The Sergeant's Cat by Janwillem van de Wetering is a collection of 13 short stories in the Amsterdam Cops mystery series set in late-20th-century Amsterdam. Adjutant Henk Grijpstra and Sergeant Rinus de Gier are veteran detectives in the Murder Brigade. They investigate and solve crimes with intuition. Often it leads them to direct evidence; if not, their subtle questioning method elicits confession. Typical banter between the detectives is filled with wry humor, making the stories more entertaining than mysterious or suspenseful. A common theme in the short stories, that I don't recall from the series novels, is the shortage of jail cells, hence a Queen-decreed mandate to deter criminals from further crimes, rather than arrest them.
Not yet nine o'clock on a Sunday is early, especially when the Sunday is Easter.
Not a passionate man, but lawyers seldom are. Lawyers practice detachment; they identify with their clients, but only up to a point.
We don't hang up on bizarre calls. Quite often the bizarre is true.
How does the accusing pencil connect the given points? How well did I know this Hubert?
I was forgetting at the time that Dad was also a kind old man, not just a fat fence that had to be kicked down to open our way.
Detectives of the Murder Brigade are always ankle-deep in a quagmire of sticky evil.
Good strategy--true kindness is a most fearsome weapon.
"Van Gogh" de Gier said. "There's a throat-scrape at the end. And the o is not long like in Ophelia but short like in osprey."