by Antonio Hill
The house came into view over the hill. This time, César had found it without a problem. He parked the car, and for the first time in the whole journey he turned to Brais with a worried expression and honesty in his voice.
“I don’t really know what we’re doing here …”
“Sílvia insisted we come.”
“Yeah.”
So it was, and what César couldn’t explain was Sílvia’s change of heart regarding Octavi Pujades. A few days before she’d reacted like a fiend when Amanda insinuated that she suspected him. It was true they didn’t know where Octavi had been on Sunday evening. Nevertheless, just as he’d lied about what time he left Sílvia’s, when by mid-afternoon he couldn’t take it anymore and had to leave, Brais could have made up his alibi.
“By the way, why did you meet up with Manel?”
“Want to know the truth?” Brais lowered his voice. “I went to see him for the same reason we’re here now. To find out if he’d betrayed us, if it was he who was sending that damned photo.” He continued without the other man insisting. “And if it was him, to make sure he stopped.”
They got out of the car in silence, and César was walking toward the house rapidly, cursing the cold, when Brais added, “Earlier I talked about regrets. Know what I’ve found out? They’re limited, and they fade. And something else: if they are confronted by fear, better that they lose. It’s called survival.”
Similar notions were going around and around in Sílvia’s mind, fear and survival, as she contemplated the newspaper page where, in broad strokes, the company’s image was being destroyed. The article didn’t name names, but the headline “Young, free and … dead,” was a poisoned dart aimed at the heart of Alemany Cosmetics.
She’d spent the morning answering some emails and ignoring others, in an attempt to minimize the effects of the catastrophe. A company even indirectly causing the suicides of its employees—three in only five months, to be exact—became a kind of living toxin. Moreover, if the name of said company was linked to concepts like beauty, well-being and health, the irony reached surreal proportions.
At five in the afternoon, a little before César and Arjona left for Octavi’s house, Sílvia decided to log out of her email, switch off the computer and focus. Something that it seemed was going to be impossible, because scarcely ten minutes later her brother entered the office, very differently to the morning when he’d burst in brandishing that very newspaper as if she and all the people in the company were a bunch of disobedient kids and he a justly furious boss.
“How is it going?” he asked her.
“I suppose it could be worse … at least nobody is talking about the products as such, just the company in abstract.”
He nodded.
“Yes. People demand our products for their name, not the cosmetics lab.”
“Is that what you told your buyers?” She couldn’t help being sarcastic.
Víctor sighed.
“Something like that. Sílvia … this has to stop as soon as possible.”
“What do you want me to do? Offer a bonus to everyone who promises not to throw themselves off their balcony?”
He sat down on the other side of the desk.
“Don’t change the subject, Sílvia. Is there anything I should know about that weekend?”
“That you should know?” She shook her head, perhaps out of tiredness, perhaps out of pure disdain. “All there is to know, and you should be clear on this without needing to ask me, is that I would never do anything that could put our company in danger. Never. It’s you who seems not to feel the least regard for it and is ready to sell it to the highest bidder.”
“You’re just like Papa,” he replied, and the scar left by sad truths could be heard in his voice. “The company is a thing, Sílvia. You can love it, but it’s never going to love you back. Being satisfied with that is pathetic.”
“Yeah. I’m sure Paula returns your affection with interest.”
“Leave Paula out of this—she has nothing to do with it.”
“Oh no?” Sílvia was going to make an unpleasant comment, but she bit her tongue. “I’ll tell you something, Víctor: the company is not a thing. It’s alive, with people, projects, ideas … and of course you get back what you put into it. More than with people.”
Víctor looked at her as if he wished to understand her, as if for an instant he could get inside her body and mind, feel and think as she felt. As children it was like that, more or less: there was a strong bond between them, something that felt unbreakable then. Now, the distance between them was so great he didn’t have the spirit to cross it.
“I don’t know when you started confusing life with work … This is a business, nothing more. Difficult times are coming, we both know that. It’s much wiser to sell now at a good price than hold out until the storm comes. And it will come, I assure you.”
“It’ll come, yes. But don’t try to deceive me, Víctor. You’re not selling out of prudence, or fear of the future; you’re doing it out of boredom, a late attack of immaturity … The desire to do what you didn’t have the balls to do at eighteen. I assure you, youth’s not catching, Víctor. However much you sleep with it. Not catching, and you can’t live twice.”
The conversation had come to the cliff edge, that place where stances were so irreconcilable that to continue talking would only cause injury. Víctor knew it, so he rose and went to the door. Before leaving, he turned to his sister.
“At least I’ve taken care of you, so you could keep your role and responsibilities. When you left, you didn’t even look back. Not thinking for a second about how things would be for me …”
She was about to answer, to claim in her defense that she was only seventeen, that he could have done the same, that it wasn’t her fault that he’d opted for obedience and that she regretted—yes, she’d always regretted it—leaving him in a hostile home, at the mercy of a cold, demanding father, but once more, pride won out.
“Well, you got your reward, didn’t you? Papa left you practically everything.”
“Exactly. And because of that I’m the one who gets to decide, not you.”
The office door closed behind him and Sílvia was alone, paper spread, and for a moment she thought perhaps none of it was worth it. If the words she said aloud insisted on betraying her true feelings, maybe it was better to shut up forever. Forfeit the match. Sleep.
“Well, well, more visitors.” Octavi Pujades’ tone was unmistakably scathing. “Poor Eugènia will think she’s already died, with so many people wandering through the house.”
He didn’t invite them into the sitting room, or to sit down, or to have an alcohol-free beer. He came out on the porch despite the evening cold. And it was he who spoke first.
“This morning some Agent Fort was here. A very friendly young man, asking me questions about Amanda. By the way, I know what happened because Víctor called me yesterday afternoon, but I find it curious that none of you bothered to tell me.”
Both César and Brais felt like schoolboys being suddenly reprimanded by a strict tutor. “It’s not important. I thought you’d forgotten me. Now I see you haven’t.”
“I’m sorry, Octavi,” said César. “I was sure Sílvia would have told you.”
Octavi smiled, and in doing so his expression became even sharper, more tense, as if the skin of his cheeks was going to tear.
“César, César … I’m afraid I’m no longer the object of Sílvia’s devotion. Now that I think about it, I suppose she sent you. She doesn’t trust me anymore, does she?”
Brais took a step forward; not too much but enough to bridge the gap that separates a chat from a threat.
“Enough of the sarcasm, Octavi. I haven’t come here to waste my time.”
“And why have you come? To beat me up? Kill me, perhaps?”
The two were so close, and the difference between the contenders so evident, that César stepped in between them.
“Hey, enough. Octavi, no one distrus
ts you—”
“Tell that to this thug. You like intimidating people, do you, Brais? Does it make you feel like more of a man?”
“Octavi, please!”
The only light on the outside of the house, a cast-iron lantern hanging on a corner, illuminated the three faces. Three faces covered by masks ranging from confusion to suppressed rage, fear to indifference.
In the distance a couple of dogs howled, as if all these emotions reached them on the night air.
“Get out of here,” Octavi finally ordered. “Tell Sílvia she can relax: for the moment I have no intention of speaking to the Mossos and telling them the truth. If I’d wanted to, I’d have used this morning to do it.” He looked again at Brais, defiant, and César took a step back on seeing him take a small pistol from his anorak pocket. “Relax, I’m not going to shoot. Just so you know I’m protected.”
Brais didn’t move an inch. He held the older man’s gaze and then, with a sudden movement, he forcefully bent back Octavi’s wrist. The weapon fell to the floor and César kicked it away.
“Having a gun’s not enough to protect you, Octavi. You have to have the balls to use it as well,” Brais warned him.
The dogs stopped barking.
31
Héctor emerged from one of the station bathrooms just as Inspector Bellver was entering. Luck makes our paths cross like in a bad western, thought Salgado, although in this case we’d have already fought a duel in the town square in the blazing sun. But Barcelona wasn’t the Wild West and the duels were settled behind closed doors, with more sophisticated weapons. Anyway, thought Héctor, a part of that philosophy still holds good: with types like Bellver, it’s best not to turn your back on them.
He was going to his desk when he bumped into another, much nicer person.
“Martina …”
He hadn’t seen Sergeant Andreu since the week before. He’d hoped to speak to her on Monday, but all his plans had fallen apart with Amanda Bonet’s death. She smiled faintly by way of a greeting, but her expression immediately changed, becoming very serious.
“Come with me. We have to clear up this mess.”
Héctor didn’t have time to ask her how she’d heard about everything. It wasn’t hard to figure out: at some point on Monday afternoon or that same Tuesday morning, someone, probably Fort, would have told her. In any case, not really knowing what to expect, Héctor followed her.
Martina Andreu knocked sharply at the superintendent’s door and, without waiting for an answer, opened it and went in.
“Andreu—back already?” Savall had never bothered to hide his liking for Sergeant Andreu. “Everything all right with Calderón and his lot?”
She snorted, as if Calderón, his lot and the whole Russian mafia didn’t matter at all just then.
“All right for now.” Martina Andreu adopted a formal tone, different from her usual one behind closed doors after so many years’ working together. “Superintendent, I wish to tell you now and in the presence of Inspector Salgado that I took Ruth Valldaura’s file from Bellver’s archives myself. Without Héctor or anyone knowing.”
Savall looked at her intently. No one could have said if he doubted her word, but the sergeant’s fervor brooked no argument.
“And might one know why you did so?”
Martina hesitated for a moment, time enough for both Salgado and Savall to guess that what she would say next wouldn’t exactly be the truth and nothing but. She realized this, and before blurting out the excuse she’d thought up she just said, “No.”
From the mouth of any other of his subordinates, this refusal would have unleashed all the superintendent’s fury. But from Martina Andreu, it left him speechless.
“I will apologize to Bellver if you think it necessary.”
Savall gestured indifferently with his hand, as if linking the words “apology” and “Bellver” was absurd.
“Leave it. It would just make things worse. I’ll speak to him.” Then he turned to Héctor, who had observed the scene in silence. “Anyhow, best if you don’t have too much contact with Bellver and his team for a few days. Avoid possible encounters, okay?”
He addressed them both, but no doubt it was directed at Salgado.
“That takes two, Superintendent.”
“I know.” Savall sighed. “Well, we’ll leave it there for now. Héctor, how’s the cosmetics lab case going?”
“If you’re going to talk about that, I’ll leave you to it,” said the sergeant.
“Ask Fort to come here, please,” Salgado ordered. “He went to interview Pujades this morning and I still haven’t had a chance to speak to him, though I’m almost certain he hasn’t got anything out of him.”
“I’ll send him to you straightaway. But treat him well, okay? Take it easy on him or I’ll take revenge.”
She smiled, and the camaraderie that had always reigned between them previously suddenly returned.
“We’ll talk later, Andreu,” said Savall. “You need to tell me how you made out over there.”
A good while later, Savall and Salgado were still discussing the suicides case under the attentive gaze of Agent Fort, too timid to intervene if not asked a direct question.
“Let’s see,” said the superintendent in an attempt to recap, “up to now, were it not that these people have the same place of work, we’d have three cases of suicide, or even one—and I’m referring to Amanda Bonet—which could be classed as accidental death.”
Salgado shook his head.
“She took a lot of sleeping pills, Superintendent. And according to her lover, it wasn’t the first time they enjoyed those ‘games,’ as he calls them.”
“All right then, three suicides.”
“Three suicides but five victims,” Salgado pointed out. “Ródenas’s wife and daughter—don’t forget them.”
“How could you forget them?” Savall was quiet for a moment, putting his thoughts in order. “Let’s start at the beginning. Gaspar Ródenas. Recently promoted, worried about said promotion, though with no other known issues.”
“True. His case was included in crimes of domestic violence, but there were never reports made by his wife or the least suggestion of ill-treatment in the family environment.”
“Nevertheless, Ródenas did buy a pistol, didn’t he?”
“He did. But that weapon could have been to kill his family, then commit suicide, or to protect himself and those around him,” Héctor pointed out.
Savall nodded.
“It’s a possibility. However, in that case we’re dealing with a ruthless killer. A killer who didn’t hesitate in killing a little girl only months old so that the crime scene would appear like an extreme case of domestic violence. Do you really believe you have someone like that among the suspects?”
He recalled the faces of the Alemany Cosmetics employees: Sílvia, César Calvo, Brais Arjona, Manel Caballero …
“I don’t know. Honestly I couldn’t say,” concluded Salgado. “What was Octavi Pujades like, Fort? I know his statement just confirmed the version of the others, but on a personal level, what impression did you get from him?”
Fort flushed a little and considered his answer before speaking.
“I’d say he’s much more affected by the situation at home than he thinks.” He shivered. “Practically alone, caring for his wife in her final days … He seems to be under enormous stress, although I couldn’t say more with any certainty.”
“Fine,” Savall intervened, “we’ll leave Ródenas aside for a moment. Sara Mahler threw herself on the metro tracks on Reyes night.”
Héctor made an irritated gesture.
“We still don’t know where she was coming from or going to at that time. She didn’t usually go out at night.”
Fort felt obliged to add: “We’ve tracked the movements of her bank account. Sara Mahler withdrew money from an ATM at 21:35, but she did so alone, near her home. The ATM images show as much.”
Poor Sara, thought Salgado. Her final ho
urs were recorded on different cameras: those at the bank, the metro station …
“Sara Mahler’s death occurred four months after that of Ródenas and his family,” Héctor pointed out. “So if Ródenas was killed, whoever did it felt safe until then.”
“True. On the other hand, Amanda Bonet—”
“Died a few days after Sara Mahler.”
Superintendent Savall’s appearance expressed a mixture of irritation and fatigue.
“And the others say nothing?”
“That’s the worst of all. They seem upset,” said Héctor, musing as he spoke, “shocked, even. Whatever they’re hiding, the fear of it being discovered is greater than what they feel about the deaths of their colleagues.”
“And you’re sure they’re hiding something?” asked the superintendent.
“Yes.” Salgado’s reply was unequivocal. “It’s intuition: something happened that weekend, something grave enough for them to hide it, keep quiet … And for some of them to be dying for it.”
“One more thing in relation to Amanda Bonet,” said Savall. “Did anyone know a key could be found underneath the doormat? Anyone apart from her lover, this Saúl …”
“Saúl Duque. According to him, Amanda suspected that Sara Mahler knew about their relationship. If that’s true, Sara could have told someone.”
“Who?”
“Víctor Alemany, for example. She was his secretary, and throughout the company they say Sara was very loyal to her boss.”
“Were they lovers?” said Savall, half smiling.
“I don’t think so,” Salgado answered firmly. “What’s more, Víctor wasn’t with them that weekend—”
“True,” Fort interjected, daring to do so spontaneously for the first time, “but if Sara told him everything, perhaps she explained what happened in that house as well.”
“Good point,” said Héctor. “Even so, we continue as we are and keep going until we establish the root of all this.”
“Exactly.” Savall was starting to show signs of impatience, gestures Héctor recognized easily. “What are your plans, Héctor?”