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Authors: Robert Wilson

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BOOK: The Ignorance of Blood
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‘I'd overslept at Marisa's,’ he said. ‘It was six o'clock in the morning and, you know, I wasn't as collected as I would have been normally. Inés appeared to be asleep. She wasn't. When I dropped off, she got up and found the shots.’
‘And that was the first time you hit her,’ said Falcón. ‘Have you thought about that since you've been in here?’
‘Are you going to be my shrink as well, Javier?’
Falcón showed him an empty pair of hands.
‘If you didn't take the shots of Marisa and the only reason you had the camera with you was to provide yourself with an alibi for Inés, how come it was at hand for your lover to take photos of herself naked?’
Calderón stared into the wall for some time until he gradually started chopping the air with his cigarette fingers.
‘She told me she went through my jacket pockets. She said: “I come from a bourgeois family; I kick against it, but I know all the tricks,”’ said Calderón. ‘They all go through your pockets. That's what women do, Javier. It's part of their training. They're very exigent on details.’
‘Did she volunteer that information?’
‘No, I asked her.’
‘Any reason?’
‘I don't know,’ said Calderón. ‘I think I was hunting for my shoes. I was nervous about getting back to my apartment and having a confrontation with Inés. I'd never stayed out all night before. I suppose Marisa's behaviour just struck me as a bit odd.’
‘Any thoughts about it now?’
‘It's the sort of thing a wife would do … not a lover,’ said Calderón, crushing out the cigarette in the tin-foil ashtray. ‘It's what Inés did when I got home.’
‘You're smoking a lot, Esteban.’
‘There's nothing else to do, and it calms my nerves.’
‘Maybe you should think of an alternative method of calming your nerves.’
Calderón looked up, suspicious.
‘You can keep trying, Javier, but I'm not going to lie down on your couch.’
‘What about somebody else's couch?’ said Falcón, flicking
over a page in his notebook. ‘Another question about the transcript…’
Calderón lit a cigarette, belligerently. He inhaled deeply without taking his eyes off Falcón and blew the smoke out the side of his mouth.
‘Go on,’ he said. ‘I'm listening.’
‘Why do you think Marisa told Inspector Jefe Zorrita that she'd met Inés?’
‘Zorrita said that dealing with liars was like dealing with children. Marisa tried to lie about it but he broke her down.’
‘Zorrita is a dictaphone man, not a note-taker. I've listened to the recording of the interview with Marisa,’ said Falcón. ‘If there was one bit of evidence you didn't want in Zorrita's hands it was the fact of Marisa and Inés having met before, and especially the circumstances of that meeting.’
‘Probably,’ said Calderón, not that interested in something he didn't regard as a development.
‘Zorrita found a witness to that meeting in the Murillo Gardens on 6th June. It wasn't too difficult because, apparently, it was quite a showdown between the two women. The witness said they went at each other like a couple of whores competing for the same patch.’
‘Doesn't sound like that witness hung around in very nice places.’
They smiled at each other with no humour.
‘According to this witness, Marisa had the last word,’ said Falcón, flicking through his notebook. ‘She said something along the lines of: “Just remember, Inés, that when he's beating you it's because he's been fucking me so beautifully all night that he can't bear to see your disappointed little face in the morning.” Is that what Marisa told
you?
Because she didn't happen to mention that to Zorrita.’
‘What's your point?’
‘First of all, how did Marisa find out that you'd been
beating Inés? She didn't have a bruised face. Did you tell her?’
‘No.’
‘Maybe one of the ugly lessons she learnt in her early life in Havana was how to spot an abused woman.’
‘Your
point
, Javier?’ said Calderón, with courtroom lawyer's steel.
‘Marisa gave Zorrita the impression that Inés had the upper hand. She mentioned Inés's phrase several times:
“La puta con el puro.”’
The whore with the cigar.
‘That's what
she
told me,’ said Calderón, listening hard now.
‘Zorrita thought Marisa had told him all that because she was still furious at being shamed by Inés in public, but clearly she wasn't. Marisa crushed Inés. The witness said that Inés went off like “the village cur”. So what was Marisa's purpose in telling Zorrita about that meeting?’
‘You think it was calculated,’ said Calderón.
‘I listened to the tape. Zorrita only had to prod her a couple of times to get the story out of her. And the story, her version of it, was crucial in redoubling your motive to beat Inés and perhaps take it too far and kill her. Now that would be a story that you'd want to keep out of the investigating officer's mind at all costs.’
Calderón was smoking so intently that he was making himself dizzy with the nicotine rush.
‘My final question to do with the transcript,’ said Falcón. ‘Inspector Jefe Zorrita came to see me some hours after he'd interviewed you. I asked if you'd broken down and confessed, and his answer was: sort of. He admitted that when you refused a lawyer – God knows what you were thinking of at that moment, Esteban – it meant that he could be more brutal with you in the interview. That, combined with the horror of the autopsy revelations, seemed to create doubt in your mind and, Zorrita
reckoned, it was then that you believed that you
could
have done it.’
‘I was very confused,’ said Calderón. ‘My hubris was in refusing the lawyer.
I
was a lawyer.
I
could handle myself.’
‘When Zorrita asked you to describe what happened when you went back to your apartment that night, he said you rendered the events in the form of a film script.’
‘I don't remember that.’
‘You used the third person singular. You were describing something you'd seen … as if you were out of your body, or behind a camera. It was clear you were in some kind of trance. Didn't your lawyer mention any of this?’
‘Maybe he was too embarrassed.’
‘There seems to be some confusion about what you saw when you came into the apartment,’ said Falcón.
‘My lawyer and I have talked about
that.’
‘In your film script version, you describe yourself as “annoyed”, because you didn't want to see Inés.’
‘I didn't want a confrontation. I wasn't angry, as I had been when Marisa told me about meeting Inés in the Murillo Gardens. I was pretty much asleep on my feet. Those were long days. All the work, followed by media engagements in the evening.’
Falcón flipped over another page of his notebook.
‘What interested me was when you said: “He stumbled into the bedroom, collapsed on to the bed and passed out immediately. He was aware only of pain. He lashed out wildly with his foot. He woke up with no idea where he was.” What was all that about?’
‘Is that a direct quote?’
‘Yes,’ said Falcón, putting the dictaphone on the table and pressing ‘play’.
Calderón listened, transfixed, as the smoke crawled up the valleys of his fingers.
‘Is that me?’
Falcón played it again.
‘It doesn't seem
that
important.’
‘I think Marisa put a cigarette lighter to your foot,’ said Falcón.
Calderón leapt to his feet as if he'd been spiked from underneath.
‘My foot was sore for days,’ he said, with sudden recall. ‘I had a blister.’
‘Why would Marisa put a cigarette lighter to your foot?’
‘To wake me up. I was dead to the world.’
‘There are more charming ways to wake your lover up than burning his foot with a cigarette lighter,’ said Falcón. ‘I think that she
had
to wake you up because the timing of your departure from her apartment was crucial.’
Calderón sank back into his chair, lit another cigarette and stared up into the light coming in through the high, barred window. He blinked as his eyes filled and he bit down on his bottom lip.
‘You're helping me,’ said Calderón. ‘The irony's not lost on me, Javier.’
‘You need different help to what I can give you,’ said Falcón. ‘Now, let's just go back to my original point from the transcript. Just one more thing about that night. The two versions you gave Zorrita about how you found Inés in the apartment.’
Calderón's brain snapped back into some pre-rehearsed groove and Falcón held up his hand.
‘I'm not interested in the version you and your lawyer have prepared for court,’ said Falcón. ‘Remember, none of this is about
your
case. What I'm trying to do
might
help you, but the design is not to get
you
off the hook, it's for me to find my way in.’
‘To what?’
‘The conspiracy. Who planted that small Goma 2 Eco bomb in the basement mosque, which exploded on the 6th of
June, detonating the hundred kilos of hexogen stored there, bringing down the apartment building and destroying the pre-school?’
‘Javier Falcón keeps his promise to the people of Seville,’ said Calderón, grunting.
‘Nobody's forgotten that… least of all me.’
Calderón leaned across the table, looked up through the pupils of Falcón's eyes into the top of his cranium.
‘Do I detect something of an obsession going on here?’ he said. ‘Personal crusades, Javier, are not advisable in police work. Every old people's home in Spain probably has a retired detective gaping from the windows, his mind still twisted around a missing girl, or a poor, bludgeoned boy. Don't go there. Nobody expects it of you.’
‘People remind me of it all the time in the Jefatura and in the Palacio de Justicia,’ said Falcón. ‘And what's more, I expect it of myself.’
‘See you in the loony bin, Javier. Save me a place by the window,’ said Calderón, sitting back, inspecting the conical ember of his cigarette.
‘We're not going to end up in the loony bin,’ said Falcón.
‘You're pretty keen to get me down on some shrink's couch,’ said Calderón, dredging for lost confidence. ‘And you know what I say? Fuck off, you and anybody else. Mind your own madness. You especially, Javier. It's been less than five years since your “complete breakdown” – wasn't that what they called it? – and I can see you've been working hard. God knows how many times you went through the files on the bombing before you started combing Zorrita's reports, looking for the flaws in my case. You should get out more, Javier. Have you fucked that Consuelo yet?’
‘Let's get back to what happened at around 4 a.m. on Thursday 8th June in your apartment in Calle San Vicente,’ said Falcón, tapping his notebook. ‘In one version you came
in to see Inés standing at the sink and you were “so happy to see her”, and yet in the other version you were “annoyed”, there was some sort of hiatus, you woke up lying in the corridor and when you went back to the kitchen you found Inés dead on the floor.’
Calderón swallowed hard as he replayed that night in the darkness of his mind. He had done it so many times, more times than even the most obsessive director would have edited, and re-edited, a scene from a movie. It now played in short sequences, but in reverse. From that moment of intense guilt when, trapped in the patrolman's torch beam, he'd been discovered trying to throw Inés into the river, to that blissful, pre-lapsarian state when he'd got out of the cab, helped by the driver, and walked up the stairs to his apartment, with no other intention than to get into bed as quickly as possible. And that was the point he always seized on: he knew at
that
moment he did not have murder on his mind.
‘There was no intent,’ he said, out loud.
‘Start from the beginning, Esteban.’
‘Look, Javier, I've tried it every which way: forwards, backwards and inside out, but however hard I try there's always a gap,’ said Calderón, lighting another cigarette from the stub of the last one. ‘The cab driver opened the apartment door for me, two turns of the key. He left me there. I went into the apartment. I saw the light from the kitchen. I remember being annoyed – and I repeat, “annoyed”, not angry or murderous. I was just irritated that I might have to explain myself when all I wanted to do was crash out. So I remember that emotion very clearly, then nothing until I woke up on the floor in the corridor beyond the kitchen.’
‘What do you think about Zorrita's theory, that people have blank moments about terrible things they have done?’
‘I've come across it professionally. I don't doubt it. I've searched every corner of my mind…’
‘So what was this about seeing Inés alive and being so happy?’

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