Part One
Part Seven
Part Eight
Part Nine
Part Ten
Part Eleven
Part Twelve
Part Thirteen
Part Fouteen
Part Fifteen
Part Sixteen
Part Seventeen
Part Eighteen
Part Nineteen
Part Twenty
Part Twenty-One
Part Twenty-two
Louis Shalako
Speak Softly My Love
Chapter Twenty-Three: the culmination
It
had suddenly come to Hubert. The solution to all of their problems.
It
was just so damned simple.
Tailler
was interviewing the one known as Lucinde. He was asking simple, innocuous questions
about her hometown. She was putting him off as best she could. Her answers were
very general, vague even. They were a little too vague for someone who had
allegedly lived there in Lyon for many years.
Their
voices were muffled on the other side of a panel of one-way glass.
Hubert
and Maintenon stood beside Ada Bellerose, brought in from Molsheim by Jeannine,
back on the case, and LeBref, who barely came up to her shoulder.
She
gulped, not really knowing what was going on.
“Can
you tell us who that is, Mademoiselle?”
She
cleared her throat.
“Yes.
That—that is Zoe Godeffroy.”
Maintenon
took her arm.
“Thank
you, Mademoiselle. That will be all.”
Hubert
tapped on the glass. Two faces turned to look at the mirror on their side. The
lady was very pale as Tailler went back to the questioning.
***
“Monsieur
Godeffroy.”
The
gentleman had his lawyer present. Tailler and Hubert sat on one side of the
table and the two of them sat on the other.
Hubert
was letting Tailler handle this part. Emile had definitely earned it.
Those
blue-black eyes stared across the table as the attorney, a Monsieur Pichon,
shifted in his chair. It was the face from the pictures, even some of the
pictures of the other guy—the dead one.
The
lawyer’s briefcase was on the table between them, unopened. His jacket,
hand-stitched, looked thick and soft in a kind of multi-coloured grey weave of
Italian make.
The
attorney spoke.
“And
what might they be?”
His
intelligent glittered behind thin silver glasses. For professional reasons, he
was completely composed, although his client bore the signs of nervousness.
“You
can take your chances and go to trial.”
Tailler
waited.
“You
can go to trial, plead your innocence, and who knows—you might walk away a free
man. Or face the guillotine.”
Tailler
paused again, looking into those eyes.
“Or
you can plead guilty, get up on the stand, and tell some big sob story. You can
blame somebody else, claim self defense, whatever. Talk about the blackmailer
threatening you. Hell, it might have happened, right? Even we can see that.
Extenuating circumstances, throw yourself on the mercy of the court.” The
gentleman might plead to manslaughter, or a homicide in the lesser degree. “At
the very least, you avoid the death penalty. If you’re lucky. You might get
parole in about forty years…”
“Or?”
“One
of our concerns is for the ladies. Lucinde has children. They, at least, are
real. With a little cooperation from you, sir, we could maybe let them off the
hook—we could try and keep the children out of the limelight.” Tailler was
hoping he would go for it. “They are your children after all.”
Didier’s
face fell into his hands and he sobbed.
“We
can recommend to the public prosecutor, twenty-five years, with the possibility
of parole after twenty. Time off for good behaviour. Devil’s Island, which, on
reflection, might be better than a metropolitan prison…n’est pas?”
He
would at least get to see the light once in a while. He could have his own
garden and grow vegetables, beets and things.
Tailler
stopped. He swallowed. He looked down at the notes before him. Didier’s eyes
had already fallen. The dead weren’t the only victims. There were also the
living.
“May
I speak with my client?”
“Certainly,
sir. We need for Didier to be very clear on this.”
Without
hesitation, Tailler and Hubert pushed their chairs back. Hubert tapped on the
door and there came the ringing of keys and the clunk of big tumblers.
It
was in the lap of the gods at this point.
***
It
was another morning, the start of another brand-new day. Over the course of
time, busy as hell they were lately,
they all blended into one, or so it seemed.
Tailler
came in, with snow on the shoulders of his coat and on the wide brim and peak
of his battered grey fedora. The radiators along the front wall steamed with a
collection of hats and gloves laid there in the forlorn hope of drying out
before they were needed again.
He
hung it up, turning and rubbing his hands.
“What’s
up?”
They
were all mostly there, including Archambault, looking a pale and wan shadow of
his former self, and even LeBref.
Levain
looked up from his desk.
“Have
you seen the papers?”
“Ah,
yes, I have.” Tailler grinned and made a little mock bow.
Didier
Godeffroy, having made an agreed-upon statement of the facts, had pleaded
guilty before the court and had been convicted of two homicides. His written
confession was very detailed, including the real names of Lucinde and her dead husband.
Didier
Godeffroy was all over the front pages. Tailler and Hubert were there too, as
well as some other important mentions.
Didier
was awaiting his official sentencing, but there was little reason to doubt that
he’d be on the boat to Devil’s Island in pretty short order. It was one for the
history books now.
“Congratulations,
Emile. You gentlemen did a wonderful job.” Picking up a white pasteboard box
from his desk, Gilles came over and lifted the lid.
“A
baker’s dozen. Strawberry-filled, Emile. And they’re all for you.” There was
white icing on top, and those lovely, colourful candy sprinkles.
Emile
Tailler’s mouth opened as he took the box.
“For
me—really?” The look on his face was priceless.
“No,
Emile—they’re for somebody else.” Gilles stepped back, nodding gravely as
Levain guffawed.
“It’s
either the one or the other, Emile.” Hubert grinned from behind the desk.
Tailler
found words.
“It
is just so hard to be accepted around here.” He sighed. “And I suppose, there
will always be doubts…”
Lifting
a beignet and biting into the wrong side, a squirt of red jam flew out and over
and spattered down on their black and white tiles.
Merde.
“I
have just one more question, Emile.”
“Ah,
yes, sir?” His mouth was full and he gasped at the sticky mess. “And what’s
that, sir?”
“What
is the moral of the story?”
Tailler
broke off his quick search for a rag or a cloth or something. A weird, comical
look crossed his homely mug and then he regarded the Inspector.
“Didier
Godeffroy loved women.” The room broke up and Emile flushed. “It was
pathological with that guy. Like the loaves and the fishes, he figured out a
way to indulge it in a most spectacular way. You really got to hand it to good
old Didier. He loved women, loved them,
altogether, just a little too much. Too much for his own good. And too much of
a good thing can kill you.”
Tailler
sighed deeply, almost in a kind of admiration.
“For
all of his fascination, it’s like he just didn’t appreciate them enough.”
“Ha!”
LeBref had just come in. “He’s got you there, Gilles.”
Levain
snorted. Hubert was wondering when the phone would ring; probably soon enough.
“Hmn.
I’ll buy that. I guess.” Maintenon’s hands came up and he led the room in a
sustained golf clap that brought a blush to Tailler’s face.
It
was all over save the actual eating of the aforesaid beignets.
There
was still that bit of goop on the floor too.
End
About Louis Shalako
Louis
Shalako began writing for community newspapers and industrial magazines. His stories
appear in publications including Perihelion Science Fiction, Bewildering
Stories, Aurora Wolf, Ennea, Wonderwaan, Algernon, Nova Fantasia, and Danse
Macabre. He lives in southern Ontario and writes full time.
Speak Softly My Love is available in paperback from Lulu for only $6.99 + S & H.
Here it is on Smashwords, free in multiple ebook formats. Limited time offer.
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