Inspector Regalia and the Case of the Wedding Gone Wrong – Episode 5 : The Spiky Haired Fellow

The spiky haired fellow was nervous, still in shock. Regalia had to get him to start talking. Then he needed to keep him talking.

Regalia circled the fellow a couple of times, trying to get a feel for his interviewee. Unlike Mrs Pall, who’d been gung-ho and communicative throughout her interview, this fellow looked guilty before anyone had accused him of any thing.

He was a very nervous young man. He never looked straight at Regalia or held his gaze for very long, at least not initially. In a way, his mannerism didn’t match his spiky hair and spiffy clothes. One would think that he was the one arrested for attacking a wedding guest instead of the other way round.

‘What’s your name?’ Regalia began, trying the most obvious and least threatening line of questioning.

‘Dickinson. Samuel.’

‘Dickinson Samuel?’

‘Actually, it’s Samuel Dickinson.’

‘Whose side are you on? Were you invited by the Bride or Groom?’

Tears began welling in Samuel Dickinson’s eyes,

‘You mean ‘the late Bride and Groom’.’

Regalia sighed and finally settled into the chair opposite the spiky haired fellow.

‘I heard the gunshot like everyone else but I couldn’t tell which direction it came from. So I simply ran. Then that woman came at me with a fork.’

‘Yes, that’s what I mean. Who invited you?’

‘Aarav, the groom.’

‘Was he a friend? Family?’

‘A friend. We’d both attended culinary classes together in the UK. That’s something that no one in his family knows about because as you may have guessed – it’s a family of movers and shakers. They don’t do business, they own them. Aarav’s interest in cooking was greatly discouraged and I don’t believe he told anyone here about it.’

‘Can that explain why you were circling the wedding cake, as witnesses put you?’

His voice grew angry,

‘What witnesses? The wild woman with the fork? Who is she?’

‘She’s a concerned guest who saw you running towards the gunshots instead of away from them.’

‘I have a problem with my hearing, his voice grew softer.’

‘Excuse me?’

Dickinson reached up to his left ear and removed a device. He held it in his palm for Regalia to see. Then he replaced it.

‘My hearing aid. It’s a little aged and faulty. I heard the gunshot like everyone else but I couldn’t tell which direction it came from. So I simply ran. Then that woman came at me with a fork. It was madness, the whole experience.’

Regalia was silent. He had been watching Dickinson’s eye movement as he told his story. The fellow was recalling his experience, not making them up. That was obvious to Regalia, as it would have been to anyone who’d had a passing acquaintance with NLP. The eyes tell you how the brain is working. When the brain is fabricating something, the eyes look one way. When a memory is recalled, the eyes look the opposite way.

‘What did you think of the cake?’

Dickinson, spiky hair and all, appeared to have regained a good measure of his composure back. He didn’t sound so defensive. He gave a condescending laugh.

‘Cake, Inspector? Amateurish I’d say. It tasted too plain. Not fit for such an occasion.’

‘It looked impressive though.’

‘Ah, looks. Isn’t that all that matters, Inspector? The cake was poor. Aarav would not have approved. He and Smyrna did not miss much.’

‘So you did nothing to the cake?’

A puzzled look came on Dickinson’s face. With his spiky top, it made him look like a farm bird.

‘No, I did not. And anyway, what’s the cake got to do with the murders? They died because of gunshots. Didn’t they?’

Regalia continued, as he had no answers, as yet, to these questions.

‘You knew the family a bit I suppose? Tell me. What would have happened to the family fortune with Aarav’s marriage?’

Dickinson sat back, as if Regalia’s question had set him off thinking about something he’d completely forgotten or overlooked, up until that point.

‘Inspector, is it possible to get me a drink? I just realized something. There would be some serious consequences financially once he got married. Damn!’

There was a tone of triumph in Dickinson’s voice.

Regalia stepped out of the room, asked for a drink and waited as his man disappeared into the kitchen area. Through the French windows, the lawn outside shone green in the sunshine, dotted with guests, still in their finery, gossiping, drinking and standing silently side by side. Servants were going, from group to group, with trays of refreshments and finger food.

Inside, a couple of policemen stood beside the bride and groom, whose bodies had finally been covered with a dining table cloth. Just behind the policemen, Jan and George De Cruz were seated, sharing a drink and commenting on the decorations around them, looking for all the world like another couple at a typical function. They looked lovely together. Regalia waved when he caught their eye and they waved back. He needed to get to them as soon as he was done with Dickinson. His man came back from the kitchen, glass of water in hand.

Regalia entered the room, closed the door and walked back to where the young man was waiting. He placed the glass on the table and took his seat,

‘What would change with the wedding, Samuel?’

The young man held one finger in the air, as he lifted up the glass and gulped down its contents at one go. There was a confidence in his manner which was non-existent at the start of the interview earlier.

He sat back with a smile, as he wiped the edge of his mouth with the back of his hand.

‘There is a clause in the will of Aarav’s late father which kicks into effect upon Aarav’s wedding. You see Inspector, I know this because he told me in England, when we were taking cooking classes and he was dabbling with the idea of giving up his family fortune to go on his own. The recklessness of youth and all that you know.’

Dickinson coughed. Regalia took the opportunity to make a circular motion with his left hand, indicating that he should get to the point.

A nod, then Dickinson continued,

‘Aarav is the eldest child in the family. In order to claim the lion’s share of the fortune left by his late father, he needed to be married. But…’

Another cough. Regalia leaned forward, starting to get impatient. He tried to move the telling along,

‘But if he wasn’t married, or dead, that would mean the will remains intact. Someone else would be eligible. A sibling.’

Dickinson coughed. Several times. He sipped the water again and continued his narration,

‘No, Inspector. The crucial thing is that the will is open to not only children from the late father’s known marriage. It specifically stipulates that any offspring who is able to provide DNA proof and is married…’

Regalia froze. Although Dickinson’s words had an impact on his thoughts, what made him stop was the look on the spiky haired fellow’s face. It was stricken, no longer wearing the satisfied expression he had when he’d recollected the details about the family will.

Regalia leapt for the door, threw it open and shouted for medical help, for the seated De Cruz’s to come quick.

When he turned and ran back to the young man, Dickinson was motionless against his chair, head slanted to one side. His eyes were open, a bit of froth was trickling down the side of his mouth, and blood was draining from his face. He’d stopped breathing.

By the time the De Cruz’ arrived, Samuel Dickinson was dead.

To be continued….

photo from unsplash.com by Joseph Greve

Baker’s Dozen (Thirteen by the Sea)

No one was crying, because the bodies consisted of no one local. Thirteen in all, the last one making it a baker’s dozen.

The bodies were brought into the shrimp town and for want of a better place, laid out in rows under white sheets outside the seafood restaurant. Fishermen’s pickups, dirty and clunky, filled with dead people instead of fish, arrived one after the other and departing after depositing the latest body pulled up from the sea. The last one made it a baker’s dozen. Thirteen in all, lined up outside the restaurant. Locals milled about in the prickly afternoon sun, hands behind their backs, standing side by side and gently removing the sheets to stare at the faces briefly, before covering them again. Several kids were among the curious, having left school to come straight to the restaurant after hearing the news. No one was crying, because the bodies consisted of no one local, although a proper air of solemnity was maintained. No one from out of town was there yet. Not the state police. Not the coroner nor other medical people. Everyone had been informed but it always took four hours driving from the big city to this nook of the slithery peninsular. It wasn’t far but the existing road was poor, made worse by the downpour of the past week.

At least it was sunny. If the weather holds, and the road conditions don’t deteriorate, the police and ambulances should make it by late evening. And maybe some of the kinfolk of the dead as well.

Those folks who’d seen enough corpses to satisfy their curiosity – having something personal to share about the tragedy in conversations later – walked to a couple of coffee shops within view of the seafood restaurant-turned-mortuary. They took seats with a view of the bodies, ordered drinks and noodles and spoke about what they had heard about the initial discovery earlier that morning by the shore. They wondered why the owner of the seafood restaurant would allow the bodies to be brought to his place, ensuring nobody would eat there that day and probably for several days afterwards. Besides, it’s just known to be plain bad luck to have dead people on your premises when you didn’t know them. Certainly not as many as thirteen. Did he need to expose himself, his family and business to whatever that may bring?

The pickups had dropped their cargo and drove on a bit further. Several had stopped down the long main road, all within view of restaurant. Over the roofs of the bakery and hotels and restaurants (no structure more than two stories high), was the thin, milky blue line of the ocean that surrounded their town on all but one side. Behind the seafood restaurant, rose the hill and rainforest through which lay the only road that ran fifty miles to the capital – only fifty miles but what an ordeal they were.

At least it was sunny. If the weather holds, and the road conditions don’t deteriorate, the police and ambulances should make it by late evening. And maybe some of the kinfolk of the dead as well.  The unofficial mayor of the town – the head of the fishermen’s association – who happened to be a failed priest – was busy arranging temporary lodging for the city folks heading their way.

Away from all this buzz created in town by the bodies, a man was walking with his large black dog. He was clad in black and had the look of a foreigner. He climbed the trail that led through the rainforest to a vantage point that gave a panoramic view of the town, the long road that ran through it, the seafood restaurant that was serving as a temporary mortuary, the sea beyond and way down below, a clear look at the point where the bodies had been discovered, along the rocky shore, a stretch that the locals never frequented because of the jagged rocks and treeless patch.

When he reached the vantage point, he looked back to see the dog following him silently. It came up and stood next to him and together, they took in the scenery. They could see the rows of white sheets and the town people milling about. They saw the pickups parked at various spots along the central road through town. They saw the rocky coastline where the thirteen bodies had been found. Even from their height, bloody red streaks shone here and there as sunlight glinted off the dark, wave-washed rock surfaces.

And further out, the waves were coming in off the blue sea, growing white with froth as they crashed against the rocks, over and over, while hiding, for now, the cause of so many deaths near this fishing town.

photo from unsplash.com by Dominik Lange