Showing posts with label drama. Show all posts
Showing posts with label drama. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 14, 2019

A Stranger In Paris. Inspector Gilles Maintenon Mystery #9. Pt. 5. Louis Shalako.

As if life wasn't depressing enough.


Louis Shalako


Gilles put the phone down, after giving instructions to Doctor Poirier. The lady would be allowed to examine the body for birthmarks, although she said she couldn’t recall anything in particular—a mole on a shoulder, a small scar on the shin or a knee perhaps, (and half the young men in the world had such scars), and so, even if it was there, it could hardly be conclusive. Poirier would keep the face and hands bagged and covered, and sometimes that was the best that could be done, and horrifying enough under the circumstances. She’d said the young man hadn’t been particularly hairy.

Unfortunately, that lined right up with what the Doctor was saying, and the evidence of their own eyes. Again, totally inconclusive. It was also the sort of thing that would not be in the paper, for what that was worth. 

Doubts, doubts…always there were doubts. Without fingerprints, there wasn’t much point in checking police records or for military service. The name might be there…that name had to match up with a body, therefore fingerprints or a mug-shot were essential. It was low-priority work, and yet someone had to make the phone call…jot that down on the list.

And, as long as the lady was in a car headed to the morgue, Detective Hubert could nip around to her place and just see if that nasty old key fit in the front door-lock…according to her, this was Paul’s habitual mode of entry. No sneaking around back doors for them, apparently.

Ah, but Paul, rather their victim, had only had one key—there was her place and then that loft in Montmartre. It was truly unfortunate, but she’d only been there once and couldn’t really remember much. Certainly not the address, although it was just off of a main street. They’d gone there after a night on the town, and they’d both been quite tipsy. He didn’t inquire any further, the deepening colour on her cheeks had been enough. Such memories might help to keep her warm at night in her old age—another shitty little thought, but it was there nevertheless.

He looked inquiringly at Andre, just coming in the door with a certain look on his face. He’d been called out on some mysterious errand…

Looks like we got us another one...
The younger man hung up his coat.

“Okay, boss. It looks like we got ourselves another one—”

“Oh, really.”

Andre looked smug.

“Oh, yes, sir. Indeed we do.”

***

“Tell me more—”

“The only major wrinkle here is the lack of a weapon. It’s early yet, but the body was found Thursday morning. Time of death appears to be ten to fourteen hours previously. It was a chilly night, and wet, the low body weight, all of that affects rigour mortis. Face obliterated. Fingers and thumbs gone. Scene similar to our first victim. An alley, not much frequented except by the householders along the way. The trash disposal people, the odd wino, a homeless person maybe. Killed or dumped in the night, although the whole place is such a shambles it’s hard to read the blood spatters.”

Andre quickly gave his impressions, barely consulting his notes, which to be fair would be competent enough, and admissible as evidence in a court of law.

“Nice clothes, hair and teeth. Good shoes, not quite as nice as the last ones. Again, robbery does not seem to be a motive—” The victim had some cash on him, again no identification, rather expected considering the attempt (or presumed attempt) to make an ID difficult if not impossible.

All of those stab wounds—conforming, at first glance, to their previous victim.

“Go on.”

There was the smell of alcohol, enough that it would probably show up in autopsy results. 

There was the one poker chip, albeit a big one, five hundred francs, in the jacket pocket. It was either winnings, not even cashed in at the end of a night, or one hell of a big tip—

This one had been handled by a thousand people, which added up to about a million smudges.

That was the hell of such objects.

“Let’s have a look.” Gilles studied it through a magnifying glass.

Totally generic. One could buy them in almost any toy or department store in the city.

Compression-molded of clay and other materials, shellac for example, with their colourful inlays—the latest technology, light, colourful and almost indestructible according to the makers…Andre uttered a deep sigh.

No one was listening. It was like he was the only one really there.

“Hubert says the key didn’t fit. I guess you knew that—”

Maintenon: It's all bullshit.
Andre shook his head. It was like he just wasn’t getting through, sometimes.

“Madame made no comment on the circumcision…”

He sighed.

“Well, I mean, the question is motive. Why, Gilles, why?”

Maintenon nodded, eyes on the ceiling where the dead flies and cobwebs still held their sway after all of these uneasy years...a cob was a British spider, as someone had once put it.

He was still clutching the poker chip.

“Well, Andre. I should think that would be obvious.” The next words came in what was a bit of a bombshell. “I mean—well. It’s all bullshit, of course.”

***

And, of course, there had to be another woman—another bereaved—another lover.

She was waiting in the wings, a little less than forty-eight hours after filing her complaint.

“And the lady?”

“Mademoiselle Bernier.” She was waiting in one of their interview rooms.

“All right.” With a sigh, Gilles stubbed out his cigarette and heaved himself to his feet.

It was very quiet in the interview rooms, with barely a hum coming through walls, the occasional muffled voice in the hallway outside.

Maxine Bernier was different in some ways. Mid-fifties. Owned the home she lived in, tall, narrow and jammed in between all the others, but five floors including an unused loft. Never married. A sister in Orleans, a brother in the Levant, where he was said to be doing very well.

Prosperous enough, the clothes were much more sedate, perhaps that was the wrong word. 

The clothes were of good quality but sexless. This one would be a church-goer…a real do-gooder, unless he missed his guess.

She sat there, bolt upright on the hard wooden chair, hands clasped in her lap, feet flat in the low heels, on the floor, knees tightly together.

A good girl, in other words, with her education by nuns and staid, upright older virgins written all over her.

This one was already dressed for mourning, as if life wasn’t already depressing enough.

“So. Mademoiselle. What is this all about?”

In a soft yet precise voice, barely able to look him in the eye, she began.

“Jean…Jean didn’t come home at his usual time, and at first I thought he’d just missed the bus and that he’d be home soon enough.”

“I see.”

She nodded.

“Of course, after a time, it was getting late—and I just went to bed.”

“And he lives with you?”

“Er—yes. That is, he rents the flat above, but of course, he was—he is such a nice young man, and in some respects, he is almost a member of the family.” A family, which, upon inspection, would turn out to be a live-in maid, a cat or two, or three, and a bunch of faded pictures on the mantel-piece.

“Go on.”

She was blushing, but managed to look Gilles in the eye before quickly darting away again.

“Quite frankly, he has never stayed away, I mean overnight before. I’m worried that something terrible must have happened to him.”

“And what did Jean, er, do for a living? What is his last name, if you don’t mind?” The pen hovered over the page.

“Cariveau. Jean Cariveau. He is a machinist.” She mentioned the name of a company.

He’d never heard of it, but she gave him an address—the street name, at the very least, and police would undoubtedly check it out. Cariveau would have to take a bus, a tram, and the Metro to get all the way over there, to the industrial southeastern quarter, but it was a skilled profession. 

For such a young member of the working class, he’d be making real money, hand over fist, as she put it. It was worth an hour and a half or more of travel per day. His father, now deceased, had been a dock-worker along the quays, and his mother a seamstress. The mother, apparently, had liked books, that love of learning rubbing off on the son. He had two younger sisters, and a brother who lived in Marseille. They had been very proud of him, but their flat was small and so, looking to get out on his own, he’d answered an advertisement of Mademoiselle Bernier’s.

“It’s not that I really needed the money. But it seemed a shame, just to leave a perfectly good flat empty, and of course people are flocking to the city these days.” There was a small storefront on the street level, a man and his wife, green-grocers for the last twenty-four years, according to her.

The rent was helpful.

“Ah. I see. Thank you. Does he go out often?”

“Oh, no. Not really, although he does have a social life.” Many of his evenings, according to her, were spent in her flat, which was much bigger and nicer than his. “He enjoyed playing the piano, and of course he didn’t have one of his own.”

A musical connection, thin though it was. Gilles had a piano—Ann had wanted one, and so he’d reluctantly gone shopping with her. Anne had taken lessons as a girl. As it turned out, Gilles was the one who had taken some small interest, perhaps even exhibiting some talent.

“..and of course it’s so very difficult, cooking for one I mean.”

He still had it. It was still there, in the back room, and a place where he hardly ever went, except to look for the cat, or to open a window to catch a cross-breeze on the warmest summer nights.

The place was so quiet these days, to tinkle a few keys seemed a shameful disruption, and so he never did it anymore…the notion that half the street might hear him, had been more than enough to stop the impulse dead in its tracks.

“Was he good-looking? Or non-descript, perhaps?”

An innocent enough question, but the sudden blush said much.

“Yes. Yes, I suppose so—he was a, ah, very personable young man.”

“I see. So, he had working clothes, and street clothes?”

“Yes, of course.” She hesitated. “He’d just taken out life insurance.”

“What?” What? Heavy thumps from the hallway had half-drowned the lady out.

Apparently, someone was getting a new desk…something big and heavy.

“He’d just taken out life insurance. Oh, please don’t think what you are thinking—but, he was a very thoughtful young man. He’d heard someone, some speaker, on the subject. It might have been some magazine article. Anyhow, it was a good deal, according to him, and yet, he had to have some kind of beneficiary.”

“And so, he made you his beneficiary?”

“Er, yes, Inspector.” Shame flooded her cheeks. “I didn’t know what to think, but his poor mother—perhaps he knew something I didn’t, perhaps she was already provided for.”

“It’s all right, Madame. I understand.”

She put her head down and cried.

All one could do sometimes, was to wait them out.


END

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Sunday, July 14, 2019

A Stranger In Paris. Inspector Gilles Maintenon Mystery #9. Pt. 3. Louis Shalako.







Louis Shalako

Back at the office, there were one or two calls to return, and by that time, the air was filling with blue smoke.

Andre came over with a brimming cup, setting it down for him about the same time as Gilles finally hung up.

“Oh, thank you.”

He had a file open in front of him, photos spilling across the desk.

“One thing we can say, Boss. This sure doesn’t look like a professional hit.” Too much time involved—all those stabs to the face, the time it would take to hack off fingers, one digit at a time.

The blood, splashing and spattering everywhere. For the professional, one good knife-hit in the right place and the victim was dead anyways. The killer would be twenty metres away before the victim even knew they’d been had. For that, the bayonet was hardly necessary. A much smaller blade, easily concealed, was ideal. For souvenirs, surely one finger would have been sufficient.

He was thinking out loud—

A real pro would be on their way, before they’d even had time for one good scream. Pros rarely cared about obscuring the identity of the victim. It was hiding their own identity that they were worried about—

“Which implies that most disturbing of persons. The talented amateur.” Someone with imagination.

Andre nodded.

Gilles was studying photos, still a bit tacky from the lab. Almost still warm from the chemical bath. One had to handle them carefully, or you would leave deeply-embedded fingerprints all over them.

The impression, the impression was that the blood trails, the pools were all wrong.

“Andre. Take a look at this.”

“Hmn. Interesting.” The younger detective nodded. “Rolled off a tarp, or a raincoat or something.”

It was just that one area, clean and spot-free. The sheer objectivity of a photograph made obvious what should have been visible at the scene.
 
Nothing like that had been found in the immediate vicinity. He made a note of it, but the odds were slim. Even if it had been dropped in a trash bin, by the time the garbage was picked up, the stains would have turned very dark, near black in fact. The smell, if any, it might have almost faded, and clouds of flies hovering over the garbage of the back alleys was nothing new. Not that there wasn’t a chance—there was always a chance.

Officers on the street were keeping their eyes and ears open, putting out the word as best they could. They had established a radius of five hundred metres, all that was reasonable under the circumstances, and in such a crowded city it was the best they could hope to do.

“All right. First. Check and see if there have been any similar crimes in the past twelve months.” Neither one had heard of any, but this would be a nationwide query. “Also. Check all missing-persons reports for this city, going back a month or so. Put out a bulletin, nationwide, with a description of our victim and the modus. Now, who have we got for man-power.”

As far as that went, it was fine. But. There were a hundred watering holes within fifteen or twenty minutes’ walking distance from their alley. All of the members of the Special Homicide Unit were out at present.

Gilles uttered a small sigh. The coffee was good, though.

“We’ll know more about the clothes when the lab boys have had a look.”

Other than that, there was nothing to do but wait.

***

“There’s always Hubert.”

The figure by the door, hanging up his coat and his hat, looked up.

“Oh, no. Not me—”

Andre laughed and the younger detective subsided again, giving a curious look at Maintenon, feet up on one end of the desk and apparently, lost in thought.

“Here. Take a look at this.” Rising, Andre brought him a big glossy photo of their victim, a face-shot.

“Egads.” Hubert gave a sharp little nod, something he might have unconsciously picked up from the boss. “All right.”

He grinned.

“I see your point. Hmn—I think we can safely rule out suicide.” He patted Andre on the bicep. “Well. Good luck with that one.”

Turning, he went to his desk, where he had reports to work on until someone told him otherwise.

Settling in, he opened his notepad and read. Tentatively at first, gaining speed and confidence as his thoughts gelled, he began to type.

Eyebrows slightly raised, Andre Levain regarded him. Maintenon seemed oblivious.

Andre looked at the clock and the door. It was pretty much time, wasn’t it?

So.

It’s like that, is it.

He, at least, had a life. He had a wife and two kids, with another one on the way, and not only that, Nichol was a very good cook. Reaching for his hat, he headed for the door.

It was like he didn’t even exist. Poor old Maintenon didn’t even look up.

***

Gilles spent a quiet weekend with the cat, his cigars and his brandy. With Madame Lefebvre gone for good due to heart problems, as well as aging rapidly into early-onset senility…well, that was just the way things were. It was one more tragedy. It was something that had to be accepted.

He’d been content to fend for himself for a while. He could only sort of wallow in it, honouring the old girl’s presence, (or absence), for so long. It was quickly getting old, and he had reluctantly resolved to put up an advertisement for a replacement. Not a live-in. Someone who would come in by the day. Someone who could put up a few meals for his weekends, which were important on some level…someone who could shop, and clean, and do laundry, and answer the door and the phone. Someone who would do that very well—that was the thing, wasn’t it.

Someone that didn’t need to be trained from scratch…someone who could do well enough on their own, and there was always the cat—there was always the radio. For the right person, it would be pleasant enough. Certainly compared to some other jobs—

That was the problem, wasn’t it? Madame, having fit in at first and then taking charge of the place over time, had sort of made herself indispensable. Any household competence he might have once had, had quickly faded.

He’d been confronted, in some sense. It was his responsibility—and he was stalling, nothing more. He was the only one who could do it. That was Sunday evening, when he’d looked in the kitchen cupboards, hoping for some kind of revelation. The only real revelation was that he was running out of tinned foods and weevily old biscuits, and someone would have to do something about that.

Morning, he’d shuffled out of bed, none the wiser, apparently.

Again, he was confronted. That face in the mirror. While shaving only the cheeks and the neck saved time and effort, there was still the necessity of taking the scissors and cropping what was left. He’d come damned close to snipping a nostril once or twice, and yet stopping off at a proper barber’s to get it done would seem to take more time than it was worth these days. More time than he had, really.

One more day, he thought. Then I really will shave it off.

In the meantime, it was Monday morning, not even really light yet. The clock was ticking and he had important work to do.

The beard could wait—for now.

***

END


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