The Stray. Alessio Chiadini Beuri

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The Stray - Alessio Chiadini Beuri

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I take a look at the report?"

      "If it's okay with Matthews."

      "Hey, come on! For old time's sake!"

      "You're getting old. They weren't so good."

      "Piss off."

      "Get out!" with a gentle nudge Peterson pointed the way.

      "Don't make me put you to sleep."

      "You've always been good with words."

      "I punched the mayor in the face, don't think I'd lose any sleep over you."

      "You sound frustrated, I understand, but you're picking on the wrong man. Your wife wasn't my type."

      Behind Mason's fist, Peterson's face crumpled into a grimace of pain. Stunned, the detective staggered and darted to the side to retreat from a possible double. But Mason did not strike again, picked up his gun, which had escaped from his former partner's hands, and holstered it. He adjusted his hat and watched Peterson spit and wipe his mouth with the back of his hand. He then motioned for the two agents who had come to his aid to escort Mason out of the building. Mason did not resist.

      "If I let you go this time, it's only because of Adele," Peterson shouted before the precinct doors slammed shut.

      Back when real men didn't still reek of imported tobacco and bloody fish-egg canapés, the likes of Mason got to decide the good and the bad. Now he was just a man on the pavement, the renegade bastard of a town that had purged its sins and disowned its rebellious sons.

      Stone adjusted his collar and slipped into the alley, engulfed in the dust of a world everyone thought was dead. The iron groan of an old door tore away the echo of his footsteps.

      "Don't kid yourself, old man: I barely heard it." Peterson.

      "Your Irish pig face lies but your eyes say you cried like a little girl."

      Mason's wife's name was Wendy, not Adele.

      And that's what she still calls herself, wherever she wants to take her ambitious ass. Los Angeles? Northern California? A sleazy small-town casino?

      Adele's was the old Polish bar next to the district. In fact, in those days it was nothing but a lousy dump full of memories no one wanted. A cop bar when cops weren't supposed to go near a bottle of booze except to get it down the drain.

      "Low profile." Peterson beckoned him through the back door from which he was drenched in cologne. He'd be in trouble if Captain Martelli or Matthews found out he was spilling the details of a case to a first-rate undesirable like himself.

      He took him to Dr Tollins, and to Elizabeth.

      "When I looked in the mirror this morning, I swore to myself that that would be the last horrible thing of the day. Now I understand why my father never made any promises. Hello, Doc."

      "Always a pleasure, Stone."

      "Our private detective would like to see someone," Peterson said.

      "Do you have an appointment?" Doc acted as their cicerone among the many tables he was working on. Pale silhouettes under white sheets from which nothing but feet and name tags sprouted.

      "The lady said she'd wait for him," cop humour.

      "Elizabeth Perkins." cut Mason short.

      Doc walked over to the table on his left and discovered the bluish body of a young woman, caught in her most beautiful dawn.

      "Female, 21 years old. Height five feet seven inches, weighing approximately..."

      "Skip the introductions, Doc."

      "Arms have obvious bruising."

      "Fingers." Mason said aloud.

      "She was forcibly restrained," Peterson said.

      "Perceptive as usual."

      "The location of the bruises tells us that the attacker was facing her," the coroner continued.

      "Signs of forced entry?" Mason turned to Peterson.

      "None. When they found her she was on the floor. Only her blouse and skirt on. On the table two used glasses."

      "Liquor?"

      "In one was water or brew, in the other a light tea. Doc has already ruled out possible traces of poison or narcotic."

      "The rest of his things?"

      "Scattered all over the living room."

      "Was she raped?" asked Doc.

      "There's nothing to suggest rape."

      "An angry lover?" proposed Mason.

      "A husband who came home early from work?" suggested Peterson.

      "There'd be a body missing," Mason pointed out.

      "Maybe the boyfriend, tired of sharing her, decided to come out of the closet and she threatened to leave him."

      "The lover in love theory? Peterson, how humiliating!"

      "Who can say that?! Everyone seems to be going crazy these days. And without alcohol, there's nothing else to keep human impulses in check."

      "You look better since you've been on tonic water, Pete. The 18th Amendment thinks about your health."

      "As if Prohibition didn't triple the workload," he complained to himself.

      "Are there any witnesses?"

      "The body was discovered by the caretaker at 6.45pm. The door of the flat was half-opened. The man saw two men enter the building: the first went up at about 4 p.m. but, as he had been there before, he didn't ask any questions; the second, a notary, asked about the Perkins' interior at about 5.30 p.m."

      "Have you identified them yet?"

      "They're working on it."

      "What about the husband?"

      "Samuel Perkins, a Sunshine Cab driver, is..."

      "Disappeared, I guess. When was he last seen?"

      "What a lovely reunion! Pity he wasn't invited: I would have brought something." Standing in the doorway of the morgue towered the burly homicide detective Matthews. Peterson's hand went immediately to Mason's chest as the newcomer advanced toward them. This was neither the time nor the place to let tempers flare.

      "I came to say hello to Doc and tell him a few cheerful stories. Now that he's a father, he needs more constructive anecdotes than the evolutionary cycle of maggots in corpses," Mason improvised, throwing a smile at Doc, who caught it and began to shake his head vigorously.

      "Yeah, congratulations Doc. Take care with that creature: one creepy family member is more than enough!" barked Matthews, giving the doctor half a sidelong glance. Mason did not spare

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