Water-Blue Eyes (14 page)

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Authors: Domingo Villar

BOOK: Water-Blue Eyes
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Impression

The block of flats on Avenida de las Camelias was one of those functional buildings that multinational companies with branches in the city rented for employees who were
transferred
to Vigo. It was cheaper for those companies to keep a number of flats all year round than to finance their
executives
’ numerous nights in hotels one by one.

Caldas and Estévez got out of the taxi, went into the hall and climbed up the stairs to the fifth floor. Estévez stopped in front of a door with a small brass plaque that read Orestes Grial.

‘And this?’ asked the inspector. As he pushed the door, he noticed the lock was smashed.

‘I rang the bell,’ said Estévez by way of an excuse, ‘and as nobody answered I kicked it a bit and …’

‘I see.’

The inspector took a quick look at the empty flat. A single large room, with dark floorboards and white walls, served as living room, dining area and bedroom. The modern
open-plan
kitchen was next to one of the two windows
overlooking
the street. On the shelves on the wall were a dozen books, two photo albums, a digital camera and a few
hundred
CDs. Everything was neat and tidy, except for the unmade, pillow-less bed.

‘Where is he?’

‘In there,’ replied Estévez, pointing to a closed door.

Caldas went into the bathroom and found Orestes
spread-eagled
on the floor by the toilet bowl. He’d bled from the back of his shaven head and the blood had spread into a red puddle, which contrasted sharply with the white marble – an unsettling sight.

The DJ was wearing only striped pyjama-bottoms, and his bare chest revealed how thin he was. The pillow was on the floor, stained with blood.

‘Did you move anything?’

‘Of course not. After I found the stiff and called you eighty times on your mobile, I made sure there was no one else here, pulled the door shut and went to get you at the radio station.’

Leo Caldas inspected the hole the bullet had made in the back of the boy’s neck. He didn’t want to touch the wound, and with all the blood he wasn’t able to calculate the calibre of the gun. He tried to locate the shell of the bullet on the floor, also unsuccessfully. As he was looking for it, he lifted the pillow slightly by one of its cleanest corners, and saw a hole going through it surrounded by a blackish stain. The murderer had used the pillow to muffle the shot. He pointed it out to Estévez.

‘I noticed that already, chief,’ said the officer. ‘A
home-made
silencer, but an efficient one nonetheless.’

Caldas left the pillow on the floor. No sign of the shell.

‘They caught him pissing,’ said Estévez.

Caldas nodded.

‘Perhaps the doorbell woke him up,’ he speculated. ‘He must have got up to go and open the door, and then he needed to urinate.’

They decided to look for clues on their own before calling anyone in from the police station. Caldas, using a
handkerchief
to make sure he didn’t leave any fingerprints, turned the digital camera on and saw its memory was empty. Then he concentrated on the albums on the shelf. Meanwhile Estévez, who had put on a pair of gloves he’d found in the kitchen sink, carried out a search round the flat. He went through the night-table, the table in the living room, the cushions on the sofa, the kitchen … Then he opened the wardrobe, rifled through its drawers one by one, and
checked the pockets of all the trousers and jackets on the hangers.

Caldas devoted his time to looking through the first of the photo albums. He scrutinised every picture with a
watchmaker’s
meticulousness, but he didn’t find any known faces there. He put it back on the shelf, next to the CDs, and reached for the second one.

Estévez drew near to take a look at the CDs. Almost all of them were copies, with the artists’ names written in indelible ink.

‘Do you realise? Only idiots buy CDs these days. At this rate, a plumber will soon make more money than a rock star,’ declared Estévez sententiously.

‘Indeed,’ muttered Caldas, engrossed in the photographs.

Estévez went over the CDs hastily, and looked around as if something were missing.

‘Where the hell did he play them?’ he asked, thinking out loud.

‘What?’ asked Caldas without taking his eyes off a
photograph
taken at the Idílico.

‘Nothing, it’s there,’ said Estévez, calmly looking at the kitchen. ‘I was wondering where he played the CDs, but it must be on that laptop.’

‘What did you say?’ asked Caldas, raising his eyes.

‘That he must have listened to his CDs on that computer there in the kitchen,’ repeated Estévez.

Leo Caldas had already noticed the flat object on the kitchen surface near the cooker, but he thought it must be a sandwich maker or some such appliance. Nor had the gizmo which sat right next to it on a stack of garish paper attracted his attention.

He went over to the kitchen surface, opened the laptop, and turned it on. The futuristic object to the right turned out to be a small laser printer sitting on a ream of paper.

As the computer started up and logged on its profiles, the inspector finished checking the second album; he didn’t
find anything of interest there either, and returned to the shelf.

He went back to the keyboard and opened the
recent-items
menu. He saw that the last programmes used were the web browser and the image processor. He clicked on the latter, and accessed another complex menu. The inspector was no expert in new technologies, but was familiar enough with computers to realise that Orestes kept thousands of digital photographs stored on the hard drive of his.

There was a search option on that screen allowing you to set parameters in order to find certain files more quickly. Leo Caldas wrote the name he was looking for: Luis Reigosa.

A moment later twelve icons showed up. He clicked on the first, and a photo opened at once, filling the screen.

‘Bingo!’ said the inspector.

Rafael Estévez approached.

‘What’s up, chief?’

Leo Caldas didn’t reply. He kept opening the images and pressing the print key.

‘They knew each other,’ muttered Estévez, with his eyes riveted on the first picture that came out of the printer. ‘Son of a bitch!’

Trace

The wooden gate slid to one side, and the car advanced among the trees before stopping in front of the steps. The maid was waiting for the officers in the same martial posture she’d adopted in the morning, and led them round the house to the porch just like before.

Yet things were different. The sun wasn’t high in the sky but setting over a shimmering sea that seemed covered in gold leaf, and to Estévez’s relief the temperature had
dropped
a few degrees since noon. The officer was no longer sweating.

On the path leading to the quay, they saw the slender Mercedes Zuriaga silhouetted against a background of bright light. She had put a long white chemise over her cream dress. She went past them and stopped as she recognised them.

‘Good evening, officers. Another visit?’ she asked politely.

‘Yes, we need the doctor’s advice once again,’ lied Caldas.

‘Does he know you’re here?’

Leo nodded.

‘I was about to ask for some tea,’ she said, pointing to the sliding door leading into the living room. ‘Would you like a cup?’

They said no, thank you.

Merecedes Zuriaga disappeared into the living room for a minute, and after giving some terse instructions, came back and sat down with them under the porch. A little later, the maid in the cap appeared carrying a small silver tray and left it on the table.

‘If it’s all right, I’ll keep you company until my husband comes down.’

‘Of course,’ agreed Caldas. ‘Is the doctor feeling better?’

‘It would seem so. A little after you left he went out on some errands and to do a bit of shopping,’ she explained. ‘It’s a good sign if he’s in the mood to spend money,’ she joked.

‘Naturally,’ admitted Caldas.

‘Are you sure you won’t have any tea?’ she insisted, lifting the teapot.

Caldas and Estévez thanked her, but again declined. The three of them sat there, appreciating the view and hearing the sea hit the rocks as Mercedes Zuriaga stirred her tea with a spoon.

When the doctor came out and approached the porch, Caldas experienced that gut feeling he’d missed in the
morning
. Now the sun was lower, the bougainvillea didn’t cast a shadow, and Dimas Zuriaga’s hair looked as immaculately white as Caldas had seen it at the cemetery.

‘Inspector Caldas, I thought I made things perfectly clear this morning,’ said Zuriaga without hiding his exasperation.

Leo didn’t want to elaborate in front of his wife.

‘Rafa, would you mind sitting with Mrs Zuriaga while I take a stroll with the doctor?’ asked Caldas.

They walked away in silence. The inspector pointed to a stone table far from the porch, near the pond-turned-
swimming
-pool.

‘Would you mind if we sit down over there, doctor?’

Dimas Zuriaga reluctantly agreed and, once they’d done so, asked Caldas what exactly was expected from him.

‘An honest answer,’ replied Caldas, placing on the table the photograph of Luis Reigosa and his saxophone, the same he’d showed Zuriaga that morning. ‘Do you know this man?’

Zuriaga didn’t even look at the picture.

‘They promised me this morning’s outrage wouldn’t be repeated,’ said the doctor dryly. ‘You’ve justified your
impertinence as best you could, and I vouchsafed to forget the incident. But this is too much.’

‘Do you know him?’ pressed Caldas.

‘Do you think I’m one of those petty criminals you can bully just like that?’ exclaimed Zuriaga, standing up.

Leo made an effort to remain calm.

‘I don’t think anything, doctor, but let me assure you I’m treating you with far more respect than I think you deserve in the circumstances. For the last time, then, do you know this man?’

‘I’ve said I don’t!’ roared Zuriaga in his thunderous voice. ‘Now get out of my house, please.’

Leo Caldas took another photograph from the inside pocket of his jacket. In it, Dimas Zuriaga and Luis Reigosa were
having
an animated conversation with two beer glasses in front of them. Caldas placed it on the table, very near the doctor.

‘What do you say now, do you know him?’

He took out another picture and threw it on the table.

‘Do you know who I mean or would you rather think it over, doctor?’

Leo threw another photograph in the air. This one left no doubts as to the kind of relationship between the doctor and the saxophonist.

‘Are you not saying anything, doctor?’

Dima Zuriaga, suddenly pale, sat back down. He held the photographs in his hand for a moment and then dropped them on the table.

‘You don’t need to show me all of them, inspector. I know these pictures.’ There was no trace of his former defiance.

‘So you do know the man who’s in them with you?’ asked Caldas once again.

‘Of course I do, inspector,’ he said at last. ‘It’s Luis. Luis Reigosa.’

‘I don’t like to be lied to, doctor,’ said Caldas, fixing his eyes on Zuriaga.

‘Why didn’t you tell me from the start that you knew all
about it, inspector?’ His roaring voice had turned into a whimper.

‘About what?’ Leo Caldas didn’t know what he meant exactly, but he encouraged him to carry on.

‘The blackmail. Isn’t that the reason you’re here?
Someone’s
been emailing me pictures like this one for a while now. I thought no one else knew about them.’

It wasn’t such a strange reply as it might first seem. People involved in crimes would often cast themselves as victims in a last attempt to confuse their pursuers. Leo decided to
follow
the thread the doctor was offering and see where it was leading. Dimas Zuriaga was too important a personage for the inspector’s career to suffer another setback.

‘Did you report it, doctor?’

Dimas Zuriaga shook his head, and as he did the sun glinted on his white hair as on a mirror.

‘They threatened to forward them to my wife if I went to the police,’ the doctor glanced furtively at the table in the porch, where his wife and Rafael Estévez were still sitting. ‘She knows nothing about this,’ he added.

‘Would you rather we walked where they can’t see us, doctor?’

Zuriaga nodded and Caldas indicated the path leading to the quay.

‘No, let’s go the other way, inspector. I only like the sea from afar. I’ve been afraid of the water since I was small – I don’t even know how to swim.’

‘And the boat?’ asked Caldas.

‘That’s Mercedes’s. I don’t go near it.’

Zuriaga pointed to a path leading to the forest they’d seen from the entrance.

‘This way.’

The path went round a pond and led into a copse of old chestnut trees. As he waited for the doctor to start talking, Caldas walked silently, surrounded by vegetable smells which were stronger under the trees.

‘I got the first pictures one Monday morning, about a month ago,’ he finally said. ‘They asked me for three
thousand
euros to destroy them. I had to leave the money at a certain spot on Monte del Castro, near the Foundation.’

‘And did you pay?’

‘I did, but the following Monday I got another email, and the following week another … In total I left three envelopes in that place.’

‘Did you ever consider reporting it to the police?’

‘I though of it, but then I convinced myself that it would be more discreet to engage a private detective. I was
considering
different alternatives, but as you know when one has too many options it becomes difficult to choose from them, inspector. The money they were asking for was not excessive – I mean, not for someone in my position. And I couldn’t make a mistake with a matter such as this one. So I didn’t mind holding out for a while and paying up until I found the right person to take care of the investigation. I was going to engage someone as soon as I received the next message, but last Monday I didn’t get any pictures.’

‘And you decided to hide it all in case that was it.’

‘Exactly, inspector. There didn’t seem to be any point in stirring things up just for the sake of it. I try not to attract any notice, but I can’t help being a public figure. Few people in this city know my face, but they all know my name and that of the organisation I represent. I couldn’t let a scandal of this sort taint the Foundation.’

‘Or your family.’

‘Indeed. It’s all connected – work, family, society … A scandal could shake everything I and my father before me have worked for.’

Leo Caldas was thinking that the doctor’s words would need solid evidence to back them up.

‘Did you keep the messages, doctor?’

‘No. I did for a few days, but then I deleted them.’

You’re
not
very
lucky
, thought Caldas.

‘I see. Who could have taken those pictures?’

‘I don’t know, inspector, I have no idea.’

‘And sent them?’

‘The same,’ replied Zuriaga. ‘I don’t know a great deal about computers, but I did look into it. The email addresses from which they were sent were fakes and had absurd names. All I was able to find out was that they were sent from cyber cafes, which hundreds of people use every day.’

‘Do you know that Reigosa is dead, doctor?’

‘Of course. I was at his funeral yesterday – just like you, inspector. As I told you this morning, I hardly ever forget a face.’

The path passed under magnolia, yew and pine trees. Where it forked Zuriaga took the right.

‘Did you ever suspect it might have been Reigosa who was blackmailing you?’

‘Are you mad? Why would Luis do something like that?’

‘Don’t you think it’s a bit odd that you stopped receiving emails just when he died?’

‘It isn’t.’ There was no sign of hesitation in Dimas Zuriaga’s voice. ‘Luis only had to ask for whatever he needed. A man like him wouldn’t do such a stupid thing as
blackmailing
me for money. You’ve seen the pictures. You know about me, about us, inspector.’

Leo nodded, but Zuriaga laboured the point.

‘We were more than friends. I would have given him
anything
he might have needed without even asking him what it was for. He had no reason to do something like that.’

‘Did you do it?’

‘Do what?’

‘Give him money.’

‘God, no, of course I didn’t.’ The doctor drew his hand over his white hair. ‘But I would’ve done if he’d asked.’

‘Was he that important to you?’

‘You don’t understand, inspector.’

‘That’s why we’re having this conversation, doctor, so you
can explain to me what I don’t understand. Was he
that
important?’ he insisted.

‘Of course, he was more important than even he suspected.’

‘But not enough to leave your wife.’

‘I’ve already explained to you what I represent, inspector. A great enterprise like the Zuriaga Foundation requires that one should make certain sacrifices. I chose to lead this horrid double life. I chose to deceive Mercedes all this time.’

‘And was it worth it?’

‘Well, actually, I think it was, inspector. At least, that was the idea, even if at times I was tempted to openly speak to her about my … shall we say, inclination.’

‘Why didn’t you?’ asked Caldas.

‘Tell Mercedes? For several reasons, but in the first place, because Luis wouldn’t let me. He encouraged me to carry on with my main projects – the Foundation and my marriage.’

They walked and talked like Peripatetics, along the path bordering on a coppice of box trees. Caldas listened to Zuriaga’s explanations with the feeling that he was before a crumbling giant.

‘How long have you led this double life, doctor?’

‘In a way I’ve always known, but I didn’t take the plunge until Luis turned up. I’ve never wanted to go to a certain type of bar. I’m too old to brandish a flag or mix in some absurd, superficial ambiance.’

This man with snow-white hair had little in common with the one who’d called to denounce Estévez’s misconduct at the Idílico.

‘Could I ask you how you met Reigosa?’

‘At a jazz festival sponsored by the Foundation. We talked after the concert, then there was a dinner party and then

‘When was that?’

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