to read all of our case notes, otherwise we’d never get a conviction.” He uttered a long, drawn-out sigh. “And the housekeeper got the knock at the door and accepted all of this at face value.”

“Yes. Their timing was perfect. They might have been aware of her routine. If they knew anything about the lady at all, it was a dead certainty. To sit there and wait for them to finish would have been beyond her. Fridays, she heads out, early afternoon, does an hour or so of shopping, comes back. She puts it all away, probably looking at the clock every two minutes, knowing her.” She would have been put out if she’d had to stay one minute over her allotted time, or worse, been forced to deviate from what was clearly a pretty strict routine. In an emergency, Gilles would have been happy to pay overtime, but with that one, it simply wasn’t in the cards, at least not before Hell froze over.

Fridays, she went home early, as agreed between them on day one…she would have been caught between a rock and a hard place, and didn’t seem to have much flexibility of mind.

“Fuck. I had no idea of what to do.”

The crazy woman had let them in, accepting their story at face value and trusting them alone in the home of what was, after all, a pretty senior police official. She’d taken her purse and her shopping bags and simply walked away—

Unbelievable, and he was still trying to decide whether to let her go or just give her a stiff little lecture…any kind of help, let alone good help, was surprisingly hard to find these days. It would be the perfect chance to get rid of her, the trouble lay in finding another one.

Madame wasn’t even much of a cook, and he’d taken to making excuses for her, mostly, and eating out or having his meals delivered. What might have been acceptable on weekends had now become seven days a week. That, could only go on for so long.

“And?”

“Finally, it occurred to me that I really ought to call the police. Ha. She says she signed a delivery form, and yet one would think a legitimate operation would leave an invoice or something, perhaps a thin, badly-translated manual, or a warranty card or something. But, no, nothing.” They’d taken away the crate, or any other materials that might have gone along with it.

Heavy and difficult to handle, the machine had been scrupulously wiped down for prints.

It was one hell of a load to drag up three flights, even in the empty state…how in the hell had they even gotten it in the door, and that was another good question.

Of course, she hadn’t taken any notice of the name on the side of their delivery van, parked right out in front, nor much notice of the men involved, at least three or four of them or so she said. All average working men, of indeterminate age, nothing that really stood out about any of them. All of them wearing coveralls, again, with the name of the company written all over them. She had said that they were very polite, very sincere, and that was about all it had taken to convince her.

“Bah.” Gilles practically spat the word in his disgust.

There were hundreds of places where one might purchase such a freezer, and all of that would take time to look into.

“Here’s the thing. A private citizen could pay cash, and drag the thing home on their own. A moving company, a nephew or a son-in-law with a lorry or van of their own. It’s a cash sale, they don’t even need a story.” While the machine had a serial number, that only led back to the manufacturer and up to the point of sale. “If the sales person was a little too persistent, they could simply give a fake name and address, load her up and take it on home, or wherever.”

It might have been cash-and-carry all the way along.

It was up to the customer to fill in and mail in the warranty card…the seller couldn’t care less if they did or if they didn’t. There would be those customers who wouldn’t bother, or simply forgot.

Gilles. One pissed-off dude.

After that, it was pretty much untraceable. It was brand-new, insofar as anyone could determine so far, and yet it had to be looked into, in the hopes of some future outcome which would require documentation—the chain of evidence and custody.

“Are we supposed to go around to every recent customer’s house and make sure their deep freezer isn’t missing?” Maintenon gave another little snort. “There’s nothing like that in the recent theft and burglary reports…”

“Ah.”

Roger wasn’t the most intuitive of people, but he was bright enough to be head of the department. The more professional thieves were known to take a load of meat, sometimes the whole freezer, better yet, a refrigerated van or lorry, full of product and easy enough to dispose of. If you knew all the right, or all the wrong, sort of people. These were mostly crimes of opportunity, possibly a little planning, given a little bit of inside knowledge and the right time and place.

“Yes. Anyhow, the idea of a bomb or something struck me, and of course there are the times we live in…”

Roger nodded. Recent events came to mind—

It was a like a virus going around, and the political climate had not been good for some years in this country.

Gilles had made the call.

Officers had attended to his residence, and thinking furiously, they’d found a dustpan and some large bowls. It had taken quite some time, just scooping out ice cubes, which had tended to fuse together in large lumps, once the lid had been open for any length of time. Once the kitchen sink was full, they’d started in on the bath tub and the little sink in there. Once they’d gotten a ways down, running hot water through the taps to sort of help the melting process along, a dark colour had shown through the ice cubes and it was clear they had something else on their hands—

Gilles growled.

“One dead body, well, that’s a tragedy. Three, dead bodies—that, is damned interesting.”

Cause of death as yet unknown. It would take time to make any kind of identifications, or perhaps there would be no identification. At this point, once they’d figured out there was at least one corpse in there, the thing to do was to call in the crime-scene photographers. Then to drag it down the stairs again, all very carefully, so as not to spill it, and take it all down to the lab. Gilles had spent Friday night with the thing in his kitchen and an officer on the door for crime-scene security. On some level, Gilles might even be a suspect. It was laughable. Yet appearances of propriety had to be kept, even so, he’d been allowed to remain in his own home. It was the privilege of rank or something, and there would probably still be questions.

They had literally discussed the fate of the cat. Perhaps that had been the clincher—that and his own glares and grunts.

What were they going to do, arrest him? Were they going to arrest Sylvestre?

He had laughed in their faces.

He’d been pretty pissed-off by that point. He outranked the whole damned bunch of them, all at once sort of thing. For a senior officer to lose it like that wasn’t good and yet he still had the stubborn feeling…that was it. He really didn’t have much of an excuse.

A bad compromise all around.

And there still might have been a bomb, down in the bottom somewhere, as he put it.

It was one hell of a mess, and the news-hounds, the average tabloïd de journalisme jaune would be all over it, and for good reason: it was downright sensational, there was no other word for it.

"Looks like you're screwed, Boss."

“It gets worse from here, Gilles. I’m going to have to suggest that you are excused from this investigation. Mostly for the sake of appearances—”

Gilles nodded glumly.

“I agree.”

“There’s more, Gilles.”

“There is?” As if it wasn’t bad enough already.

“I hope you understand, as your boss, but also as a friend, that I am also under a bit of pressure here…” He trailed off. “Well. It’s a question of your vacation time.”

Maintenon groaned.

“I’m afraid I’m going to have to insist this time, Gilles.”

“Argh.”

“Gilles. Take three weeks—please. Or the Minister will be having my head.” He rose, glancing at the others in the room, all desperately trying to look busy and not like they weren’t eavesdropping on every word. “It’s been years, Gilles. Years. It’s fucking summertime, Gilles. The weather has been beautiful, and you really, really do need to get out of this town once in a while. Just for the sake of your own sanity.”

And mine too, although he didn’t say it.

“…look, you can hand off your files to the other detectives. Cold cases won’t get any more hopeless with a few weeks off. Your people are very competent when it comes to the live ones and you know I have full confidence in their abilities. But you’re off, as of Friday at quitting time…” That would give Gilles a little time to get used to it.

He could tidy up the desk and his files…

It might even give him a little perspective on things.

He didn’t say that either. Halfway out the door—

Gilles growled again.

Spinning on one heel, Roger turned back, half-choking on a laugh which would be real bad politics just then. He waggled a finger in Maintenon’s darkening face.

“That’s an order, Gilles. I’ll put that in writing, if I must—” And then he was gone.

Faces turned to him and Margot, for one, caught his eye.

Levain: about time, too.

“Looks like you’re kind of screwed, eh, Boss.” Her eyes dropped and she went back to her notes.

And there was Levain, grinning in the background over his own typewriter.

“And it’s about effing time, too.” Levain snorted, pleased with his joke.

His eyes came up and stabbed Maintenon right in the gizzard.

“…sooner or later, it had to happen. Right?”

Fuck.


END

Louis has books and stories available from Amazon.

See his works on Fine Art America.


***

Chapter One, Scene One.

 

Thank you for reading.