In the elevator of his building, Sharko turned the key in the lock and pushed Sub 1, a restricted floor that gave residents access to the underground parking lot. He hadn’t slept a wink, having spent the entire night thinking of Lucie. He’d been so worried about her that he hadn’t been able to resist sending her a text at 3:10 a.m.: “Is everything all right?” To which she’d answered simply, at around 6, “All ok.”
Heading down, he looked at himself in the elevator mirror. For the first time in ages, he’d put a little gel in his long salt-and-pepper hair, brushing it back off his forehead. He hadn’t used the stuff in so long that it had practically hardened in the tube. On an impulse that morning, he had also donned his old charcoal-gray suit, one of the ones he’d worn for his big criminal cases. Every cop has a fetish object—a pipe, good luck bullet, or medal. For him, it was these clothes, and he couldn’t have said why. To keep his pants from falling, he’d had to pierce another hole in his black belt, using a fruit pitter because he didn’t have a screwdriver. He floated in the jacket, its shoulders drooping. It was as if Hardy had lent Laurel his outfit, but no matter: in the well-tailored suit, he felt better and looked better.
He jumped when he reached the parking spot for his Renault R21. A shadow emerged from a recess in the garage stacked with piles of junk.
“Shit, you gave me a start!”
The shadow was Bertrand Manien. Harsh face, molelike black eyes. He stuck a cigarette in his mouth and flicked his lighter. The click echoed in the concrete cavity, and a yellowish glow haloed his flinty face. Of all the captains in Homicide, Manien had the darkest, murkiest past. He had been around every squad, from Vice to Narc, and knew the underbelly of Paris like the back of his hand. Secret brothels, S&M clubs, shady joints where he’d sometimes been seen off-duty. Not to mention his long stint in the human trafficking detail. A squad that no one came out of unscathed: the vicious way people treated one another—especially minors—defied the imagination.
No one, except Bertrand Manien, who often boasted of his service record.
“Nice suit. And I see you got a haircut. There been a change in your life, Sharko? Maybe a girlfriend, after all this time?”
“What do you want?”
“I was just at Frédéric Hurault’s place. The poor guy lived not two miles from here. You two were practically neighbors, fancy that. So I figured I’d drop by.”
How long had he been waiting? How had he got in? Why had he come alone? And why the allusion to a girlfriend? Sharko tried to open his car door, but Manien flattened his palm over it.
“Two seconds. Why are you always in such a rush?”
The inspector felt his throat tighten. If Manien had camped out here, someone else could easily have followed him yesterday to Vivonne Penitentiary, or even broken into his apartment to look around. There was nothing more rotten or twisted than one cop pursuing another.
“What do you want?”
“You’ve scored a prime parking spot for this rust heap. I didn’t know you could still get an R21. Why don’t you keep it outside?”
“Because this spot exists and it’s mine.”
Manien played with silences, looks. He walked around the vehicle, as if he were about to strip it to nothing.
“Can you tell me where you were last Friday night?”
Sharko greeted a neighbor with a nod of his chin and let him move away. He lowered his voice:
“You keep coming after me. You’re here alone, at my house, at not even eight in the morning. This is becoming personal with you. Why aren’t you out questioning the whores and pimps who were in that neck of the woods? Why don’t you just do your job?”
“On the contrary, I am doing my job. So, I suppose you were in your apartment on Friday night, around midnight?”
“Nothing gets by you, that’s for sure.”
“And no one to vouch for you?”
“I’ll say it again, nothing gets by you.”
With a malicious smile, Manien pulled out a small notepad.
“You know what’s in here?”
“Search me—the address of your last pickup? Who was it this time, some Romanian teenager?”
“Don’t be obnoxious. You know, I’ve gotten hooked on quite a little game since you intentionally fucked up my crime scene. I said to myself, ‘Well, now, what if I tried to find out exactly who this Chief Inspector is, with his dark, mysterious past?’ The Hurault case was the perfect opportunity for me to look into you.”
“If you’ve got nothing better to do, I feel sorry for you.”
“Not at all. I’ve rather enjoyed it. So I chatted a bit with your building superintendent, and he told me something really interesting.”
He let linger an unwholesome silence, hoping to rouse Sharko’s curiosity and reveal a sign of weakness. But the inspector didn’t flinch. It was like the silent combat of two cobras gauging each other before the final attack. After a while, the detective went on with his story.
“Since he’s known you, the good super has almost always seen you use the outside parking lot, in front of the building, just a few yards from your entrance. If you had a BMW, I’d have understood why you’d suddenly want to stick it underground, safe from delinquents and rainstorms. But a clunker like this . . .”
Manien squatted down, touched the brushed concrete floor with the back of his hand.
“This concrete is like new. The guy in the next spot assured me the space had always been empty, so he parked on a diagonal because it was so narrow. But you went to see him last week and told him from now on you’d be taking the spot, and he had to keep off.”
Voices echoed in the underground lot. In the distance, a squeal of tires, a hiss of rubber. People were going to work. Sharko could again feel the tension mount.
“And?” he replied. “Would you like the results of my last physical? Given my condition, I have to avoid carrying anything heavy, and packs of milk or water are heavy. Look behind you, the elevator is right there, and it lets me out just opposite my door. If I park outside, I have to walk at least two hundred yards and climb a bunch of stairs to reach the building. I confess I’m having a hard time seeing what you’re getting at. It’s like you’re trying to drag me down, no matter what I do.”
Manien let out a huge puff of smoke, despite the detectors just a few feet away. The guy was dangerous, even crazy; Sharko had seen him bust suspects with hard kicks to the shins.
“The super was positive: your car didn’t budge from its spot on the night of the murder.”
“Not surprising, since I was at home.”
“You created the perfect alibi for yourself. Even days later, you continue to park here. You’re a genius, a real genius. To change your habits so thoroughly. Open the garage with the remote, wait, cruise around these narrow aisles in this boat that barely has power steering. When were you planning to drop the charade and start parking out in the fresh air again?”
Sharko finally opened his door. He kept his voice calm, assured.
“You didn’t hear what I just said, but no matter. It’s possible I’m mistaken, that I still don’t understand how cops work, but since when does having an airtight alibi make you guilty?”
Manien didn’t let go. Worse than a starving dog let loose on a bone.
“It’s a long way to the Vincennes woods. Since you left your heap here the night of the murder, you must have taken a cab or bus, or better still, the subway. There are surveillance cams in the subway.”
“That’s right. Go look through every camera in town. It’ll give you something to do.”
Puffing on his cigarette, Manien stepped back until he was in the middle of the aisle. Then he flicked away the butt, just under the Renault’s rear tire.
“Don’t bother seeing me to the door. Anyway, we’ll catch up at number thirty-six. And don’t worry, this whole business is just between you and me. I reassigned Leblond—he should be helping out with your investigation in just a few days. I certainly wouldn’t want my little conjectures to sully your . . . troubled reputation.”
His steps echoed in the silence, then faded away for good.
Sharko remained still for a long time, feeling as if he’d received a sock on the jaw.
As every Wednesday, he went by the cemetery, where he meditated for a while at his family’s grave. He couldn’t keep from thinking about what had just gone down with Manien.
A half hour later, he met Jacques Levallois at a café on the corner of Boulevard du Palais and Quai du Marché-Neuf. The place was hopping at that time of day. Pedestrians, cars, hordes of scooters rushing to work. The young lieutenant was a regular of the establishment, which he frequented just before going on duty. He was seated at a sidewalk table, in his thin tan cotton windbreaker, dipping a sugar cube into his espresso while watching the barges drift by along the Seine. His large scooter, a 250-cc with two front wheels, was parked at the curb. Sharko ordered a juice for himself and took a seat across from his partner, who gave him a quizzical look.
“Where’d that suit come from?” asked Levallois. “You did notice it’s a bit big on you, right?”
Sharko’s gaze was absorbed by the police vehicles already circulating around the front of the Palais de Justice, right next to number 36. Cops in uniform, judges in robes, suspects in handcuffs. A constant round, tons of cases to handle, solve, and stash in the archives. Overcrowded prisons, ever-increasing and ever more violent delinquency. What was the solution? Sharko snapped back to the present when he saw a hand waving in his field of vision. Levallois was leaning across the table.
“You’ve got a real problem, you know? It’s eight in the morning and you’re already asleep on your feet. Robillard told me yesterday evening that you’d been in touch with him. That you’d also called some of the prisons, the last ones on the list. Pretty ambitious for a day off . . .”
Sharko took a large swallow of coffee. Activate the internal machine, restart the boiler, whatever it took.
“I needed to know what our victim was hoping to get from those convicts. So, what’s new with the Louts case?”
“Okay, so, the tech guys struck out with the computers. Nothing interesting on the one at the animal center. On the other hand, they managed to find the thesis on the girl’s PC. The file was fragmented on the hard drive, but nothing permanently lost since the killer didn’t reformat the disc. They’ve given Clémentine Jaspar a complete copy of the text.”
“Excellent. Did you have a chance to look through it?”
“Not really, it’s more than a hundred pages, with all kinds of graphs and incomprehensible blah blah about biology. I’m meeting with Jaspar this morning so she can explain it to me. She’s had it since noon yesterday.”
“You’re learning to delegate, that’s good. And I can see from your eyes that that’s not all.”
Levallois flashed him a smile. Sharko wondered what his wife was like. Did he have kids? What were his hobbies and interests? The inspector had never asked, not wanting to get close to anyone. The less he knew, the better.
The younger man skimmed through his notepad.
“Not a whole lot of info on Louts herself. Something of a loner, as we’d figured. Her neighbors didn’t notice anything out of the ordinary; her friends said she’d dropped out of sight. For the last year, she’d cut herself off from the world to do her work. Her thesis adviser didn’t tell us much we didn’t already know. On the other hand, he practically fell off his chair when we told him about Louts’s trips to South America. He had no idea. As for her parents . . . you can imagine. They’re completely devastated, they don’t understand any of it. Eva was their only child.”
Sharko sighed sadly.
“They’ve lost everything and won’t ever get over it. Did they know about the trips?”
“Not even. They only saw her once or twice a month, for brief visits. Louts was very independent. And thanks to her parents, her bank account was always full. She was plenty able to indulge that kind of whim.”
He leafed through his notes.
“For the prisons, you checked with Robillard, you’re already up to speed . . .”
“Yes. Louts only interviewed violent criminals, all young, with large builds, who’d committed child murders or massacred people with knives—who had succumbed to murderous impulses that no one could explain. She always asked the same questions: did they use their left hand, were they born left-handed, and so on.”
“She was trying to determine if the fact of being left-handed had an influence on their life, their actions. Each time, she came away with photos of the prisoners’ faces. She claimed it was so she could reconstruct the interview later on, but it’s curious all the same. We haven’t found those photos. The killer might have taken them.”
“What about the lab tests?”
A sudden glint appeared in Levallois’s eyes.
“They called me late last night. It was about the tiny shard of enamel we found in the victim’s wound. DNA analysis confirmed that it was indeed from the tooth of a common chimpanzee.”
Levallois grabbed a paper napkin and wrote something down.
“You like puzzles, right?”
“Not first thing in the morning.”
He pushed the napkin toward the inspector. Sharko looked at what he’d jotted.
“‘2,000.’ What’s that mean?”
“It’s the age of the tooth fragment.”
Sharko, who was lifting his coffee cup, stopped short and put it back down.
“Are you saying that it was . . . ?”
“A fossil, exactly. The killer probably showed up at the primate center with a monkey skull from way in the past. He killed the victim after knocking her out with the paperweight, then pressed the jaw into her face. That’s what created the bite mark. It’s confirmed by the fact that the lab found no animal saliva mixed in with Louts’s blood.”
Sharko rubbed his chin. The setup was worthy of a horror film and told him they were after a killer who was precise, cunning, and perverse.
“That’s why Shery kept talking about a ‘monster,’” he deduced. “A terrifying monkey skull, which gradually became covered with Eva Louts’s blood.”
Levallois nodded.
“No doubt. The killer tried to disguise his crime by making us think it was an ape attack, and that might be where he slipped up. He probably had access, probably even owned, jaws, a skull, or perhaps even an entire fossil of a chimpanzee. He didn’t leave any fingerprints, but that scrap of tooth enamel gave him away. So we’re dealing with someone who has access to the world of paleontology. Maybe a conservator, collector, a scientist, or a museum employee. There can’t be that many places around here where someone can get information about this type of thing. You don’t find two-thousand-year-old skeletons on every street corner.”
“The natural history museum . . .”
“Precisely, in the Botanical Gardens. I was planning to go when it opens, right after I finish my java. I’ve arranged to meet Clémentine Jaspar. After the live monkeys at the primate center, it’s on to the fossilized mammoths at the museum.”
Sharko was beginning to develop a liking for this young fellow he barely knew. He downed his coffee in one gulp, then nodded toward the scooter.
“Finally, something solid. You’ve got an extra helmet, I hope?”