The metro

Meri jaan that is awesome.sone of beautiful.

"It's identical. Another headless corpse, just like the others - male, middle-aged, white."

 

"Where?" asked Inspector Dutruelle fumbling for a cigarette.

 

"Château Rouge."

 

"In the Metro?"

 

"Yes sir, just inside the tunnel. In the anti-suicide well between the tracks."

 

"Close the line - if you haven't already. I'll be with you soon. And don't move it, d'you hear?"

 

Inspector Dutruelle replaced the receiver with a sigh as his wife padded into the room.

 

"I hate these early morning cases," he muttered. He lit his cigarette.

 

 

"Have a coffee before you go. Another dead body will keep."

 

"But we've closed the line. And it's the other side of town, my dear. North Paris."

 

"All the same."

 

He sat down heavily and watched his wife sullenly as she made the coffee. Madame Dutruelle was a simple woman of forty-six whose long, thin-lipped face was framed by stern grey hair. Her strong, practical hands were country hands, and she had never got used to city life. She lived for the day when she and her husband would retire to their home village in Les Pyrenées. Inspector Dutruelle sighed to himself again. Poor Agnes. She tried so hard to please him. How could she know that he longed to be free of her? How could she possibly know of Vololona, the young Malagasy he had met while on the Clichy case? For him it had been love at first sight.

 

"And for me too, my darling," Vololona had been quick to agree, her large brown eyes welling with tears as they gazed at him through the smoke of the Chatte et Lapin where she worked, "a veritable coup de foudre." She spoke French well, with a Malagasy accent and huskiness that left you with a sense of mystery and promise. Inspector Dutruelle was a happy man; but he was careful to tell no-one except Monsieur Chébaut, his closest friend, about the source of his happiness.


Tanvir Tanvir Farhan

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