Murder in the Raw

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Murder in the Raw Page 9

by C. S. Challinor


  A six-foot wire fence concealed by a hedge closed off the property from the open land beyond, which ended at the dirt road leading to the Sundown Ranch and Butterfly Farm.

  “Mind if I walk with you?” he asked the beefy guard.

  “I seen you round. You dat lawyer from Scotland.” He introduced himself as Winston and said he would be glad to answer any questions.

  “Thank you.” Rex fell into step with him as he toured the outdoor tennis and indoor racquet ball courts. “How many guards work here?”

  Winston informed him there were three, who rotated. He then volunteered the information that he and a younger man called Pierre had been working the night shift when Sabine Durand disappeared.

  “What time did you arrive for work?”

  “Just before six. We went to da front office as we always do. Da desk manager gives us a briefing before we go on patrol to tell us what to look out for. Da Gendarmerie sends reports to da resort about any crime in da area.”

  “Was it quiet that night?”

  “Very quiet. I din’ know what was up till da Canadian man with tattoos come running up an’ say we have to search for da young lady. Den ev’rybody was rushing about. Pierre an’ me went past da rocks. Was too dark to see anyting, but dere wasn’t no body. Next morning I had to stay until da po-lice come.”

  “Who found Mr. Powell’s cell phone?”

  “I did, over by da rocks.”

  “Did you see Pierre on patrol?”

  “We walk a circle in different directions. One goes front of da cabanas, other goes down da beach, an we meet up in da middle an continue. Ev’ry five rounds, we stop for a cigarette an’ rest for a while.”

  “Where do you take your cigarette break?”

  “Back of da Cockatoo, by da kitchens. After ten, we get a meal. I was goin’ over dere when I heard about da missing woman.”

  When Rex spoke to Pierre, who was on guard at the front entrance, the shy youth repeated everything his colleague had said, though less eloquently. He hadn’t understood whom they were looking for until he saw the papers and recognized Mlle. Durand from the resort.

  “Any strange goings-on in the last couple of weeks that you remember?” Rex asked.

  Pierre shook his head, a blank look on his face. Rex thanked him and went inside the main building, where he was pleased to find a message from Thaddeus waiting for him at the front desk. At last. He asked Danielle if he might use the phone in the back office to call London.

  “This could be important,” he said.

  “Browne, Quiggley, and Squire,” the young law clerk answered. “Mr. Quiggley’s office.”

  “Thad, ’tis I,” Rex announced.

  “Oh, good, sir. I have quite a bit of information for you.”

  “Thanks for getting to it so fast. What did you find out?”

  “Well, here are the salient facts, Mr. Graves, sir. I’ll fax the entire report as soon as we’re off the phone.”

  Rex heard a preparatory cough. Thaddeus was still a bit wet behind the ears and had a lot to learn, but he was a thorough researcher.

  “Coenraad van Bijhooven, alias Bijou,” the law clerk began, “was born in Amsterdam in 1957. His mother, Alice Frankel, was a high-class call girl who gave up her profession to marry Henrick van Bijhooven, a successful industrialist. Coenraad went to Paris to read international law at the Sorbonne.”

  “Did he now?” Rex asked pensively.

  “Upon his return to Holland, he went into the flesh trade and opened a string of strip clubs in the Amsterdam red light district, which he sold fifteen years ago to set up in real estate on St. Martin. When his father died, he left Coenraad a sum of money which provided capital for some of his more ambitious projects.”

  “Did you manage to link him to the Jewel Murders in Amsterdam?”

  “A couple of witnesses came forward at the time but their silence must have been bought off because they never appeared in court. The girls, who were found sexually assaulted, tortured, and bejeweled, had all worked for Coenraad as either prostitutes or dancers. I did find out an interesting fact.”

  “Go on.”

  “They were all of slender build, with long hair and delicately modeled cheekbones.”

  The description evoked an image of Sabine.

  “The women resembled his mother,” Thaddeus informed him. “There’s a picture in the file.”

  “Is she still alive?”

  “No. A complication arose when she was delivering her second child. Both mother and baby died while Coenraad was in Paris.”

  “Have there been any murders on the island with the same modus operandi as those in Amsterdam?”

  “Two years ago. Both investigations fizzled to nothing. It was widely assumed a tourist was responsible and then left the island. The victims were not found immediately. Their relative states of decomposition showed they were murdered within a couple of weeks of each other.”

  “Who were they?”

  “One worked as an exotic dancer at The Stiletto in Philipsburg.”

  A chill ran down Rex’s spine, alerting him to the fact that he might be on to something. “Owned by Bijou?”

  “Correct. He changed his name legally before he left Holland, and travels on his new passport.”

  “What do we know about the girls?”

  “Leona Couch was in her twenties. The other victim was a tour guide: Geraldine Linder, early thirties. Both fit descriptions of the women in Amsterdam.”

  “What was the connection between Bijou and the tour guide?”

  “None was ever established. I’ll fax the report right now. It’s marked for your attention and has CONFIDENTIAL stamped all over it. Stand by.”

  Rex had often thought Thaddeus should have gone into the Secret Service, but the studious young man was not exactly the field agent type.

  “I’ll wait by the machine. And thank you verra much. Next time I’m in London, I’ll take Quig out to dinner and extol your virtues.”

  Quiggley was one of the partners at the firm Thaddeus clerked for, and a longtime friend of Rex’s.

  “I’d appreciate that, sir. And good luck with the case. I hope you’ll let me know the outcome.”

  “Never fear. Good day to you, lad.”

  For a brief moment, Rex whimsically thought how nice it would be to have a son like Thaddeus, whom he could mentor in law, and who spent more time studying and therefore less time chasing women than Campbell.

  He exited the office and addressed the desk clerk. “Would you do me a favour and make an appointment for me to see this chiropractor while I wait for a fax?” Handing her the message slip that had been in Vernon’s pigeon-hole, he returned to the fax machine which was just beginning to spurt out the pages of Thad’s report.

  “The phone number for the chiropractor in Philipsburg does not exist,” the clerk told him when he came back out of the office, report in hand.

  “Are you sure it was taken down correctly?”

  “Absoluement, monsieur. I took the number down on several messages.”

  “Do you have a directory handy?”

  She placed the “Yellow Pages Sint Maarten” for the Dutch side of the island on the desk. Rex scanned the listings for Dr. Sganarelle and found no one by that name. He then checked the local phone book to no avail.

  “Thanks,” he said, closing the book.

  Entering the store in the building to buy breakfast, he encountered Greg Hastings, the resort manager, who wore a brass badge to that effect. A nattily dressed man with a neatly trimmed salt-and-pepper beard, he greeted Rex effusively and asked how he was enjoying his stay at La Plage d’Azur.

  “Verra pleasant.” Rex asked the manager about the two guards.

  “The employees are all carefully vetted,” he assured Rex in a northern English accent. “We only take on people we can trust and whom other employees can vouch for. Uh-oh,” he said glancing out the window. “Rain’s coming.”

  Rex looked out at the sky, which wa
s dark to the east. Raindrops began to fall.

  “It doesn’t usually last long,” Hastings assured him.

  “Winston told me he was the one who found the phone belonging to Mr. Powell.”

  “That’s right. He gave it to me and I put it in the safe overnight. The gendarmes confiscated it the next morning but returned it a few days later after Mr. Powell made a huge fuss about it having all his clients’ numbers on it and needing it for work.” The manager’s pale face colored slightly.

  “Is there something you want to tell me?”

  “I’m afraid you’re going to think very badly of me.”

  “Not if you come clean now,” Rex encouraged, hoping for a promising confession.

  “Well …” Hastings stuck his hands in his jacket pockets. “While I was waiting for Mr. Powell to pick up his phone, I was idly comparing the functions to mine. All right, I admit it, I was curious about what big-shot entertainment clients he might have. But I would never divulge what I found.”

  The manager paused, but Rex didn’t do him the favor of asking for names, since he personally had little interest in American stars, except perhaps for Angelina Jolie.

  “Anyway,” Hasting continued. “A photo came up on the phone. Most of them were boring sightseeing pics. None of Mr. Powell’s gorgeous wife, it was interesting to note. Just rock formations and such. Vernon likes geology. He’s so stony-faced himself, he probably feels there’s a connection.”

  Rex smiled in spite of himself and waited for what the manager had to tell him.

  “I downloaded the photo because it looked suspicious. It was the last one taken before the phone was found on the beach, and was dated July 10. Lieutenant Latour never pursued it. I suppose he failed to see the relevance, but I made a photocopy. Wait here a sec.”

  Hastings returned with a sheet of paper. “See what you make of this.”

  Rex examined the photocopy, which took up a quarter of the sheet of paper. The photo, taken at night, looked at first glance like a grainy blur of indistinct shapes. “I canna tell what it is,” he said.

  “Look carefully.”

  Rex blinked to refresh his eyes and get a different perspective, as when contemplating one of those trompe l’oeils that can either represent a vase or two facing profiles, depending on how you view it.

  “Ah, now I see,” he said. “It’s part of a woman’s face taken from below. I recognize the necklace.”

  “It belongs to Mrs. Winslow. I don’t think she meant to be in the photo, not from that angle.”

  The digitalized date stamp confirmed the photo was taken the day Sabine Durand disappeared. What was Elizabeth doing on Vernon’s cell phone that same night? “Did Winston say exactly where he found the phone?”

  “This side of the promontory, up by the rocks. He noted the location and time in his report: 10:24 p.m. Do you want to keep the photocopy?”

  “I don’t think so, but put it somewhere safe for now. You’ve been verra cooperative.”

  “If Mrs. Winslow found the phone, why did she leave it on the beach?”

  “Good question.”

  Pondering this new development, Rex made his purchases at the boutique-cum-grocery. On his way out of the main building, he saw Duke Farley hurrying over from the direction of the racquet ball court, a white towel draped around his squat neck.

  “Good work-out?” Rex asked from the top step, just as the rain started in earnest, drumming on the porch roof.

  Duke ran up the steps for cover. “You bet. D’you play?”

  The curly blond hair on his thick torso glistened with rain and sweat. Rex considered what it must be like running energetically about the court with everything swinging.

  “I have no eye-hand coordination.”

  “What do you do for exercise?”

  “I like to hike. Gives me a chance to nature-watch.”

  A leering grin spread over the Texan’s face. “Nature, huh? Well, you sure came to the right place. What ya think of the local talent?”

  Rex wondered if he was referring to the band at The Cockatoo, which he couldn’t rate, not having much of an ear for music.

  “The babes,” Duke prompted. “If you go down by the bars at the other end of the beach, ya’ll see some that are barely legal.”

  Rex failed to understand what a beautiful and intelligent woman like Pam saw in Duke Farley, but apparently he was worth billions in oil and beef. Rex appraised him again with a swift glance. Oil and beef was precisely what he was. He could not help but feel an aversion for the man.

  “Yessir, plenty of bathing beauties at La Plage. Now, Sabine, there’s a gal that looked good wet.”

  “Excuse me?”

  “The true test of beauty. Some women just look good wet.”

  “Oh—aye.” The vision of Ursula Andress emerging seductively from the sea, blonde hair slicked back as droplets of water beaded her womanly form, had fueled many a moment of lonely adolescent lust since Rex first saw the James Bond movie.

  “What a waste,” Duke said, shaking his large head. “What’ll you do if you find out who the murderer is?”

  “Hand him or her over to the authorities.”

  Duke snorted. “Like they’ll do anything.”

  “My mandate is to unearth the culprit if I can. I canna enforce justice. In any case, this half of the island is part of an overseas department of France and therefore subject to French law.”

  “Bad luck for Sabine,” the Texan growled. “Oh, hell, this rain might last a while. See ya around.” Pulling the towel over his head, he ploughed into the deluge.

  Bad luck for Sabine, indeed, Rex thought, glumly munching on his croissant while he decided whether to make a run for it too.

  How could he get his hands on the elusive Bijou? Where could he get proof of his guilt? Horrible to think the young actress could be another victim in a string of bizarre international killings.

  Rex cadged a lift into Philipsburg in Brooklyn’s jeep, a newer Japanese model than Paul Winslow’s, though no more roomy inside.

  “Where did you say you wanted to be dropped off?” Brooklyn asked on the way into the Dutch capital.

  “The Stiletto Night Club.”

  “The strip joint?” his roommate asked in surprise. “I don’t think it’s open at lunchtime. It’s not one of those seedy dives either. You have to wear a suit and tie to get in.”

  Rex was wearing a casual short-sleeved shirt. “I’m not going for my own pleasure.” He had only ever been to one strip show, and that had been for a college friend’s stag night in Glasgow, a less than glamorous experience best forgotten. “I’m following a lead. Sounds like you might know where I can find the place.”

  “It’s not far from the port.”

  Rex thought it natural that a young bachelor of the world like Brooklyn would know The Stiletto, and tried not to hold it against him.

  They entered the narrow streets of the commercial district and became ensnarled in stop-and-go traffic. Office workers and tourists with shopping bags crossed between the stalled cars. No one appeared to be in a hurry.

  “What are the girls like there? I’m only asking because I heard one of them was murdered a few years ago.”

  “Couldn’t really tell you as it’s been a while since I was there. That’s one of Bijou’s clubs and I tend to avoid him.”

  “Why’s that?”

  “I was dating a young woman called Gerry from this side of the island,” Brooklyn replied. “I even brought her to La Plage once or twice. That was two years ago. Anyway, I discovered she was two-timing me with that effeminate jerk Bijou.”

  “So you ditched her.”

  “I can’t remember who ditched who, but she went back to Europe. Ships passing in the night. It was no big deal.” Brooklyn pulled into a small parking lot by a government building. “I’ll have to drop you off here as I’m late for my meeting. The Stiletto is down that street all the way to your left. How will you get back to the resort?”

  “I�
��ll call the hotel desk when I’m finished, or else get a cab. See you back there.”

  He followed the directions Brooklyn had given him and arrived at The Stiletto, a whitewashed building wedged between two office blocks and displaying a black high-heeled shoe across the white double doors, which turned out to be locked.

  Rex had not called in advance, not wishing to alert Bijou of his intention to nose around and question some of his minions. Coming later when people would be too busy to talk to him had not made sense either, so now he was pretty much stuck as to how to proceed—until he noticed a small side door for deliveries. He turned the handle and the door opened.

  Following a corridor to the back of the building, he ended up in a kitchen equipped with gleaming stainless steel surfaces. A double swing door led into a restaurant decked out in elegant black-on-crimson décor, with spotlights focused on three daises for the dancers. A cherry wood counter extended the width of the back wall.

  A bartender sat on a stool poring over a ledger. Rex coughed politely to announce his presence, and the man spun around.

  “Are you lost?” he asked sternly, with a faint German or Dutch accent, no doubt assuming Rex had wandered in off the street, and annoyed at being disturbed.

  Rex realized he must be the bar manager. “I’m not a tourist. I came to ask a few questions regarding Monsieur Bijou.”

  “You are from the police?”

  “No, I’m a lawyer pursuing an investigation.” Rex handed him his business card.

  The man looked unimpressed.

  “I just need to know one thing: where your boss was two weeks ago Tuesday.”

  “He was here that night.”

  “Can you prove it?”

  “Actually, yes. I have him on security tape entering the building. You are quite welcome to see it.” The man glanced around him and, satisfied that they were alone, said in a low voice. “Look, I don’t owe Bijou any favours other than my paycheck. I’m not covering for the guy, if that’s what you’re thinking. Every other Tuesday he comes in at six o’clock, meets with the accountant, and stays for the show. In fact, he’s due here again this Tuesday, so I’m going over the books just to make sure they are in order. If there are any anomalies, he’ll find them. He has X-ray vision.”

 

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