Authors: J. Robert Janes
âHas he been arrested?'
âLater. In a moment.'
âJust what the hell has he been up to, Gabrielle? He was to question a Frau Schlacht, nothing else, and then return to the Salpêtrière to pick me up. A ⦠a woman with two small children had stopped us in the street. Hermann ⦠Hermann and I gave them a lift to the soup kitchen at the Gare d'Austerlitz. He was going to â¦'
âCalm down, please. For now I need you to keep still.'
The gash in his upper left arm was deep and ragged, and of about ten centimetres in length. âWho did this?' she asked.
He sighed heavily. âI tried to arrest two murderers. One was difficult. Both got away and can now await a little visit. There's no hurry even if they should happen to kill each other.'
âThere is for this, and you know it.'
âThen please telephone the morgue and ask if Armand Tremblay is going through the autopsy notes on the corpse of Alexandre de Bonnevies and doing his own as I requested. Armand can patch me up. I need, also, the analysis on the bottle of Amaretto.'
âDon't be an idiot. I'll do this myself. Now be quiet.'
Everything that was necessary was kept behind the bar. Deftly she cleaned the wound and refilled his glass. âI've done this lots of times,' she said.
âYou continue to surprise me.'
Her hair, worn loose at this hour, was of shoulder length and not blonde as he'd first thought, but the soft shade of a really fine brandy, and it spilled forward as she set to work. Her hands were slender, the fingers long.
âHermann was taken by the
Milice
but we still do not know where to. Remi has asked two trusted friends to quietly find out. For now you are to rest and keep out of it.'
âYou
like
giving orders. I could sleep for a year.'
âWith me, I hope.'
âYou know I can't. Gabi, listen to me, please. It's not safe for you to be seen with me. The SS, the
Milice
, will only cause further trouble.'
âAvignon was unpleasant?' she hazarded, not looking up from her needle.
âA handful of madrigal singers. The
Cagoule
caused difficulties.'
âAnd Gestapo Boemelburg is not happy with the result?'
Still she hadn't looked up. âWe've been warned to behave. An explosion on the tracks, then what happened to Oona. Boemelburg wants us to do one thing; the Kommandant von Gross-Paris another.'
The
Cagoule
had many friends and supporters among the
Milice
, thought Gabrielle. Others were members of it, and their lines of communication throughout the country were tragically getting better. âThen that must explain why an SS major wanted to talk to Hermann but got those people to haul him in.'
There was a sadness to her voice that said much more. An aching for France and what had happened to a once splendidly humane nation. Refilling his glass, she told him to drink it neat. From a silver cigarette case he knew well, she took two Russian cigarettes, the tobacco black and much stronger than he liked, but â¦
âFor me, for you,' she said on lighting them. âFor the first time we met, and for the times since then.'
âFor my partner, too, wherever he is.'
Would Jean-Louis and Hermann live to see the end of the Occupation; would she herself, or Oona and Giselle? wondered Gabrielle.
Rolling his shirt sleeve down, she buttoned it. âYou know I want us to have a life together.'
âDon't be difficult. It's impossible. It's far too dangerous for you.'
âFor you also?' she asked.
âFor all of us,' he said and did not offer to brush her tears away, just looked so steadily at and through her, one instantly saw Sûreté!
âThen you had better come to the house anyway, Monsieur
l'Inspecteur principal
,' she retorted acidly. âYou see, my concierge telephoned here last night and then discreetly came to see me rather than give the news to Gestapo ears, even though those
salauds
are still probably aware of it since they constantly watch the club and I could not tell her this. Apparently I have acquired, through no effort of my own, you understand, a new maid. Sixteen years of age and very capable, so much so, among her references it is stated that she was trusted implicitly, Inspector â
implicitly
â by her former mistress and made four trips a year to Switzerland with her. Heavy suitcases in; light ones out, in spite of the desperate need for canned goods here. Speaks more than a smattering of German which will be helpful, you understand, since the girl can't possibly stay in Paris and must go underground immediately. Giselle brought her to my place.
Giselle
, Jean-Louis.'
âNot Oona?'
He was desperate. âNo, not Oona.'
âArrested also?'
â
Oui.
'
The Citroën had remained in darkness in front of the club. No one had touched it or tried to steal it, thought Gabrielle. Things were so bad, word had spread rapidly and it had been avoided like the plague, but left by the arresters so as to give the other half of the partnership wings.
Reaching under the driver's seat, Jean-Louis soon found what he wanted, and dragged them out. âAs keeper of our guns until needed, Hermann is, at times, careless,' he confessed.
She knew his would be the 1873 Lebel
Modèle d'ordonnance
, six shots, the calibre 11mm. Hermann's was a Walther P38, a semiautomatic 9mm Parabellum, with eight cartridges in the clip.
âJean-Louis, I meant what I said about your sleeping. You can't run on that stuff like your partner does.'
âI will if I have to.'
Digging into the side pocket of the door, he found a spare phial of the little grey pills of Benzedrine the German night-fighter pilots took to stay awake, and downed how many? she wondered.
âFour,' he said. âAfter a while the system grows accustomed to them, so one must increase the dosage.'
â
Mon Dieu
, will you not listen to me? Where ⦠just where do you think you're going to find him?'
âAt a smelter. You know it and so do I, so why try to hide the fact? Just take care of that new maid you've acquired. Let me drive you home and then forget about us.'
âI can't. I won't.'
âYou'd best, for the sake of your son.'
The furnace was white hot. The Alsatian guard dogs were restless and had had to be chained.
Awakened in the dead of night and forced from their garrets, the Russian smelter workers and their families huddled in grey nightshirts and nightgowns. Teenagers, kids, thumb-sucking toddlers with runny noses, grandparents and parents mutely watched from the rickety, soot-encrusted staircase that climbed above the wall of cages.
Frantic, one of the guinea pigs was dangled by a hind leg over the gaping mouth of the furnace. Heat roared up, smarting its glistening dark eyes and causing it to madly squirm.
Sweat poured from Kohler. Blinded by it, he tried to clear his eyes. His wrists ached like hell. The bracelets â
his
bracelets â were cutting into them. Strung up, stripped naked, he hung from a chain and hoist pulley near the furnace. Only his toes touched the floor.
There were six
miliciens
and one of them had removed his tunic and beret to don goggles and asbestos. The others, their expressions dark with hatred, waited. There was no sign of the SS major now. No sign â¦
When dropped, the creature didn't even squeal. It simply flashed to steam with little smoke, and this rushed from the furnace, white and sudden and carrying still-glowing bits of its fur.
Frantically Kohler searched for a way out. These bastards weren't just angry about the loss of two of their own. They'd had word from Avignon and were out to put an end to him!
Goggles removed a gauntlet and took from a small, slag-encrusted crucible, a fine gold neckchain and locket.
â
Don't
! Please don't,' managed Kohler. There had, as yet, been no sign of Oona.
The locket was opened. The hoist was released a little, and now his feet could rest flatly on the floor. In relief, he shut his eyes tightly, then opened them.
âLook, be reasonable, eh? It's the only picture she has of her two children. They were lost during the blitzkrieg in the west â killed, she believes, on the trek from Holland, and I ⦠I can't make her see that there could still be hope. I can't.'
âHalf-Jewish,' grunted Goggles. âJohan would have been nine years old now; Anna, seven. The father, Martin Van der Lynn, was a Jew the woman you shelter tried to hide in Paris.'
âThe French Gestapo of the rue Lauriston killed him in the Velodrome d'Hiver.' The cycling arena.
âAnd good riddance,' said Goggles.
The locket was dangled over the furnace. The photograph began to turn brown, to curl and finally to burst into flame.
âGone,' wept Kohler. âAh, Oona ⦠Oona, forgive me.'
Blood and sweat trickled from his left eye to run down the scar the rawhide whip of an SS had left a good two months ago at the chateau of Gabrielle Arcuri's mother-in-law near Vouyray, and overlooking the Loire. Yet another murder investigation whose outcome had definitely not been appreciated.
Blood and sweat found the one that cut diagonally across his chest. â
Maudit salauds
!' he cried. âWhat the hell have you done with Oona?'
âThat's not for you to know.'
Godonov was summoned and told to charge the furnace. âWe need enough to bathe this one's feet.'
Scrap silverware, sand, charcoal, lead oxide, bone ash and the yellowish peroxide of sodium were added.
âNow we must wait,' cautioned Godonov. âPlease.' He ducked his shaggy head to one side in deference. âA little vodka,
mes amis.
Pickled cucumber and beetroot will be served on
blini
, the small pancakes we usually eat with caviar. There is
coulibac
also, and made in the old way, you understand. A superb cabbage pie whose origins date from the sixteenth century.
Pel'meni sibériens
, too. These are a kind of ravioli that we have stuffed with a delectable forcemeat of guinea pig.'
He paused to let his gaze sift over the assembled. âOf course, messieurs, we apologize for there not being any sour cream or caviar, but such things are difficult these days, as is the vodka, although God makes allowances.'
Clothing that was Oona's was dangled over the furnace and allowed to catch fire before being dropped.
Herr Kohler was hoisted up so that his toes no longer touched the floor.
âForgive me,' said Godonov softly. âThere is, alas, nothing I can do.'
Tendrils of tobacco smoke rose into the beam of the cinema's projector. On the screen, an ancient rerun, approved by those idiots in the Propaganda Staffel, was telling the French how decadent they were.
An abortionist was about to attend to a young girl of misfortune who was afraid and hesitantly undressing. Flames rose from the skirt and sweater she removed. Flames caught at the woollen knee socks, cotton blouse, half-slip and brassiere. Oona ⦠was it Oona?
Giselle was sitting all alone beneath the projector beam. Tears streaked her face; she tore her hair. Blood ran from her beautiful lips. Pregnant ⦠was Giselle pregnant?
Oona
, idiot. She's worried about âOONA!'
With a shriek, Herr Kohler awoke from his little nightmare as the ice-cold water hit him. Shaking his head to clear it, he realized at once where he was still hanging.
âWere they raping them both,' asked Godonov softly with deep concern, âor just the one they have taken?'
âWhat time is it?'
Worried about repercussions, Godonov hesitated. âThree or four a.m. I have not asked.'
The Russian lowered the bucket and, at a word from behind, deferentially stood aside and returned to the staircase to join the others of his little flock.
Goggles stood beside the furnace, with a gauntleted hand on the pour-lever which would rock the cradle and tip the melt out. Gradually the other
miliciens
came into view. Fists were doubled, arms folded tightly across their chests. Bastards ⦠bastards â¦
âSo, Herr Kohler, a few small questions,' said the one that was fifty and fast greying but tough, too tough. A butcher, probably, in his previous life. âNothing difficult, you understand.'
âDID THEY TELL YOU LOUIS AND I SAID STUFF LIKE THAT IN AVIGNON, EH?'
Sweat ran down Herr Kohler's flanks causing the scars from that other war to glisten, as did those of the whip marks. âPlease, make it easy for yourself,' continued Vincent Soulages,
Chef de Milice du quartier du Mail et de Bonne-Nouvelle.
âWe're not monsters and must go home to our families as loving fathers or sons, so as to sleep peacefully.'
âPiss off.'
Stung, Soulages lashed out with his truncheon, hitting the buttocks. Gritting his teeth, Kohler refused to cry out. The chain creaked as it swung back and forth, finally coming to rest.
âI will ask you only once
!' shrieked Soulages. â
Where did you take the wax and hives
?'
âI don't know. Hey, it's not that I won't remember. It's simply that I didn't ask the boys who were with me
!'
âWE'RE WASTING TIME, VINCENT!' yelled Goggles.
âA moment, Felix. He has not quite understood.' Savagely the truncheon was swung back, the blocky shoulders moving with it.
âOkay, okay,' shrilled Kohler. âHey, I was only kidding but if you hit me again, my lips will be sealed.'
âThen we await your reply.'
âAnd then you'll pour the melt â is that it, eh?
Ach Du lieber Gott, meine Idioten
, you've forgotten with whom you're dealing. Old Shatter Hand,
Dummköpfe
! He gave us orders to pluck that crap away from your little
Bonze
and destroy it!'
The furnace, mounted on rollers, was moved a little closer. A trough of firebrick was put in place and sloped to Herr Kohler as he was lowered until his feet once again touched the floor.