Authors: J. Robert Janes
They descended the steps. Louis slipped and nearly went down. Kohler cursed the impulse that had led them to explore the place from such an entrance. At the back door, repeated banging brought no answer. All the curtains were drawn. â
Merde
, what now?' muttered Louis.
âWe open it up. We have to. Look, for all we know Boemelburg and Herr Max could have had everyone arrested and be only waiting for us to return to Paris.'
âIdiot, they'd have stopped us on the road. You're forgetting the controls.'
Kohler tried to force the lock. âMessieurs â¦'
The voice had about it a breathless urgency. At the far corner of the garden, a top step was hesitantly negotiated by a wooden-clogged, tall, thin woman in black with a shopping hamper. A hand was thrown up. They held their breaths. âMadame Jacqmain is in her grave these fifteen days,' she cried out. âThe Mademoiselle has gone to Paris. You â¦
why would such as you demand such as this effort from one such as myself
?'
They recrossed the garden at a run and when these two from Paris who had come in the shiny black car that had been left outside the
mairie
and Kommandantur stood below her on the steps, Madame Augustine Moreel faced them from above, thus blocking their way and putting even the giant at a disadvantage. âMessieurs, must I notify the préfet himself? You were tampering with the locks.'
A Belgian, a Walloon ⦠âMadame, could we not discuss things on more stable ground?'
Suspicion raked him. âPlease state your business.'
Her purse was black and gripped as a weapon. âSûreté and Kripo. He's the Sûreté, I'm the â¦'
Her grey-blue eyes flashed impatience. âWhat's the son done this time? Violated another poor young thing? Flayed her to satiate his base desires and then wept on his knees before that portrait of his dear mother, a saint?'
They waited. They swallowed this outburst, these two detectives who clung to the icy ascent beneath her.
â
Well
?' she demanded.
Louis was about to say, A few small questions. Kohler shushed him by gripping him by the elbow and nearly sending the two of them to the bottom. âYou mentioned a mademoiselle, madame?'
âPerhaps I did.'
âThere were two ladies who came from Paris. Did they have a suitcase with them?' tried Louis.
âWhen, exactly, did they come?' she asked.
âThat's what we'd like to know,' managed Kohler.
âA suitcase,' she said, the breath held back. âTravellers always have such things.'
Merde
! they were getting nowhere. âMadame, please step aside and accompany us into the house.'
âI'll do no such thing. Madame trusted me implicitly and carried her confidence in that trust to her grave.'
A treasure, then, if the key to part this one's lips could ever be found. âThe two who came here, did they take Monsieur Jacqmain's daughter to Paris with them?' It was a complete shot in the dark.
âSylvianne was beside herself with grief, monsieur. The child has lived all her tender life with the grandmother she adored. They were the greatest of companions. No matter was too difficult for either to accomplish for the other. Reading, sketching, piano lessons ⦠Night after night exquisite concerts, the singing ⦠Though she's only twelve years old, the daughter has the sound of angels in her voice and fingers, but also the great goodness of God in her heart, thanks be to Him who has made us all in spite of accidents of birth.'
âYou must be freezing,' said Kohler. âHere, let's go round and into the house by its proper entrance. It was stupid of us to have come this way. Undignified of police officers.'
Suspicion registered but she held her tongue. An eighteenth-century iron railing ran atop the wall. There were the usual âtourists' about, members, also, of the Wehrmacht's local detachment, but the lack of schoolboys throwing snowballs at schoolgirls reminded one that the light of day was, alas, fast fading. Soon the kids would be let out of school.
âMessieurs, why have you come?'
It was Louis who said, âHe has killed himself.'
She drew in a breath. âThen you will want to know where his daughter is. Two deaths in such a short time ⦠It will be hard for Sylvianne to bear. In spite of everything, that goodness of heart included the father she had never seen except in photographs faded by the rays of the tropical sun.'
âWho was the mother?'
Why were they so anxious? âOne whose skin was that of a mulatto. A gypsy. A “virgin” he took repeatedly in a brothel in Bruges and once beat so terribly with his whip, it brought the police, thereby disgracing his mother in the eyes of her family and friends, while leaving her with the constant reminder of the child that was given to her at birth by the madam of that house.'
Tshaya's child ⦠âA saint, you said,' offered St-Cyr kindly.
âNow, please, let us go in before the neighbours think I've been arrested and that the house will fall into the hands of the son they know nothing of but whispers.'
The house was pleasant, the kitchen spacious beneath a wealth of ancient beams from which, by some avoidance of the ordinance for copper, scrap and otherwise, the pots still hung. There was a large and blackened, grey, cut-stone fireplace in which a small fire soon burned. Clearly Jacqmain's daughter had been in charge of collecting twigs and branches, but it was when he went to get some of the fist-sized balls of drying papier-mâché she had made, that St-Cyr found the half used-up novel.
â
Nana
,' he said. âWhy did I not think of it?'
Zola's novel of the courtesan, âactress' and âsinger' of no talent but one, had captured readers ever since its publication in 1880. A tall and stunningly curvaceous creature with reddish-blonde hair. Nana had suddenly appeared on stage at the Variétés in the operetta,
La Vénus blonde
. At the age of eighteen she had had no qualms. Her breasts had been firm, the nipples erect beneath the flimsy, diaphanous veil she had worn with nothing else. In triumph, she had lain in the grotto of the silver mine on Mount Etna, its walls serving as polished mirrors to her nakedness. Through their opera glasses, the bankers, financiers, stock brokers and
demi-mondaines
of fashionable Paris had even seen the tawny hair of her armpits and her radiant, if wickedly lecherous smile.
She had known all about men and had known exactly what they had wanted of her. But her young life, after unbelievable riches had been heaped upon her, had ended in smallpox and he could still recall the scent of carbolic that had permeated the death-bed room at the Hôtel Grand on her return from Russia. Only her hair had retained its radiance but Zola had given a last glimpse of it in candlelight. Touched by a chance gust, some strands had fallen forward to be glued to the sores.
Within six months of the novel's end, Bismark's Prussians had marched into Paris. The Franco-Prussian War of 1870â71 had ended and the German state had begun.
âNana Thélème,' he said when Hermann came to find out what was delaying him. âIt's the stage name our Nana chose and the daughter here must have known of it. Hence her reading the novel, in secret no doubt.'
âI made her burn that book,' said Madame Moreel. âThe child adored Mademoiselle Thélème who, before the Defeat, would come to visit us as often as she could and delighted in this house and in the child. It was through her that Sylvianne took up the piano, the singing and dancing.'
âIs Sylvianne the reason Monsieur Jacqmain sold his diamonds and sent that suitcase?' asked Kohler only to hear Louis interjecting. âA moment,
mon vieux
.
âMadame, this friend of the child's father, did she sometimes bring along another? A Dutchman? Tall, thin, about â¦'
âWhy is it, please, that you ask, Inspector?'
The coldness of suspicion had leapt into her eyes. âOnly to give us background. It's always best to explore all avenues.'
All branches of the tree â was this what he was implying? she wondered anxiously. âThey adored Sylvianne. The child was very fond of Mademoiselle Thélème's friend, but he did not come here often, nor did she explain his long absences beyond that she did not know where he was. What passed between our Nana and her “Jani”, Inspector? Love â ah! even an old widow such as myself could see it. But why did he not marry her?'
âThe suitcase,' said Kohler brusquely.
âThe money was to ensure that Sylvianne and her grandmother should want for nothing, but I couldn't have that father of hers suddenly coming into her life. It was Madame Jacqmain's most fervent wish that her son never see his daughter or take any part in her life. When she died, after a long illness, I had to see that these wishes were carried out and let them take the child and the suitcase to Paris, but now that he is dead, Sylvianne can return. His suicide is as if God had answered all our prayers.'
Fearing she had said too much, the woman gathered an apronful of the papier-mâché balls and, clutching the last of the novel, went back to the fire.
âWas the daughter even Jacqmain's?' grunted Kohler, pulling down a lower eyelid at the vagaries of whorehouses and the paternity of such offspring.
âTshaya must have been banished from the
kumpania
and from the Rom for ever, Hermann. She'd have left the child with them otherwise. But if De Vries was the father, that could well be why he came here and why Nana took such an interest in the child.'
âWhat about the nitro? Could he have come to tap a little of it from time to time in the thirties?'
âPerhaps â its certainly worth considering.'
âAnd the Thélème part of her stage name?' asked Kohler, his mind still on the explosives.
âIt's from Rabelais's magnificent satire of 1534. He believed that humanity held within itself a basic instinct to do what was right, if all his conditions of being free and well-bred, properly educated and of good company were met. There was a war in which all the priests but one sought refuge in prayer while their lonely brother took on all comers in the abbey close and drove the enemy from it. To celebrate the victory, an abbey was built whose only rule was “Do what thou wilt”.
L'Abbaye de Thélème
.'
âAnother
maison de tolérance
!' snorted Kohler.
âNot so. A place where all good things might be enjoyed,
yes
! but goodness being defined and governed by that fundamental instinct in us all. You should read more, Hermann. You really must introduce yourself to our literature.'
âOkay, I get the message. Hey, I would never have let you down. You know that, Louis. We're in this together.'
They had no tobacco. They could only share a handshake.
âMadame,' said Louis gently when they had returned to the kitchen, âwas Sylvianne's mother Lucie-Marie Doucette?'
The woman was instantly suspicious. âIf so, she did not call herself that. Her name, and the only one she went by, was Tshaya. Myself, I saw her only once and what I saw, I did not trust, but Madame was determined to make amends by adopting the child, and I am for ever grateful that she did.'
Louis nodded sagaciously. Onions were being peeled for the soup that would be her supper. âAnd was Mademoiselle Thélème aware of the mother's name?'
Was she familiar with Tshaya â is this what they were after, these two? âMadame confided it to her just as Mademoiselle Thélème brought news of Madame's son she then imparted in confidence.'
âAnd when, please, did these visits begin?' said St-Cyr.
âInspector, you ask too many questions. I'm an old woman.'
âThen I'll ask it again.'
She shrugged in reproof. âThe Mademoiselle Thélème first came to us almost as soon as we had moved in. The child was about a year old.'
âIn 1931, then.'
âYes, but her “Jani” did not come with her until the summer of 1934.'
âAnd did she use the name of Thélème at that time?' persisted Louis.
The slicing stopped. Tears began to form. âInspector, have I been wrong to entrust Sylvianne to her?'
âNo. No, of course not. Please, you mustn't worry. The girl will soon return.'
âThen why did you ask that about Nana? What else would she have called herself?'
It would do no good to avoid the issue, but Nana had obviously come gradually to understand who the child's real father was. âWe only thought it might be a stage name, as is the Mademoiselle Arcuri's, whose real name is Natal'ya Kulakov-Myshkin.'
âA Russian!'
âBut widowed. Her married name is Thériault.'
Louis was just digging a hole for himself. âWhen did they arrive to take the girl?' asked Kohler.
Her look was cold, but she knew she'd have to answer. âA week ago yesterday. They came, they said, only to deliver the suitcase but when she learned of Madame's death, Mademoiselle Thélème agreed to take Sylvianne with her even though they would have to seek residence and travel papers for her. The Mademoiselle Arcuri was convinced she could take care of the matter and that there would be no problem. “The Kommandant von Gross Paris is an old friend,” she said. “He'll understand the need and that there is nothing untoward in our request.”'
Old Shatter Hand wasn't going to like it when he learned the truth, thought Kohler but said pleasantly enough, âThey went to a quarry.'
âYes. Monsieur Jacqmain had told Mademoiselle Thélème of the
pierre fine
from which the Château de Versailles was constructed. This limestone came from quarries nearby.'
Building at Versailles had begun in 1624, recalled St-Cyr. Louis XIII had wanted a small hunting pavilion, but it was the Sun King, Louis XIV, who, from 1661 to 1681, had built on an impressively grand scale and in 1682 had made Versailles the official residence and seat of government.