‘That he lived here, alone, and that he had plenty of money.’
‘Plenty of money, yes,’ agreed Retancourt, looking at the tapestries on the walls, and the baby grand which took up a third of the room. ‘But alone? Surely you don’t get mas sacred like this if you’re really alone in the world.’
‘That’s if it’s him at all, Violette. But we’re nearly certain about that. The hair looks the same as we found in the bathroom and bedroom. So if it was him, his name was Pierre Vaudel, seventy-eight, former journalist, specialised in legal affairs.’
‘Ah.’
‘Yes, but according to the son, he didn’t have any serious enemies. Just a few disputed cases and some vague grudges.’
‘Where’s the son?’
‘On his way by train – he lives in Avignon.’
‘He didn’t say anything else?’
‘Mordent says he didn’t burst into tears.’
Dr Roman, the police pathologist, who had returned to work after a long time off sick, came and stood in front of Adamsberg.
‘No point trying to get the family to identify him. We’ll do it by DNA.’
‘Obviously.’
‘This is the first time I’ve ever seen you sit down on a case. Some reason you’re not standing?’
‘Because I’m sitting, Roman, that’s all I want to do. What would you deduce from this carnage?’
‘Some body parts haven’t been entirely crushed with a heavy implement. There are recognisable sections of thighs, arms, just bashed about a bit. But the murderer took special care to demolish the head, hands and feet. They’re completely shattered. The teeth too. It’s a very thorough job.’
‘Have you ever seen anything like this?’
‘Sometimes you get faces and hands being obliterated to avoid identification. But that’s got much rarer since we have DNA checking. I’ve seen plenty of bodies that’ve been damaged or burnt, and so have you. But such a ferocious way of dismembering the body? No, it’s quite beyond comprehension.’
‘Where does it take us, Roman? Insanity?’
‘Sort of. It’s as if he went on repeating gestures over and over until he could do no more, as if he were afraid of leaving something undone. You know, it’s a bit like when you go back ten times to make sure you’ve locked the door. He didn’t only crush everything, bit by bit, and started again more than once, he chucked the pieces all over the place. No one fragment ended up next to another, even the toes aren’t together. It’s almost as if he was scattering corn in a field. Did he think there was a chance the old man could come to life again, or what? Don’t ask me to try and reassemble the body, it’s impossible.’
‘I agree,’ said Adamsberg. ‘He was out of control, panicking, in some kind of endless rage.’
‘There’s no such thing as an endless rage,’ his colleague,
Adamsberg stood up, shaking his head, and stepped on to a platform, then on to the next, carefully. He was the only one moving. The other officers had stopped to listen, standing still on their own platforms like so many pawns, as a key piece moved on the chessboard.
‘Normally, no, Mordent, but here, yes. This man’s rage, or panic or madness, goes beyond what we can see, taking us into unknown territory.’
‘No,’ the
‘Well, what is it then?’
‘Hard labour, obstinacy, calculation. Maybe even setting up a scene for us.’
‘Impossible, Mordent, nobody could fake this.’ Adamsberg crouched down to look at the floor. ‘He was wearing boots? Big rubber boots?’
‘Yes, that’s what we thought,’ Lamarre confirmed. ‘Looks like a sensible precaution, given what he was going to do. The soles have left some good prints on the carpet. And there are some fragments of stuff from the ridges in the boots, mud or something.’
Mordent murmured ‘hard labour’ again, and stepped diagonally like a bishop, while Adamsberg moved two paces forward and one to the side, accomplishing a knight’s move.
‘What did he use to do the crushing?’ he asked. ‘Even with a heavy club or something, he couldn’t do that on the carpet.’
‘We’ve got a patch on the carpet hardly stained,’ Justin pointed out, ‘a rectangular shape. He might have put something on a block of wood or some metal plate, to act as an anvil.’
‘That’s a lot of heavy equipment to carry around: a chainsaw, a club, a block of wood. Plus spare clothes and shoes.’
‘You could get it all into a big sack. I think he must have changed outside in the back garden. There are some specks of blood on the grass, where he must have put down bloodstained clothes.’
‘And now and again,’ Adamsberg remarked, ‘he sat down for a rest. He chose this armchair.’
Adamsberg looked at the chair, its carved arms and its pink velvet seat now stained with blood.
‘That’s a very fancy chair,’ he said.
‘That,’ said Mordent, ‘is not just a very fancy chair, it’s Louis XIII, no less. Early seventeenth century.’
‘All right,
Mordent made another bishop’s move, away from Adamsberg. The
‘Why are we saying “he”?’ asked Justin conscientiously. ‘A woman could have brought in the material if she parked near enough.’
‘This is a man’s work, a man’s mind. I don’t see an ounce of woman in this. And look at the size of the boots.’
‘The victim’s clothes,’ said Retancourt, pointing to a pile on a chair. ‘He didn’t tear them off, or rip them up. They’ve just been taken off, as if he were putting the man to bed. That’s unusual too.’
‘Because he wasn’t in a rage,’ said Mordent from the corner to which he had retreated.
‘Did he take them all off?’
‘Except the underpants,’ said Lamarre.
‘That’s because he didn’t want to see,’ said Retancourt. ‘He took the victim’s clothes off so as not to foul up the saw, but he couldn’t bring himself to strip the man naked. The idea upset him.’
‘In that case,’ said Roman, ‘at least we can say he wasn’t a doctor or nurse or a paramedic. I’ve stripped hundreds of bodies in my time, doesn’t bother me.’
Adamsberg had put on gloves and was rolling between his fingers one of the little balls of earth from the boots.
‘There’s a horse somewhere,’ he said. ‘This is horse manure, stuck to the boots.’
‘How can you tell?’ asked Justin.
‘By the smell.’
‘So should we start looking for people who work with horses, racehorse trainers, stud farms, riding stables?’
‘Come off it,’ said Mordent. ‘Thousands of people go near horses, the killer could have got that on his boots just walking down any road in the country.’
‘Well, that’s already something,
‘He should be at HQ in less than an hour. He’s called Pierre, like his father.’
Adamsberg looked at his two watches.
‘I’ll send you a relief team at midday. Retancourt, Mordent, Lamarre and Voisenet, you deal with collecting