Wednesday, January 22, 2025

Dead Reckoning, Chapter Twenty-Six. An Inspector Gilles Maintenon Mystery #10. Louis Shalako.














Louis Shalako




“Okay. So, Doctor Bourdillon is in charge of the Surgical and Anatomy Department. This is where the students get into all the really interesting stuff, like dissecting corpses for fun and profit. He’s in a hell of a lot of trouble, what with half the world reading that story in the paper—the one about Maintenon and that freezer full of stiffs.”

Bingo, as the saying went—

“Oui, Monsieurs. It would seem that Monsieur Savard, president of the hospital foundation, also reads Le Temps. Naturally, he inquired as to whether the department had taken any kind of inventory, or exactly what kind of records were kept, er, when the cadavers came and went, and all that sort of thing.” More casual curiosity than anything, but it had sure set a fire under someone’s tail.

“Yes, gentlemen, it would seem that our good Doctor Bourdillon went into the back room and started pulling out drawers…” He paused, literally, for the drama—this one was a real character, all right. “…and, well, you can probably guess the rest.”

“There’s your first hundred. Ah, please—go on.” Hubert pulled out a few more small bills, keeping them in hand for the moment. “I would love to have your phone number—just so we can talk later on. So, how many do they figure are missing.”

No answer.

The bills were carefully folded and then shoved deep down into a hip pocket, a little awkwardly considering the confines of the back seat. Alphonse had the seat all the way back as well.

“Oh, I don’t know about that.” He took a breath. “Three stiffs, just like it said in the paper.”

“Okay, so why don’t you tell us…ah, just exactly what kinds of records are kept, assuming you know anything about that at all—”

The man nodded.

“Sure. Uh, yes, they do keep records. They have a stack, copies of death certificates, as a matter of fact. They have to be able to identify the body, leading to the proverbial toe-tags of popular fact and fiction. They like to have the medical history of the various bodies. If someone died of cancer or a heart attack, the students can cut them up and have a look for themselves. Yes, sir, in alphabetical order, in a steel filing cabinet. Someone donates their body to medical science, that’s somebody’s momma or poppa, or maybe even someone’s little sister, right. Daddy’s little girl, just died of brain cancer or something. They are entitled to their human dignity. The funeral home delivers them right to our back door. They know enough not to embalm them. Some of them are true paupers, and they can’t afford a nice funeral in the first place. They can do all that stuff right here, when it’s applicable. I mean, they do cut them up and make slides of tissue samples, stuff like that. Bits of kidney, liver, brains and lungs, right. Pickled in formaldehyde. Poop samples, even. They look at them through microscopes and make little drawings and stuff. They’ve got a cold room with a bunch of stainless steel drawers and any number of stiffs in there. Some of them are full and some of them are, ah, partials. A few bits and pieces missing, you know. Ah…if someone is teaching musculature, the students don’t necessarily need all the internal organs to cut up a leg or a shoulder. Waste not, want not, right. At some point, we end up with skeletons, with little holes drilled in the ends of the bones, and they’re wired together and hung on a frame. Everybody loves a good skeleton. A lot of stuff does get a decent burial at some point, when it’s no longer useful. It’s like meat that’s been freezer-burned and the students are looking at cell walls and stuff under the microscope. The chaplain blesses all that stuff as it goes out the back door. No, I think the real problem, is that they have a few dead bodies missing, and more than anything, they would very much like to avoid any kind of big stink over it. They would prefer not to get sued by the next of kin for a million francs, eh. As for phone numbers, why not just call up Savard. Don’t let on you’ve been talking to anyone here. Tell him you’re calling around to all the universities, the larger hospitals, and don’t just fake it—he’s savvy enough to check up on you guys too.” Word would get around all too quickly in such a case.

“Interesting.” Hubert held up the bills, rubbing them between his fingers. “What else can you tell us. Who else works in that department. Where exactly do you work—I mean, how would you be in a position to know this sort of stuff.”

The man thought it over. He already had a hundred francs—for five minutes work—and was the risk really worth it. The cops already knew a little too much about him—why give them any more. They also, knew his face and where to look for him. Only he knew if the information was any good. It was like the thoughts were written all over him.

He was hooked well enough.

“Honestly, guys, there’s, fuck, at least a dozen people, mostly doctors, instructors in all the courses. They come and go as they please. Janitors, they have the run of the building, and they all have their own sets of keys. Security guards…I could cough up names all day long, why bother when it’s mostly irrelevant. It’s just a list of names.” The names of department heads, various administrators, those were on plaques over their office doors, all one had to do was to take a walk through the building. “I’m not accusing anyone in particular. I’m just saying they have a problem.”

Hubert pulled a business card out for the gentleman.

“Okay. So, if this checks out, how are we supposed to get in touch with you?” It was worth a try—

“It will check out. Trust me on that one.”

“All right, Monsieur Nope, as you say. If you can think of anything else, give us a call. I’m Hubert, that’s me on the card. Okay?”

“I’ll think about it.” He turned. “I’ll call you, say in about a week.”

“You might even get that other hundred.”

“I’m quite looking forward to it, gentlemen.”

“Hold on.” Hubert whipped out the team photo. “Recognize any of these people?”

He took a quick look.

“No, not really. They all kind of look the same, don’t you think.”

“Okay.” It was worth a try.

He popped the door and stepped out, hurrying away, heading in the direction away from the hospital. He’d probably circle the block and come back with a coffee and a bagel or something, thought Hubert.

“He’s obviously done all of this before.”

“Hmn. That’s just what I was thinking. But, there are informants all over the place. We all have them, right. Easy cash, or so it would seem. Assuming you know anything, anything at all.” Garnier, tired of craning and straining, settled into the seat. “He’s somebody’s little buddy all right.”

In which case, he was safe enough, as cops generally didn’t mess with another cop’s source unless it was a truly serious matter.

Alphonse hit the starter and fired her up.

They were out of there.

 

END

 

 

Previous.

Chapter One, Scene One.

Chapter One, Scene Two.

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.

Oh, the suspense.

Chapter Seventeen.

Chapter Eighteen.

Chapter Nineteen.

Chapter Twenty.

Chapter Twenty-One.

Chapter Twenty-Two.

Chapter Twenty-Three.

Chapter Twenty-Four.

Chapter Twenty-Five.

Real Change is Incremental.

Louis has books and stories available from Google Play.

 

 

Thank you for reading.

 

 


Dead Reckoning, Chapter Twenty-Five. An Inspector Gilles Maintenon Mystery. Louis Shalako.




Louis Shalako



The phone was ringing and Hubert sat up in bed with a lurch and a flutter in his heart, but the thing had frankly scared the hell out of him. He’d been having one of those dreams, the one where you’re a rat caught in some kind of a maze, and you can never get out of there—

Emanuelle was in the bathroom, predictably enough, what with having a fetus pressing down on her bladder all the time, and he snatched it up before the ringing drove him to say a bad word or two…which he tried not to do too much around the house.

“Yes.”

“Can you be ready in half an hour?”

The voice was baffling in its familiarity.

“Argh. Who in the hell is this?”

“Alphonse—”

Of course.

“Merde. Ah—yes. I suppose so.” Fuck. “Can’t you pick up Martin first? For crying out loud.”

“No. He’s on the way to our first stop. I will be calling him next. I will be doing that right now.”

The phone went dead, and that was that. That was Alphonse.

“For fuck’s sakes…” Thankfully, a faint tinkling sound on the other side of the wall ended, there was a pause, and then the toilet flushed.

With a start of recognition, he threw back the covers and headed for the bathroom door before she decided to run the bath or something like that. This would not only be extremely time-consuming but also fairly irritating. This was no way to think of the love of one’s life or the imminent mother of his son or daughter, whichever that might turn out to be.

No matter how irritating that might be.

And love conquers all.

 

***

 

At this hour of the day, what with picking up Martin and then the busy morning traffic, the typical furniture and appliance store still wouldn’t be open for some time. Alphonse had figured that much out all on his own, and so they were on the way to meet their hospital informant, for whom they didn’t even have a name yet. How in the hell he had managed it, was a good question, probably his buddy Paul in the Situation Room. Someone would have taken the call, most likely coming from a booth like the last call. They would have gotten right to Alphonse at home, who was known, like Gilles, to be an early riser.

They’d have the source on one line, and Alphonse on the other to set that up, otherwise it was just another small mystery.

That’s why they kept him around, as everyone said—the sort of man it didn’t pay to underestimate.

Just a time, and a place, and a promise not to be late.

"So, how do you know all of this stuff...???"

It was a public park, just down the street from the hospital doors, and it seemed the person would be on their way to work. Or, possibly leaving a night shift or maybe just sneaking out for an early coffee break.

With tall, stately trees lining the boulevard, and a bit of urban forest for a good chunk of the block, it would seem that the park was popular with hospital employees. Three nurses walked along, heading into work, side by side, beside the car. Alphonse was slowing to turn in. He waited for them to get across the entrance, the turn signal indicator insistent in its clicking.

“I knew this was a good idea.” Alphonse studied the trim calves, slender ankles and svelte bodies with some care.

“Huh.” Hubert was still sort of spent from the night before, as even for a woman at seven-plus months preggers, Emanuelle had been sort of starved for attention lately…these guys had no real need to know that part. “Argh.”

“I agree with him—” Garnier, in a kind of diplomatic ambiguity.

He and Alphonse exchanged a quick grin, as the older man pulled in off the street and began looking for a parking spot.

This seemed to be something of an auxiliary to any official parking lot. Such a big edifice had to have at least some dedicated parking. It would also never be enough, and the number of vehicles on the roads went up by leaps and bounds with every passing year. In such an ancient city, you simply couldn’t build roads and streets big enough, or fast enough, and that went for parking places as well.

The parking slots were angled, rather than at ninety degrees, straight in and straight out. The place was mostly full. Alphonse found a spot, where they could watch the action through the trees. There were the front doors, which they couldn’t actually see from this angle, and there were the side doors. There were people coming and going, with a few people just standing around, smokers mostly. There must be doors on the back of the building and on the other side. Ambulances. Vehicle access for deliveries. There was a fair bit of foot traffic. People all over the place. There would be hundreds of employees, patients, visitors, and casual foot traffic on both sides of the street, buses pumping out their diesel stench. All kinds of extraneous action. The classic meet, in other words. Act natural, and blend in with the crowd.

“Make sure we all got our hats on, and roll down the windows.” Alphonse was firm on that one. “Let’s make it fairly obvious, at least for our new friend.”

Upon Alphonse’s arrival that morning, he’d parked across the street from Hubert’s place. For that reason, the left rear passenger door had been left unlocked. Hubert had climbed in and slid across. It was something of a surprise, when a figure coming up from behind appeared at the window, the door opened and the person dropped into the seat beside Detective Hubert.

Garnier: this guy seems pretty bold.

“Hi, guys.”

“Yes?”

“Okay. So, how much is in this for me.”

“Well, this has to be our guy.” Garnier had spun around on one hip to keep an eye on him, for he seemed pretty damned bold. “What exactly are we talking about, anyways?”

“Information, upon request.”

“Fifty francs.”

The fellow snorted.

“A hundred francs. And it had better check out—”

“I want five hundred. And we all know what I’m talking about. Frozen dead people, that’s what I’m talking about.”

“Do you have a name?”

“Nope.”

“Okay, Monsieur Nope, ah, one hundred francs. Half up front and the other half when it checks out. Take it or leave it.”

The man’s hand reached for the door handle, as Alphonse sort of engaged Hubert’s eyes in the mirror.

“We can do this the hard way, if you want.” Hubert was thinking this guy was familiar, in some way, a weasel, an archetype—a weekend football player maybe.

The guy sort of froze—then half turned back.

“And what in the hell is that supposed to mean?” It was pure bullshit, but threatening enough to someone who might be dependent on their present employment.

“I’ll make it a hundred up front. Another fifty if it checks out—and it had better check out. Capiche, mon ami?”

“A hundred, eh?”

“Yes, and we might even forget about withholding evidence of a crime, and interfering with police in the course of an investigation…uttering a false report…”

Hell, even Alphonse winced at that one.

Ouch.

As for the source, he took it all in stride.

Alphonse.

“Yeah, yeah, all right. Fuck it, if you can’t take a joke. A hundred up front.” Settling into the seat again, he held out a hand as Hubert reached for his wallet. “Ah, and a hundred when it checks out.”

In the mirror, Alphonse gave a barely perceptible nod.

“All right. A hundred it is, then, and another hundred when it checks out.”

“Let us hope this is worth it.” Garnier.

“So, what’s your name, anyways. What do you do here. Do you even work here at all. How do you even know this information…”

There was always a long list, but first one had to get them hooked.

First, let him take the money, second, we ask him about Abu Samaha—just another worker in a menial job, just another guy in coveralls, just one more building cleaner.


END

 

Previous.

Chapter One, Scene One.

Chapter One, Scene Two.

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.


Real Change is Incremental.

Louis has books and stories available from Google Play.

 

 

Thank you for reading.

 


Sunday, January 19, 2025

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















Louis Shalako





The pair of detectives had one last stop on the way back to the office. It was to the home of LeBeaux, on an upper floor of a pension-style apartment in a central part of the city.

As it turned out, Hubert barely had the chance to explain himself, as the lady of the house was out. Her daddy was still sick in bed, where he had been battling some sort of respiratory infection for weeks, and Éliott’s little sister had the bored composure of the typical fifteen year-old. Unluckily for them, any older siblings were also out at the moment. She took the envelope and the short explanation at face value, asking no questions and making no statements. A radio blasted away in the background, popular music no doubt, but it wasn’t helpful in communicating and it was clear they weren’t all that welcome in her little world.

After a quick thank you and a promise to draw it to her mother’s attention, she shut the door in their faces, and none too gently, either.

“That didn’t take too long at all. The fact that we simply reek of alcohol probably has nothing to do with it—” Garnier followed him back down the stairs again, and out onto the street.


And, of course, by the time they got back to the car, Alphonse had taken another radio call, and this time it was two more hits on their news story. The first, a man who claimed to have sold two large freezers to the same customer on the same day, and the second was a little more mysterious but it involved a low-level employee of the custodial department of a prominent Paris teaching hospital, Les SÅ“urs de la Charité de Sainte Marie, asking to meet them anonymously at a location of his own choice, assuming arrangements could be made.

Craning again, Martin kind of shook his head. He looked at his watch too.

“So. What do you think?”

Reviewing the addresses in question, they might do one, but they couldn’t do both, not before quitting time. This was a real thing when the case was going along at a certain pace, and this one had looked sort of hopeless all along. They were not gendarmes responding to a fire or a bank robbery in progress. They were detectives on an investigation. This was the long game, rather than the short game.

It was Alphonse who had the answer.

“Tell them we’ll get back to them.”

“He’s right.”

Martin picked up the microphone, clicking over to Channel D for secure communications.

An executive decision—but Hubert had been going all gangbusters for quite some time now and there was the need to prioritize. He did have a life of his own. He did have a wife to consider, and it had been quite a while since he’d spent a quiet evening at home. And just when you started to get comfortable, you thought of LeBeaux. That one was enough to make one’s stomach churn. There was nothing he could do about that, but he still wondered…and then there was Gilles.

Even so.

It could still wait until tomorrow.

And thank God for Alphonse and his no-bullshit attitude.

 

***

 

The girl had departed, which might help in some ways. It was also something of an emotional wrench, but one could only hope and pray on that one. He’d just have to sweat it out. Éliott had made a bit of a show, taking his sweet time, doing a real thorough job of it, in washing up the dishes, and in giving one hell of a good scrub to the pots and pans. He’d uttered a few cusses of his own while doing that, but it was like the old man just didn’t care. Then, heating more water and giving himself a proper shave. He’d topped it all off with another bit of performative theatre. He had taken off the boots and the socks, rolled up the pant-legs, all while sitting on the chair in front of the hermit, with the big bowl on the floor, and washed his feet in the leftover shaving water.

“Oh, thank God.” Finally—

Toweling the feet dry, changing into fresh socks, rinsing out the old socks, hanging them up to dry near the stove, it seemed the hermit couldn’t care less—or maybe he did; but he seemed to be lost in a world of his own.

“Oh, Charles. Oh, Darwin.” Fuck—

The hermit had laughed at that one.

Strong liquor would do that to you. This was especially true if a person hadn’t had any in a while. A full belly might have helped as well.

With nothing else to wear, he’d pulled the tongue and the flaps of the boots wide, stuffing the long laces down inside so he wouldn’t trip on them. This wasn’t the sort of place where you could go barefoot, there simply wasn’t the luxury. That floor was grubby indeed, and the socks were white and brand new.

They’d agreed to switch over to beer for a while and conserve the cognac. The hermit was half-pissed anyways. It was more a question of maintaining that buzz, without going overboard, so to speak. Éliott had dumped the scummy water outside, a good distance from the front door. He’d immediately filled up their big pot and began heating more water.

“Sir. There’s something I’ve been meaning to ask you.”

“Huh. The answer is no.”

He grinned, but the man really was like that. He simply didn’t care as to how he might be perceived.

“Ah, I don’t mean to pry, ah, but, uh. I was just wondering how you got that awful wound on the head, ah, on the old noggin there. That’s downright nasty-looking. Also, I was wondering. Would you, ah, have such a thing as a broom around here…”

A little psychology, a little human understanding. A little compassion might go a long way in a situation like this. It bordered on animal psychology. A little bit of the carrot, and a little bit of the stick. A direct question, and an indirect question, a rhetorical question, and one that was right to the point, always ready to back off, to circle around again, and try it on again another way—

“Huh?”

“A broom. A broom, sir. I was just saying, do you have any kind of a broom around here…”

“Yeah? And who the fuck are you.”

“I am Éliott, sir, and who the fuck are you, anyways.”

The hermit chuckled. This was about as close as Éliott had gotten to the direct question.

But surely the man would have a name.

“You’re an idiot.”

 Ã‰liott laughed, whether it was a joke or not, he wouldn’t care to speculate.

“Yeah. Well. Someday, perhaps, I will tell you my hard-luck story.”

“Huh.”

That’s how it had been going with the hermit, one step forward, and two steps back.

Éliott could only wonder at what had happened—at what must have happened.

“So. When was the last time you figure you had a bath, or anything like that—”

When was the last time you had them fucking boots off.

And—

What in the hell am I going to use for a blanket tonight.

That one didn’t bear thinking about.

 

***

 

The first time the two detectives had knocked on the hermit’s door, the whole thing had been so unexpected. The muzzle of a shotgun poking through a crack in the doorway and right in your face will do that to you.

There was a certain shock value. There was a certain immediacy, one which ruled out all other considerations, if only for a time.

But the hermit hadn’t been wearing a hat, and through the gap in the door, Éliott had glimpsed the greying hair, clumped with dark, clotted blood. Hubert had been in no position to see it, it was only him. It had meant nothing at the time, and they’d gotten out of there while the going was good. It was only when the man had passed them on the trail, with Hubert not paying too much attention, eager to get going. He’d taken a second to look, really look, and that wound had looked pretty damned bad.

Even then, he still hadn’t gotten it.

It was just one of those things. The man was such a prickly character, clearly not seeking company or attention, and in some sense, he’d figured it was none of his business.

It was only later, belatedly recognizing that they were, in fact, police officers, with a duty to protect and to serve. They’d sworn an oath to that effect. That was when that sneaky little guilty feeling had sort of caught up with him.

Even then, he still hadn’t caught on. It was only in the pre-dawn hours, laying there in that hotel room, still in that state, halfway between dreaming and wakefulness, it was only then, that the coincidental aspect of that wound had come to him. They’d gotten up, thrown their stuff in their bags and buggered off to the train station, and he’d still been thinking about it.

Had Maintenon fallen down, hit his head on a rock, rolled or slid into the river, and drowned, his body washing downstream and ending up caught under a logjam further down, as Hubert had so strongly come to believe? Or maybe he hadn’t, which left an awful lot of other possibilities, a lot of other theories. It left a lot of other doubts.

What if they were wrong?

What if every fucking one of us is wrong…

What if Maintenon hadn’t died after all? In which case, what in the hell had happened to him.

And what about that alleged ghost. Dolores’ ghostly apparition of her childhood crush, Gilles Maintenon, walking down the road in front of her house. High noon, or shortly thereafter.

What about that, eh.

Ghosts mostly came out at night. They preferred the darkness. Right? Not the broad light of day.

It wasn’t like he didn’t know Gilles. The changes wrought in the man were such, that all previous resemblances, all previous mental images were now somehow rendered obsolete, to the extent that he still wasn’t really certain. If nothing else, the man’s very behaviour would have cast doubt.

In that sense, it really wasn’t the same man.

Not anymore.

He had the scissors, he had the bandages, and he had an ointment to put on that nasty old wound.

But what he wanted, more than anything, (besides the girl), would be to gain the man’s trust, by any means necessary, and to give him one hell of a good shave—to cut that hair to something more closely resembling Maintenon’s hair, which was trimmed fairly regularly, but not obsessively, not with Gilles, that was for sure—

If he could shave his own face, he could shave someone else’s. Confidence was everything, in that sense.

And patience was everything else.

Maintenon did it when it was necessary, and only when he could get around to it. His hair had been fairly longish, weeks ago, when he’d been sent off on vacation. Getting his hair cut would have been just about the last thing on his list at that point.

One thing Éliott had figured out well enough—to get the man drunk, knock him out with the narcotic pain pills he had in his coat pocket, hanging by the door there, and then to just to go ahead and do it, would be pretty invasive of the man’s rights. It might not be very well appreciated, and for that reason, he was going to need at least some cooperation. If he was right, all well and good. If he was wrong, it would be morally reprehensible, and possibly even a kind of assault. An assault on human dignity, if nothing else, and how in the hell one would define that in the current situation was anyone’s guess.

If he could get that cooperation, that really would be some kind of a miracle.

And then there was the girl, an unknown quantity, and one who had no very good reason to trust him. He’d shown up out of nowhere, a complete surprise in every sense. He must be downright threatening to one such as her—every hound-dog in the village must have taken some kind of a crack at that one.

Once upon a fucking time—

No wonder she was so shy.

Right?

If she came back tomorrow, that would be a very good sign, otherwise, she would be gone for good—or at least until Éliott had given up, presumably to go home or just moving on, or something like that. It would be very hard for her to avoid the place and abandon her friend the hermit. Not for very long. Odds were, she just couldn’t do it, but then he hadn’t been able to do it either. Knowing that she didn’t have too many real friends herself didn’t help much either. Then again, everyone in town probably knew her—and sympathized without quite knowing what to do about it. This was, of course, merely an assumption.

Fuck.

 

 

End

 

 

Previous.

 

 Chapter One, Scene One.

 Chapter One, Scene Two.

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.




Louis has books and stories available from Google Play.


 

Thank you for reading.