Murder in Belleville (2000)

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Murder in Belleville (2000) Page 31

by Cara Black


  Aimee wished the woman would shut up. Her voice kept increasing in volume.

  “The groom’s family is so traditional.” The woman leaned forward, her tone becoming confidential. “What can they expect from girls born over here, eh? But they can hope, I say.”

  “May I ask you a tremendous favor?” Aimee said, feeling out of place. She didn’t wait for the woman to answer. “Hand this to Kaseem, please!” she said thrusting the paper into the woman’s jeweled fat fingers. “That man there.”

  She pointed toward Kaseem, who was seriously stuffing franc notes in the giggling bride’s hair. “He’s my friend’s uncle, and he wanted the paper for some reason. I’ve got to go back out and park the car. It’s on the curb and I’ll be towed. Please!”

  The woman shrugged. “Why not? I want to find out if he has a son my daughter’s age anyway.” She let out a loud laugh, nudged Aimee in the ribs again, and worked her way to the other side of the room.

  Aimee thought Kaseem might want that money back when he realized his bank account status. She’d enclosed a copy of his new statement as well. She edged along the velvet curtains dividing the banquet room from the dining area.

  Aimee never got to see the look on Kaseem’s face.

  She felt something stick in her spine. Pointed and sharp.

  Her heart pounded.

  She reached back for her Beretta but an iron grip imprisoned hers.

  She turned slowly. The knife edge grazed her skin. Dede’s eyes locked hers. Cold and dead. Sweat prickled her spine.

  “Make a move,” Dede whispered, “and I gut you like a fish.”

  “It’s over, Dede,” she said, her voice hoarse. “Kaseem’s history. Read the paper.”

  Out of the corner of her eye she saw Kaseem holding the newpaper while the woman pointed toward where Aimee had stood. Several uniformed men had gathered, peering over his shoulder, yet agonizingly Aimee couldn’t see his face.

  “Quimporte?” Dede said. “I always finish the job.”

  He hustled her through the swinging kitchen doors to the left. They followed a white-aproned waiter past bubbling saucepans in the hot steaming kitchen.

  Aimee wriggled, but every time she did, the knife came closer to her flesh. For a little man, Dede had a grip like iron.

  “Tiens, you can’t come in here!” a waiter said, his arms laden with a huge couscous platter.

  “I know the chef,” Dede said, barreling past him with Aimee.

  They stumbled past yelling waiters and sweating cooks who shook slotted spoons at them. Aimee grabbed at some knives on the chopping block but Dede seized her hand, shaking them out one by one. One of the chefs rushed forward as the knives clattered to the floor.

  “Stand back,” Dede yelled, waving the Beretta and letting go of her arm briefly.

  Aimee’s one thought was to grab another knife. Instead her hand came back with greasy steel kabob skewers. She worked them under her sleeve before Dede caught her hand again.

  If only she could get away, escape out the back exit. But Dede’s truck waited in the back passage, an old deux chevaux delivery truck, battered and rusty. He opened the back doors, slammed her inside.

  “Let’s go for a ride,” he said.

  Dede” whacked her again. This time so hard that she flew against the hard plastic cartons racked on the truck’s wall. White-hot pain shot through her body. Then he kneed her in the back, knocking the wind out of her. She gasped, trying to get air. The last thing she remembered was her head hitting the floor and seeing the blurry pavement through a rusted-out hole in the floorboard.

  SHE BECAME aware of her heels dragging over stones, gravel popping, and dirt. Everything was dark except for curiously shaped white slabs shining in the moonlight. Her head ached. Every breath was like the stab of a needle in her rib. Dede’s voice came from somewhere.

  “Thought I’d save everyone the extra trip,” he said, huffing and setting her down. “Kill you here.”

  She realized she was in a cemetery. And Ded6 held her Beretta.

  “Cimetiere de Belleville,” he said. “Not many famous people buried here, and a little out of the way, but you’ll have a nice view.”

  She wouldn’t give him the satisfaction of whimpering, but her head felt ready to explode with pain.

  “Dede, your contract’s over,” she said, her voice not much above a whisper. “Forget this.”

  “Maybe it’s my proletariat upbringing—some work ethic, but when I start a job, eh, I finish it,” he said sitting down on a low marble crypt. He smoothed down his short jacket, dusted off his pants. “That’s what they pay me for.”

  In the slants of moonlight she saw Dede’s hands find the bald soccer-ball key chain in his pocket. He fingered it, worrying it nonstop through his fingers.

  “Please listen, Dede. Kaseem’s finished,” she said.

  “Alors, my work is my life. There’s a pride and satisfaction in it. Eh, I like doing an even better job than my employer asked for. I make it personal. Kids today … just don’t have it.”

  Her hands shook, but she could hardly move them. He’d tied them up. How could she get away? She felt the kabobs jabbing her somewhere above her elbow. But couldn’t reach them.

  “After you screwed up the car bomb,” Dede clucked his mouth, shaking his head, “I had to do a lot of work. But when you stole the pearl lighter and embarrassed me in front of my mecs—that did it.”

  Her mind grew clearer. The pain had receeded so she could think. She felt a metal cross behind her. She started sawing the rope that tied her wrists.

  “What about the other Lake Biwa pearls?” she said, remenv bering there’d been four of es Maudites. She wanted to keep him talking until her hands came free.

  “My collection has grown,” he said. “I have them all.” Dede slipped the key chain back in his pocket and pointed the Beretta at her.

  Behind the dark cemetery wall two tall water towers loomed, standing outlined against the yellow glow of Belleville. In the moonlight she saw piles of dirt and pipe holes in the lot under the towers. Muffled voices came from a nearby gravestone.

  She started screaming but her voice came out only a low croak.

  Dede stuck his sleeve in her mouth to shut her up. She bit as hard as she could. He yelped. And she bit harder.

  He tried to shake her off, swatting her head against the marble. She wouldn’t let go. Blood filmed one of her eyes, but she hung on like a pit bull until her hands came free. Then she shoved him over the wire cross, struggling to her feet.

  “Salope!” he swore, still gripping the Beretta.

  What sounded like a whistle came from the wall.

  Aimee started running, dodging the gravestones.

  Her head throbbed, but she could run. She skidded through an abandoned gate in the wall. Her labored breaths stung sharply, but she made herself gulp air, her mind clearer the more she did so. She made it halfway across the gravel lot between the water towers before Dede caught her ankles. Her body slapped the ground. She came face-to-face with a hole, her neck stinging.

  “Look what you’ve done!” Dede hissed, pointing at his ripped jacket.

  She’d almost gotten away!

  “Kaseem used you,” she said. “Like he uses everyone.”

  Dede marched her to the nearest water tower, six or seven stories high. The tower loomed robotlike, with spindly legs webbed by ladders and pipe.

  “Climb!”

  The Beretta felt cold against her temple.

  Aimee looked up, her hands shaking on the side of the ladder.

  “But I’m afraid of heights.”

  “Too bad,” Dede said. His gold chains glinted in the moonlight, his perspiring face glistening with sweat. “I need target practice.”

  He was going to pick her off like a fly.

  “Look, Dede—”

  “This is taking too long, I’ve got other jobs.” He cocked the trigger, shoved her toward the ladder. “Move.”

  She took several ste
ps, faltered. Her greasy hand slipped and she grabbed the railing. Her leather-soled boots slid down the steps.

  The heavy skewers rained from her sleeve, tinkling down the metal steps.

  Gone.

  Her heart sank as her last hope rained over the gravel.

  “What’s that?” Dede grunted, leaning forward and grabbing them. He laughed, short and barklike. “Kabobs? You belong on these.”

  “No, you do!” She turned quickly, not caring anymore what he’d do.

  But she spoke to the air. She’d knocked into Dede. His finger pulled the Beretta. Shots drilled into the concrete water tower supports. She ducked as he spun and staggered. In his other hand he held the skewers. He tripped into a hole. She saw him land with a loud ouff! then a piercing cry.

  A skewer rammed through his temple.

  He clutched his face in surprise, a skewer handle poking out above his ear. He convulsed in a burrowing motion. Trickles of blood pooled into the dirt, and then Dede lay still.

  Aimee collapsed and grabbed her gun from the dirt. She tried not to look at his face.

  “I told you I’m afraid of heights.”

  Tuesday

  “YOU STILL LOOK LIKE you’ve been hit by a truck,” Rene said.

  “Just got slammed into the back of one, like I told you,” Aimee said as she limped into her office.

  Miles Davis scampered beside her and jumped onto Renews chair.

  “Why don’t you recover at home?” Rene’asked.

  “Work heals me,” she said, hanging her leather jacket on the hook. “What’s the EDF status?”

  “Last night they talked about us doing a vulnerability scan of their software system,” he said, with a little smile. “Today they mentioned hardware. Tiens, no signatures on any dotted line yet.” Rene buttoned his Burberry raincoat. “Guess where Philippe’s money went.”

  Aimee looked up.

  “Into his vineyard,” Rene shook his head. “Chateau de Frois-sart turned into a veritable money pit. His vines have root disease.”

  No wonder he needed a lot of money.

  “Time for my practice at the dojo,” Rene said. As he opened the door, he paused, concern on his face. “Ca va!”

  “Fine, partner,” she said.

  “Someone’s here to see you,” Rene said.

  Morbier walked into her office, hand in hand with the boy from the photograph in Samia’s apartment.

  “Leduc, meet my grandson, Marc,” Morbier said.

  “Enchante, Marc,” she said, rising to greet him. She wasn’t too surprised.

  Marc’s round black eyes shone in his honey-colored face when Miles Davis appeared.

  “Would you like something to drink, Marc?”

  Marc’s shy smile got hidden in the folds of Morbier’s coat. He leaned down to pet Miles Davis, who’d pranced up to sniff him.

  “We’ll take a raincheck, Leduc,” he said. “We can’t be late for the special event at the Vincennes Zoo. Just wanted to drop this off.” He thrust a grimy folder on her desk. “Now you know what I know,” Morbier said, giving her a meaningful look. “That’s if you want. Drop it off later.”

  After the door shut she sat down. She stared at the folder, dog-eared with a coffee stain on the cover.

  Her cell phone rang several times. Miles Davis barked and jumped on her lap. She ignored the phone. She reached for the folder, but her hands shook and she couldn’t grasp it. The shadows lengthened. She didn’t know how long she’d sat staring at it before she grew aware of the streetlights shining in from rue du Louvre. Miles Davis growled. Pounding sounded on her office door. Loud and insistent.

  Aimee opened the door.

  Yves stood on the landing, his suitcase behind him. Charcoal stubble shaded his chin. He wore black jeans, a black leather jacket, and looked good enough to eat. And he was going away.

  “You stole my thunder, Aimee, grabbing the front page and bumping my Defense Ministry expose,” he said, coming in. He grinned. “But if anyone did, I’m glad it was you. Reuters seems interested. They’re making the appropriate noises.”

  “Is that why you disappeared?” she asked.

  “I couldn’t tell you what I was doing, you were working for the minister’s wife. Martine wasn’t too happy with me either. She won’t run the story. But I understand, it’s family. She knows I’ll go elsewhere with it.”

  Before she could speak he handed her a thick envelope.

  “You could come with me,” he said, his dark eyes locking on hers.

  “It’s just not that easy.”

  “True. It’s very simple,” he said, brushing her spiky hair down. He ran his fingers along her chin. “There’s an open-dated ticket in there, departure and return good for a year.”

  She stiffened. “I’ve got a business… Miles Davis…”

  “There’s computer crime in Cairo. Matter of fact, all kinds of crime, too,” he said. He held out another ticket. “Miles Davis has a seat but he’ll have to spend some of the flight in a doggie carrier.”

  He enveloped her in his arms and kissed her hard. Hot and searching. She didn’t want him to stop, but he did. “My taxi’s waiting.”

  From her window she watched the red brake lights as Yves’s taxi pulled away on rue du Louvre. To the right the western palace of the Louvre lay dark and tomblike. But on the lighted quai the trees had flowered, fragrant and leafy.

  She set the tickets next to the folder on the desk and opened the window. As she sat down to ponder the course of her life, the late-night traffic hum reached her ears, Miles Davis nestled in her arms, and she inhaled the first breath of spring.

  Table of Contents

  Cover Page

  Title Page

  Copyright Page

  Table of Contents

  PARIS: APRIL 1994

  Monday Early Evening

  Tuesday Morning

  Tuesday Midday

  Tuesday Afternoon

  Tuesday Late Afternoon

  Tuesday Early Evening

  Wednesday

  Wednesday Morning

  Wednesday Midafternoon

  Wednesday Early Evening

  Wednesday Evening

  Wednesday Night

  Thursday Morning

  Thursday Morning

  Thursday Afternoon

  Thursday Night

  Early Friday Morning

  Friday Midday

  Friday Late Afternoon

  Saturday Afternoon

  Saturday Evening

  Saturday Early Evening

  Saturday Evening

  Saturday Night

  Sunday Midafternoon

  Sunday

  Sunday Late Afternoon

  Sunday Evening

  Sunday Night

  Late Sunday Night

  Early Monday Morning

  Monday Early Morning

  Monday Morning

  Monday Noon

  Midday Monday

  Monday Early Afternoon

  Monday Evening

  Tuesday

 

 

 


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