Authors: J. Robert Janes
She hadn't just been studying for the sake of a licence. She had been plotting the use of these abbeys as way-stops en route to and from France. âPilgrims, was it, mademoiselle? Is that why you found yourself in that van at those ruins? Did you also tell those two of it when you bummed a lift? And what of the others, please? Did they, too, know of it and is that why they then followed? Are we even wrong to have assumed that you bummed a lift? Is there another reason for your walking ahead to that van? Did your
passeur
know of those two and tell you to leave the truck while you had a chance?
Merde
, but you engender questions!'
At the last of her notes there was a line that she must have written just before leaving. Though from the Rule of Saint Benedict, she hadn't quoted directly but had done as Benedict himself, and had gone right back to the primary source, the first epistle to Saint Paul, 1 Corinthians 15:10: âBut by the grace of God I am what I am.'
*
Leaving everything but the key exactly as he had found it, he gave the room a final once-over, noticing only that he had missed the cork from a bottle of Moët et Chandon. It was on the little bedside table and behind the glass she had emptied, rinsed out, dried and left upside down until her return.
Up on the roof, the wind was from the east, the air so clear he paused to draw in a few deep breaths. To the forest of chimney pots he now faced, there was not a single trail of smoke. Beyond the entrance to the stairwell was an apron of flat roof that allowed for rabbit and chicken hutches and rows of bell jars and pots of earth. Leeks, celery, Belgian endive, chicory, lettuces, green onions, chives, basil, too, and marjoram, rosemary, thyme and sage, she had them all. Sampling a few, he fed the rabbits a little, they eagerly expecting more.
âTwo visits home,' he asked, âand all you bring back is a piece of embroidery? The house of your parents, mademoiselleâthe home you grew up in and would have come to love. Surely you must have brought something from that first visit. Additionally, you would have hidden it where easily retrievable.'
Wedged by two slats, and up under the roof of the last of the chickens, was a tin box, some twenty-four by twenty and eight centimetres in depth, the irony total. â“Chabert et Guillot,” mademoiselle? When I was but a boy of four and behaving myself for a change, Grand-mère decided a reward was necessary. “They make the finest nougat in the whole wide world,” she told me. “Even Napoleon had a passion for it. Lavender honey and grape sugar, and no others but those are first heated. Egg whites are then beaten and stirred in until the consistency is such that you can dip a finger and draw out nothing but the most perfect of trails. Only then are the pistachios, almonds and dried fruit added, the whole beaten until ready to be smoothed out on special paper and cut into squares and cubes.”
âUntil the age of ten it, too, was my passion, but on 3 December 1900, my birthday, I received a tin just such as this and was of course, overwhelmed and warned not to chew too many at a time. Yanking a filling, no fault I assure you of the quality of the nougat and its perfect softness, I lost my passion and found another: the fierce and unbridled terror of dentists that I still harbour, especially since these days, no anaesthetics are available.'
Tucked out of sight behind the rabbits, he opened the box and immediately said, â
Ah merde
, you poor unfortunate.'
It wasn't a treasure trove, not that he could see. It was, instead, one of utter despair, for the house must have been ransacked, the parents arrested and deported, the neighbours or the Occupier or both having helped themselves, even to smashing up the furniture for badly needed firewood. âExactly the same is happening here,' he said. âMuch to our shame, necessity negates decency.'
Trampled, stained and crumpled snapshots gave views of the mother and father. In one, probably taken just after the general strike, the mother, aged forty perhaps, was pensively looking out a window. Tall, willowy and obviously very fair, her lips were tightly drawn at a future she did not want to contemplate, her left hand twisting the pearls about her neck.
Scattered, there were about six of those that Anna-Marie must have gathered.
Another snapshot was of herself at the age of ten at one of the Sunday afternoon antiques fairs in the Nieumarkt, for the Waag, that lovely many-towered building that had been built in 1488 as the southern gateway to Amsterdam, was behind her. She had a teacup she had just found to surprise her mother, the shadow of the father falling just to her right. In yet another, but at the age of twelve, she was with the brand-new Sparta her birthday must have brought. Anticipation of that newfound freedom, love, too, for her parents and that father in particular, simply emanated from her, the bike, though, one that she could never have forced herself to leave behind. Yet another snapshot showed her at the age of nineteen or twenty with the young man who must have become her fiancé, for there was an open bottle of champagne in the dune sand behind the couple.
âHand in hand, mademoiselle. Those are, I believe, the dunes at Zandvoort on the Noordsee. It's only about thirty-five kilometres from Amsterdam and a favourite resort to which I once took my Agnès, but you and that boy would not have stayed over. You wouldn't have wanted to disappoint your parents, not you.'
The crystal stopper of a perfume phial had been recovered, a wooden kitchen spoon and several loose-leaf, handwritten pages from the mother's recipe book. â“
Stroop pannekoek,
pancakes with syrup;
gember pannekoek
, those with ginger, and
speculaas
, especially
janhagel
, the spiced almond cookies.”'
She had even managed to find one of the wooden moulds she would have helped to fill at a very early age, that of Saint Nicholas.
Again he took up the photo of her and that boy but this time found the cork he had taken from the shattered neck of that bottle in the van. âA Moët et Chandon as well, Mademoiselle Annette-Mélanie Veroche, lest I forget the name you're now using, but a bottle that matches exactly the one in this photo and the cork you kept beside your bed so that, instead of one of these photos, you could touch it every night before sleep. Did our killer know that you were engaged? Did he mock you and take that drink when you had finally returned to that
passseur
's truck? An informant, mademoiselle?'
Below these there was a gold pocket watch, its chain with a cat's-eye fob. Obviously the father had had a hiding place she had known of. In Dutch, the inscription read,
To Jonas Vermeulen for 25 years of steadfast loyalty and exemplary service, Diamant Meyerhof, Amsterdam 7 June 1932.
Even at the height of the Great Depression, the firm had done this.
Beneath everything were two flattened white cotton bags with ties. Feeling their contents brought only despair, for in the one, all the particles were essentially of the same shape and size until at last, he having opened it, he heard himself saying, âCongo cubes, mademoiselle? Who else knows of these and if so, why on earth are they still here?'
Brown, dark grey, clear or yellowish, and even an off-green, all were typically dimpled completely on each surface and cubic in shape, and were of from one to two millimetres to a side. âBoart, is collectively diamond that when crushed and ground, and separated as to size by settling in oils of differing specific gravity, yields the gradations of grinding powders modern industry simply can't do without. Mining for these cubes really only began in earnest in 1939, but by 10 May 1940 and the Blitzkrieg, the Congo was supplying the world with nearly seventy percent of the boart and other industrials needed, those for metal-cutting, wire-drawing, trimming, shaping glass, drilling, too, and cutting slabs of rock, but you've a terrible problem on your hands, haven't you? You've a fortune in these alone if sold on the
marché noir
, but can't have told a soul, not if planning to get that boy to you via those abbeys.'
Only then did he hesitantly open the other sack, carefully setting its tie aside and spilling a little into a hand.
Clear white to off-white, and among them the exceedingly rare coloured diamonds, there were stones of every description and size up to and including those of two carats. âMine and river rough,' he managed, still stricken. Many of the crystals were octahedral, others dodecahedral, cubic, modified cubes and even hexoctahedral, but there were still others of a flattened triangular shape that, with their natural facets and colour, looked ready for setting in jewellery but could well have been used as industrials too.
As with all of them, sunlight flashed, giving myriad telltale glints. However, from himself there was only despair. Oona, Giselle, Gabi and her son were all at risk, but how had this girl come by them, only to then make a repeat journey, and what, please, had she intended?
â
Un mouchard
, mademoiselle. One your
passeur
and his firebox feeder didn't know about but you finally did, causing him to leave his operatives a note wrapped around a rijksdaaler? Since they didn't stop that truck from leaving Amsterdam, there has to be something that
Sonderkommando
desperately need you to do and that can only mean Hermann and myself are being dragged deeper and deeper into it.'
Through the silence of the abattoir came the constant dripping of those
verdammte
taps and the muffled coughing of that boy. Too many smokes and a complete loss of nerves had put Hartmann right on edge, the stench here rank enough to permeate the skin. It was now 16.32 and Dillmann hadn't arrived. To stay any longer was crazy. Louis would have said, Hermann, get the hell out of there while you can. Dillmann can't be trusted anyway. If Heinrich Ludin has his hands on him, he'll readily sing whatever tune is necessary.
Flinging the empty cigarette package away, his second, Kohler found the boy sitting on those boxes of fags into which he'd been dipping. âGive me one of those and don't argue. Light it first.'
âThey've all been arrested. It's Russia for sure. My mother warned me. She said they'd do that to me if I ever got in trouble.
Ach, Scheisse
, I would drop your cigarette. Why isn't the Oberfeldwebel here?'
âHang on. We'll wait another five minutes.'
âNot me. I'm going, but where? With these eyes of mine, I haven't got a chance.'
âSteady. Here, take a couple of breaths and leave the fags alone. You've got too much nicotine in you. Now go and stick your head out between those doors and have a look. Maybe that's a truck I heard.'
Actually, there were three of them, two from farms and one from the Wehrmacht, but all drove in as if it were the end of the world, to slam on the brakes and leave engines running.
As Hartmann closed the big doors, men piled out and went to work, the tarp's being flung back.
âBonzen
shrieking at
Bonzen
held us up, Kohler,' shouted Dillmann, tossing his cigarette away.
âEinen Moment, bitte.'
Suckling piglets ready for the spit were chased by whole sides of beef and pork. Cages of chickens were noisy, those of ducklings too. Squash, carrots, cabbages and potatoes followedâ
liebe Zeit
, were there no shortages? Onions by the sack came next, beets, too, for that much-loved borscht, sugar also and pears, apples, eggs, cheeses, grapes by the box but wine by the barrel this time.
All of it was swallowed up in exchange for the grease, oil and gasoline needed, the thumbs-up given and a âbeat it' until next time.
âEverything is organized because it has to be,' went on Dillmann, taking a breath and grinning from ear to ear before breaking out the cigars, even to lighting them. âWithin the hour, their half will be sold on the streets or to the shops, restaurants and hotels, our half as well.'
âSince it only takes about ten minutes to drive from one side of the city to the other, eh?'
âMaxim's, the Ritz, the Hotel George V, the Boeuf sur le Toit and the Grand Vévour for us, the Druant, too, others also, of course.'
âChez Rudi's?'
â
Ach
, you're not here to find out about my travels, but that place too, since it's right across the Champs-Ãlysées from the Lido and Rudi's a valued customer as is the Lido. But rumours are flying, my Hermann. A
gazo
, a
Schmuggler
, and a person who a Standartenführer and a Kriminalrat want so desperately they would hold up traffic for hours and hours? Kaltenbrunner must have told them not to say a thing to anybody, so let me hear from yourself what you've thought to involve me and my men in without first asking.'
Everything was rumour these days,
Mundfunk
*
its primary source. âWe simply don't know, that's why I've come to the fountain.'
Rudi was that and everyone knew it. âFlattery I don't need, not when that truck of mine should be leaving.'
âThen if you were a
Schmuggler
using a
gazo
they wanted what would you do?'
âStop and change trucks. Use one that burned diesel or gasoline, or take the time out to change over the original.'
âAnd get you to let them in?'
A dark look should be given but there wasn't time. âOr someone as capable. I'm not the only one, Hermann. Surely you know this?'
âThat package has a cut on the hand or forearm.'
âThat why you wanted Schütze Hartmann's first-aid kit, the one he was wearing on his belt when I dropped him off here and told him to obey me and no one else?'
âThat package may need it's antibacterial.'
âAnd big words, is it? Such a concern tells me that package is a skirt but is she
eine Jüdin
, Hermann?'
âEine Halbjüdin
, we think.'