Authors: Bavo Dhooge
“You may be right, sir. But with all due respect, why me?”
“Why you?” He leaned forward and rested his elbows on his desk and examined the young man closely. “Styx didn't like you, Inspector. He told me that more than once. He
never
told me you're a good cop, but he didn't have to. He knew it, and he knew I knew it.”
Delacroix stood up, but Crevits waved him back to his seat.
“Tell me about Rotiers's alibi.”
“He hasn't got one for the first two murders. At least, not one that checks out. He's a bit of a Don Juan. Handsome, well-known around the nightclubs. According to our sources, he scores more often than not. They say he's made it with half the women under thirty in Ostend and is hard at work on the second half.”
“We're trying to find a serial killer, not a sexoholic. Casanova doesn't really fit the profile.”
“I know, but he's pretty heavy into the kinky stuff. Orgies, S&M, bondage, like that. He'll try anything once.”
Crevits remembered the original interrogation of Karel Rotiers. He and a few of the other cops lurking behind the one-way mirror while Styx came down hard on the guy.
Rotiers turned the questioning into a vaudeville act, using it as an opportunity to brag about his cocksmanship, and, when Styx asked him straight out if he had any interest in necrophilia, he responded, “No way, man, I don't need your sloppy seconds.” Styx lost his cool and slammed the playboy up against the wall.
“You've got a hell of a rep around the clubs, asshole,” the cop
snarled. “I heard you really made yourself some enemies at the Tantra House. I mean, come on, Karl, an X-Acto knife? Always up for something new, huh, you fucking pervert?”
Rotiers started to give it right back, but Styx slapped him into silence.
“Some of the girls call you the Stamper, I hear. What about the Stuffer, you ever get that one? I know you like stuffing it in 'em whenever you get the chance.”
“I'll stuff it in your wife,” Rotiers shot back, and by the time they were able to pull Styx off him, Loverboy's face was a bloody mess.
Rotiers had spent two days in the hospital and then two more in police custody before they'd let him go for lack of evidence.
Now Crevits waved a dismissive hand at Delacroix and said, “What are you waiting for, a medal? I want to know if that bastard Rotiers has an alibi for Madeleine Bohy's murder.”
“You want me to track down where he was last night, too?”
“What am I, your guru? A cop's been murdered, Delacroix. I'm giving you your big chance. Don't fuck it up.”
As the rookie was on his way out the door, Crevits called him back a second time. “I want to know
where
Styx was killed. That photo's real, but it could have been taken anywhere. I don't like to think of him lying somewhere, waiting for that sick fuck to come back and, well, you know. Styx had his problems, but he was one of us. We can't let him end up like those three women.”
Styx stepped out of the dressing room, his bag in his hand, his top shirt button casually undone, and left the store. The mall was crowded, and hordes of shoppers streamed past him like zombies, unaware of the world around them, their eyes glazed, paying him not the slightest attention. It was ten
AM
, and a dozen television screens in the window of the electronics shop next door to the H&M caught his attention. The morning news began with a bulletin:
“Last night in Ostend,” the perfectly dressed blond presenter said, “the notorious Chief Inspector Raphael Styx was murdered. Styx served for sixteen years on the city police, and for the last several months he led the team investigating what have come to be known as the âStuffer' serial killings. Styx's body has not yet been recovered, but traces of violence were found earlier this morning in a cabana on the Ostend beach.
News of the murder came to light when the Stuffer posted a photograph of Styx's lifeless body to the police department's Facebook page.”
Styx stood there, stunned, as the report continued.
“Commissioner John Crevits will hold a press conference later today, representing the chief of police, who is out of the country at the moment, but has already expressed his disappointment that his friend and subordinate's death was reported in the media before Chief Inspector Styx's family could be officially notified, and emphasized that, in the absence of a body, it is premature to use the word
murder
in connection with Styx's death. In fact, the case is being treated at this juncture as a disappearance, although police department insiders who have seen the Facebook photo consider it to constitute undeniable proof that Styx was the victim of a violent attack, and tell us that the department is proceeding on the assumption that Styx was indeed the Stuffer's fourth victim.”
Styx stared at the bank of screens. It was one thing for
him
to know that he was dead. But it was a different game entirely now that the whole city had the news.
“Commissioner Crevits assures the public that a full investigation is under way, and that the Ostend police will take all possible steps to uncover the truth. He offers his deepest condolences to Chief Inspector Styx's family in these sad circumstances.”
Styx's thoughts turned to Isabelle and Victor. He tried to put himself in their place, but he had absolutely no idea how they would take the news. If the roles were reversed, he knew, and he were to hear that his son had been killed in a car crash, it would tear him apart. Same thing if he opened the door one morning to find a colleague there to deliver the news that Isabelle had been run down on her way to the hospital. He hadn't been much of a husband in recent years, but she was still his wife.
“The Raphael Styx case reopens the debate over the responsibility
of social media. It has been confirmed that the Stuffer has posted repeatedly to Facebook, using a variety of accounts. Facebook representatives tell us that steps are being taken to prevent the killer from making any additional postings, but such measures will be difficult to implement. Commissioner Crevits further informs us that the gruesome photograph of what appears to be the body of Chief Inspector Styx will be taken down from the Ostend Police Department's Facebook page within the hour. We'll have more on this developing story asâ”
Styx wanted to get a look at the picture, and to check his own Facebook page to see what was posted there. It had taken him a while to make peace with Facebook. He'd opened and scrapped two accounts, but finally acknowledged that it was a necessary evil. He could no longer afford to stay under the radar. People who refused to accept citizenship in the virtual world weren't just closing themselves off from other people's awareness. They were erasing themselves. For all practical purposes, they were dead.
He wondered how many people had already seen the picture of his corpse. If the Stuffer had played his cards rightâand Styx knew the serial killer was a hell of a card playerâhe'd not only posted the photo but tagged it with Styx's name. Each of his online “friends”âhis colleagues, his family, his
real
friends (as few and far between as they were)âwould see his gruesome photograph in their feed:
Raphael Styx
was tagged in
Stuffer
's photos.
Styx felt the life bleed out of him all over again. Life,
his
life, his life with friends, acquaintances, colleagues, and family, had been brutally torn away from him, without him even getting a vote.
Was there any chance he might be able to find a way toâ?
No, there was no point speculating. Better to focus on the
undeniable truth. For now, at least, he was trapped. He couldn't run to Crevits, even if he wanted to. The station would be surrounded by media vultures, waiting to pick the bones of this latest sensational story. If they spotted him, the resulting circus would surely throw the Stuffer investigation off the rails.
He had to think this through.
The world thought he was dead. Who was he to say otherwise?
He wasn't a well-known cop outside the city. Yes, his picture had been in the national papers a few times over the years, but not often and not lately.
That would change as the story of his murder spread, but for now he was probably fairly safe, especially with a face full of makeup.
For now, he was not just a zombie but the Invisible Man.
Inspector Joachim Delacroix was inside
the beach cabana where Styx had died, not far from the Venetian Galleries.
Yellow police tape protected not only the crime scene but also the cabanas to either side from prying eyes, and a pair of patrolmen were stationed on the dike to keep the rubberneckers moving along.
“Now the fucker's got his
own
Facebook page?” one of the detectives marveled.
“I don't get it,” sighed Delacroix. “How does a sick bastard like this wind up with friends?”
“Probably an open profile,” said the detective.
“What does that mean?”
“Means anybody can see what he posts, you don't have to be friends with him.”
“And who found the page?”
“Inspector Allaert.”
“Stany? Where is he now?”
“Clocked out and went home. He was pretty shaken up. He and Styx were friends, one of the few guys Styx really got along with. Been on the force ten years, and he's managed to keep his nose clean despite Styx's influence.”
“You seen the photo?” asked Delacroix. Without realizing it, he'd switched to a more confidential tone.
“Negative,” the detective said, “and I'll pass, thanks.”
“It's pretty awful.”
“I'd rather remember Styx the way he was.”
Delacroix thought,
You mean a complete asshole?
But what he said was: “We're not one hundred percent sure he's dead.”
Although it was broad daylight outside and the cabana door was open, the interior of the wooden shack was only dimly illuminated. They had found bloodstains on the floor, on the air mattress, and on the walls. DNA testing would take awhile, but Delacroix feared the worst.
They'd lucked into the cabana when the elderly couple on vacation had shown up this morning, found the lock broken off, and called it in as a burglaryâalthough there'd been nothing there worth stealing.
If Delacroix closed his eyes, he could still see Styx's body lying crumpled and lifeless on
this
floor, his head half-resting on the edge of
this
air mattress. He could see the three gaping wounds, the blood, Styx's dead eyes staring off into the Great Nothing.
“Any chance it might have been Photoshopped?” asked Paul Breton, who was there representing the Public Prosecution Service.
“Honestly? I don't think so,” said Delacroix. “I don't see this guy faking a picture. Why bother?”
“So you didn't know Styx well, huh?” asked Breton.
“I didn't know him
long
,” Delacroix admitted.
“He used to be one of the best.”
“Used to be?”
“Long time ago.”
Hard to imagine
, thought Delacroix.
“Then he started spending a little too much time in bars with the scum he was supposed to be putting
behind
bars.”
“I've only been here a year.”
“Yeah, one of the best I've ever seen. But he turned into a real shitheel. I can't believe he's gone.”
Delacroix had no trouble believing it. Maybe it was precisely
because
he'd barely known Styx that Delacroix found the idea of his death so easy to absorb. He wasn't distracted by personal considerations. He had to admitâto himself, although he wouldn't say this to Crevits or Bretonâthat he didn't care for the chief inspector any more than the chief inspector had cared for him. The guy had been totally corrupt. Delacroix wasn't happy the man was dead, but he saw Styx as the Stuffer's fourth victim and nothing more.
That thing Crevits had said, about Styx knowing he, Delacroix, was a good cop? Delacroix didn't believe a word of it. It was just one of Crevits's tricks. Even if it
was
true, he really didn't give a shit about Styx's opinion of him. Styx might have been a good cop, once upon a time, but he was a bad manâand Delacroix would rather be a good man and a lousy cop than a good cop and a lousy man.
Breton put his phone away. “First report from the lab,” he said. “It looks like it
could
be Styx's blood, but they're not ready to say for sure without running some more tests.”
“I wonder how he wound up here,” said Delacroix.
“I wonder where he is right now.”
“Who, the Stuffer?”
“No, Styx. Imagine he turns up tomorrow on the dike. Statue number four. Jesus, I don't want to think about it.”
“We have to find him,” said Delacroix.