by Black, Cara
He rolled his sleeve up and she saw faded tattooed numbers on his forearm. He’d been in a concentration camp like Soli Hecht. She slipped her hands, covered with SS lightning-bolt tattoos, into her lap.
The man to her left joined in. “I concur, Superintendent Foborski. I also found no record of these.”
Here was the superintendent—a concentration-camp survivor–and she was dressed as a neo-Nazi skinhead.
Rene stole a glance at her and rolled his eyes. Under the table she could see his pudgy hands clasped in prayer.
“Sir, these records—,” Aimee began.
But the man next to her reached for his glass, promptly spilling water and knocking toner all over her coat. Accidentally or on purpose, it didn’t matter. The powdery toner turned into a clumpy charcoal mess all over her.
Even sopping wet and cold, she wouldn’t take the coat off. The fake tattoos were probably bleeding all over her chest.
“Pardon, I’m very sorry,” he said. “Please, let me help.”
Lili Stein’s coat was ruined. She tried to wipe the mess up.
“I insist,” he said, pulling at her sleeves. “This could be toxic.”
“Leave me alone, Monsieur!” she warned.
“Are you hiding a weapon, Mademoiselle Leduc?” Superintendent Foborski’s eyes glittered. “If you don’t remove that garment, I’ll call security to assist you.”
Her shoulders sagged. Gently, she pulled her arms out of the soggy coat, dripping and smelling of wet wool. Swastikas and lightning bolts lay exposed through the holes of her tank top.
Eight pairs of eyes fastened on her tattoos.
“This has nothing to do with that—”
“This board will look at no request without the proper forms,” interrupted Foborski, “it’s impossible to conduct any further business. Consider your tax in default. Penalties will be levied retroactively in addition to a five-thousand-franc fine.” He waved his hands dismissively.
“No!” Aimee stood up and looked him straight in the eye. “What I was attempting to say,” she began levelly, “is that all those forms have been sent to you.”
She rifled through Rene’s file and immediately pulled out a blue sheet. “You are,” she stopped and spoke slowly, “Superintendent Foborski, I take it?”
He nodded imperceptibly, glaring.
She continued, “Your office accepted and time-dated this receipt.” Aimee strutted over to Foborski and laid the sheet in front of him. “Keep it, I’ve got several.”
“Why don’t I have a copy in my file?” He looked at it suspiciously. “I’ll need to have this authenticated.”
She’d dealt with bourgeois bureaucracy before, so she was prepared. “Here’s a copy of the sign-in log stating the time I submitted them, with the tax revenuer’s stamp, if that’s any help to you.”
He stared at the paper and shook his head. “Take this for verification,” he said to his colleague.
Aimee went back, sat down, and gave them what she hoped was a professional smile. “As you know from the form, I’m a private investigator. I don’t usually look like this, but in my current case”—she turned to Foborski and looked again in his eyes—”the part demands it.”
Aimee passed her investigator’s license, with the orange code symbol on it, around the table. She focused on the next most hostile pair of eyes and said matter-of-factly, “Can you bring me up to speed on what points my partner and you have negotiated so far?”
AFTER AN hour of negotiations, she and Rene walked down the marble staircase, partially triumphant.
“Only a seven-day extension.” She looked at Rene ruefully. “We need three months.”
“Even with Hecht’s retainer, we’re short. Of course, if our overdue accounts paid their balance we’d make it.” He half smiled. “But we’d have better odds buying lottery tickets.”
Near the exit to Place Baudoyer, they sat down on the wooden bench. Rene pulled out his ever-present laptop. Aimee hesitated—should she confide in Rene?
Years after the bombing, she still woke up screaming from the same nightmare. She’d be crawling on cobblestones slippery with blood amid broken glass in the Place Vendôme. Her father would angrily demand that she hurry and piece his charred limbs together so he wouldn’t be late for his award dinner. “Vite, Aimee, quickly!” he’d say out of his melted, burned mouth. “I have no intention of missing this!” She’d wake up terrified and run through her dark, cold apartment.
Only once, after too much Pernod, had she told Rene about her nightmares and the bombing. Right now, she had to talk with someone she trusted.
“I need a sounding board,” she said. “Got an ear?”
He nodded and left his laptop unopened. “I thought you’d never ask.”
She told Rene most of what had happened since Soli Hecht had hobbled into their office. She’d already told him about finding Lili Stein.
“I wonder if Foborski attends Temple E’manuel Synagogue, the ones who supposedly hired me,” Aimee continued. “Or if Abraham Stein does.”
“So?” Rene said. “I can’t see Stein asking a fellow synagogue member to deny you a tax extension.”
“No, of course not.” Aimee shook her head. “It’s just strange that Foborski didn’t have those forms.”
“Let me help you.”
She shook her head. “I’m reserving you for computer work.” His hacking skills were the best she’d ever seen besides her own. Even better than her own. She saw the rejection in Rene’s downcast eyes.
“Because I’m small?”
“Stop that. I dealt with your size long ago. You’re my best friend.”
“And tact is not your strong suit, Aimee,” Rene said. “Even though you’re my best friend, too. Do you think if I were tall I’d be able to help you?”
“Alors! This has nothing to do with your size, Rene. Lili Stein’s homicide isn’t our usual corporate crime.”
“Don’t count me out, Aimee.”
“I swore on my father’s grave.” She put her head down. “Now I’ve blabbed to you.”
“You swore to deliver something to Lili Stein. You did. Remember, I’m a black belt.” He nudged her proudly. “And a good backup.”
She sighed. “You keep reminding me.”
“What about Soli Hecht?”
“He said no contact.”
“Come to the dojo with me. You need all the self-defense kicks you can master.”
“Merci.” She squeezed his hand. “I’m going to see Morbier. He should have the forensics report by now.”
“What is that stuff on your fingernails?”
“Like it? It’s called Urban Decay,” she said. “I’m going to Les Blancs Nationaux meeting tomorrow.”
“Why?”
“If they murdered Lili Stein…”
He interrupted. “You need backup with those types, Aimee.”
She hesitated. That might not be a bad idea. But if it was a setup…She decided against exposing him to danger.
“If I need you I’ll call you.” She kissed him on both cheeks. “Pressure Eurocom’s accountant, make him sweat. See you later at the office.”
LE COMMISSARIAT de Police seemed quiet for an early Friday afternoon. Few desks were occupied and the television blared an old American rerun of Hunter. As Aimee approached, Morbier’s head appeared from under his desk.
“Lost the grip that holds up my suspenders,” he said with a sheepish grin.
“Try this.” Aimee plucked a safety pin from her jeans and passed it to him. “I’ve got plenty.”
Morbier hitched up his trousers and pinned them.
“Just for that, I won’t comment on your appearance.” He smiled and sat down heavily at his desk.
Her father would have said something like that.
“Look, Morbier,” she began. “I need a favor.”
“You’re a big girl now, I know,” he said stiffly. “Our investigation will remain professional.” He winked.
She
controlled her impulse to stuff the cigarette dangling from his mouth down his throat. One minute he played hard-line and by the book. The next, he became a paternalistic old coot who couldn’t express his feelings. She wished he’d decide on the role, then play it.
“I’d appreciate Les Blancs Nationaux’s phone records, calls made and calls received,” she said. “I want to know who Rambuteau talked with when I was in the office.”
“Back up here. Who’s Rambuteau?”
“A born-again Nazi who could be setting me up.”
“Why?”
She hesitated. “I’ll know when I infiltrate Les Blancs Nationaux’s meeting.”
His eyebrows lifted. “How did you manage an invitation? They don’t let just anyone in—the scum level is high.”
She told him.
“Maybe you shouldn’t go.”
“It’s a bit late now.”
He whistled. “Could be a trap.”
“Exactly. Can you get me the phone numbers?”
Morbier’s mouth hardened. “Before I do anything, hit me with the real reason you’re mixed up in this Stein pot-au-feu.”
“Maybe if you believed in community policing and made friends with the rabbi at Temple E’manuel”—her shoulders tightened—”he wouldn’t have called me about Lili’s shoplifting.” She paused, realizing she had to be more careful…what if Morbier contacted the rabbi? She shifted the conversation’s focus. “I’d like to see the forensics report.”
“Me, too.” Morbier scowled. “Somehow it’s lost in the shuffle between the Brigade de Recherches et d’Intervention, the Brigade Criminelle, and the Commissariat,” he said. “You know, the usual rivalry in our three-pronged justice system. Either of the other two would sooner let someone escape than let us at the Commissariat grab them.”
To avoid him venting his frustration on her, she tried being sympathetic. She sighed, “Why don’t the branches work together?”
“Our squad car radios can’t even communicate with each other. Napoleon’s theory of divisiveness still prevents us from ever getting together to overthrow the government.”
She grinned. “An interesting idea that makes for lousy police work.”
“Supposedly, the feds at BRI have a covert operation.” He rolled his eyes.
She could tell he was warming up, testing whether to toss a few morsels her way.
“Far as I’m concerned they’re all clowns. But you never heard that from me.”
“In other words, be careful not to step on anyone’s territorial toes?” she said.
“That’s one way to put it,” he said. He opened his desk drawer and pulled out the crime scene photographs and a clear plastic Baggie which he dangled in front of her eyes. Jumbled inside were dirt, scraps, and leaves.
“Voila.”
She reached up but he slipped the Baggie behind his back.
“My commissaire has become extremely interested in this case.” He shook his thick finger at her. “Share and share alike, Leduc?”
He’d make her pay for every particle of information. She bit back her nasty reply. “D’accord.”
He pulled out two pairs of tweezers, gauze masks, and sterile plastic bags. Aimee put on a mask. He wiped his arm across the top of his computer terminal, laid down newspaper, and dribbled the Baggie contents.
“Where did your men find these?”
“You tell me.” His eyes narrowed.
She remembered the splinters in Lili Stein’s palm and the bloodless swastika. “You mean she was murdered in the light well?”
He nodded. “There’s evidence of a struggle—forearm bruising, linear marks on fingertips from the ligature, concrete bits under her fingernails, metal scratches from the screws in her crutches. Points to the perp dragging her upstairs.”
One hell of a struggle, Aimee thought. She leaned over and smelled the damp earth from a cluster of dirt-encrusted leaves. She gripped the tweezers and picked up a mud-spattered paper strip covered with numbers. Carefully, she lifted a length of variegated-colored wool, then a centime-sized cloudy, plastic cylinder. She peered intensely at each. She left the knobby pink button in the Baggie. Aimee turned the Baggie over, pointing out the double interlocked C’s on the button.
“Odd,” she said. “Lili Stein didn’t look the Chanel type.”
“Aha!” He let out a big sigh. “The killer wore Chanel and lost a button in the struggle pulling her upstairs.” Morbier poked the chunky button. “A designer murder!” He smiled.
She ignored him. “Assuming that’s Lili Stein’s wool, where are her knitting needles? Or the bag she carried her knitting in?”
And what about Soli Hecht’s name in Lili’s knitting, the photo, or the threatening fax? She didn’t mention any of this to Morbier, especially since Morbier had mentioned the federal BRI, the government’s strong-arm enforcement. She’d figured Hecht didn’t want flics involved due to his innate suspicion of them. But maybe it was something else…maybe he suspected corruption.
“Checked the dustbins, public and private?” she asked.
“Dustbins, that’s quaint,” he said. Morbier made a long face and consulted his notes. “Garbage pickup was that morning and the hotel bin had just been emptied.”
She cocked her head sideways. “Which hotel?”
“Hôtel Pavilion de la Reine nearby.” She’d heard of this exclusive hotel, multi-starred in the Michelin guide.
“What about this?” She pointed to the scrap of paper in the Baggie. “How near to Lili’s body was it?”
“The crime-scene unit noted this was found in the courtyard entrance,” he said.
“See the numbers. That looks like a receipt. Let me make a copy,” she said. “And I’d like to borrow the photographs.”
He nodded.
She took a sterile strip of Saran Wrap, laid it on the copier plate, picked up the paper scrap with tweezers, and set it down. Then she laid another sterile Saran strip over it, put down the lid, and pressed “Copy.”
The ripped edge had a number, like the bottom of a receipt. She decided to check the shops near the alley.
“Thanks, Morbier.” She eyed a Columbo-style trench coat with a patched lining on a hook. “Yours?”
Morbier shook his head. “I’m on call. Inform me if you find out anything.”
“Think someone would mind if I borrowed the trench coat for a while?” she said.
He grinned. “Be my guest, your tattoos are guaranteed to offend every group.”
“I do try,” she said, donning the coat.
OUTSIDE OF La Double Morte, Aimee walked smack into a large knot of people clogging one side of the rue de Francois Miron. Orthodox Hasidic Jews in black stood grouped among bystanders in suits and jeans.
“Nom de Dieu, Soli Hecht!” she heard an old woman wail.
Aimee flinched at hearing Soli’s name.
Red lights flashed from an ambulance straddling the sidewalk ahead. She pulled the trench coat tighter and started running. She made it to the corner before the ambulance pulled away. White-coated attendants slid a stretcher into the back door. She caught a glimpse of a blanketed mound before the doors clanged shut. The siren echoed off the cobblestones as it sped down rue Geoffrey l’Asnier towards the Seine.
Worried, she shook her head as she stood in front of the bronze six-pointed star on the gate of the Centre de Documentation Juive Contemporaine.
Two men conversed beside her in Yiddish. Both wore the black upturned hats; one was bearded, the other’s skimpy suit pants didn’t quite reach his white ankle socks.
“What’s happened?” she asked.
“Soli Hecht got clipped by the Bastille bus,” said the bearded one, switching into French. A Hebrew magazine stuck out of his pocket.
“An accident? Is he all right?” she said.
The bearded man turned to look at her and shrugged. “Hard to say, but they didn’t pull the sheet over his head. No panier a salade,” he said, referring to the blue van that picked up corpses
. “An accident? If you believe it was an accident…” He didn’t finish.
Startled, she backed into the stone wall. “But he’s an old man…,” she trailed off as the men walked away.
The bearded man looked back over his shoulder at her. “Do recriminations ever stop?”
Now, with the crowd mostly dispersed, she saw the blood-stained cobblestones by her feet. A shiver ran down her spine. Lili Stein had been murdered less than three blocks away.
The institutional-looking Centre de Documentation Juive Contemporaine stood close to the Seine. A bronze memorial to the Martyr Juif Inconnu filled the entrance. Aimee strode briskly past it to the gravel quai.
She remembered the envelopes in Lili Stein’s desk drawer addressed to the center, the list in her knitting with “Soli H” on it. Most of all, she thought about Hecht’s words. She had put the photo in Lili Stein’s hand. But it had been too late. What did Hecht know that put him in danger?
Uneasiness gnawed at her. First Lili, now Soli.
Pigeons swarmed near her feet hoping for bread crumbs as she pulled out her cell phone. Her footsteps popped gravel and the pewter-colored Seine flowed lazily beside her. She shooed the pigeons away as Morbier answered.
“I just saw Soli Hecht put into an ambulance,” she said. “Rumor is he got pushed in front of the bus.”
Aimee wanted to hear the official spin from Morbier. See if the police were treating it as an accident or attempted homicide.
“Alors!” came Morbier’s reply. “Someone trips in front of a bus and you call me at le Commissariat! Anybody see him pushed? Eh? A perpetrator and a motive would help, too. Voila, then you have something.”
“Just sharing information.” She clicked off.
She didn’t like this at all. She hadn’t from the beginning. Things didn’t smell right, as her father would say. She entered the Center’s paved square to inquire if Soli had been there or if someone noticed something. On the memorial, death camp names were chiseled. She gazed, saddened by the long list: Auschwitz, Belzec, Birkenau, Chelmno, Ravensbruck, Sobibor—so many places she’d never heard of. “Never forget” was handwritten in bold letters on a placard propped below.