The study had been less
then forthcoming; no address book or schedule. Gregorio Domingo had been an organized person, however, and
we found his bank logs all in proper order, perfectly calculating deposits and
withdrawals along with stubs from the paychecks he received from the
government. When we were done with
our search, we were informed that Mrs. Domingo had taken a sleeping pill and
would not be able to speak with us for a while. Again we wondered if this was a stall tactic.
Next stop, talk to his
ex-boss. After too many hours of
hitting bureaucratic walls we were finally scheduled to meet with the man who’d
over seen Mr. Domingo’s work, Mr. Alberto Salazar. We were also cautioned to use kid gloves, which is a good
joke with Franz and me at the helm.
“Hello Inspector and Mr. Rossi is it? What can I do for you?”
The man who’d invited us
into his sprawling office, bigger than my apartment and reeking of money and
politics, was well put together with oily yet handsome smile, the only thing
marring his perfect appearance was a limp.
“Thanks for seeing us Mr. Salazar. I’m sure you’ve heard by now; we found
Mr. Gregorio Domingo’s body today under suspicious circumstances.” Franz said.
Mr. Salazar was smart
enough to not feign surprise.
“Yes, I did hear something
about that. Pity. Brilliant mind.” Salazar did not seem too upset.
“We understand he was
employed by the government?” Franz asked.
“Yes, this is true, however
Mr. Domingo was let go sometime ago.”
He got up and went to the
bar cart. He saw me watching him
and looked down at his leg.
“Polio. One of the reasons I became so
interested in science and medicine,” he said. “Gentlemen?” he continued, holding up a decanter.
Franz shook his head no but
I nodded yes. He handed me a glass;
it’s weight felt good in my hand and it was filled with a scotch that I rarely
had the pleasure of drinking.
“Science and medicine? Is that related to the department you
run?” asked Franz.
He didn’t answer the
question until he sat down again.
“Yes, in relation to
national security,” Salazar answered.
“What was the nature of Mr.
Domingo’s work?” Franz asked.
“I’m sorry, I don’t’ think I
can say. Matter of national security,
you understand.”
“We’d like to contact some of his former co-workers,” said
Franz.
“He didn’t have many, and
you understand, you wouldn’t be able to ask them about the nature of their
work,” said Salazar.
“Is it true he worked in bioengineering and chemical
warfare?” Pressed Franz.
“I hate to repeat myself,
gentlemen, but I can not say anything on this matter.”
Salazar said this and I
wanted to knock him right in the kisser, smug son of a bitch.
“So you refuse to answer
any of my questions?” asked Franz.
“I can only answer
questions that have nothing to do with matters of state, security or otherwise
confidential reports.”
I gulped my well-aged
scotch and set the glass down harder than I should have.
“What you’re saying, in
your bureaucratic, long winded, and overly important way is that you refuse to
answer the Inspector’s questions.
So let me tell you in my quick, no nonsense way; if we find out you’ve
been hiding anything, we’ll nail you.
Remember our faces and then remember I warned you.”
Franz didn’t bother to
apologize for me. If it’d been him
blowing up in this jerk’s face he could of gotten into serious trouble. But I’d take the brunt of the yelling
and really, it wasn’t so bad.
You’re not doing things right if the police captain isn’t yelling at you
once a week.
Ten o’clock at night is too late to be
out, waiting in a car. Ten o’clock
at night is too late after waking up too early after being lied to by too many
people. Normally Franz would dole
this out to a uniform but with the high profile of the victim and the
peculiarities of the case, he felt we should be in on the scene. Franz wasn’t able to join me during the
stake out, something to do with paperwork and it was just as well. I wanted my old flask to keep me company
and sometimes with Franz, well, three’s a crowd ain’t it. What was I waiting for? I wasn’t really sure but I’d know when
I saw it, if I saw it. If I could
stay awake. I had just finished
lighting a cigarette when someone emerged from the Domingo’s gateway. The headlights of a car driving by gave
me just enough light to see that it was Gabriella. She hurried down the street and as I craned my neck I could
see her getting into a car. I
counted to ten and then started my engine and as she pulled away from the curb,
so did I. Tailing ain’t as easy at
it looks; there’s a fine line between losing the tail and getting yourself
known to the tail. It’s a heck of
a lot easier when you’re tailing a pedestrian, someone who isn’t in the game,
so to speak. I followed her closer
then I normally would because I knew even if she wondered about being followed,
she wouldn’t know how to spot me.
Gabriella led me to a neighborhood
about half an hour from her house called La Boca. Means ‘The Mouth’ in Spanish and has recently become a
hotbed of political unrest.
Socialists seemed to have housed themselves here, which isn’t surprising
considering La Boca’s main inhabitants are immigrants. Fueled already with
nationalism and anti Semitic sentiments, what was going on across the ocean had
supporters here in Argentina, which made the immigrants who’d fled the turmoil,
nervous.
I waited until Gabriella parked the car
and drove right past her. I parked
my car half a block down and got out, shutting the door very carefully. I doubled back to the building
Gabriella was headed towards and saw that it was a small hotel. Not as shady as some of ‘em, but not
the Ritz either. I waited across
the street, making sure I was out of reach of the street lights’ glow. There was the sound of restaurateurs a
street away, a faint wisp of music - an opera maybe - coming from an open
window. I waited with my back
against the wall and another cigarette in my mouth. I didn’t have to wait long though. Soon a figure approached the hotel and the way I knew it was
Salazar was because of his limp.
As I was mulling over this tidbit of information, a scream broke over
the soft noises of the neighborhood.
It came from the building I was watching, the building Gabriella had
entered, the building Salazar had gone into. Not waiting a second I ran across the street and through the
doors of hotel. “The man who just
came in, what room is he in?” I asked the manager. He was already out from behind his desk getting ready to run
up the steps.
“Up this way, follow me,” he said as he
took the steps two at a time. It
only took us minutes to reach the room and open the door. As we burst in, a disheveled room
greeted us and Gabriella’s limp body lay face down on the floor.
“Call the coppers and tell ‘em to send
Inspector Franz. Tell ‘em Marco
Rossi told you so.”
The wide-eyed manager nodded like an
idiot and left the room.
I kneeled down next to Gabriella. There were red marks around her neck and I steeled myself for
the worst. I gently put two
fingers against her throat. The
pulse was faint, but it was there. She wasn’t dead. Gently I rolled her over so that she was face up and smacked
her cheek.
“Come on you. Wake up,” I muttered.
Her head lolled from one side to the
other and then finally her eyes fluttered open. Her eyes weren’t focused properly and she must’ve thought I
was the person who’d marked her throat because with a cry she put her hands up
in protection and frantically scooted away from me.
“Mrs. Domingo! It’s me, Marco. Mrs. Domingo, calm down you’re safe,
it’s just me,” I said as I advanced towards her. I grabbed her arms as she struggled against me, her
strangled cries sounding pathetic.
Finally she looked at me and suddenly the fight wasn’t in her anymore
and she went limp against me.
“There, there. You’re safe Mrs. Domingo, you’re
safe.” I stroked her head; her
soft and silky hair felt good under my rough hands and not for the first time I
noticed what a fine specimen of a woman Gabriella was.
The hotel manager came in, relieved to
see she was alive. Making noises
about putting the kettle on, he left again and I waited for Gabriella to feel
better.
When she was clam enough she stood
up. I stood up with her and pulled
out a cigarette. I offered her one
but she refused, oxygen was still a luxury in her throat.
I walked to the bathroom and used the
glass by the sink. Walking back
into the room, I asked “You ready to talk?”
She took a long gulp of water before
she answered my question with one of her own. “How did you know I was here?”
“I think I’m owed an explanation,
having just saved your life.”
Gabriella looked down at the glass and
shook her head. It was a low blow,
I’ll admit, but I never said I was a gentleman.
“Where’s Mr. Salazar?”
Gabriella looked up, surprised I knew
of her secret but she gave me a grim smile.
“You are as good as they say,” she
said.
“Not really. I saw him come in, I heard you scream. Doesn’t take a genius.”
I sat down and looked at her
expectantly.
“Mr. Rossi, I suppose in your line of work
you’ve seen this before? But you
have to understand, I never married Gregorio for love and he knew it. Did he know about Alberto – Mr. Salazar
- and me? I think not. But he knew the twenty years between us
would always be a chasm. He
married me because of my social standing, because of my father. I married him because he would keep me
in the affluence I was used to.”
“You coulda fooled me there in the
office. Your act was first rate,”
I said.
“I might not have loved him in a wifely
way, but I did love him. I was
worried - I am worried - that he was
into something dangerous.”
“You still sneaking around with
Salazar?”
“It ended long ago.”
“Why’d you see him tonight?”
“Because I was getting
blackmailed. You are happy,
yes? My bad deeds come around and to
bite me. You feel like a man,
justifying your righteousness?”
She had every right to get angry with me and I knew it.
“It’s hard not to get fresh when you
find someone almost dead, someone who’s lied to you once already.” I had a right to be angry too and I was
letting it get in the way.
“I did not think it important.”
“That’s what they all say. But what I always say is that it’s up
to me to decide. You wanted to
hire me to find out what your husband was doing. Well, in the process I found out what you were doing. Maybe it ain’t fair, but that’s the way
it is. Are you going to level with
me now or are we still playing a game?”
“I’m going home, I’m tired.”
Forty-five
minutes later found Gabriella and me in a car in front of her house. Franz had showed up right after she’d walked
out on me in the hotel. He stopped
her and told her under no circumstances was she driving home and after a litany
of profanity, she acquiesced.
She
had a cigarette in her hand and my flask in the other; she was a woman after my
own heart. We’d made up fifteen
minutes into the ride and on the way home she told me about getting
blackmailed. It’d been a few
months ago and like all blackmail cases, the initial request stated that after
she paid a certain amount of money she’d never hear from the blackmailer again,
only to hear from him again a month later. Well, the last letter came this morning.
“So
that’s the letter you received when Inspector Franz and I were speaking with
you?”
Gabriella
nodded. “They said if I involved
the police, that it would be worse trouble for me and my husband. I did not know what to do and to get
that letter right after Gregorio died…”
“Why
meet up with Salazar then?”
“I
did not want anyone to know that I was taking out such a big sum. I was afraid the police were watching
the bank accounts. I met with him
to ask him for a loan.”
Not
only did he not lend her the money, he also tried to kill her. And I thought I had bad manners.
She
sat in my car, sipping off of my flask and smoking my cigarettes and all I
could think about was kissing her.
After what she’d been through tonight, I was pretty sure all she wanted
to do was fall asleep and forget the whole thing. Besides, most broads didn’t want to kiss me, and Gabriella
was a classy dame. Classy women
never wanted to kiss me.
We
walked into the house together; the maid opened the front door like she had a
sixth sense. I explained that Mrs.
Domingo would need plenty of rest and that she and I, I meant the maid and me, would
have to go through the house and make sure nothing was odd or out of
place. I can be a meticulous son
of a bitch so it wasn’t for another hour before I was ready to leave. I was satisfied Gabriella would be safe
and I also knew there’d be a police man stationed at the house by now so after
grabbing my coat and hat, I made my way to the door only to be stopped by the
maid.
“Mrs.
Domingo asked you to see her before you leave.”
“She’s
not asleep yet?”
“No
sir, she is not.”
I
made my way up the mahogany stairs and looked down at the maid, who was
watching me. I pointed towards the
left and she nodded, and then she headed towards the kitchen. The rich carpet underneath felt good
even through my cheap shoes.
I
knocked on the door first, waited for her to say ‘come in’ and went in.
The
room was elegant, not sparse but not overly stuffed. Mrs. Domingo sat in her bed and I walked over. There was a chair by the bed but I
chose to stand. I wanted my own
bed and sitting posed the danger of falling asleep.
“You
wanted to see me Mrs. Domingo?”
She gave a quick small smile.
“I
suppose you’ve earned the right to call me Gabriella.”
“Then
call me Marco. Now that we’re
informal, why’d you want to see me?”
“I’m
sorry I lied to you this morning.
I didn’t know he was dead.”
“All
right.”
She waved away my abruptness.
“I
plan on paying you for your time on this.
We never spoke about that since Gregorio…” Her voice caught but she
composed herself.
“Well
now, that is appreciated.”
“I
want his killer found.”
“Of
course. I charge time and
expenses.”
“Understood. Here.” She took a letter off her nightstand and gave it to me. I looked it over. It was the latest in blackmail letters
stating the time and place for her to drop off the money. The same envelope the maid had given
her when Franz and I were here, questioning her.
“If
we get you the money, how’d you feel about dropping it off?”
“I’m
to pay them?” She was confused.
“They’ll
think they’re getting paid, but we’ll be there, ready to catch them. Could you do that? Pretend like we aren’t there,
watching?”
Gabriella
nodded. “I want all of this to
end.”
“Good. I’ll call on you in the morning.”
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