The Mammoth Book of Best British Mysteries (69 page)

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Authors: Maxim Jakubowski

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BOOK: The Mammoth Book of Best British Mysteries
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“You’d have people to do that for you.”

“I would not,” she protested.

What? Strangers trooping all over her house, snooping all over her business?

“Some people might envy the rich for their lifestyle,” she said firmly. “Not me. Madame Montaud may have been successful, but the poor woman was a martyr to the business, she
barely took a day off, and look at that sister of hers. Dresses like Grace Kelly, but never gets a chance to breathe, much less be her own person. No privacy, not even a house to call her own, and
when her husband leaves the shop, it stinks of stale wine and cigars for simply hours.”

“Oh? And what do I stink of?”

“Nutmeg and citron and cool, mountain forests,” she said, and his eyes weren’t just green, they crinkled at the corners and were flecked with red, grey and brown, and his mouth
twisted sideways when he smiled. With his thick mop of dark hair and square practical hands, she was glad Luc would have no trouble finding a new wife once she’d gone.

“Hmm.”

He stuffed his square practical hands in his pockets and whistled
Mambo Italiano
under his breath as they sauntered past the bustling vineyards down the hill towards the river. Since the
Domaine was only a fifteen-minute walk from the house, they hadn’t bothered with the car, and Marie-Claude was wrong about the cardigan. She hadn’t needed it at all.

“I don’t suppose this sudden obligation to duty has anything to do with the sister?” he asked after working his way through
Three Coins in the Fountain, Smile
and
Hernando’s Hideaway.

“Madame Montaud wasn’t having an affair with her cellar master,” Marie-Claude said, wondering at what point her arm had become linked with his. “She ordered far too many
evening gowns for an illicit liaison.”

More likely she was being courted discreetly, preferring to wait and see how things developed before going public with the relationship.

“Loose women aren’t taken seriously in business,” she pronounced. “But the sister, Madame Delaville, now that’s a different story.”

Husband reeking of stale booze and smoke, choosing all her clothes? She’d lost count of the number of times she’d seen him sitting in Madame Garreau’s plush armchair, squat and
potbellied like a cocky little toad, while his wife paraded in unflattering suits with slow and mechanical precision.

“Natalie Delaville is a woman of loose moral standards?”

“Exactly the opposite,” Marie-Claude said, turning the key in the shop. “Her husband has the word bully all but etched on his forehead, but the more I think about it, the more
I remember that her chin hasn’t drooped quite so much lately, there’s been colour in her pale cheeks, and miracle of miracles, Madame Delaville actually called in half a dozen times on
her own over the past month. I want to look up what she –
voilà!

“Well?” Luc held out his hands in exasperation. “Are you going to tell me what the little mouse bought?”

“Certainly not.” Such matters were private! “But I can tell you that the dresses were feminine and flattering, and I can tell you whose account they were charged to, as
well.” She shot her husband a sideways glance. “Alexandre Baret.”

“All right . . .” Luc rubbed his jaw in thought. “But is this actually getting us anywhere?”

“It explains his unease and reluctance to provide an alibi.”

“Because he was protecting Natalie Delaville.”

“Absolutely.” She locked the door and tested the catch. “Now all we have to do is prove how that bitch killed Martine.”

“Metamorphosis is a wonderful thing,” Luc observed, stretching his pace to match hers. “One minute she’s a mouse, the next she’s a bitch – what? What have I
said?”

“Honestly!” Marie-Claude stopped outside the baker’s and shook her head in disbelief. “I don’t know where you get your ideas, sometimes! Not Madame Delaville, Luc.
She didn’t kill Madame Montaud.”

It was Madame Baret, of course. Alexandre’s wife.


And
she killed the wrong woman.”

As the hills slowly turned to russet and gold and the French populace finally came to terms with defeat in Indochina, the Empire State Building had been eclipsed as the
world’s tallest structure, civilization was facing extinction from something called Rock and Roll, and Luc had been proved right about Suez, especially in light of that botched attempt
earlier on the Egyptian president’s life.

“By the way, Marie-Claude, I received a letter from the Commissioner this morning.”

More and more these days Luc had taken to joining her on walks along the tow-path, although sometimes their route took them through the town hall park or onto the islands, where they would take
a picnic providing they wrapped up warm.

“He writes that he has finally rounded up everyone involved in the blackmail and extortion ring. Some seven police officers are awaiting trial, he says, and commends me for a job well
done.”

“That the letter?” Marie-Claude tossed it into the Charente, where a squadron of ducks came steaming in, mistaking it for a bread roll. “You know my opinion of the
Commissioner.”

“For the life of me, I can’t imagine why.”

“He said I was truculent, selfish and a pain in the
cul
.”

Luc laughed. “Well, if you overheard that much, you’d have also heard him qualify his statement by adding that you were spirited, funny, and I was lucky to have you.”

Couldn’t agree more, sir
, Luc had replied, and damn those horrid children upstairs for drowning out the Commissioner’s words.

“He congratulated me on the Montaud murder, as well.” Luc stuffed his hands in his pockets. “Being a high-profile case, I suppose word found its way back to his desk, but what
I’m getting to is that he ended by saying that, now the corruption ring’s been wrapped up and my life is no longer in danger, there’s a job for me in Paris, should we want
it.”

“You never told me your life was threatened!”

“Hell hath no fury like a Chief Inspector jailed. So, then. Do we? Want that job, I mean.”

“It might have been high-profile, but it wasn’t exactly brain surgery, Luc.”

All those late nights in the distillery, indeed!
I did not conduct an affair down here with Madame Montaud
, the cellar master had insisted,
that’s simply too sordid to
contemplate.
Quite right. It may have been his employer’s sister he’d been carrying on with, not his employer, but he wouldn’t have dreamt of taking the delicate, browbeaten
Natalie to the distillery had it not been the only place where they could meet and not be either seen or overhead. His office was too close to the main works. They dared not be seen in public. So
they either sat down there, talking long into the night, or they sneaked off in his car to plan their new life together, and what a lot of planning there was. For all that cellar masters are
handsomely paid and live in grand houses, they still don’t live like the Montauds! There would be no majestic mansion for Natalie once she left Delaville. No parklands, no servants, no
prestigious balls. Alexandre had wanted her to be one hundred percent sure before making the leap. He knew there would be no going back.

For her part, of course, Madame Baret hadn’t believed for a second that her husband had been required to work late.

In the way of deceived wives everywhere, she followed him, saw the lights in the distillery, knew about the bed, heard him whispering on the telephone in the hall. She’d had no trouble
tracing the number to the Domaine and knew immediately who he was carrying on with. (Who else was there, for goodness sake? Hardly that pale, downtrodden sister!) So, again in the way of deceived
wives everywhere, she hoped and then prayed the affair would blow over. Until the day she overheard him talking about their new life together . . .

From that moment on, revenge was all that consumed her. Revenge on the woman who had destroyed her life. Revenge on the man who discarded her.

“The marble bust might look like the instrument of a crime of passion, a spur-of-the-moment decision, grabbing the first object to hand,” Marie-Claude said, as they paused to watch
the churning waters of the millrush merge with the stately river. “But equally it smacked of a squeamish reluctance to be facing the victim.”

A uniquely feminine approach to murder. As was the cold-blooded planning.

“It was easy enough to get a set of her husband’s keys cut.”

“One of the locksmiths confirmed it straight away, but as evidence it was still far from conclusive.”

“No, but it all mounted up.” She kicked the fallen leaves as she walked. Alder, willow and poplar. “Madame Baret’s mistake was planting the desk key in Marline’s
pocket.”

Good heavens, women as elegant as Madame Montaud don’t use pockets! They tuck them away tidily in their
Chanel
handbags, which meant someone had used that key to get into her desk
and replaced it in a hurry. And if it wasn’t to take something out, then it must be to put something in.

A quick check of the keys proved that the letter had been typed on the Barets’ private typewriter, not in the office at the Domaine, but it had been a clever move on Madame Baret’s
part. If the head of a cognac house wanted rid of their cellar master, this would not be made public knowledge. A gentleman’s agreement between the two parties, however bitter underneath,
would not show on the surface. Both had too much invested in the business to jeopardize their reputations.

“She was smart about fingerprints, too.”

Taking care the only ones lifted were her husband’s, and who would think anything odd about seeing a lady of quality going round in evening gloves? Exactly. And whatever excuse she’d
used to lure Madame Montaud down to the cellars, she must have thought it was her lucky day when Martine agreed so easily. But then, of course, she didn’t know she was setting a trap for the
wrong woman.

“Too smart about the fingerprints,” Luc said. They had stopped to watch one of the wooden, flat-bottomed
gabarres
pass through the lock, laden with casks lashed with ropes.
“That was one of the things that bothered me from the outset. That if Martine Montaud was exerting so much passion in the cellar master’s quarters, why weren’t hers there,
too?”

“She misjudged the calibre of Madame Montaud’s jewellery, as well.”

How cold must her heart have been, as she stood over the corpse, unscrewing the emerald cluster? Extracting the key from Martine’s handbag, placing the letter of dismissal in her desk,
then walking out as if nothing had happened and secure in the knowledge that her husband would not plead
crime passionel.
Why should he, after all? The man was innocent.

“Never mind Madame Baret,” Luc said. “Just tell me whether we want that job in Paris.”

Marie-Claude watched the
gabarre
sail round the bend and disappear from sight. Above, the sun shone through the falling leaves and blackbirds foraged in the litter. Next week “Dial
M for Murder” would be running back to back with “Rear Window” and in subtitles, plus she still hadn’t finished those curtains for the bathroom, the cellar really needed a
new blind, the old one was a disgrace, the bedroom could use fresh wallpaper, ditto the
salon
now she came to think about it, and she’d promised Madame Garreau two more days a week
with the winter collection.

“Maybe when the rains come,” Marie-Claude said slowly.

Besides. She wasn’t sure Luc was quite ready to live alone yet.

WISH

John Rickards

Four days since I called in sick. I think.

I’ve been awake for three of them straight. I think.

My fellow
gardai
would piss themselves if they could see me, no doubt. Then they’d have me committed.

But they don’t know. They haven’t seen. They’re all out getting drunk, or off fucking their wives, or fucking their mistresses and lying about it to their wives, or passed out
in front of their TVs in their nice safe homes while I’m

fucking

dead.

And I don’t know if even I believe it.

It started with Michael. A mental case, low-grade nut. We have quite a few. A handful of paedophiles, stalkers, minor assaults. Care in the community jobs, not criminal enough to be locked up
for good, criminal enough to be in and out of the cells on a regular basis. Since jail seems to do fuck all by way of curing them – worse, many come out of it even more damaged than they went
in – my own policy is not to arrest. Talk, threaten, watch, but don’t arrest if possible. Jail only makes them more of a risk to everyone in the long run.

Some of these guys are homeless, but not Michael. It’s a shithole of a flat, though, overlooking the railway tracks not far from where they cross the Tolka, north of Dublin’s city
centre. Building that smells of boiled vegetables and cat piss. Walls the colour of boiled vegetables and cat piss.

“That woman hasn’t been poisoning your kitten, Michael. She doesn’t even know who you are. She wouldn’t know how to poison a kitten, even if she wanted to.”

“Could swear I’ve seen her . . .”

“No, you haven’t. She hasn’t done a thing. Trust me on this, OK? Jesus, they train me for this sort of thing and, believe me, if she was guilty, I’d know and I’d
have dealt with her. You’ve got to stop yelling at the woman and threatening her, Michael.”

Sullen look. A child being unfairly chided. A flash of malice. I wish for something to shut him up. I wish for something to stop this kind of shit.

So I do it. I drop the threat. Let the genie out of the bottle. Make the wish.

“And you listen good to me, Michael. You leave that woman alone from now on, or else I’ll send your name, address and photo to Iron Kurt’s Gay Nazi website.”

Let me explain. I have a friend, Curt, who’s funny, erudite, can hold his drink remarkably well, and who happens to be gay. One night in Fallon’s, the conversation turns to gay
rights and marriage, a subject which he understandably feels strongly about. He speaks his piece, and someone else makes some comment about him being a “fascist homo” or something.
Funny in its stupidity. And so the remark resurfaces and transforms, blossoming into something so much more.

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