Read A Death in Valencia Online
Authors: Jason Webster
They walked out of the restaurant and crossed the road to a dusty abandoned building on the other side. Torres leaned on a wooden gate until it gave way, and they passed through. The roof had mostly gone, except for one corner where it offered partial protection from the elements.
âDel Pozo told us this was where Roures kept his dinghy,' Torres said.
A pair of oars was leaning up against one of the walls. Cámara knelt down and started rummaging through some old orange boxes full of
palangre
fishing lines, spare hooks and extra cord for repairs. A fishing rod in pieces was lying on top of some shelves, with a heavy layer of fine dust covering it.
âPerhaps he started out doing ordinary line fishing from the shore,' he said.
âYou're allowed to start at dusk,' Torres said. âSo as not to get in the way of swimmers and sunbathers. Two rods per fisherman.'
âYou know a lot about it.'
âMy dad taught me. Used to do quite a bit when I was a teenager. Before I got married.'
A strong, rotting smell was coming from one corner of the den. Cámara hesitantly approached a blue icebox perched on the edge of a worktable.
âWhatever it is, it's in here.'
He lifted the lid and almost stumbled backwards as the putrid stench overwhelmed him.
âThat'll be the calamari,' Torres laughed. âFor the bait.'
âLet's get out of here.' Cámara's eyes were streaming as he tried not to retch. âI've seen enough.'
Instinctively they turned down the side street and walked in the direction of the beach, each one imagining the route Roures would have taken every night as he dragged his dinghy out to the sea for a spot of illegal fishing. Crossing an empty boulevard, they passed under the shade of the palms and out on to the sand. A cluster of traditional wooden fishing boats was parked there, painted in white, blue, green and red.
âI can get the owners' names from the marine authority,' Torres said in answer to Cámara's silent question. âI'm not sure if they keep them there as a kind of tourist attraction as well.'
He took out a notebook and jotted down the licence numbers.
Wordlessly, they walked the rest of the width of the beach until they came to the shore, tiptoeing their way past a score of bodies. The sea had more life to it today, and children were playing in the waves while couples stood further out where the water covered their waists, draping glistening arms around each other and kissing as the sea rocked them to and fro.
âA small rubber dinghy isn't that heavy, but still, it's quite a way to drag it out each night.'
âRoures was a strong man,' Cámara said. âOr at least he gave that impression.'
âAnd I suppose that if I wanted to attack him, out here would be my choice.'
Cámara asked him to continue.
âAs far away as possible from the street lights, no bars or restaurants near this section of the beach, some amount of noise from the sea to cover the sound of any struggle, and he's already brought the boat out here so you can dump the body inside, row it out, throw it overboard and then come back ashore.'
Cámara looked down at his feet, at the crushed white shells and damp brown sand. A dog being chased by a little boy ran past them, splashing their faces with salt water as it skipped in the foamy wavelets.
Torres was right: this place, now full of joy, of fun and life, was almost certainly the scene of Roures's murder.
They walked back into the heart of El Cabanyal along the Calle de la Reina. This was traditionally the wealthiest street in the neighbourhood, wider and with trees along the pavement, but the houses were still built in the El Cabanyal style, with carved wooden double-front doors designed to let the cooling sea breezes flow through in summer.
Passing a baker's shop, Cámara heard someone calling after him.
âMax!'
He turned to find a stubbly, friendly face beaming at him.
âEnrique.'
The two men embraced.
â¿Cómo estás, chaval?'
How're you doing, kid?
Enrique slapped Cámara on the shoulders with powerful, bear-like arms, then saw Torres standing nearby.
âWhat? Working?' he asked.
âThe Roures case,' Cámara said. âThis is Inspector Torres.'
âPaco,' Torres said, and stretched out a hand to shake.
âEnrique is a flamenco singer,' Cámara explained. âHe lives in the area.'
âJust in the next street,' Enrique grinned. âBuying some bread for lunch. Do you want to come? Maite's roasting some fresh John Dory.'
âLove to,' Cámara said. âBut we've got to keep going.'
âSuit yourself. Sad business, the Roures thing.'
âDid you know him?' Torres asked.
âWe all knew him. Everyone in the
barrio
. He was a local institution. You'd see him at the market. Or at
El Cabanyal, SÃ
meetings. We used to chat sometimes. He did the food for a fund-raising gig I did here once. Nice enough guy. Why the hell anyone'd want to do him in is beyond me.'
Despite his having lived in Valencia for almost thirty years, there was still a slight Andalusian lilt in the way Enrique spoke, a mark of his native Seville that he was proud of never losing.
Cámara made to move.
âSure I can't tempt you for lunch? You're welcome to come along as well, Paco.'
âReally, we can't,' Cámara said. Strangely, he felt uncomfortable being with Torres in this purely social situation: the sudden use of first names clashed with the surname-mateyness of the police.
âAll right,' Enrique said. âBut don't forget, Max. It's Carlos's baptism next Saturday. And you're the godfather.'
He turned to Torres.
âYou know, sometimes I think I'm the only friend he's got.'
Â
The headquarters of
El Cabanyal, SÃ
were set further away from the beach on the Calle Escalante in an old two-storey building with graffiti-sprayed death threats on the front door.
âWe don't bother trying to scrub them off any more,' Mikel Roig said when Cámara nodded at them. âThe
Municipales
are working for the Town Hall, so why would they bother trying to catch whoever's responsible?'
The house was run-down and drab in comparison to the brightly tiled facades of some of the neighbouring buildings, decked out in maritime shades of blue, green and turquoise. The sun reflected from their shiny glaze and Cámara found himself squinting against the glare. An elderly woman on a floor above was rolling out a wooden shutter over the edge of her cast-iron balcony, keeping the direct light out while leaving the glass doors behind open in preparation for the cooler sea breezes of the afternoon. Above her head, the face of a sea god peered out from a mosaic design below the eaves of her roof.
Mikel Roig was the spokesman for the pressure group. Torres leaned over and shook his hand.
âWe talked on the phone,' he said.
âI'm not here all the time,' Roig explained. âI have a job at the university library. But now in the summer months I can come down more often.'
He was a slightly built man, with a closely shaved dome-like head and a broad straight nose like an ox.
They went inside, seeking shelter from the sun, but the heat was even more intense. Cámara could feel sweat bulging from the back of his head and streaming through the hairs at the top of his shoulders.
âIt's all we've got,' Roig said apologetically. âWe can't afford anywhere better. We're just a neighbourhood organisation, getting by on people's goodwill, mostly. Someone had this place in the family and wasn't using it, so they lent it to us. But we can't afford to do it up or anything. That's not what we're about, anyway. So we freeze in winter and fry in summer. As you can see. Here, have some water.'
He passed over a plastic bottle and Cámara took a gulp.
âThat Valconsa lot, they're pretty well set up, though. You should see their place.'
âThe construction company?' Torres asked.
âThey're spearheading the whole project here for pulling houses down and extending Blasco Ibáñez Avenue through to the sea. You know, Emilia's big plan.'
âYes, we've heard about what the mayoress is trying to do here,' Cámara said.
âIt's some sort of personal thing with her,' Roig went on, happy, it seemed, to have someone to talk about the cause with. âWants to put her stamp on the city, and this old working-class district is getting in her way. I reckon she sees it like some kind of wall that she has to break down so she can link the city centre with the beach.'
Cámara took another gulp from the bottle, sensing the water as it trickled down his gullet and into his stomach, then passed it over to Torres.
âThen there's Cuevas, the head of Valconsa.'
âYou mean José Manuel Cuevas,' Torres said.
âYeah. This is just one big business opportunity for him. A chance to build some cheap apartment blocks and make even more millions. With all the right kickbacks to the politicians along the way, obviously.'
âAre you making a formal accusation?' Torres said.
âNah. Come on. But you know how these things work.'
âThat's not why we're here.'
âYeah, all right.'
Roig looked away.
Cámara got up and went to the door to check the street outside while Torres leaned his chair in towards Roig's desk to glance over the leaflets and campaign material. An old man in a vest and a straw hat was walking his Alsatian dog at the edge of the pavement, staying as close as he could to the sliver of shade.
Roig got up and stood next to Cámara, greeting the man with the dog.
âI've got to take him to the vet,' the man said, pointing to his pet. âHe's got a sore behind his ear. Hasn't been himself since we moved.'
âI'm sure he'll be all right,' Roig said. â
Ãnimo.
' Keep your chin up.
âIt gets harder to say that as you get older,' the man mumbled, and he allowed himself to be dragged along by the dog.
âJaume,' Roig explained to Cámara. âJust got out of hospital. The whole stress thing of losing his home. They pulled it down last winter. He couldn't hold out in the end.'
He leaned over and opened a window on the other side of the doorway.
âHere,' he said. âWe might get a bit of breeze.'
âTell me about Pep Roures, about his involvement with you,' Cámara said.
âOne of our most valued members,' Roig said. âBig loss. We're all gutted. Can't see Valconsa and the Town Hall being too upset, though.'
âHow much time did he put into the organisation?'
âA lot. Attended all the weekly meetings,' Roig said. âLet us use the restaurant for cultural events a couple of times. We put on concerts, art exhibitions, that kind of thing, to help raise awareness about what's going on here.'
âSo everyone would have known about Roures being part of this.'
âHe was one of the last people holding outâand one of the most visible,' Roig said. âLots of others here have been tempted to sell, or have made signals to Valconsa that they might sell. Not Roures. And what with most people in the city knowing his restaurant, he was a bit of an annoyance, if you see what I mean. We're just a residents' group trying to do what we can, but Roures counted for something.'
âThere must be rivalries, tensions among the residents here.'
âWe're not trying to cause any problems. We just want to saveâ'
âBut still,' Cámara interrupted him. âNot everyone's against the Town Hall plan. I've seen some banners around in favour of it.'
âYeah, they're new. Emilia's paying for those,' Roig said. âLook, of course something like this can get people upset. It's obvious. Arguments, people not talking to each other.'
âWas Roures involved in any of it?'
Roig hesitated.
âI didn't see or hear any of this myself. I don't want to give you dodgy info.'
âIt's all right. Go on. Even if it's just a rumour, it might give us a lead.'
Roig crossed his arms.
âPeople said Roures was having problems with one of the fishermen who had a house down near La Mar. Sold up a few months ago. Apparently he was annoyed that Roures was campaigning against the Town Hall plan, and was threatening to report him for his midnight fishing. Wasn't entirely legal, or something. I don't know the details, but I heard it was getting a bit heated.'
âDo you know the name of this fisherman?'
âRamón. Everyone called him that. Don't know his surname.'
âDo you know where we might find him?'
âAsk around. He's usually knocking about somewhere.'
Torres joined them at the door, holding a clutch of
El Cabanyal, SÃ
pamphlets.
âI'll take these,' he said. Roig nodded.