“I had a drink with someone after a full-moon party,” he said.
“You mean you went to a rave?”
“That’s for tonight,” he said. “Eh, voilà.”
René was full of surprises.
“What’s her name?”
He mumbled something.
“Couldn’t catch that.”
“Magali. Now pull up the Salys account.”
“I finished that proposal last night.”
He stared at her.
“While you were out dancing. Makes a change, eh?”
Chastened, René sighed. “We just met. Now don’t start with you and Guy wanting to—”
“Meet her? Don’t worry.”
She’d keep it to herself about Guy. No reason to burden René when he was so happy. Outside, melting ice spattered in silver droplets on the window overlooking rue du Louvre.
“René, I need help with a surveillance. I questioned a woman in an upper apartment overlooking the site where Jacques was shot. But there’s a prostitute on the street across from her building whom I couldn’t find.”
His eyebrows shot up. “In case you haven’t noticed, I’m meeting with the Salys account in half an hour. At least they pay on time.”
And a nice fat account it was, too. “After that, please go on an assignment for Laure.”
“Me?” René snorted. “Like I don’t stand out in a crowd?”
“Find the pute. It’s a village there. Those Montmartroise don’t regard themselves as part of Paris. Besides, you’re perfect.”
“Reincarnate Toulouse-Lautrec and walk around with a palette of paints for the tourists?”
She smiled. “That’s an idea.”
“In this field, you use what you have, don’t you?” he said half-seriously and paused, his fingers on the keyboard.
She leaned forward. “The building’s under renovation; someone knew an upper-floor apartment was empty. Say the killer lured Jacques from this empty apartment, then took advantage of Laure’s appearance to frame her. He knew the layout and escaped over the connecting roof. It’s a theory.”
“I’ve said it before: you have an overactive imagination. Put it to work on our new account with Salys.”
He was right, of course. “I already have.” She clicked on the keys and pulled up the Salys file on her laptop. “I submitted the proposal last night; they’ll be ready for you.”
She spread the rough diagram of the buildings and courtyard she’d made at the Commissariat across her desk. “I saw lights and heard music from a party there,” she said, pointing to an apartment. “I’m trying to get ahold of the owner, a Monsieur Conari.”
“The flics will question him.”
“You can look for the prostitute after your meeting with Salys. Question her and whoever else you see go into any of the buildings next to or opposite the one where Jacques was shot. The clock’s ticking. I’ll concentrate on the one where the party was held.”
“You really want me to go undercover?”
Was there a scintilla of interest in his voice?
“Haven’t you always wanted to, partner?”
AIMÉE WORKED on some computer virus checks. Two hours later, her impatience took over and she called Maître Delambre again.
“I expect him any minute,” his secretary told her.
She had to catch him before he left for another court session. She grabbed her leather coat. Without the police report, she was pedaling without wheels.
“Please tell him Aimée Leduc’s en route to talk with him.”
MAÎTRE DELAMBRE’S chambers were more impressive than his appearance. Wan, pale faced under wire-rimmed glasses and mouse brown hair, in his long black robes and white collar he looked barely twenty-five.
The vaulted wood ceiling and bookshelves lined with legal briefs and thick volumes of the penal code did little to allay her fears. The firm’s letterhead on thick vellum sheets read Delambre et Fils. A family concern. Maybe Laure should request his father’s help.
“Maître Delambre, I’m worried about Laure Rousseau,” Aimée said.
“I haven’t managed to speak with my client yet,” he told her as she sat on a wingback chair. “How can I be certain that she hired you?”
Semantics, Aimée thought. She ignored the dubious ring of his words. “Have you received the crime-scene report?”
“I just reached the office,” he said, annoyed. “I need to deal with a pile of messages. She’s just one of several clients.”
“And how many are facing possible imprisonment for shooting their partner?” Aimée asked. “Please, it’s important. I’d appreciate it if you would check.”
“Just a moment.” He sorted a pile of papers, cleared his throat. “Let’s see here.” A pause, more shuffling of papers.
Outside on the quay, sleet battered the roof of a bus stuck in traffic. She heard his sharp intake of breath and turned.
“They’ve moved her. To the Hôtel Dieu, the CUSCO ward.”
She gripped the arms of the chair. That was the public hospital’s intensive-care criminal ward on Ile de la Cité!
“Has she been charged?”
“No charges have been filed yet. However, in such cases, that’s the next step.”
“Has her condition deteriorated?”
“Figure it out, Mademoiselle Leduc,” he said. “You’re the detective.”
Aimée stifled a groan. “What information do you have?”
“She suffered a severe concussion,” he said, consulting a message pad. “According to this, she’s stable but they’re monitoring her condition. That’s all I know.”
Laure in intensive care? Looming complications and the possibility of permanent damage raced through Aimée’s mind. And representing her was a young lawyer who appeared to have just gotten his diploma.
“Please show me the dossier,” she said.
With some reluctance, he slid it over the mahagony desk. At least he’s trying to be accommodating, she thought.
Inside she saw the procès verbal consisting of Laure’s statement, brief reports describing the crime scene, the weather conditions, and a description of the body, and a cursory pencil diagram of the roof. Even the statement she had made was included.
“Didn’t a lab report accompany this?”
Maître Delambre shook his head.
“Odd. Laure told me the lab test had found gunpowder residue on her hands, although she hadn’t fired her gun in a month.”
She looked more closely. The scene-of-crime diagrammer had missed the angle of the roof at the scaffold, an aspect she’d only viewed from the chimney top. There was no mention of the broken skylight in the adjacent building. The police photos, clipped to the back of the report, showed only the immediate area around Jacques’s corpse. “You have to demand a more thorough investigation of the roof.”
“You’re telling me how to do my job?”
She took a deep breath. How could she get him to act without revealing their rooftop exploits last night? “Not at all, Maître Delambre, but there was a Level 3 storm going on when the crime took place, impossible conditions. No doubt they missed something.”
“See for yourself,” he said.
She flipped through the addendum of partygoers interviewed in the courtyard building opposite. No one had seen, heard, or noticed anything. Had they interviewed that man she’d seen at the gate?
Was it due to time constraints that the crime-scene report for La Proc was so cursory? Laure was their only suspect; no other line of questioning had been pursued.
“I spoke with a woman on the upper floor of the building that adjoins the murder site,” she said. “Last night she heard the voices of men on the roof, but no one had questioned her. And the skylight was broken in the hall of her building.”
She handed him the Polaroids she’d taken. “You can see the broken glass in this hallway. Keep them.”