Read Barcelona 03 - The Sound of One Hand Killing Online
Authors: Teresa Solana,Peter Bush
Tags: #Fiction, #Mystery & Detective, #Action & Adventure, #International Mystery & Crime
“I reckon someone is playing jokes in bad taste on us,” Borja chipped in.
“No, no⦔ replied CecÃlia. “I am sure there is a good explanation. When Horaci comes this afternoon â”
“And, in the meantime, what are we going to eat, eh?” asked Xavier.
“I'm hungry!” said Sebastià .
“Me too!”
“And so am I!”
CecÃlia couldn't think what to do, and Borja suggested sending Iolanda off to get hamburgers and chips from the local McDonald's. Initially, CecÃlia wouldn't agree, arguing that the centre's philosophy was vegetarian, but Xavier called for a vote and Borja's motion was passed with ten votes for and two against, Mònica's and Ernest's.
“I want a double-decker with cheese,” ordered Marta.
“Me too,” said Mònica. Ernest gave her a withering look, indicating she'd betrayed the cause.
“And what are you two planning to do?” Valèria asked Xavier. “Are you leaving or staying?”
“We'll stay. At least until Horaci comes back and gives us back our four thousand euros.”
“Well, we're off right away!” said Ernest, who clearly wore the trousers in that relationship. “This place is a joke, and I'm still all itches!”
He and Carles walked out in a huff. CecÃlia didn't even try to stop them.
“I prefer chicken nuggets,” said Valèria. “And onion rings.”
“I don't want any gherkin on my burger. I hate gherkins⦔ CecÃlia added timidly.
Iolanda made a list and rushed off to a chorus of rumbling stomachs. While we were waiting for her to come back with our burgers, I took Borja into a corner and asked him, “You're not behind what's happening, are you?”
“Of course not. How could you think such a thing? Do you reckon I've gone mad or what?”
“I don't know, all this is very peculiar. What if somebody is trying to poison us, as Xavier said?”
“Silicone in the keyhole, itching powder, salty food⦠I think it's somebody playing tiresome practical jokes at our expense,” sighed Borja.
“Do you suspect anyone?”
“AlÃcia. She's the only one who's been behaving strangely.”
When Horaci walked into the dining room and saw the table covered in cold chips, packets of ketchup, glasses of Coca-Cola and burger boxes with the McDonald's logo, his mouth gaped so wide that any passing fly would certainly have paid him a visit. CecÃlia dragged him out of the room and explained the situation. A few minutes later, Horaci returned, apologized profusely and in a deadpan tone declared that CecÃlia would ensure we had a decent dinner that evening.
Xavier immediately squared up to him and demanded his money back, but Horaci took him aside and said something we didn't catch that seemed to calm him down.
We had an hour for a siesta and came back to the Samsara Room at four. Just in case, Iolanda ran the carpet-cleaner over the floor before we went in, and CecÃlia checked that everything was as it should be.
“I imagine,” said Horaci in best schoolteacher manner, “that one of you has been playing these little pranks on us. I don't want to know whom. I'd only ask the person if he or she is still with us to have a little respect for the people who have come here to learn. And now let's begin the meditation class.”
There were no more japes or incidents that afternoon, and, in the evening, as Horaci had indicated, we had to
make do with a vegetarian dinner like the previous evening's, and that made me long for the hamburgers we'd eaten at midday. This time I decided to try the sausages, which I didn't like, and had my second helping of spinach salad. Bernat, CecÃlia and Horaci dined on our table, and, as soon as we finished, Bernat said he was going home, and Horaci said he had things to see to in his office.
As we decided it wouldn't be very sensible to go down to the garden for a smoke because Horaci would see us from his office, Sebastià invited Marta, Borja and me for a whisky in his bedroom.
“Hey, this is like being back at school!” quipped Sebastià , taking the bottle out of his bag. “Who'd have thought I'd have to hide to smoke and drink a Scotch at my age?⦔
“Well, no one forced you to come,” I retorted. “You're here because you want to be!”
“It's not quite as simple as that,” said Sebastià , winking at me.
Borja and I exchanged glances: we'd been too hasty in making AlÃcia our main suspect. So, what if it turned out that this apparently benign, venerable old guy, fond of his whisky and tobacco, was behind all these annoying japes?
Guessing what was going through our minds, Sebastià simply smiled.
At a quarter past eight on Sunday morning, a distraught Borja dashed into my room.
“Eduard, I think you'd better get dressed.”
“What's the matter?” Breakfast was served at half past eight, and as I had had another bad night I had just got up and was still in my pyjamas.
“Horaci is dead. He's been murdered,” he said. “We just found him in his office, with his head split open.”
“Is this another joke?”
“If only.” Borja's distraught face confirmed it was no prank. “We've informed the police. The
mossos
are on their way,” he said as he lit a cigarette, his hands shaking.
“So what happened?”
“Sebastià heard me drinking a glass of water in the kitchen and came to see if I wanted a smoke in the garden. We went down in the lift, and when we got out, we saw that the walls and floor on the ground floor were covered in red blotches. At least, that's what Sebastià said, because, as you know, I â”
“Blood?”
“No, it's paint. You can still smell it. But we noticed Horaci's door was half open and went to investigate. We found him on the floor in the middle of his office, with his head bashed in.”
“Did you touch him to see whether he was still alive?”
“Sebastià did and said he was dead. I didn't have the⦠He phoned the
mossos
.”
“Couldn't it have been an accident? Perhaps he fell and hit his head⦔ I ventured, wanting Borja to have got it wrong.
“If you'd seen him, you wouldn't be asking. No, Eduard, they did Horaci in.”
People were shouting and running in the corridor. We both peered around the door and saw residents in pyjamas rushing frantically down the stairs. They had just heard the news.
“I'll get dressed,” I said, going to my wardrobe.
“I'm going to change.” Borja was still in his kimono. “Better put your own clothes on, bro, I reckon our time at Zen Moments is over!”
Borja shut the door behind him as he left. I hurriedly dressed and stuffed my belongings in my bag that I put on the futon. Before going out into the corridor, I washed my face in cold water to wake myself up, but didn't bother to shave. My brother was waiting for me in his new jeans and designer shirt. He was chatting to Valèria and the disgruntled couple. They, too, were in their everyday clothes.
“They've also put graffiti on the first floor,” said Borja, turning round to me. “They've made a real mess.”
“Does the graffiti mean anything?”
“I'm no graffiti expert, but from what I could see they were just meaningless blotches,” said Xavier.
“Maybe they are the symbols of a Satanic sect. Or squatters,” said his wife, trying to embrace her husband. He wriggled away.
In the meantime Marta and CecÃlia were trying to calm Mònica down at the end of the corridor. She had an attack of hysteria and couldn't stop sobbing.
“Calm down. Take deep breaths. The police will be here any moment and then you can go,” I heard her say. Just then Iolanda came out of the kitchen and took her a cup of steaming tea.
“What we need is a cognac,” announced Borja. “Pity I left my flask at home!”
“I heard that. It's the first sensible thing I've heard since I arrived here,” said Xavier, shaking his head.
“Why don't we go downstairs?” I suggested.
Borja and I went downstairs, followed by Xavier, his wife and Valèria. When we reached the first floor, we stopped to contemplate the spectacle offered by walls, doors and floor. Xavier was right: they were just blotches, I imagined made by one of those spray cans graffiti artists use. They didn't represent any symbol or seem to inscribe any kind of message. It was as if the entire act of vandalism was about making the biggest mess possible.
“It's the same on the ground floor,” said Borja. And he asked me quietly, “Is this paint red as well?” Borja is colour-blind and can't tell red from green, but for some reason or other wants to keep it a secret.
We walked down to the ground floor, where everyone had spontaneously assembled. The only person I didn't see was AlÃcia. The same splashes of paint were on the floor and walls, and I saw that the reception counter and Buddha in the entrance had also fallen victims to the spray. Sebastià was blocking the entrance to Horaci's office to stop anyone from going in and disturbing anything. Borja preferred to keep his distance, though I stuck my nose round the door to confirm that, in effect, his death had been no accident. The small, bloodstained statue of the Buddha the doctor kept on his desk was next to the body, with a tuft of hair stuck to it.
“What about Bernat? Where's Bernat? Somebody go and get him. He's a doctor, isn't he?” I heard Carme say.
“He never sleeps here,” said CecÃlia, who'd just come down with the two younger women.
“Besides, Dr Comes is no medical doctor,” added Iolanda, unable to hide the satisfaction she derived from making such a revelation.
“What do you mean, he's no medical doctor? It clearly says âDoctor Comes' on his door!” growled Xavier.
“He's a doctor of philosophy,” CecÃlia went on uneasily.
“That's right. He's not a medical doctor,” the young girl reiterated in case anyone still was in doubt.
I heard shocked mumbling all around me.
“What cheek!”
“This is a fraud!”
“I want to go home! Someone open the door!”
“You do realize they could have killed any of us?”
Luckily the
mossos
arrived before there was an outbreak of collective hysteria. As the steel door that gave access to the precinct from the street was shut, CecÃlia went to the control panel in the lobby to enter the code and let them in. After that, she opened the security lock so they could enter the building.
“Whoever did it didn't force the door,” I observed. “They must have got in somewhere else. What did you and Sebastià do the other day to get into the garden?” I asked Borja.
“There's one of those emergency doors behind the lift that open inwards,” he replied. “You just need to wedge so it doesn't close, because you can't open those doors from outside.”
As soon as CecÃlia gave them access, the
mossos
burst in like a whirlwind and asked us to stand to one side. The graffiti was the first thing they noticed, though they immediately went into the office to make sure Horaci was dead and not in need of medical help. Then one of the police, who was in plain clothes, introduced herself as Deputy Inspector
Alsina-Graells from the murder squad and asked about the sprayed paint.
“They did it last night,” CecÃlia explained. “There wasn't any when I went to bed, at around eleven.”
“And who are you?” asked the Deputy Inspector, who seemed very young, taking a notebook out of her pocket.
“My name is CecÃlia Ros, and I'm the yoga teacher. I was in charge of this group this weekend,” she added, pointing at us.
“How many people are in the building?” she asked.
“Twelve residents plus the girl responsible for the meals and myself. Dr Comes will be here later on,” she answered.
“And who is Dr Comes?”
“He's our specialist in Bach flower remedies. He should be here mid-morning to give a talk.”
“He's no doctor!” shouted a voice that didn't belong to the girl who ran the kitchen.
“He is a doctor of philosophy,” CecÃlia said to clarify the situation. Her cheeks blushed deep red.
“Ah!” was the police officer's only response.
A group of four plain-clothes
mossos
, feet wrapped in plastic bags, walked towards Dr Bou's office. Another group in uniform cordoned off the area with plastic tape and created a kind of passage from the entrance to Horaci's office.
“So then, tell me what happened,” barked the Deputy Inspector.
Sebastià hurriedly introduced himself and explained how he and Borja discovered the graffiti and the body. He also described the string of incidents from the previous day. Sebastià , who hadn't moved from the office in all that time, was still wearing his white kimono, and the Deputy Inspector was staring at him in bemused fashion.
“But we didn't touch anything,” Sebastià assured her. “And we didn't let anyone in.”
“And where is this Borja character?” asked the Deputy Inspector, giving us all a look-over.
“This time I can't wriggle out of it!” whispered Borja, stepping forward and raising his hand like a good boy at school.
Borja repeated more or less what Sebastià had said.
“Is anyone still upstairs?” asked the officer, staring at the ceiling.
We looked around, checking that nobody was missing. I saw the two girls who were weepy-eyed friends, the unhappy married couple, Sebastià , CecÃlia, and the girl who ran the kitchenâ¦
“AlÃcia isn't here,” I heard a voice say.
“Yes, AlÃcia is missing,” said someone else.
“Is she the only one in the group not here?” asked the Deputy Inspector.
“Yes,” CecÃlia confirmed, doing a recount of the faces present.
The Deputy Inspector simply raised an eyebrow and a group of
mossos
went up the stairs while the rest of us stayed in the lobby and answered questions. A few minutes later, we saw a
mosso
come down looking scared and carrying a travel bag I was very familiar with. In his wake came three policemen with AlÃcia in her nightdress, her hair uncombed.