Authors: J. Robert Janes
âDid you do it for him, since you knew where it was kept?'
âNO! I ⦠Look, I didn't, I swear it.'
âBut he asked you to?'
âAnd I refused.'
âThen what about the stepson?' demanded Kohler.
He was so anxious now she would have to smile weakly at him, she told herself, and softly say, âOflag 17A, you know of it, of how desperate Juliette was to get her son home? She would do anything Oskar wanted her to and went with many men in that place of his. Two ⦠three at a time, if he wanted her to â prostitutes as well â what did it matter, so long as Oskar would buy the boy's freedom?'
âDid you watch them?'
âOnce. Oskar ⦠Oskar thought it was funny. He throws dinner parties and then we ⦠we all go back to that hotel of his to ⦠to observe things.'
But that was more than once. âAnd did he buy the son's freedom?'
âTo put her out of her misery â one of the French? What do you think?'
âThat he'd prefer to spend the money on a bit of sculpture for
der
Führer.'
âLeda and the Swan, ah yes.'
âNo freedom, then?'
âNot from Oskar. This I know.'
âGood. Now let's stop pissing about. Tell me where he's keeping Oona.'
âOona? Who is this, please?'
Abruptly Kohler moved away from her to deeply thrust into the coals the long iron hoe that was used to pull clinkers from the firebox. âThe candle factory, where is it?' he demanded.
âOn the rue Championnet, across from the Omnibus Yards.'
âHow many employees?'
Would he threaten to burn her with that rod? âThirty, I think.'
âHow many shifts?'
âTwo. Each of twelve hours, when ⦠when there is sufficient wax.'
âAny guards?'
âWhy should there be?'
âLorries?' âTwo.'
â
Gazogènes
?'
âTheir roof tanks are filled at the Omnibus Yards. Oskar has a ⦠a deal with the manager.'
âDeals and deals, eh? So where do the
Milice
who keep an eye on that smelter of his hang out?'
âDid they hurt you badly?' she winced and heard him answer, âNot badly enough.'
âThe gymnasium on the rue Bonne Nouvelle. They ⦠they have a room at the back and ⦠and use the gym for parades and ⦠and other things.'
âLike beating people up and raping girls they've hauled in for questioning?'
âWhen it's necessary, yes.'
âSince when were either necessary?'
âYou ⦠you know what I meant.'
âSo, where is Oona?'
âAt the Hotel Titania. There's a room Oskar uses for ⦠for the girls he's preparing.'
âGuards?'
âOne or two.'
âFrench?'
âOf course.'
âGangsters?'
âYes.'
âAnything else I need to know?'
âNothing! Will the Führer really shut us down?'
It took all types to make up the Occupier, but he'd best say something to calm her, thought Kohler, setting the rod aside to help her on with her coat. âNot if I can prevent it. That's what the Höherer SS wants and we aim to deliver.'
âWe?'
âMy partner and I, though he doesn't know about it yet, but don't go telling your boss that we've had this little chat, not when Oberg agreed to let me question you.'
âDid he really?'
âIf I were you, I wouldn't even ask. Oh by the way, I'll want to interview you again about your use of the name “Juliette” for Mme de Bonnevies, and your knowing all about that tin of ⦠What did you call it?'
Verdamm
!
.
âOil of mirbane.'
Honoré de Saussine was in his mid-forties, the picture of health in these days when the sick got sicker and most others became ill through worrying. He did not back away from anything, thought St-Cyr, but met each question with a confidence that was troubling. A civil servant, and no doubt once a lover of
la petitesse
, the virtue of living small, he had come up in the world. No longer was his tie worn loose so as not to wear it out, nor did he bother to save his cigarette butts.
âInspector, as assistant director of building codes in the Ninth arrondissement, I was at my desk on Thursday from eight a.m. until noon, and from two until six. I could not possibly have gone to Charonne, nor had I any intention of, or wish to harm Alexandre. Oh
bien sûr
, we disagreed. Among scientists is disagreement not a fact of life? But to poison him ⦠Ah no. No. It's impossible.'
âAnd you've those who will swear to your being at that desk?'
âMy secretary and my assistants, the director also. Let me tell you nothing escapes that one's eye. Nothing.'
âThen that's settled. A moment. I'll just jot it down in my little book. “De Saussine at work.”â
The Sûreté took his time and wrote far more, so as to be unsettling, but one could only smile at such a ruse, thought de Saussine. St-Cyr would find no paste-pot pinching civil servant here, no shifty-eyed accumulator of the rubber bands and erasers of fellow employees.
From time to time Juliette de Bonnevies would glance their way and he had to ask himself, What has she told the Inspector? That I hated Alexandre even more than she did? That I knew very well where the nitrobenzene was kept â had I not been in his study many times? Had I not my own to use, in any case?
At the flash of a lewd and knowing grin from him, the woman quickly averted her veiled eyes and turned her back on them, a back that, when naked, had been seen by many.
The Hôtel Titania, eh, madame, he silently taunted. Was Alexandre aware of the things you did in that place, things Herr Schlacht bragged about to me?
âYour lunch, monsieur,' said the Sûreté, suddenly looking up from his notebook. âWhere, please, did you have it on Thursday?'
âMy lunch â¦? In the café at ⦠at the corner of the rue Rossini and the rue Drouot, near the office. We always go there. Myself and two others.'
âThe soup, the
pot-au-feu
⦠a glass of wine?'
âNo wine, Inspector. It was a no-alcohol day, remember?'
âBread?'
âTwo of the twenty-five gram slices.'
âThe National?'
That grey stuff that was made of sweepings and a lot of other things. âYes.'
â
Bread
,' he muttered and wrote it down. â
No wine.
'
âInspector, is this necessary?'
âAs necessary as is the truth, monsieur. You see my partner has spoken at length with â¦'
âAll right. I ⦠I dined with Herr Schlacht at
l'Auberge de Savoie.
'
âThirty-six rue Rodier, but still in the Ninth and not far from that office of yours in the town hall, not far from the auction house either. Before the war, the porters at the Hôtel Drouot were its regulars. They all came from Savoy, a prescriptive right Napoleon insisted on, but now ⦠Now I do not know how things are.'
âOccasionally a few of them still eat there, but ⦠but it's a busy place and the clientele has changed.'
âBlack market?'
âThe
gratin de pommes de terre de Savoie
was superb.'
Baked, thinly sliced potatoes, cheese, eggs, milk and garlic, with pepper, salt and butter, optional nutmeg and sometimes sliced onions or shallots ⦠in a city where most hadn't seen a potato since the winter of 1940 to â41, to say nothing of the butter and cheese!
âThe
soufflé de truite à la sauce d'écrevisses
was magnificent.'
Mon Dieu
, trout with a crayfish sauce! âThe Reblochon and the Boudane?'
Cheeses from Savoy, the latter matured in grape brandy. âThose also, and coffee. Herr Schlacht likes to dine well.'
The Inspector painstakingly wrote all of this down, then took a break to pack his pipe and light it. The match was blown out, not waved out, and then, as an added precaution, spittle wetted a thumb and forefinger and the thing was decisively extinguished.
âOne never knows, does one?' he said. âThe threat of fire in winter seems even more imminent than in summer.'
Fire in a greenhouse! âInspector â¦'
âMonsieur, I am certain Herr Schlacht expressed to you his thoughts regarding your president.'
âHe was concerned, yes.'
âNot simply concerned, monsieur. The two of you â¦'
âWhat, exactly, did Madame Roulleau tell you, Inspector? That I was
deutschfreundlich
and assisting one of the Occupier? Since when is that a crime?'
âMadame Roulleau and I did not even discuss you, monsieur.' This was a lie, of course. âBut it is interesting that you should think she has accused you of murder.'
âI didn't say that! I â¦'
âBut the possibility arose between you and Herr Schlacht, didn't it, and you were asked advice on how best to do it?'
âI refused absolutely to even speak of such a thing.'
âAt what time did you finish your lunch? Please remember that the
patron
will be consulted.'
âAt three forty. We ⦠we talked of other matters.'
âThe honey you were selling for him. Honey you knew carried diseases and yet ⦠and yet you sold it to your colleagues to augment the winter stores of their hives.'
âInspector, to not have done so was for them to have lost their colonies. If Madame Roulleau were at all honest and reliable, she would have acknowledged this.'
âYou deal on the black market, monsieur; you sell diseased queens.'
âWhat else did that interfering old woman tell you?'
âThat you threatened your president with legal action; that the two of you argued vehemently and that Monsieur de Bonnevies sent out notices to warn others of the diseases you were so thoughtlessly spreading.'
âHe had no proof! It was all a figment of his “scientific” imagination. Acarine mites ⦠A crisis in the making? A tragedy? It's absurd. Idiotic. Their numbers were far too small. Only a few hives showed any signs of it. All were fumigated most thoroughly. All!'
âAnd Herr Schlacht, monsieur? Didn't he offer you a substantial reward if you took care of things for him?' This was another lie, of course, but when needed, could lies not be forgiven in these difficult times?
âI refused. Ask him.'
âTwo hundred thousand francs?' It was a shot in the dark.
âA million. It ⦠it was insane, Inspector. I ⦠I couldn't agree to such a thing â how could I? Alexandre and I go back too far. When I was but a boy of thirteen, he took me under his wing and shared his love of bees. I â¦'
âInspector â¦'
It was Lalonde, the assistant gardener. âWell, what is it?'
âA moment, please. I ⦠I have found something you must see.'
âCan it not keep?'
âForgive me, Inspector, but it can't. Your partner also wishes to speak with you in private.'
Hermann â¦
Merde
, what the hell had happened? âHe's always in a hurry. Monsieur de Saussine, please remain ready to continue. A million you said? Ah! I must jot that down and get you to ⦠Sign here, please.'
âIt ⦠it's in code. I can't reâ'
âJust sign it, monsieur, and date it. Thirty-first January, 1943 at ⦠four ten in the afternoon. No wonder I'm hungry. I've totally missed my lunch!'
Hermann was waiting in another of the greenhouses and didn't look up when approached. Humus was scattered. Two of the potted flowers, set well behind a screen of others on the trestle table, had been uprooted and hastily replanted. Broken, blackish-brown rootlets formed a tangled spaghetti on the leaves of adjacent plants.
â
Merci
, Monsieur Lalonde,' sighed St-Cyr. âYou may leave us now, but were absolutely correct to fetch me.'
âMademoiselle Danielle could so easily have come in here before the meeting, Inspector. The girl is considered almost as one of us and knows well where each type of flower is grown.'
The gardener was clearly much distressed and with good reason, but had best be told. âSay nothing. Let us deal with it. Now go. We will return to the others in a moment.'
â
Helleborus niger
, Louis. The Christmas rose â¦'
âYes, yes. A cure for madness in the days of Pliny the Elder, Hermann, but as to how many patients survived, the historical records are understandably vague.'
The flowers, of a very uncomplicated but proud look, were large and white or purplish and stood tall and straight, with golden, pollen-covered anthers to which the bees, excluded from this greenhouse, could not come.
The leaves were serrated and leathery; the stems, a purplish-brown.
âDid she wear gloves?' asked Kohler.
âIf it was Danielle â if, Hermann. We don't know this yet, but if gloves weren't worn, then the skin of the fingers â especially that around the nails â will definitely show signs of inflammation.'
âThere'll also be earth under her fingernails, idiot!'
âUnless whoever did this washed their hands afterwards, or wore gloves.'
âThe roots, Louis.'
âWhen dried and ground, they have the look of powdered liquorice and can, at times, unfortunately be mistaken for it. A dram of the tisane has been known to kill, but with the powdered root, the exact dosage is unknown and probably varies, though it has to be much less than a gram.'
âShe either killed her father or thinks that half-brother of hers did it and now plans to kill herself.'
âAnd if not Danielle and not Ãtienne?'
âThen Frau Käthe Hillebrand, or Madame de Bonnevies.'
âOr Honoré de Saussine, or Father Michel?'
âYou tell me. Look, we have to talk. The Palais d'Eiffel is about to be shut down. Oberg insists we do everything we can to prevent this. We can find our murderer, but had better leave Schlacht and his wife well out of it, or else.'