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Authors: Robert Wilson

Tags: #Fiction, #Mystery & Detective, #General, #Thrillers, #Suspense

BOOK: The Ignorance of Blood
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There was a taxi waiting in the prison car park, engine running, air-con roaring, cabbie asleep, head thrown back, mouth open. As Falcón went up the path to the prison reception he took a call on his mobile from his old detective friend in Madrid, calling him about the apartment in La Latina where he'd met Yacoub.
‘It's not privately owned,’ he said. ‘The whole block belongs to the Middle East European Investment Corporation, based in Dubai.’
‘Was that apartment rented out to anyone?’ ‘It's one of three in the block that's empty.’ Falcón hung up, found Alicia with her serene white face, red lipstick under a jet-black bob, waiting patiently in the reception area. He greeted her. They kissed. She squeezed his shoulder, happy to hear his voice. He told her about her taxi.
‘I've been sitting here for twenty minutes,’ she said, annoyed. ‘What's the matter with these people?’
‘He's a taxi driver from Seville,’ said Falcón. ‘It's their nature.’
‘How are you?’ she asked.
‘Complicated,’ he said.
‘That seems to be the default setting for people our age,’ she said.
Falcón told her that Consuelo's youngest son had been abducted and the effect on their relationship. Alicia was shocked, said she'd call her straight away.
‘She must be going crazy.’
‘Don't speak to her on my behalf,’ said Falcón.
‘Of course not.’
He walked her to her cab, the heat cracked down on their heads. He opened the cab door for her, showed the cabbie his police card, pointed at his meter with a long hard stare. The cabbie zeroed it, pulled away.
When the guards first brought Calderón into the room made available to them by the prison governor, he looked so shattered Falcón thought he might send him straight back to his cell. The guards got him seated and left the room. Calderón ransacked his pockets for cigarettes, lit up, sucked in a huge drag, swayed in his chair.
‘What brings you here, Javier?’ he asked.
‘Are you all right, Esteban? You look…’
‘Bedraggled? Crazy? Fucked up?’ said Calderón. ‘Take your pick. I'm all of them. You know, I hadn't really understood it before, but there's nowhere to hide in psycho … you wouldn't call it therapy, exactly, would you? It's more like … extraction. Psycho-extraction. Yanking rotten memories from the brain.’
‘I just saw Alicia in the car park.’
‘She doesn't give much away, that one,’ said Calderón. ‘I reckon psychoanalysis is no different to poker, except that nobody knows what cards they have. Did she say anything interesting?’
‘Nothing about you. She's very discreet. She didn't even
tell me why she was here,’ said Falcón. ‘Maybe you shouldn't look at it as extraction, Esteban. You can't extract memories, nor can you hide from them without consequences. You just illuminate them.’
‘Thanks for that, Javier,’ said Calderón, dismissively. ‘I'll see if that makes it any less painful. Doctora Aguado asked me what I wanted from our sessions. I said I wanted to know if I'd killed Inés. It's interesting. She's no different to a lawyer making a case. She starts with a premise – Esteban Calderón hates women. Me – can you believe it? Then she starts wheedling the usual shit out of me about how I despise my stupid mother and how I fucked up a girlfriend who didn't like my poems.’
‘Your poems?’
‘I wanted to be a writer, Javier,’ he said, holding up his hand. ‘It's all a long time ago and I'm not going into it. What are you doing here?’
‘We're getting somewhere on Inés's murder,’ said Falcón. ‘But we've also hit a brick wall.’
‘Come on, Javier. Don't talk shit to me.’
‘I've been working on Marisa.’
‘That sounds like the wet-towel treatment.’
‘It probably was something like that for her and she's been getting it from all sides,’ said Falcón, and went on to tell him about finding the footage of Margarita, the threatening phone calls and the kidnapping of Darío.
‘You keep your inner turmoil better hidden than I do, Javier.’
‘Practice,’ said Falcón. ‘Anyway, I sent Cristina Ferrera to talk to Marisa, and while intoxicated she pretty well admitted that she'd been coerced to start a relationship with you.’
‘By whom?’
‘The people holding her sister. A Russian mafia group.’
Calderón smoked intensely, staring at the floor.
‘What I need to know from you, Esteban, is how you met Marisa,’ said Falcón. ‘Who effected that introduction?’
Silence for a moment while Calderón leaned back in his chair, eyes narrowed.
‘She's dead, isn't she?’ he said. ‘You've come to me because she can't tell you any more.’
‘She was murdered last night,’ said Falcón. ‘I'm sorry, Esteban.’
Calderón leaned across the table, looking up into Falcón's head.
‘What are you sorry about, Javier?’ he asked, tapping his own chest. ‘Are you sorry for me, because you think I loved her and she was just fucking me under orders?’
‘I'm sorry because she was a woman in an impossible position, under immense strain, whose only thought was for the safety of her own sister,’ said Falcón. ‘That's why she didn't talk to us. A singular, but very compelling reason.’
That did something to Calderón's equilibrium. He even wobbled in his chair and had to anchor himself with his hands flat on the table. Emotion rose in his chest. And maybe it was because this conversation had come hard on the heels of his session with Alicia Aguado that he managed to see beyond his own self-interest and realize that sitting before him was a man with a completely different moral centre to his own.
‘You've forgiven her, haven't you, Javier?’ he said. ‘You now know that Marisa was in some way involved in Inés's murder, and yet…’
‘It would be very helpful if you could remember who introduced you to Marisa,’ said Falcón.
‘Does this mean,’ said Calderón, blinking back the tears, ‘that I
didn't
do it?’
‘It means that Cristina Ferrera
thought
that Marisa, who was drunk at the time, had been coerced into consorting with you,’ said Falcón. ‘Marisa never admitted that it was the Russians who'd forced her. We have no signed statement and no recording of the conversation. There's no new
evidence. We have, however, lost Marisa. Her words will never be heard. We have to go back to an earlier level of involvement, which means finding out how she met you. Were you introduced?’
Falcón could see quite clearly that Calderón did remember. He was staring at a point above Falcón's head and running his thumbnail up and down between his front teeth, weighing something up; and whatever it was it had weight.
‘It was at a garden party at the Duchess of Alba's house,’ said Calderón. ‘Marisa was introduced to me by my cousin.’
‘Your cousin?’
‘That is the son of the Juez Decano de Sevilla,’ said Calderón. ‘Alejandro Spinola. He works in the mayor's office.’
15
Outskirts of Seville – Monday, 18th September 2006, 13.30 hrs
On the way back from the prison, Falcón got the call.
‘Two officers from the Narcotics squad in Las Tres Mil just called in a double murder in the apartment of a drug dealer called Roque Barba, also known as El Pulmón,’ said the operator. ‘A Cuban male called Miguel Estévez found in the living room, shot twice in the back and stabbed in the side, and a Spanish female, Julia Valdés, believed to be El Pulmón's girlfriend, found in the bedroom shot in the face.’
Falcón came off the motorway and on to the ring road. He took the exit before the golf club and joined the Carretera de Su Eminencia, a road he'd always thought ridiculously named, given that it enclosed one of the grimmest public housing projects in Seville.
In the 1960s and 70s the municipality had lured gypsies from the centre of town out to this development of residential blocks on the edge of civilization. Years of poverty, lack of community and self-respect had transformed a halfhearted attempt at social engineering into a neighbourhood of drugs, murder, theft and vandalism. This did not mean that the
barrio
was without soul. Some of the greatest
flamenco voices came from here, and quite a few of them had done time in the prison he'd just come from. It was more that the soul was not evident from the bare, treeless landscape, the grimy concrete blocks, the cheap clothes hanging out to dry on metal bars over the windows and landings, the rubbish collecting in the basements and stairwells, the graffiti and the air of complete desolation that told anyone who was in any doubt that these were forgotten people in a place that had fallen off the back of the town hall's mind.
The operator in the Jefatura hadn't bothered with an address. It was just a question of cruising around, looking for the crowd of people, the collection of police cars and the green day-glo ambulances, which he soon found at the foot of an eight-storey block. The patrolmen were nervous. Some of the people gathered around the metal security cage at the entrance of the block looked more desperate than the usual citizens of Las Tres Mil. Some of them were crouched low on the grassless earth, arms wrapped round their shins, holding on to themselves and shaking. The name of El Pulmón reached his ears. These were his clients, and they'd just lost their supply.
A patrolman told him to watch his step going up. There were blood drips circled in yellow on a number of steps going up to the fourth floor. The stink of rubbish followed him. No lift. The apartment was full of the usual crime-scene personnel. The bodies were still in position. Falcón shook hands with the médico forense and the instructing judge, Anibal Parrado. Sub-Inspector Emilio Pérez, with his dark good looks of a thirties matinée idol and total devotion to detail, was running the investigation. They talked Falcón through the scene.
‘We're not sure of the sequence of events, but we're assuming that the gun found on the floor by the window was secured to the table by those screws. It has been fired
only once and the blood spatter on the wall beneath the mirror would suggest that we're looking for a wounded man. There is no other firearm in the apartment. A hunting knife was found close to the Cuban's body, which had not been used. From the entry wounds, the ballistics guys think that the same gun that killed Miguel Estévez also killed Julia Valdés in the adjacent room. Obviously, given that two shots killed the victims, they were not killed by the gun found on the floor, which they think is of a different calibre anyway. They will confirm that when they get the bullets out of the two victims. An initial inspection of the gunshot wounds to Miguel Estévez suggests that he was shot by someone lying on the floor. The body seems to have fallen on to the shooter, which would suggest that someone was using him as a shield and pushed him back on to the killer. Judging by the blood drips on the threshold of the bedroom, it is believed that the girl was shot from there by the wounded man.’
Over the médico forense's shoulder Falcón could see the girl's ruined face. Her upper body was slumped against the wall, which was covered with blood and cerebral matter. Her neck was crooked over the low bed-head, while her left hand was flung out towards the window. Her other hand had come to rest between her splayed legs but, with the palm upwards, it indicated the awkwardness of sudden death rather than the demureness of a final modesty. She was naked, but with her right leg caught up in the twisted sheet. The cameo spoke of fear, panic, paralysis and, finally, violent death.
‘The blood drips leave the apartment and go down the stairs to the pavement, where they disappear. We assume the shooter got into a car.’
‘And the stab wound to Estévez?’
‘The Narcs say that El Pulmón favoured a blade,’ said Pérez. ‘And it looks as if he's taken it with him.’
Falcón inspected the gun on the floor, the screws in the
table, the bullfight magazine on the floor in front of the mirror.
‘There are clear prints on the gun,’ said Jorge, appearing from under the table with his custom-made inspection glasses on.
‘We've got El Pulmón's prints on file from previous drug arrests,’ said Pérez.
‘We have to assume that this gun did not belong to the Cuban, Miguel Estévez. Two men with guns are no match for a single man with a blade. Which means,’ said Falcón, ‘that this was the gun secured to the table and that El Pulmón was expecting trouble.’
‘He must have bought that gun recently,’ said one of the Narcs. ‘He was always a knife man before. You know he was an ex-bullfighter?’
‘Have you seen this guy before?’ Falcón asked the Narc, pointing at Estévez.
‘No, but things have been changing around here. The product is different to what it was last year. We still haven't been able to work out where the packages are coming from.’
‘Have you come across any Russians?’
He shook his head.
‘Were you the one who found the bodies?’ asked Falcón.
‘Me and my partner,’ said the Narc.
‘Any idea what time this happened?’

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