“Horrible. Skin and muscle stripped from the bone. All the spine exposed. Blood; much blood.”
“Phillipe is seventy.”
“So?”
“An old man would not be capable —”
“In other respects,” the Inspector interrupted, “he seems to have been quite capable, oui? The lover, yes? The passionate lover: he was capable of that.”
“And what motive would you claim he had?”
His mouth scalloped, his eyes rolled and he tapped his chest.
“Le coeur humain,” he said, as if despairing of reason in affairs of the heart. “Le coeur humain, quel mystère, n’est-ce pas?” and exhaling the stench of his ulcer at Lewis, he proffered the open door.
“Merci, Monsieur Fox. I understand your confusion, oui? But you are wasting your time. A crime is a crime. It is real; not like your paintings.”
He saw the surprise on Lewis’s face.
“Oh, I am not so uncivilized as not to know your reputation, Monsieur Fox. But I ask you, make your fictions as best you can; that is your genius, oui? Mine; to investigate the truth.”
Lewis couldn’t bear the weasel’s cant any longer.
“Truth?” he snapped back at the Inspector. “You wouldn’t know the truth if you tripped over it.”
The weasel looked as though he’d been slapped with a wet fish.
It was precious little satisfaction; but it made Lewis feel better for at least five minutes.
The house on the Rue des Martyrs was not in good condition, and Lewis could smell the damp as he climbed to the little room on the third floor. Doors opened as he passed, and inquiring whispers ushered him up the stairs, but nobody tried to stop him. The room where the atrocity had happened was locked. Frustrated, but not knowing how or why it would help Phillipe’s case to see the interior of the room, he made his way back down the stairs and into the bitter air.
Catherine was back at the Quai de Bourbon. As soon as Lewis saw her he knew there was something new to hear. Her grey hair was loosed from the bun she favoured wearing, and hung unbraided at her shoulders. Her face was a sickly yellow-grey by the lamplight. She shivered, even in the clogged air of the centrally-heated apartment.
“What’s wrong?” he asked.
“I went to Phillipe’s apartment.”
“So did I. It was locked.”
“I have the key: Phillipe’s spare key. I just wanted to pick up a few clothes for him.”
Lewis nodded.
“And?”
“Somebody else was there.”
“Police?”
“No.”
“Who?”
“I couldn’t see. I don’t know exactly. He was dressed in a big coat, scarf over his face. Hat. Gloves.” She paused. Then, “he had a razor, Lewis.”
“A razor?”
“An open razor, like a barber.”
Something jangled in the back of Lewis Fox’s mind.
An open razor; a man dressed so well he couldn’t be recognized.
“I was terrified.”
“Did he hurt you?” She shook her head. “I screamed and he ran away.”
“Didn’t say anything to you?”
“No.”
“Maybe a friend of Phillipe’s?”
“I know Phillipe”s friends.”
“Then of the girl. A brother.”
“Perhaps. But —”
“What?”
“There was something odd about him. He smelt of perfume, stank of it, and he walked with such mincing little steps, even though he was huge.”
Lewis put his arm around her.
“Whoever it was, you scared them off. You just mustn’t go back there. If we have to fetch clothes for Phillipe, I’ll gladly go.”
“Thank you. I feel a fool: he may have just stumbled in. Come to look at the murder-chamber. People do that, don’t they? Out of some morbid fascination. . .”
“Tomorrow I’ll speak to the Weasel.”
“Weasel?”
“Inspector Marais. Have him search the place.”
“Did you see Phillipe?”
“Yes.”
“Is he well?”
Lewis said nothing for a long moment.
“He wants to die, Catherine. He’s given up fighting already, before he goes to trial.”
“But he didn’t do anything.”
“We can’t prove that.”
“You’re always boasting about your ancestors. Your blessed Dupin. You prove it. . .”
“Where do I start?”
“Speak to some of his friends, Lewis. Please. Maybe the woman had enemies.”
Jacques Solal stared at Lewis through his round-bellied spectacles, his irises huge and distorted through the glass. He was the worse for too much cognac.