Entanglement. - Part 12
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Part 12

"I have no idea. I'm just thinking about it," replied Szacki, rubbing the bridge of his nose with his thumb. He needed that cola. "No, not yet. Let's hold off until Monday. There's something I have to check."

Kuzniecow didn't insist, but Szacki knew he had a different view. And who knows, maybe he was right. Szacki didn't want to decide right now to raid the flats of all the suspects. He felt it wouldn't be right.

Finally he gave up on the cola and devoted the next three hours to finding an expert witness who was a specialist on Family Constellation Therapy. While he was about it he noticed that the name of Cezary Rudzki featured on the list of experts. In fact he was the first person to be suggested to him. Only after a few calls to acquaintances at the psychiatry inst.i.tute on Sobieski Street did he get a different name.

"A pretty eccentric guy, but once you accept that he's incredibly interesting," a familiar psychiatrist told him. Pressed by Szacki, he refused to disclose what this "eccentricity" involved, but just kept repeating that Szacki would have to see for himself.

"I'd just like to see the transcript of that meeting," he said at the end of the conversation, and started to sn.i.g.g.e.r like a madman.

Doctor, heal thyself, thought Szacki. As he usually did whenever he had to deal with psychologists and psychiatrists.

The therapist was called Jeremiasz Wrobel. Szacki called, briefly described the case and made an appointment for Friday. The conversation was short, but he didn't get the impression that he was talking to a particularly nutty person.

VII.

His study at home was predominantly in the office style of the 1970s, but it didn't bother him, quite the contrary. Sometimes he even sought out some gadget or other from that era on the Internet as a new exhibit for his museum. Lately he'd bought the Great Universal Encyclopedia published by PWN in the 1960s - thirteen volumes of it - and he was considering the original Soviet edition of The History of the Second World War in twelve volumes. Editions like these looked good in his gla.s.s-fronted bookcase.

As well as the bookcase, there was a large French-polished desk, a lamp with a green shade, an ebonized telephone and a black leather armchair with a chrome frame. There was oak parquet, a thick wine-red rug and dark panelling on the walls. He hadn't been able to resist hanging a rack of antlers above the door. Dreadful kitsch, but it suited this interior to perfection.

Only he was allowed in the study. He did the cleaning in here himself, dusted and washed the windows. The door was secured by one mighty lock, for which there were only two keys. One he always had on him, the other was kept in a safe at the office on Stawki Street. And the point of it all was not that he kept valuable objects or secret doc.u.ments in his study, though undoubtedly a search conducted in this room would have revealed facts capable of damaging the careers of several people in the public eye. What he was concerned about was privacy; about having his own place, where no one - not his wife, or his lover, or his children, who came to visit less and less - would have access.

Now he was sitting by the window in a deep armchair upholstered in dark-green corduroy, drinking tea as he read Norman Davies's book about Wrocaw and waited for the phone to ring. He was feeling calm, and yet he couldn't concentrate on his reading. For the third time he started the same paragraph, but his thoughts kept drifting away to Henryk and the man conducting the inquiry. He was keen to know what Prosecutor Teodor Szacki had come up with.

Finally the phone rang.

"It's Igor. I know everything. Shall I fax you the lot?"

"Don't go over the top, I've got more interesting things to read," he said, marking his place in Davies's book with a postcard he got from his daughter living in Santa Fe, and put it down on a coffee table next to his chair. "You can summarize."

"The statement of facts is the statement of facts. Nothing we don't know about. Henryk plus the therapist plus the three patients. The patients had never met before; the therapist had been giving Henryk individual treatment for six months. They got to the place on Friday..."

"Don't witter on. Hypotheses?"

"First one: Henryk was murdered accidentally by someone committing theft by breaking and entering."

"That doesn't concern us. Next?"

"The murderer is one of the people taking part in the therapy or the therapist. Each of them had the opportunity, but none of them - or so it appears from the evidence gathered so far - had a motive that could justify committing murder. At least not a direct one. Some of the circ.u.mstantial evidence implies that the therapy was a very painful process. Under the influence of these emotions, one of the patients could have taken Henryk's life."

"What sort of bulls.h.i.t is that?" he bristled. "People kill because they're drunk or for money. And they said this Szacki wasn't bad. Oh well, yet another disappointment. So what's our white-haired prosecutor planning to do?"

He had to wait while Igor found the relevant bit.

"He's planning to ask the opinion of an expert on the therapy techniques applied in the case of the deceased and to investigate his professional and social environment, to confirm or exclude any previous contact with the witnesses. Apart from that, routine activities, blah blah blah."

He sucked in air noisily.

"Yes, that's worse."

"I wouldn't get too upset about it," said Igor.

"Why not?"

"Henryk wasn't particularly sociable or professionally active, and he only met up with us from time to time by chance. They'll question a few of his friends, maybe some of Polgrafex's clients. I don't think it can be a danger for us. We'll keep a finger on the pulse and keep getting up-to-date information from the police and the prosecutor's. Apart from anything, we've got more important, much more complicated matters to see to."

He agreed with Igor. They couldn't devote a lot of strength and resources to the Telak affair. And as it all implied that the case would fall apart at the seams and the only result would be another "perpetrator unknown" in the Ministry of Justice statistics, there was nothing to worry about.

5.

Thursday, 9th June 2005.

In j.a.pan, Triumph presents the ecological bra - not only can you join the cups together to make a model of the world, but it's totally biodegradable. After a few years the shoulder straps change into compost. Research shows that thirty-seven per cent of Poles prefer plain ice cream, twenty-five per cent vanilla, and twenty-two per cent chocolate. Meanwhile in Africa 25,000 people are dying of hunger and lack of water every day, Bono tells the head of the European Commission. Polish State Railways are under threat of strikes. The unions agree to restructuring with a human face, not the kind that causes "terror and poverty". Cimoszewicz is "considering a change of mind", Kaczyski I (leader of the "Law & Justice" Party) is seeking to correct a report that said he called MP Zygmunt Wrzodak a "tramp", and now Kaczyski II (the Mayor of Warsaw) is banning the equality rallies; h.o.m.os.e.xuals are calling for civic disobedience. In the penultimate round of the First League, Legia beat GKS Katowice, who are being relegated to the Second League, and Dariusz Dziekanowski makes it into the club's Gallery of Fame for playing 101 matches and scoring forty-five goals. The city guard start patrolling the Old Town in Melex electric vehicles, prompting even more ridicule than usual, and the police catch the murderer of a twenty-eight-year-old woman. The couple met on the Internet, and after killing her the man stole a computer, which the police found at the home where he lived with his pregnant wife. For lack of funds the hospital on Banach Street has started sending away patients with cancer untreated. Maximum temperature: sixteen degrees; cold and cloudy, but no rain.

I.

Hard-boiled egg in tartare sauce, beefed up with a large portion of green peas. No lawyer in Warsaw was unfamiliar with this particular delicacy, a cult item on the menu at the Warsaw Regional Court canteen.

Teodor Szacki took two helpings, for himself and Weronika, put them on a plastic tray next to two instant coffees and took it over to their table. He missed the old court canteen - a large hall that stank of fried food and cheap cigarettes, its walls gone yellow with age, filth and grease, thirty feet high, full of small metal tables, reminiscent of a provincial station waiting room. A magical place - going up the high steps leading into the canteen had been like looking through a microscope at a section of the main artery of the judiciary. The judges - usually up in the little gallery, having a two-course lunch, on their own. The lawyers - usually having coffee together, sitting with their legs crossed, greeting each other sincerely and at the same time casually, blithely, as if they'd dropped in at the club for a cigar and a gla.s.s of whisky. Witnesses from the underworld, big shots and emaciated women in evening make-up - probably feeling just the same here as anywhere. Guys bowed over a piece of meat, women sipping mineral water from the bottle. The victims' families - grey, sad, by some miracle always finding the most wretched little tables, staring suspiciously at everyone around them. The prosecutors - eating alone, whatever and however, just to get it over and done with. Knowing they couldn't get anything done on time, that whatever they did it'd be too little, there'd always be something left for next day, which was already planned out from start to finish; infuriated by every recess the judge ordered, too short to do anything and too long to bear in peace. The court reporters - too many people at one small table, with no room for all the coffee cups, cigarette packets, ashtrays and plates of tongue. Too noisy, swapping jokes and anecdotes, now and then jumping up to greet a familiar lawyer, draw him aside and whisper questions to him. The rest would cast glances in his direction, curious whether he knew something they didn't. "Any news?" they'd ask when their colleague returned, knowing he'd reply with the invariable joke: "Oh, nothing special, you'll read about it in tomorrow's paper."

There was none of that atmosphere in the new canteen, where everything seemed kind of ordinary. Weronika had crushed him recently by claiming it felt good in here because the atmosphere was like at the City Council buffet - what could be good about that?

He sat down next to his wife and put the coffee and egg in front of her. She was looking pretty. Suit, make-up, sheer wine-red blouse with a low neckline. When they met in the evening, she'd be wearing a T-shirt, slippers from Ikea and a mask of all-day tiredness.

"Christ, what a dreadful case," she said, adding cream to her coffee from a plastic container.

"Bierut again?" he asked. Most of the cases Weronika conducted concerned property that people had been deprived of after the war by force of a decree issued by the Communist president, Bolesaw Bierut. Now they were reclaiming their tenement houses, but if in the meantime several of the communal flats had been sold to the tenants, the owner de facto regained only part of the building. So then he sued the city for compensation. Each case of this kind was a boring lottery; sometimes by using legal loopholes you could shift the obligation to the state's cost, rather than the city's, sometimes you could postpone it, but you could hardly ever win.

"No, unfortunately not." She took off her jacket and hung it on the back of the chair. Her blouse had very short sleeves, he could see the scar from her TB inoculation, and suddenly he felt a ma.s.sive urge for s.e.x. "The city awards special grants to hundreds of organizations of various kinds, which they have to account for later on. A year ago we awarded a small sum to a youth club in the Praga district that takes care of children with ADHD and various other conditions. Mainly children from Praga families, as you can imagine. So we got their report, where it says as plain as day that they used the money to pay the electricity bill, or else they'd have been cut off, although they got the funding for therapeutic activities."

"It's hard to conduct therapeutic activities without electricity," he commented.

"Jesus, Teo, you don't have to explain that to me. But rules are rules. As they used the grant wrongly, I have to write and tell them to return the money..."

"Which of course they won't, because they haven't got any."

"So then we have to sue them. Obviously, we'll win, we'll send round a bailiff, the bailiff won't get anywhere; it's all a complete sham. Of course the teachers from the place have already been to see me, they begged and pleaded, and soon I'll be doing the same in the courtroom. But I really can't do a thing." She buried her face in her hands. "Rules are rules."

He leaned forward, took her hand and kissed her on the palm.

"But you do look very s.e.xy," he said.

"What a perv you are. Give me a rest," she said, laughing, and wound her legs round his. "Best time for s.e.x, isn't it?" she murmured. "This evening we won't feel like it any more."

"We'll make ourselves some coffee and we'll see. Maybe it'll work."

"I'll make a big jug of it," she said, running a finger along the edge of her blouse, revealing more cleavage.

"Just stay in that blouse."

"Don't you like my teddy-bear T-shirt?"

He couldn't help laughing. She was the person closest to him, and he was sorry he couldn't tell her about all his dilemmas, fears and hopes to do with Monika. He'd like to open a bottle of Carmenere or Primitivo, sit down next to her in bed and tell her some funny stories, how he'd been afraid to order a meringue so he wouldn't have to battle with it in front of the girl. Funny? Funny. Would she have laughed? Absolutely. They did almost everything together, but he could only cheat on her separately.

They bantered for a while, then Weronika quickly ran upstairs, while he stayed put for a bit longer to look at the paper. For once there was something interesting: an interview with the female head of a prison in Puawy. She talked about the women convicts, mostly victims of domestic violence who one fine day had finally taken a swing at their husbands - often with a decisive result. This was exactly the case with Mariola Nidziecka. He had to charge her. And he didn't know what with. That is, he knew, but he also knew his cla.s.sification would cause the officious old bag in charge to have palpitations. Providing Chorko would accept it at all.

Apart from that it was the usual stuff: an interview with Cimoszewicz, who "in the face of such great pressure" was having to give serious consideration to changing his mind and running for President. Szacki hoped that Communist-Party wonderboy would read the entire paper today, because several pages further on there was an article about some American research which proved irrefutably that voters are guided at the ballot box by the candidate's looks, not his abilities. Or maybe I'm wrong? thought Szacki, stuffing the newspaper into his briefcase. Maybe his foxy face will win him the election?

He left the court catacombs and went out into the atrium, which was big enough to house several railway depots. The sun was shining in through the enormous windows, carving corridors in the dust, like in a Gothic church. At one time you could smoke in here, but now Szacki had to go outside for the first of his three cigarettes.

"Good morning, Prosecutor, would you like a cigarette?" he heard as soon as he pa.s.sed through the heavy revolving doors.

Bogdan Nebb from Gazeta Wyborcza newspaper. The only journalist he could talk to without feeling sick. Not counting Monika. He glanced at the packet of RI Lights being held out towards him.

"No, thank you, I prefer my own," he replied and reached into his jacket pocket for the silver packet of Benson & Hedges, which had finally become available in Poland recently. He thought they tasted worse than when he used to buy them abroad. They lit up.

"The Gliski trial's starting next week. Are you prosecuting?" the journalist asked.

"I've just come to look through the files before the trial."

"Curious case. Not very obvious."

"To whom?" replied Szacki laconically, unable to admit that Nebb was right. But he was. The body of evidence was so-so and a good lawyer should win it. He would have known how to undermine the circ.u.mstantial evidence he himself had gathered. The question was whether Gliski's lawyer would know too.

"Are you going to insist on that cla.s.sification?"

Szacki smiled.

"You'll discover all in the courtroom."

"Mr Prosecutor, after all these years..."

"Mr Nebb, after all these years you're trying to get something out of me."

The journalist tapped ash into the brimfull ashtray.

"I heard you're conducting the inquiry into the murder on azienkowska Street."

"I was on duty that day. I thought you weren't working on the current crime columns any more."

"My friends told me it's an interesting case."

"I thought you were taking a cautious approach to your police sources these days," said Szacki, alluding to the recent well-publicized affair when on Monday Gazeta Wyborcza had written about a criminal gang at National Police Headquarters, on Tuesday and Wednesday had insisted on their story despite a series of denials, and on Friday had gra.s.sed on their informers, claiming they'd deliberately misled them. For Szacki it proved the rightness of the basic principle that he followed in his contacts with the media: never say anything they wouldn't know anyway.

"The press makes mistakes too, Mr Prosecutor. Like any authority."

"The difference is we don't choose the press in general elections," Szacki retorted. "History teaches us that self-proclaimed authority makes the most mistakes. And is the best at covering them up."

The journalist smiled weakly and stubbed out his cigarette.

"But somehow it works, doesn't it? See you in court, Mr Prosecutor."

Szacki nodded to him, went back inside and glanced up at the historic clock hanging in the atrium above the cloakrooms. It was late. And he still had so much to do. Once again he felt tired.

II.

Teodor Szacki sat on the bed where Henryk Telak had spent almost two nights. He took the site inspection report out of his briefcase, and looked through it again, although he had already done that earlier. There was nothing in it, just the obvious. Yet again. Discouraged, he put down the report and looked around the dark room. A bed, a small table next to it, a lamp, an Ikea rug, a shallow wardrobe, a mirror on the wall, a cross above the door. There wasn't even a chair. There was one small window with two handles; the paint was coming off the frame, and the gla.s.s was begging to be cleaned from both sides.

Earlier on Szacki had looked around the other bedrooms - they all looked the same. On the way to azienkowska Street he thought maybe something would inspire him, he'd see some detail, or his instinct would tell him who the murderer was. None of it. From the courtyard - theoretically locked at night, but Szacki didn't believe anyone kept an eye on it - you entered via an ugly brown door into a vestibule. From the vestibule you could go through to the refectory, or to the cla.s.sroom where the body was found, or go on down a narrow corridor leading to the bedrooms (there were seven of them in all) and the bathroom. Further on there was another vestibule and a pa.s.sage to another part of the monastery. Though Szacki wasn't sure the word "monastery" was apt. When he looked at the building from the outside it was. But inside it was more like a neglected office that hadn't been done up for years, dark and gloomy. The pa.s.sage was blocked off by pinewood double doors that were never opened.

Hopeless, thought Szacki. When the police searched these rooms, and all the witnesses' personal belongings, just after the body was found, they found absolutely nothing at all that might be connected with the case. Nothing they could treat as circ.u.mstantial evidence or even a hint of it. Hopeless. If nothing came of his visit to the expert tomorrow, from Monday he'd have to go and join the narcotics squad.

He jumped up when the door opened abruptly and there stood Father Mieczysaw Paczek. Kuzniecow wasn't entirely wrong in saying they all looked like fanatical w.a.n.kers. The priests Szacki had met in his career always seemed a bit dull, with a misty gaze and a sort of softness, just as if they'd spent too long sitting in a bath of hot water. With his benevolently concerned smile Father Paczek was no different from the rest. Well, almost. He spoke quickly, without priestly solemnity, and as he talked he gave the impression of being bright and down-to-earth. Szacki realized the priest had nothing to say that could help. Yet another disappointment.

"Have you found anything?" asked the priest.

"Unfortunately not, Father," replied Szacki, standing up. "It looks as if only a miracle can push this inquiry forwards. If there's anything you can do about it," he pointed upwards meaningfully, "I'd be grateful."

"You're on the right side, Prosecutor," said the priest, knotting his fingers as if eager to fall to his knees at once and say prayers for the inquiry. "And that means you have some powerful allies."

"Maybe they're so powerful they don't even know that somewhere out there in the trenches a handful of soldiers from the allied army are trying to stand up to superior enemy forces. Maybe they think this bit of the front is lost already anyway, so they'd rather send their reinforcements somewhere else?"

"You're not just one of a few soldiers, Prosecutor, you're a lieutenant in a great big army - the enemy forces aren't so numerous at all, and your bit of the front will always be one of the most important."