Louis Shalako
Speak Softly My Love
Chapter One
It all started with a litre of milk. Or rather, the
lack of one.
He’d run out completely. It was only Thursday.
Shopping day was Saturday.
Madame Lefebvre had laid in a fair supply of
groceries before heading off on her annual one week’s vacation with her sister
in Orleans. He wasn’t short of food exactly, just milk. He wasn’t expecting to
see her before Monday.
Gilles didn’t drink much milk, not being a big cereal
eater, not being a big fan of oatmeal and porridge and the like. His routine
was to have at least two cups of coffee in the morning. Lately the caseload was
such that nothing much had been happening to disturb the even flow of his
morning.
He should have left a note for the milkman, really,
but he was unfamiliar with the routine of his own household.
To have a little milk in the house might save him from
a day that began badly. At work, they’d have him running his legs off all day
long, with no chance of getting off his feet. Rushing out first thing, finding
a familiar place and then queueing up for it, and then finding a place to drink
it, would never be his first choice. He wasn’t that sociable to begin with, and
the fact was Maintenon felt like a walk.
The milk was merely his excuse.
It was good to walk alone sometimes.
It was a fine clear night in early September. The moon
was up but high clouds obscured it in some places. The dark sky to the north
revealed stark glittering stars down low, in among the branches, the rooftops
and the chimneys. He walked softly, preferring to hear other people first,
which meant that he had an option…
The park was coming up. Gilles wasn’t particularly
worried, although the difference between night and day could be profound. This
wasn’t such a bad neighbourhood. Not being a young man he had nothing to
prove—as an older individual maybe a little something to fear. The statistics
were clear enough.
He was also armed and wasn’t afraid to use it, which
made a big difference.
The fragile, hence doubled-up paper bags tucked under
his left arm, Gilles turned onto the grass and soft wet leaves halfway in
between streetlights. It was a habitual cut-through. There weren’t too many
people about. At this exact hour, most were either at home having dinner, or
had already gone out for supper, dinner, dancing or the show. Whatever. An
entirely different crowd would be out a little later, when the more prosperous
victims were coming home again. They would be mellow and off-guard, with full
bellies and as often as not a skin-full of good wine aboard.
It was very dark under the old oaks and beeches, there
were shadows strewn everywhere and every which way, but the ground was level
underfoot and benches and flowerbeds were easy enough to avoid. Flowerbeds
were, with their rick black humus, even darker than the grass. They were topped
by dormant shrubs and those stalks which were trimmed or clipped but not
totally collapsed in the way certain
perennials might do—horticulture being a bit of a foreign subject to Maintenon.
When he stumbled across the body, Gilles fell flat on
his face, dropping the bloody milk and putting his hands out quickly in an
effort to save himself from falling right in somebody’s open mouth.
“Merde!”
Forgetting the milk, he was up in a jiffy.
“Damnation.” There was something warm and sticky on
his hand, after he touched the body again in the general centre of the body
mass.
It confirmed what he already knew.
He was half bent over, trying to get a good look. The
only thing he could properly see was that pale oval face, and the deeper black
mass of the body, a dark suit blocking out the lighter coloured leaves, but
darker than the wet green grass. It was a formless shape, a body nevertheless.
The moon came out fully from behind the thin cloud
layer and that’s when he got a good look at the fellow.
“Merde.”
He stood staring down at a slender male of
indeterminate age, high thirties possibly. The man looked to be about average
height. He was a handsome enough, clean shaven. It might have been a kind, a
gentle face once, curiously unlined. Was that grey at the temples or a trick of
the light? The eyes were wide and
staring, the hair tousled and lanky. The body was still warm, the blood still
wet and he was a police officer.
With a quick nod at nothing at all, Gilles left the
milk, the cheese, the butter and the fresh baguettes where they lay.
Turning, he sprinted back towards the light.
The sooner he called this one in, the better. There
was barely a chance, but that body was still warm.
***
Inspector Gilles Maintenon lived in the city’s 14th
arrondissement. A running man drew attention, and there were curious looks from
an obviously-married pedestrian couple as he pelted back to the corner store
where he had bought his miserable little purchases.
Jamming coins in, he dialed an all too familiar
number.
“Who?” Dispatchers never wasted a second.
“Inspector Gilles Maintenon. Hurry. The body’s still
warm for Christ’s sakes.”
“All right, Inspector Maintenon. We have units on the
way. You say this is in the Park Montsouris?”
“Yes, it’s off the path and away from the lights.”
“All right then.” The dispatcher was calm and cool
when Gilles could only wish. “You had better wait on the sidewalk then.”
“I’ll be on the Rue Gazan. Near the lake.” Pond might
be a better word.
The dispatcher was speaking into their microphone and
he waited on the line.
“Right. You live right there, don’t you, Inspector?”
“Yes, I went out for milk. I cut through the park on
the way home.”
“Very well, Inspector. We’ll have some people with you
shortly.”
Gilles hung up the phone. He was a little shaken.
There was little else he could do. It wasn’t an insult, it was just
coincidence. The odds against finding a body on your evening walk were
astronomical.
Quite frankly this was the first time it had ever happened to him
and he hoped it would be the last.
Let other people find the damned things.
For crying out loud!
It was distressing.
It gave him a new perspective—civilians found bodies all the time and the
police were often quite cross when they muffed it up. They disturbed the body
or left their own soda bottles, candy-wrappers, cigarette butts and footprints
all over the place. The worst one in his recollection had been a cub
journalist. He worked for some socialist weekly down south, and he was just in
Paris for the day or something…the seventh congress, the popular front. The
freaking Communist International. For crying out loud. He’d had found himself a
body and then spent what seemed like hours photographing it before phoning it
in to police. That one left a complete circle of footprints around the body,
taking pictures from every angle and carefully bracketing his shots as he
subsequently explained.
Looking back, Gilles couldn’t quite recall, but he
might have seen one or two on the front page.
The guy might have made a few francs out of it.
He looked at Madame Foubister, on duty most evenings
in the small, slightly unkempt but always cheerful little store on the corner.
He lived a few short blocks away and there was a kind of warmth, a kind of
friendship or friendliness at least, that he had learned to appreciate very
much since Ann’s passing. No doubt she, and the lady standing goggle-eyed with
her, had heard every word, which meant the next customer and the next, and the
one after that would also hear every word.
“Ah, yes, Monsieur?”
He repressed a sigh, there being nothing he could do
about it. It was only human nature, and anything further would only add fuel to
the fire.
“Good evening, Madame. Thank you, there is nothing to
be alarmed about.”
She waved as he made his way out the door, brushing
past more customers on their way in.
***
Gilles made his way back to the point where he had
first entered the park. He found a pool of light under a lamp-post. On the
chill evening air, the cry of the sirens came from somewhere not too far away.
He shook his head. Two young people were coming down
the street from the northeast, a male and a female. Before they got to him,
they turned. They were holding hands and giggling as they entered the park. His
mouth opened. They were too far away, and it was already too late. There were
scattered lights in there and he watched them. Voices traveled across in front
of him from left to right. Their shadows swept across like the second hand of a
clock and he sighed deeply. He was pretty sure the body was right along there…
A scream confirmed it. The girl was hysterical.
The young man’s voice was high but loud, cursing and
swearing and saying it was an abomination.
He called out.
“Please don’t disturb the body.”
There was nothing but silence and then came the sound
of voices. The girl was crying and the young man was holding her close as the
pair came out of the darkness, seeking his authoritative voice. As soon as they
saw him, a non-descript middle-aged man, standing a little too close to a dead
man and seemingly somehow involved, the pair turned and bolted off to the
southeast.
“Excuse me—please.” The young man gave an angry look
back, and putting their heads down, the pair ran off up the street.
Innocent. That was his first impression, and first
impressions are lasting ones. Neither one of them was wearing a coat. There was
little doubt they were from the neighbourhood. Hopefully they could be located
quickly, although they probably knew nothing. Just what they had seen, and no
more.
A loud engine and stabbing headlights careened around
the corner and roared up the street from the north.
A carload of uniformed gendarmes screeched to a halt
right in front of him. The driver stayed in the car and the other two got out.
The driver had the microphone up, reporting their on-scene status.
“Inspector Maintenon?”
“Yes.”
“Sergeant Girard. I understand you have a discovered a
body? A dead one?”
“That’s the usual description, Sergeant Girard.”
Gilles lifted an arm like a tour guide. “Step right this way, please.”
The officers snapped on their torches and followed him
across the dewy grass, and a moment later he was rewarded with the sight of his
own footprints...presumably. They were the only obvious ones along there. They
should lead straight to the scene of the crime.
END
Redemption: an Inspector Gilles Maintenon mystery is the first in the series.
Thanks for having a read. > Louis
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