He
was nearing the top of the second flight of stairs, and the temperature had
gone up by a degree or two. The light rumble of talk came from somewhere in the
room, behind the wall to his right. His head was about floor level.
“Andre?”
His voice sounded loud in the enclosed space, but perhaps they hadn’t heard
him.
He
clambered up a few more steps, holding the rail as the wooden risers were dusty
and he’d already slipped once with his hard leather shoes on the third one from
the bottom.
“It’s
all right, boss. The boys are almost done.”
Gilles
turned the corner from the landing and went into what was clearly a kitchen. It
was all glazed to his left, with curtains thrown wide open, and giving a strong
north light to that end of the room. The other way was the kitchen proper with
its big and very old fashioned cast-iron range and oven immediately to his
right.
“Well.”
Gilles suddenly understood why Andre sounded so smug about it over the phone.
The
lady of the house, sprawled at the foot of the stairs in the far left corner,
lay amidst puddles and spatters of blood. He moved around the central block
table and had a look.
The
long slender sword sticking out of her chest lent a rather surreal air of
melodrama to what was already a shattering scene. Her glasses were on her face
and intact, but her eyes had that glazed and lifeless look, halfway rolled up,
back into her head. Gilles approached the body and knelt. He touched her
lightly on the wrist, noting she was certainly very close to room temperature.
“Oh,
my. Was she stabbed in the head, then?” The blood loss was copious…
Levain
neatly bypassed the question. He was letting Maintenon have it cold, like
yesterday’s gravy. That was just an expression they had.
“Madame
was killed early this morning. The cook arrived at seven-oh-five, or seven-ten
or so, according to her.”
“Ah.”
Andre
Levain cocked his ears at the sound of feet on the stairs.
Tailler
came in, taking in the scene, mostly the body at first, and looking with
interest at the lab boys, before his eyes finally came around to Gilles and
Andre. Andre Levain nodded at him in neutral fashion, noting the boyish air he
had about him, with his unusual height and still a bit of baby fat in the face.
Tailler had hazel-brown eyes and a fairly intelligent look about him.
Tailler
glanced at Levain in equally neutral fashion and nodded politely back.
“Sir?”
“It’s
all right, Tailler. You can observe the goings-on.” Gilles looked deadpan at
Andre. “Go on, please.”
“Right.
The young girl, her name is Sophie. She was out late, came home around four or
four-thirty, alone in a taxi-cab. She says she can’t remember the name of the
company.”
“Very
well.”
“She
said she had a couple of glasses of champagne at the party, and that she fell
asleep immediately upon coming home.” Levain consulted his notes as if to
ensure he had everything. “She says she didn’t hear anything until the cook
pounded on her door around seven-twenty. She’s not sure of the exact time and
neither is the cook.”
“All
right.”
“There
was no one else in the house. The rear door, which opens onto the alley, appears
to have been broken into. Glass inside and out, nothing unusual. We’re asking
if anything is missing.” Levain looked at his notebook. “The cook and the other
girls are pretty shaken.”
Gilles
nodded.
“So,
it looks like a sneak thief.”
“That’s
how it looks, Gilles.”
The
unspoken question was, if so, then why
are we here?
Gilles
bit his lip in silent contemplation.
“So
she was stabbed repeatedly with the sword? Hmn.” It certainly fit the profile
of a hasty choice of weapon. “That’s very strange.”
Something
heavy, a blunt instrument, wielded from behind, would have been much easier to
use with any likelihood of success. It was hard to conceive a self-respecting
thief not hearing her coming down the stairs, but that was an assumption on his
part. The thief might have been deaf!
She
would have been screaming like mad.
A
deaf perpetrator seemed unlikely, as they would find a less hazardous
profession very quickly. There were hard floors in all directions from this
vantage point. Gilles moved further into the room, absorbing it, the smell of
cooking, the smells that emanated from behind the cupboard doors, spices and
condiments and the raw smell of onions coming from somewhere nearby. Levain
watched him silently as he got the feel of the place.
“What’s
in there?” Gilles pointed to a small door.
“The
pantry. The usual stuff.”
Gilles
used his handkerchief to avoid leaving prints and carefully opened it.
Bulkier
stores, jars, tins and boxes, sacks of flour and what he thought was salt, were
lined up on wall shelves. There were empty baskets on the floor in the corner
and shopping bags hanging from pegs close to the door. A half a bushel of
apples, some potatoes, carrots…nothing out of the ordinary.
The
fingerprint technicians came out of a front room with their bulging valises.
They had their jackets on.
“We’ll fill you in when our reports are
complete.”
Maintenon nodded thoughtfully.
The first one made for the stairs.
The second one was more outgoing.
“We got a lot of good prints, quite a
number of different ones.” His attitude seemed to imply that he was just having
some good clean fun. “Any place a thief was likely to touch, including the
doors and knobs, of course.”
“Thank you, gentlemen.” Gilles could
still hear faint muttering from somewhere in the front of the house.
The inhabitants must be around
somewhere. He’d have a few questions for them in a moment. Levain continued.
“All
right. We have a housemaid, the cook, and the niece in the parlor, which is up
one flight. We have plenty of photos and the morgue boys are waiting for the
body.”
Just
then a familiar figure stuck his head out of the passage leading to those rooms
overlooking the street out front. Brighter out there, he was backlit but
immediately recognizable by a miss-shapen head, just like a big strawberry. That
had been his nickname in his younger days. The shock of tousled red hair would
have given him away at almost any distance. The sound of the fingerprint boys
clumping down the endless stairs, for the ceilings were all three and four
metres up on these floors, finally faded away with one last flurry of deep,
distant voices.
The
coroner was none other than the inimitable—Gilles had never found much use for
the word, but it somehow fit Gaston Janvier.
“Gaston.”
“You
know your victim was shot three times, don’t you?”
Levain
laughed aloud at the sadly patient look on Maintenon’s face, the deep and
expressive sigh he gave. Tailler looked on as if he’d known it all along. The
poor fellow had no idea of what he was supposed to be doing there. He had the
uncomfortable feeling that the Inspector was making a joke of him, which wasn’t
very nice.
“Sorry,
Inspector! I was just saving a little something for you.” Levain winked at Janvier.
Gilles
eyed Levain in a sardonic kind of agreement.
“Ah.
Ha. Yes. I see. Hmn.” He looked over at Tailler with tolerance written all over
him. “So, what do you think, young
man?”
Tailler
shook his head, completely baffled by all of the attention, but then he just grinned.
He shrugged expressively and winked solemnly at Levain, who oddly enough looked
away.
“Might
as well have a bash, eh, sir?”
END of EXCERPT.
So there it is, warts and all, my third mystery novel and my twelfth overall.
I'm still proofing it and it will be out in a couple of days.
It will be available by Christmas on various platforms.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Please feel free to comment on the blog posts, art or editing.