Read Murder on Brittany Shores Online
Authors: Jean-Luc Bannalec
âWe will.'
âMy daughters and I sat down and drew up the list of people from yesterday evening.' Still holding it in her hand, she now placed it on the table in front of Dupin.
âSo did someone occur to your daughters whom you hadn't thought of?'
âJust Muriel Lefort. She was apparently there briefly and also spoke to her brother. I was probably back here in the kitchen then. It must have been around half eight. Or thereabouts.'
Dupin knew that already. Just not the time. Dupin got out his Clairefontaine and made a note.
âMy daughters also remembered what Konan and Lefort ate and drank. They are practically certain. First some draught beer and then red wine. They got themselves a bottle several times, spread out over the course of the evening. Anyone can help themselves to water at the front, the carafes are right there. Both of them ate fish soup, then Konan had the lobster and Lefort the
entrecôte.
'
Dupin made a note of everything.
âAnd nothing struck you or your daughters as unusual that evening? Something up at the bar, a person who behaved in a striking way?'
âNo. But I'll speak to my daughters again.'
âWas anybody in the kitchen apart from you?'
Solenn Nuz hesitated.
âNo.'
Dupin switched into a neutral tone.
âNow that we know that it was murder and that we are dealing with a whole new situation â does anything occur to you generally that you consider relevant, Madame Nuz? Do you have an idea of what may have happened here? Iâ¦'
âUm.'
There was a pointed throat-clearing. Kadeg planted himself right in front of them.
âMy smartphone. We could do with the photo.'
Dupin held it out to him mechanically.
âMadame Nuz has drawn up an initial list of people. She is going to complete it. I also want a detailed sketch of the room with every table, every chair and the bar â mark everyone on it. Who stood or sat when, for how long, where, along with timings.'
Kadeg and Riwal were familiar with these impossible tasks. What was astonishing was â they had learnt this over the years with Dupin â how often it was in fact possible to achieve what seemed absolutely out of the question at first. And the purposes it could have. Kadeg made no comment on the task, not a word and even his expression was remarkably neutral. He turned around and left.
Dupin turned back to Madame Nuz.
âI had asked whether anything had occurred to you in general in relation to this murder.'
âYou will find a whole series of people with motive. People tell nasty stories about Konan. I can't say what there is to them. And Lefort â people hate him. I know only a handful of exceptions.'
She had uttered these sentences in her distinctive, calm tone of voice. But it was clear that she felt the same way.
This was something new anyway. The deceased usually only had friends, never enemies, they had been admired by everyone, cherished and loved.
âAnd what was the reason? Why was he hated and by whom? By whom specifically?'
âThere would be a lot to tell there.'
âGo ahead.'
Solenn Nuz looked serious.
âThere really are a lot of unpleasant stories.'
âI want to hear them all.'
She took a deep breath.
âFor over ten years, Lucas Lefort has been trying, using every means possible, to make the Glénan into a great “tourist scheme”. With hotels, sports facilities, bridges between the islands. Four of the islands belong to him in any case. To him and his sister. He has always failed in his schemes, although only just. The former mayor of Fouesnant rebelled against it. He was one of his arch-enemies. Lefort then changed his plans two or three times. Purely strategically. He attempted to do it with a gigantic extension planned for the sailing school. He also always wanted to buy the diving centre from me and extend it. His latest idea was: “sophisticated ecotourism”. He is,' she paused for a moment, âhe was not above even the most brazen lie.'
Dupin was making notes. As well as he could. This was a big issue opening up here. These were the stories he had been waiting for.
âThe former mayor often wished him dead. Lefort fought back hard, Lefort slandered him maliciously, accused him of corruption. He tried to make a fool of him. Yet the mayor was a man of integrity.'
âWhat is the situation now?'
That was vague, but Dupin had to get familiar with the subject first.
âLefort's plans died down for a few years, but then he started on ecotourism recently. Apparently, he was on the point of submitting the revised concept. It's been talked about everywhere for months already. The new mayor hasn't spoken out yet. We all assume that he will advocate the same firm position as his predecessor. The local council is largely still the same as it was a few years ago. It also voted against, although only by a narrow majority. The district council was similar. The new coastal protection laws make it impossible really. Which didn't in the least deter Lefort from trying anyway.'
âBut he was there yesterday evening too, wasn't he? The mayor, I mean. Monsieurâ¦'
âDu Marhallac'h. Indeed.'
âYou mentioned that he in fact spoke to Lefort too.'
âYes.'
Solenn looked away from Dupin and contemplated her hands.
âIt would destroy the Glénan. Everything here. Yes, there is tourism, but it only affects the archipelago on a superficial level.'
To an extent, Dupin understood what she was trying to say.
âAnd his sister? Muriel Lefort?'
âShe has always been firmly against all of these plans.'
âSo there was serious conflict between the two of them?'
Solenn Nuz hesitated for a brief moment.
âIncessantly. They fought bitterly, there was a real battle between them.'
âThe Leforts must be very well off.'
âIndeed they are.'
Dupin made another note.
âApart from these plans, were there any reasons for disagreements between them?'
âIt's impossible to imagine siblings being more different. In every respect. Muriel embodies the “original spirit” of the sailing school. Her brother trampled all over that. He was only interested in how to make more money, heâ¦'
âCould you explain that in more detail: the “original spirit”?'
âAn attitude. Certain values. Volunteering, living collectively, solidarity, self-reliance. The sailing school is a global institution. It was founded at the end of the Second World War, out of the spirit of the Résistance. Lucas and Muriel's parents were leading members of the resistance in Finstère. The sailing school was initially a kind of commune of idealistic young men and women.'
âAnd then?'
âOver the course of years, it kept being expanded by Lucas and Muriel's parents. Cautiously. Very shrewdly. And always in keeping with the old ideals. It was about great ideas. Even today it's the opposite of a “posh yacht club”, the normal sailing schools. The course participants still stay in the most basic conditions here. Everyone is equal. No matter how much money they have. They sleep on cots in dormitories, use communal showers like when camping, they eat together outdoors. They don't just learn to sail, it's about much more than that. â That's what Muriel Lefort stands for. And Maela Menez.'
âShe's the assistant.'
âYes.'
âWhat's her exact role?'
âShe is Muriel's right hand woman. She does everything. She runs a few things on her own too. The boat park for instance. She embodies the spirit of the sailing school in a very, how should I put it, rigorous way. Ruthlessly. She is very â idealistic.'
âSo she had a strained relationship with Lucas Lefort too.'
âOh yes.'
âDid the two of them not chat yesterday evening too?'
âThey were standing next to each other. At the bar. I don't know exactly how long for.'
âStill speaking to each other in any case.'
âDon't get the wrong idea. Even Muriel and her brother weren't shouting at each other the whole time,' she seemed to be reflecting, âthe conflicts went far deeper than that. And don't ever forget that it's a very unique world here. And very small.'
Solenn Nuz reminded Dupin of Nolwenn in some ways, which was something that had already occurred to him before. Yet it wasn't their names sounding similar, or the extensive knowledge that they both gathered about people, but, more than anything, it was their way of observing, how and what they observed.
âAre you aware of whether there was some escalation between the siblings recently?'
âMuriel always tried not to keep the conflict behind closed doors. Not doing that would have been distasteful to her temperament. She is a highly discreet person. I don't know exactly what happened. Only she knows.'
Dupin's forehead creased.
âWho else? Who were Lucas Lefort's other enemies?'
âAs I mentioned, there were quite a few. And I'm sure there were more than I'm aware of. Marc. Marc Leussot. A marine biologist and journalist. He was here last night too. A radical opponent of all tourism plans. He has written critical articles about the potential consequences of a further increase in tourism on the Glénan.'
Dupin made a note of everything. He had such a dreadful scrawl that he had to be exceptionally disciplined with himself while writing and keep his speed under control, otherwise he himself couldn't read things properly later. He had had unfortunate experiences of that.
âHe's sitting over there.' She moved her head brusquely in the direction of the bar. He's here very often. â â â And all of Lefort's women. You can't forget them. Many broken hearts. It wouldn't surprise anyone if one of them had taken their revenge. Especially his latest girlfriend. He cheated on her constantly, right underneath her nose.'
âDo you know the name of his current girlfriend?'
âNo.'
âWhat else comes to mind?'
âYou should also bear his sailing in mind. Apparently he wangled his place in the Admiral's Cup boat with ruthless methods. He was utterly cold. Unscrupulous.'
That had sounded like a résumé.
âYou know this world here like nobody else.'
âInevitably.'
For a moment, the warm, open smile that Dupin already knew returned to Solenn Nuz's face.
âBut in fact there's very little I can really say. I have no idea what Lucas Lefort's life truly looked like. He was always away for days at a time on the mainland. But as for what deals he was involved with right now or whom he might have fallen out with, no idea.'
âYou said that you personally didn't have much to do with Lefort?'
âIf he was on the islands, then we said hello and goodbye. Perhaps had some small talk. Not even that yesterday.'
This case had been strange from the beginning and was continuing that way. By the end of his first proper investigative interview, Dupin would have a list of between five and seven serious suspects. And that was in relation to Lefort alone.
âAnd Konan? What do you know about him?'
âHe started out with mattresses, but within a few years he had built up an empire. Then he expanded his businesses and became a big name in the export of Breton products. He founded a few societies. And he has a company for deep sea exploration, for scouting out oil deposits in the deep sea. He has close links with politics apparently. That probably “helped” him in all of his successes.'
âHow do you know all of this?'
âHe is extremely unpopular here. A power player. Snooty. He once wanted to buy an exclusive, private mooring spot at the quay. That kind of thing doesn't even exist here. He put two lawyers onto it.'
âBut he did keep coming here?'
âYes, with Lucas.'
This was really a very curious world, Dupin thought. They hated each other, but the place bound them all together somehow.
âAnd in private? Do you know anything about his private life?'
âWe knew each other to say hello, that was all. He's married. But his wife never came with him on any trips. I barely know anything about her. She might be a primary school teacher. She's obese, apparently.'
âSo what happened to the former mayor?'
Solenn Nuz hesitated for a second, which surprised Dupin.
âHe died two years ago. His heart. Collapsed at a Fest-Noz.'
Amongst the varied tasks of a Breton mayor there was of course this one: taking part in the endless launches for regional, local and very local festivals in the summer. Drinking festivals.
Dupin was waiting to see whether she wanted to add anything else. There was a rather long pause.
âIt's clear to me that I'm one of the suspects too. You know my opinion on Lucas Lefort. For me and my daughters it would have been simple to put something directly in their food or drink. Simpler than for the others.'
âI've just had an insight into how simple it would have been for anybody.'
âMaman?'
The younger daughter had come into the back.
âYes?'
âSome customers want to leave. They want to get back to the mainland this evening. The two inspectors have said nobody is allowed to leave the bar until they're finished their interviews.'
It hadn't been a question and she had spoken to her mother, as if Dupin had not been present at all. Dupin answered directly.
âYes, that's correct, it's what I ordered. Unfortunately, we have to do it this way. We are solving a murder.'
âFine.'
The âfine' had had no trace of resignation or sarcasm at all.
She was already gone when Riwal appeared in the doorway. He hurried over to Dupin, stood next to him and stooped down.
âMonsieur le Commissaire, Madame Lefort is going to land any moment.'
Riwal was whispering, but Solenn Nuz could still hear every word (which made the situation unnecessarily ridiculous in Dupin's eyes).