Friday, April 24, 2015

Speak Softly My Love, Chapter Fifteen.



"Three...three wives...???"

Part One
Part Seven 
Part Eight 
Part Nine
Part Ten
Part Eleven
Part Twelve
Part Thirteen
Part Fouteen 

An excerpt from a work in progress.


Louis Shalako

Speak Softly My Love


Chapter Fifteen



Hubert and Tailler were looking terribly smug as Gilles finished his informal briefing on the previous day’s events. Andre gave them a long look before tearing himself away.

“Doctor Auger will be forwarding all reports here.” Gilles had his buttocks perched on the front of his desk, arms crossed as the thunder rumbled and lightning cracked overhead in an unusual September thunderstorm. “He can hang onto the body for a while, and he’s promised to send us the clothing as soon as he’s finished his detailed examination.”

Levain heaved in his chair. The two younger detectives obviously wanted to know what they should be doing next.

“Okay. So—”

“Um, Inspector?”

Gilles had turned to his typewriter, which he had on a second rather narrower desk, set against the wall and in behind his main one.

“Yes?”

Tailler, with an air of superior accomplishment, slid open the top drawer of his desk. He pulled out a big buff envelope and got out of his seat.

He took it over to Andre, who whistled, looking up at the tall detective in astonishment.

“What is it, Tailler?”

“Yes, Inspector. We have a body too.”

“What?”

Andre looked at Hubert, who shrugged as if he wasn’t responsible for all of this mess, and Tailler took the pictures to Maintenon.

He was suitably impressed.

“And who is this?”

“That’s Madame Godeffroy.”

Tailler turned and gave Hubert a significant look.

It was his cue.

“Madame Zoe, Godeffroy.”

Maintenon’s mouth opened and he stared.

“Three…three wives…?”

“It seems terribly far-fetched, doesn’t it?” Andre leaned back in his chair, arms crossed, watching their little performance.

Levain’s eyebrows were climbing straight up, as if to escape from the sort of forehead that could conceive of all of this, in however limited a fashion.

Tailler turned and shrugged.

“What are we supposed to think, Andre? That call yesterday—just when you were leaving. That was Inspector Delorme. She was found at the Rive Gauche, the hotel.”

Andre nodded, as Maintenon studied the crime scene photos. There were incident reports, the lady’s preliminary physical exam at the morgue.

She was blonde, well-dressed. The right age, size and build.

“She came in from Molsheim. In the wine country—or one of them, right. But here’s the kicker. There’s a letter. No envelope, unfortunately. She probably had it folded up in her purse, and kept it with her. They were going to have a second honeymoon. The hotel’s a lot nicer these days by the way, it used to be a real dump known as the Belle Bleu or something.”

Andre’s head jerked a little in recognition. He knew the place.

“Okay.”

“It’s signed, love—Didier.”

Hmn.

Tailler closed his mouth and let them ponder that one.

Picking up one of the better photos of the victim, he took it and sat on the front of his own desk.

He and Hubert had some ideas, but it was better to let Gilles think on it for a while.

In the meantime, Maintenon had been thoughtful enough to bring in a couple of boxes of beignets, and if Tailler didn’t snag one of the strawberry-filled ones quick, some bastard would beat him to the punch.

Probably Andre, he decided, as the two of them moved in at once.

“So what do you think, Inspector?”

This was just getting too damned good. Hubert was about ready to shit himself.

Maintenon shrugged.

Dr. Auger, one must presume.
Thibodeau and something he said came to mind.

“It could be him. It might be him. Hell, it probably is him.” He lifted his feet up onto the desk, putting his hands up behind his head and eyeing the boxes of beignets on Andre’s desk. 

“The only question now, is how to proceed.”

It was one hell of a good question judging by the blank looks that one drew.

Hubert got up and grabbed one of the boxes, bringing it over so Gilles could have a rummage around in there.

“What is that?”

“Pardon?”

“I swear to God you were just humming—humming for crying out loud.”

“Oh, that.” Maintenon grunted, half-sad and yet half smiling. “It’s just an old song…”

He took in a short breath.

Poor old Gilles was quite the crooner.


“...speak softly, my love.

Speak low.

Speak softly to me my love

Speak softly and tell me

Please tell me

That you will never go.”


“…Love, Didier!” Tailler blurted it out without thinking.

Next thing you know, they were laughing their damned fool heads off.


***

“Okay. For starters, sir, Hubert and I would like to check out this Didier Godeffroy seven ways from Sunday.”

Maintenon nodded.

“Yes. Get to know our victim.”

“We were thinking military service, previous criminal record. Otherwise we’re relying on Madame Godeffroy’s personal identification. There are just too many of them around for any one of them to be taken too seriously.”

“Good point.”

“Also, we’re going to ask about passports. Monsieur Godeffroy almost certainly travels to Spain, Portugal, Italy, Germany…Hungary at least. He’s the senior buyer, right? If he’s left the country, customs should be able to tell us all that. He might take the lady friend with him, even.”

Maintenon nodded.

“You’re not buying the body in the river?”

“We’ll wait on Doctor Auger’s report. Don’t forget, we have two different spouses at least. Either one of them should be able to identify a dead husband. The trouble is that we have no other identification, not so far, for a body that is not in particularly good condition. No wedding ring, for example. I think we should proceed with caution there.” They should give away as little as possible. “We’ll have fingerprints from the body. We’ll have to figure out how to get fingerprints from the households in question…”

This especially included the next of kin, who might be presumed to have the best odds of benefitting from the gentleman’s death.

“Who else might identify the body?”

“Good question. If the wife can’t do it, who could? Also—”

“And he is an orphan. Getting someone from work—this Barrault character. Word would soon get out. No one knows a man like his own wife.”

“I want to get a few gendarmes. Policewomen, even.”

Levain caught Maintenon’s eye, the look of amusement difficult to stifle. Tailler was on a roll. Brave as hell physically, totally unsure of himself and his training one minute, now all of a sudden he was ticking off all the points like a seasoned pro.

“I want to put them in a room with twenty telephones. If Monsieur Godeffroy really is out there somewhere on a buying trip, then let’s find him.” He took in oxygen, and lots of it. “I got more—I think. But basically, we need to get them a list of any place he might have stayed. The longer the list, the better, and get them started on that.”

“Very well.” Gilles opened up his briefcase.

The phone was ringing and Levain picked it up. He listened for a moment.

“Hold on.” He caught Gilles’ eye.

“So?”

Maintenon shrugged elaborately.

“What have we got?”

“Dead girl. Strangled. Found on a front porch. We’re wanted.”

“Hmn. Very well. You and I will take that one—and leave these beautiful young people to their work.”

Gilles pulled off a shoe and turning it upside down, gave it a shake. Levain relayed the information back. They were on their way. Hanging up, he phoned dispatch to get them a vehicle, and in this case he figured a driver as well.

“Sir?”

“Ah, yes, of course.” Gilles put the shoe back on, mystified as there hadn’t been anything in there and yet it was like a sharp little pebble or something.

He stood up experimentally. Whatever it was, it was gone.

Andre was making quick notes and looking at the clock.

“Andre.”

“Yes, Gilles?”

“Phone downstairs. It doesn’t seem like such a busy day. Tell them we need…ah, four warm bodies for a little project.”

“All righty then.” Levain lifted the receiver, his finger a blur as he dialed.

The desk sergeant didn’t seem to be giving him too much of a problem going by this end of the conversation.

Tailler leaned back on the front of his desk, braced with both hands, looking studiously casual.

Levain hung up and stood. Gilles already had his hat, and with the weather being changeable, had his coat on as well.

“Okay. We’ll see you in a couple of hours.”

The door closed behind them.

Tailler looked at Hubert.

Hubert looked at Tailler.

“See? That’s how it’s done, Hubert.” He straightened up, and went over to stand looking out the window, arms crossed, very tall all of a sudden.

Hubert had the impression Tailler had always wanted to command troops in battle.

“Sure. Let’s just hope we get something…and soon.”

***

Less than sixteen minutes later, heavy shoes clomped in the hallway.

A loud knock came at the door.

“Come in, come in.”

Tailler and Hubert had quickly found a conference room that wasn’t being used. Using Maintenon’s name and a little fast talking, they had reserved it for at least the next forty-eight hours.

Tailler’s mouth opened.

The first uniformed gendarme bent his head and came in, shoulders blocking out the sight of those behind him.

“Sir. Reporting as ordered for unspecified duties…”

“Yes, yes, come in. How many are there?”

Two policewomen and this big one. Tailler gave him another look

“All right.” He handed them each a thin file folder. “We’ve grabbed a room. We’re getting some additional phones rigged. What’s going to happen, is that you’re going to be calling the numbers on the list and asking a few simple questions. If you get a hit, you tell them to hold on—then you come running and find one of us.”

Hubert was still pounding away at the typewriter.

He came to the end of the document in question. Sitting up straighter, he cranked it up and out of the machine.

He looked around.

“You.”

The big male cop responded.

“Me?”

“Anyone. Get over here and copy these documents. We need it quick, because we want to get you guys started.”

He got out of his chair and the bulky fellow, fingers like sausages he had, quickly took his place.

“How many copies, sir?”

“Make it six—no, eight. You can only do a couple of carbons at a time.” Hubert pulled out a drawer and showed him the paper and thin carbon sheets.

“Yes, sir.”

Hubert looked at Tailler. “Any other ideas?”

“Yeah. Take the ladies down the hall, show them where they’ll be working. While you’re doing that, I will write up, ah, some quick little briefing notes. They need to know exactly what they’re working on.”

Hubert nodded. He had an idea. Nipping to his desk, he quickly sorted through his materials.

“Here.” He picked the first one he made eye contact with. “Take these down to the lab and tell them we need six or seven more copies of each—the file number is right there. Tell them to bring it up to Room Three-Sixteen.”

He looked over at the officer typing, and raised his voice.

“You hear that? Room Three-Sixteen.”

A hand came up in acknowledgement.

“Yes, sir.”

Hubert nodded at Tailler.

“Okay, we’re off—”

“And?”

Hubert cracked a quick grin.

“Keep up the good work, Emile—we’re doing okay here. We’ll get some more people when they can spare them.” And no sooner, in other words.

The look he received in return was kind of hard to pin down. There might have been some demur, in there.

“The great thing about being cops, is that we’re never going to run out of work.” Their acolytes chuckled at the unexpected response, the tone spot-on.

Sad, but true.

Poor old Tailler was just a bit out of his depth but struggling manfully to stay afloat.

That look pretty much said it all.

***

(Jmak.)
It was a very good thing that Hubert had put some thought into briefing their untried, untested, impromptu little team.

Barely a half an hour later, they were all hard at work.

“What? Oh, Monsieur Godeffroy. We’ve been trying to reach you all day.” Looking very white around the eyes, the policewoman on the end of their long table turned and beckoned furiously.

Hubert was momentarily riveted to the spot, then galvanized into action. Here was their big chance. This was the unexpected rearing its ugly head. Always when you least expected it.

Sacre merde, he had no idea of what to do.

“Holy.” The hoarse whisper cut through everything as he threw his pen at Tailler’s back and that conversation was quickly cut to a bare and shocked silence.

Tailler stared at him and he pointed at the policewoman on the other end of the table.

The room was a babble of talk, with three of them and Tailler going one minute, and dead quiet the next. All eyes and all ears were frozen in place.

The policewoman, turning back, appeared to be listening. She’d gotten a hit and the switchboard had put her right through.

“Ah, yes, Monsieur. We were just wondering if your refrigerator was running—” Almost choking on it, she managed an insane giggle.

You could have heard a pin drop in the room, and then with a sudden wince, she pulled the thing away from her ear and quickly put her finger on the button.

She turned to Hubert.

“Where was that, exactly?”

She nodded, pencil in hand.

"Is your refrigerator running, sir?"
“It’s some little village…just north of Chalons sur Champagne. Hotel d’Esprit. What do we do now, sir?”

“That was good thinking, Jeannine. Outstanding! I thought my heart was going to stop dead. Just dead, there.” He had to ask. “What did he say? Did he say anything?”

“Well. He has an extensive vocabulary, sir.”

They all looked at him and then laughed when he laughed.

“I don’t believe it.” Tailler was right—Hubert was finding it very hard to accept that they had located their missing husband.

Just like that, right out of the blue.

Tailler was the first to hang up the phone. Dubiously, having barely gotten started into the work, the other two reluctantly cut it off with a click. They could always call back and try again.

“Okay, we need a minute to think about this one.” Hubert rose and with a look at Hubert, headed for the door.

Tailler got up out of his chair.

“All right, people. Hmn. What I want you to do, ah…now, is to call around. We know where he is. So, let’s find a map somewhere and narrow these lists down. He’s been gone for a few days now. He’s using his own name. He must have been staying somewhere. There are hundreds of vineyards, vintners, dozens of fine chateaux in the vicinity. It’s also wine country, Gaston e Cie is a big company and this guy is well-known up there.”

“In short? We just keep going?”

“Exactly. Er. As best you can. Things will change in five minutes or five hours. That’s just the way it is in homicide—” He loosened his tie. “I’ll, uh, be back with you as quick as I can. But use your heads. We want to find this man, and maybe we have. Or maybe we haven’t. And so far—so far, we have no idea what’s really going on here.”

He patted Jeannine on the shoulder, and followed his partner, who would have presumably headed for their regular squad-room.

“Sir.”

He stopped.

A gratuitous gun picture.
“Yes?”

“What if we need to go to the bathroom?”

“Then find one of those too.” He cleared his throat. “Okay. You get a break every two hours, five or ten minutes, no more. You are not goofing off. One at a time. You are under my authority and Detective Etienne Hubert as well. Don’t let anyone take you away from this duty. You guys are mine, okay? Tell them to come and see me first, n’est pas?”

Three sober and serious faces looked at him and nodded.

“Yes, sir.” At this stage of the game they were just parrots, really, two of them anyways.

The two dumb ones.

Jeannine had just saved their asses.


END


Louis has books and stories available from Google Play. This audiobook is free. One Million Words of Crap.


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Thursday, April 23, 2015

Speak Softly My Love, Chapter Fourteen.



(Jmak.)

Hubert sighed. He reached over and picked up the phone.

“Hello?”

“Yes, Hello. This is Inspector Jacques Delorme. Is Inspector Maintenon in today?”

“Ah, no, I’m sorry. He’s just left, sir. Is there something I can help you with? This is Detective Hubert.”

“Hmn. Ah. Well. Yes, why not. Look, I’ve got a body downtown here. It’s at the Maison Rive Gauche, a kind of cheesy tourist hotel. Our girl is tall, blonde, and blue-eyed. She’s been stabbed to death. The name is Godeffroy, that’s with two f’s.”

“Whoa! That’s our case, Inspector. Thank you so much for calling.” He was madly beckoning for Tailler to listen in. “And she’s dead? Shit. So what’s going on, sir?”

“Monique or Lucinde, sir?” Tailler had grabbed the extension and punched the lit extension button, butting in shamelessly.

“Ah, according to the identification and the registry, the lady’s name is Zoe.”

The pair stared at each other from across the room.

Zoe…???

“…and there’s a letter in her purse, where this Didier is asking to meet her at the hotel. The words ‘second honeymoon’ are underlined…and then it says, love, Didier.”

Tailler stood.

“We’ll be right down, Inspector.”

Tailler hung up. His mouth opened, and then closed. He stood looking at the phone, suddenly grateful that he had a partner to take down the address and other necessary details.

The door didn’t exactly hit them in the ass on the way out, either.

***

Even dead, the woman in room four-fifteen was another looker by any standard of the imagination. Tailler looked at a dead body, one which had in death, as well as in life, a mighty fine ass.

The thin silk dress clung to the form and hid nothing important. There was one shoe on the floor and one still on her foot. There was a small run in the stocking on the left calf.

He could not stifle the thoughts sometimes. There were times when Tailler worried about himself.

She was face down on the bed. The Inspector and his crew stood back and let Hubert have a look.

Tailler’s eye wandered the room. The hotel had certainly cleaned up since he’d been here last. 

At one time it would have been smoke and grease-stained wood paneling. Now it was all smooth plaster and pale, peachy yellow paint. The area had once been high-crime, as recently as five or ten years ago. In spite of the worldwide depression, the area was making a comeback if the Maison Rive Gauche was anything to go by. It suddenly struck him that he’d raided somebody on the third floor, just a couple of years ago.

Tailler wandered over to the window, looking out and checking for balconies, fire escapes and skylights below. The Rive Gauche was an irregular pile of a building. The lady’s name was Zoe Godeffroy according to the hotel records and her own documents. Her papers were conveniently displayed for them beside the purse on top of the white and faux gilt armoire.

She had been stabbed, according to the inspector. It certainly looked that way. She’d been stabbed in the middle of the room, turned, staggered and fell forwards, face-down on the bed, right arm outstretched as if reaching for the telephone.

“Have you everything you need?”

“Yes, the photographers, the fingerprint people, everyone’s been and gone.” Clad in a black raincoat, trousers of the same colour, black leather shoes with slip-on galoshes, the Inspector’s costume was topped off by a grey and brown plaid deerstalker hat.

“We’ve picked up any number of strange hairs, strange fibres, bits of toenail, odd-ball stains here and there, and it’s all useless.” It was a hotel room no matter how neat and well-kept it might look.

Too many people going through.

“Would you be so kind as to forward all reports…ah, to Maintenon’s unit?” Tailler was choosing his words.

“Delighted.”

“Thank you.” Hubert didn’t smell alcohol.

A strong smell of expensive perfume, even in death.

His men, having taken that hat for granted all these years, were suddenly reminded of it when the great Maintenon’s boys stepped in. Hubert would no doubt be watched closely. He was careful not to show any signs of mockery. This was nothing if not a deference community. 

The junior officers, flanking their chief on either side, watched him as Hubert gently turned the body over. Rigor had set in, and she was a bit stiff, but yielded with a good pull. It was like lifting a plank that had been lying out behind the barn for a while. Grass had grown over it.

She had been stabbed by a long, thin blade. It was right under the left side of the short ribs. 

One good push straight to the heart.

“Oh, yeah, that’s the way.”

Not a bone in sight from that angle. She was wearing a cheerful, printed red dress with white flowers, stockings and a garter belt. No panties, no bra. One pair of shoes, one little cap. She had one suitcase and three other outfits hanging in the closet plus slacks and a blouse. Six pairs of underwear, hosiery, a silk scarf. The closet door was wide open. The killer would have been eyeball to eyeball with the victim. Hubert and Tailler took a good look.

“Was the door locked?”

“No. We feel she let her attacker in.”

He nodded.

“They usually do, don’t they.”

She had died open-mouthed, and he could imagine her laughing, or perhaps being kissed. 

Yes, that was it. It would be all too easy.

Love, Didier.

The poor woman. One short spike of awareness, and then the incomprehensible shock of pain. The eyes would widen and she would question. Those eyes would stare deeply into hers as the awful truth came. She would have clung to him…whoever. He would have had the left arm around behind her. It would have been all too easy. The heart was punctured. Blood pressure fell so rapidly, they were unconscious in seconds. Half a minute after that and they were gone.

One minute of pain and terror. Next thing you know, you’re on your way to heaven.

“All right.” Hubert let her fall and stepped back. “Where’s the letter?”

"Love, Didier. Hmn."
A detective stepped forwards. He handed over a big buff envelope, with the name, the date, the other details written on it in a big, bold hand. There would be no mistakes with this guy, thought Hubert. He didn’t think he’d ever seen him around, but then he’d only ever heard of Delorme.

Delorme was as crazy as a shit-house rat, and said to be very, very thorough.

Hubert carefully pulled it out using a pair of stainless-steel tweezers provided by the detective.

He skimmed it quickly.

“Hmn. I like that: Love, Didier.”

Tailler came over and he showed it to him.

“So what are the hotel people saying?”

Inspector Delorme filled in the details.

“She came in by train from Molsheim. She has the ticket stub in her purse. Arrived by cab from the Gare de l’Est. Other than that, we know very little. She checked in yesterday afternoon, went out for a little shopping and after that, no one really knows. She didn’t eat at the hotel restaurant or use room service. We can ask around the dress shops. Unfortunately there are a thousand places she might have gone. It’s too bad, it doesn’t look like she actually bought anything. Unusual for a woman in town for a short time—or any time at all, actually. She left by taxi around eight p.m. No one remarked upon her return, which probably means she took the room key with her. The elevator boy doesn’t remember bringing her up, but the hotel is fairly busy.”

Hubert nodded and Tailler stood there looking intelligent.

“Very well.”

“She has a passport.”

“Nice.” Tailler’s heart began to pound.

That was another fucking question we forgot to ask…passport.

***

(Armin Hornung.)
It was unusual, but just like old times for Andre to be driving Gilles. They were heading for Epinay-sur-Seine, which while downstream of the city, was actually a little east of due north going by the map. The river did a series of S-turns, doubling back on itself several times. It was like a big snake as it wound its way through the hills and down onto the plain.

“Jesus, it’s got to be ten or fifteen kilometres.” Levain wasn’t used to long periods of introspection in this job.

Either you were on, in which case you were really on and had no choice but to focus, or you were off. You could forget it for a while and just relax, be yourself and enjoy the family.

Gilles was lost in thought. He found himself enjoying the ride, and was showing all the signs of cheerfulness.

“A centime for your thoughts.”

Gilles looked over and grinned.

“No way.”

He reconsidered.

“Almost anything is better than sitting there waiting to testify.” He had more coming next week. “It’s like waiting for a tooth to be drilled.”

Having done it all too often himself, Andre agreed.

They would be killing the better part of an hour each way on this trip, and there would be whatever time spent with whoever. It was a strange feeling, to have the pressure off for a while. It was like a kid skipping out on school.

“We’ll have a quick look at the body and then decide what to do.”

“Ah. I was beginning to wonder.”

“They have him on ice for us at the local hospital.”

Levain turned and found Gilles looking at him.

“I can’t wait to see if it’s our guy.”

Maintenon nodded then looked away. A lot of things didn’t make sense. The nearest bridge to the Parc Montsouris was probably the Pont du Tolbiac. He was mentally kicking himself. He might have foreseen this. They could have sent officers directly there. He was kidding himself, blaming himself. There were too many places to look and too short a time. Even so. 

The killer had to lug that body to the riverbank somewhere. Dropping it from the middle span of a bridge had the advantage of putting it in the middle of the stream where the water was deep and the currents were strongest. It was certainly dark enough at the time. They would have had until dawn.

He was a little surprised that it hadn’t snagged up sooner, a little closer to the point of entry.

Bodies in rivers seemed to follow natural laws of their own. This much was true.

“That’s insane—that has to be…God, I don’t know how many kilometres.”

“What? What’s insane?”

Gilles was thinking that their perpetrator must have used a car—they must have. No one could carry a body, not even two people, that far across the city, not even at night. You sure as hell weren’t going to take it on the bus or the Metro. You could hardly call a taxi. To borrow a car from someone was to eventually hang yourself and possibly them too…

He looked around.

“Where are we?

“Still in the city, Gilles.” They hadn’t even crossed the river yet, and Andre was working his way as patiently as he could through the late afternoon traffic.

If those clouds to the north opened up and Andre suspected they would, he could count on everything just getting a whole lot slower.

Holy. It looked like they might be a while yet.

***

“You haven’t started the autopsy?”

“No.” The doctor gave them a wintry smile.

“Thank you, thank you. Wonderful.”

Their escort suppressed a thin smile, but the great Maintenon was practically rubbing his hands in anticipation.

“Doctor Auger is an extremely competent examiner, but if you guys want to take over—” It was all the same to them.

Doctor Auger kept a neat little morgue in the basement of the hospital, La Maison Santé.

Detective Patrick Thibodeau, the officer of record in the matter, had met them at the front door and guided them through the labyrinthine halls of the place, badly in need of a good scrape and some paint if not quite ready for demolition. He was a man of average build and looks. He was about thirty-five, the suit looked all right and he wore a wedding band. There had always been something incongruous about a Frenchman with such a straggling, pale mustache. The upper lip looked like the guy had been drinking milk, rather than having a serious mustache. One wondered what the man himself thought of it.

As for Gilles, he had resolved to shave his off, rather than tolerate one of the horrible white mustaches he was seeing these days. They were all over the faces of his contemporaries. They were always so neatly trimmed, clipped and even powdered he suspected in some cases.

Lord, spare me that.

“Where was he?”

Gilles stepped forward as the Doctor unlatched the meat-locker and opened the hatch.

“Some fishermen found him. They take their wine and their fishing rods and congregate at various spots along the waterfront. This one’s kind of a low-rental even for them old guys. We figured he went in somewhere nearby. Either that, or he came down the right-hand channel. He hung up on some iron. There’s a popular dumping spot just along there. It was just before the end of the island.”

“Oh, so the island got him?”

Doctor Auger had the big steel tray fully rolled out, the bulk of the wall composed of three rows of small steel doors. Above that were the ubiquitous glazed ceramic tiles in an unusually cheerful institutional yellow.

Gently, he lifted the white cloth from the face.

Gilles looked down. The water had been at him for a few days. The cold preserved the body, but the water was absorbed into the cells. There was a thin film of silt or something visible here and there although the doctor had washed the face for identification purposes.

“And you think he went in right there?”

“There are a couple of bridges upstream. We figured somebody took the wallet, knifed him, and dropped him in along the bank. I’m thinking a stiletto. It’s a bit old-fashioned. He’d hang up pretty quick. That’s a nice, professional little cut-job. A real fucking Apache, Inspector. Rather unusual, especially in this neighbourhood. At least at first, until somebody recalled your bulletin.” He looked at Andre, patiently noting their few details so far. “We get a few suicides, not too many.”

Bodies turned up where and when they would. There were several known snags. There were eddies, currents, docks and pilings along the shore. Old barges sank at their moorings and there were a few of them down along that stretch there according to Auger.

Andre nodded as Gilles bent in close and examined the puncture wound. It was in about the right place.

(Ralf Roletschek.)
The only problem was that face. He stared at it. Like his man, the face was clean-shaven, and yet whiskers continued to grow after death. There was a good stubble, at least a day’s worth. 

At most, maybe two days. The rate of growth was different for each individual.

“I would like a full report.”

“Absolutely.”

Andre drew out their small sheaf of photos.

Maintenon took one, but that wasn’t the real problem as he compared the face in the picture with that of their deader.

“Hmn. Shit. Eh?”

Detective Levain beckoned a patient Detective Thibodeau over and gave him the remaining photos.

“We need an objective opinion. Just ignore Gilles. What do you think?”

“This is the guy you saw in the park, Inspector?”

Gilles’ face went all stone-like.

“Non, non, young man. What Andre means is that we want you to ignore all of that—excellent idea, incidentally. Andre. This is where we will go wrong time and time again in this case—and I’ll bet our killer…”

Mouth open, Gilles handed his photo to the doctor. He wandered over to the farthest corner and found himself a seat on a hard maple chair.

“No, that can’t be it—” Maintenon was off on a tangent, noted Andre.

Doctor Auger looked at Gilles open-mouthed for a second, and then took a good look at his little snapshot.

“Damn. It really is hard, isn’t it?”

Thibodeau stood over the body, shaking his head gently.

His eyes came up to meet Andre’s.

“Holy, shit, eh?”

Andre took a breath.

“Well. There’s nothing here that says that this can’t be our guy.”

Maintenon looked up.

“Where are his clothes? What was our amiable friend wearing when you pulled him out?”

The doctor handed the photo to Thibodeau who kept shuffling through them, still unable to make up his mind. They were going by description and photographs, and it was a tough call. 

The body had no unique identifying marks, no tattoos, birthmarks, scars, nothing.

The body on the slab and the man in the photograph would have generated a similar description from any number of witnesses. His height would have varied all over the place, along with his weight. This demonstrated one of the great difficulties of police work. 

Everyone saw the same thing and somehow saw it differently. Even the camera had some distortion and always would. It was in the nature of the round, bulging lens and the flat, rectangular picture plane.

Witnesses described a common experience using a unique perspective, differing levels of acuity, and using different words. Some, in fact most, weren’t even paying attention. 

Eyewitness descriptions would be all over the place, and yet here they had a chance to study at their leisure.

Gilles followed Dr. Auger.

The doctor had the clothes up on hangars, on racks, over a drain in the floor in the next room.

Gilles felt the fabric, still damp at the seams of the waistband. He went looking for the cut on the front of the jacket, squinting at it in the dim light of the utility room. He touched the cuts with the sensitive pads of his right fore and middle finger. It felt about right, but then pretty much any rip or tear would feel like that.

“There were no personal effects.”

“Hmn.”

They were being asked to make subjective calls when the manual stressed the objective call. It was the basis of all rational investigation. Emotion, wanting it to be true, had no place here. 

Human senses and recollection were fallible and he, a trained investigator, should only expect so much of himself.

“Andre.”

Levain went in to have a look.

“This suit is brown—” Maintenon’s face swung around just as Thibodeau called out from the outer room.

“Yeah—yeah, it might be him. It could be him, what the hell. It probably is him.”

Andre looked at the suit.

The lady said black suit, the gentleman is found in a brown suit.

How significant was that? The guy also took off and left without word. Absolutely none of the information they had so far could be trusted. Not without further facts. Not without corroboration, of some material kind.

Merde.


END


Notes.

It's as much fun writing a serial as it is writing any book or story of equivalent length. It's also obvious from reading it, that the manuscript, a work in progress, needs a fair bit of cleaning up and editing.  Chapter Ten is all over the place and even the best chapters need proof-reading. Things have to be taken out, other things have to be put in, and yet there is nothing here that three or four good, deep edits for content won't cure.

The text is being presented in 13-point size for ease of reading. Normally I write in 12-point TNR and simply zoom in if the eyes are bothering me.