Выбрать главу

'You've changed, Inspector Jefe.'

'Call me Javier.'

'Your style is different.'

'I cut my hair. I've given up suits. There's been a relaxation of standards.'

'You're not so intense,' she said.

'Oh, I am. I've just realized that people don't like it, so I hide it. I've learnt to keep smiling.'

'I had a friend whose mother gave her the advice: "Keep moving, keep smiling." It works,' said Consuelo. 'We live in an age of glibness, Javier. When was the last time you had a serious conversation?'

'I have them all the time.'

'With someone other than yourself.'

'I've been seeing a clinical psychologist.'

'Of course you have, after what you've been through,' she said. 'But that's not conversation, is it?'

'Very little of it,' he said. 'Sometimes it's like an absurd self-indulgence, other times vomiting.'

She snatched at the cigarettes on the table, lit one up and sank back satisfied.

'I'm annoyed with you,' she said, pointing at him with the lit cigarette. 'You never called me and we were supposed to have dinner… remember?'

'You moved house.'

'Does that mean you tried?'

'I haven't had much time,' he said, smiling.

'Smiling doesn't work with me,' she said. 'I know what it means. You'll have to learn some new strategies.'

'Things have been coming to a head,' he said.

'In the therapy?'

'Yes, that, and I have legal problems with my sister Manuela. My half sister.'

'She's the acquisitive one, I seem to remember.'

'You've read all the scandal.'

'You'd have to have been in a coma to avoid it,' she said. 'So what does Manuela want?'

'Money. She wanted me to write a book about my life with Francisco, including all the journals, and my take on the murder case that brought it all to light. Or rather she wanted me to work with her journalist boyfriend, who would ghost the book for me. I refused. She got angry. Now she's working on proving that I'm not the rightful heir to Francisco Falcón's house, that I am not his son… You see how it goes.'

'You have to fight her.'

'She has very different mental processes. She thinks how Francisco used to think, which was probably why he never liked her,' said Falcón. 'She's a manipulator and a public relations expert which, combined with her energy, ambition and wallet, is lethal.'

'I'll buy the dinner.'

'It's not that bad. It's just something that adds to the background pressure of life.'

'What you need is some foreground pleasure, Javier,' she said. 'That brother of yours, the bull breeder, Paco. Is he any help to you?'

'We get on well. There's been no change there, but this kind of thing is not his strength. He needs Manuela, too. She's his vet and one word to the authorities about any possible threat of BSE in his herd and he'd be finished.'

'You are remarkably sane.'

Thank you,' he said, and decided not to tell her that it was probably the drugs.

'But, having disdained it, I now think you are in need of some glibness and fun.'

Silence. Falcón tapped his notebook. A sad inevitability compressed her lips. She smoked it away.

'Bring on the questions, Inspector Jefe,' she said, beckoning him to her.

'You can still call me Javier.'

'Well, Javier, at least you've learnt a few things.'

'Like what?'

'How to ease somebody… or rather how to ease a suspect, into an interrogation.'

'Do you think you're a suspect?' he asked.

'I'd like to be one so that we can relive the detective/suspect dynamic,' she said drily.

'And how do you know it was murder?'

'Why are you here, Javier?'

'I investigate any death that is not by natural causes.'

'Did Rafael die of a heart attack?'

Falcón shook his head.

'So it's murder.'

'Or a suicide pact.'

'Pact?' she said, stubbing out the cigarette. 'What pact?'

'We found Sra Vega dead upstairs, suffocated by her pillow.'

'Oh my God,' she said, looking over her shoulder.

'Mario.'

'Sr Vega had drunk a litre of drain cleaner, which was probably either boosted or poisoned, or he'd taken pills beforehand. We'll have to wait for the Médico Forense's report.'

'I can't believe it.'

'You mean you didn't think he was the suicidal type?'

'He appeared so connected to life. His work, the family… especially Mario. He'd just bought a new car. They were going away on holiday…'

'Was Sr Vega there when you called last night about Mario?'

'I spoke to Lucia. I assumed he was there but I don't know.'

'Where were they going on holiday?' asked Falcón.

'Normally they go to El Puerto de Santa Maria but this time they thought Mario was old enough so they'd rented a house in La Jolla near San Diego and they were going to take him to Sea World and Disneyland.'

'Florida would have been closer.'

'Too humid for Lucia,' she said, lighting another cigarette and shaking her head, staring at the ceiling. 'We've got no idea what goes on in people's heads.'

'His lawyer didn't mention any of this.'

'He might not have known about it. Rafael was the type who kept his life compartmentalized. He didn't like overlaps, one thing bleeding into another. Everything had to be separate and in its place. I got all the holiday stuff from Lucia.'

'So he was a control freak?'

'Like a lot of successful businessmen.'

'You met him through Raúl?'

'He was very supportive after Raúl was murdered.' 'He let Mario sleep over?'

'He liked my boys, too.'

'Was it a regular thing, Mario sleeping over?'

'At least once a week. Normally on a weekday night or over the weekend in the summer when I have more time,' she said. 'The only thing he wouldn't allow was for Mario to go in the pool.'

'Surprising that Sr Vega didn't have a pool.'

There was one there but he.filled it in and turfed it over. He didn't like them.'

'Did anybody else know about the arrangement with Mario?'

'They might have if they were nosey enough,' she said. 'Don't you find all this incredibly tedious, Javier?'

'In my experience it's through the minutiae of everyday life that you find out about how people really live. The small details lead to bigger things,' he said. 'Some years ago I was beginning to find it dull, but now, strangely, I find it quite riveting.'

'Since you restarted your own life?'

'Sorry?'

'I didn't mean to be so intrusive.'

'I'd nearly forgotten… but that's your style, isn't it, Dona Consuelo?'

'You can dispense with the Dona, Javier,' she said. 'And I'm sorry. It was a thought that should have remained a thought.'

'I come across a lot of people who think things about me,' he said. 'Because of my story I've become public property. The only reason I don't get accosted more is that people have too many questions. They don't know where to start.'

'All I meant was that, from my own experience, when the foundations of your life collapse it's the everyday things that begin to matter. They hold things together,' she said. 'I've had a lot of rebuilding to do myself since we last met.'

'New life, new home… new lover?' he asked.

'I deserved that,' she said.

'It's just my job.'

'But was that a personal inquiry or solely for the purposes of your investigation?'

'Let's say both,' said Falcón.

'I have no lover and… if this is where you're leading to, Rafael was not interested in me.'

He played that back in his mind and found no nuances.

'Let's get back to the minutiae,' he said. 'When did you last speak to the Vegas?'

'I spoke to Lucia at about eleven p.m. to tell her that Mario had fallen asleep and I'd put him to bed. There was some mothers' talk and that was it.'

'Was it any longer than usual?'

Consuelo blinked as her eyes filled. Her mouth crumpled around the cigarette. She spat the smoke out, swallowed hard.