Authors: J. Robert Janes
The clouds had vanished; the mistral still blew every bit as fiercely.
âMonsieur le Préfet said I was to keep silent,' confessed Thérèse Godard faintly. âHe told me that if I did not wish to embarrass myself, I should remember that silence protected a girl's honour.'
The son of a bitch!
âWe'll protect you,' said the one called Kohler but she knew this could never be and said, âYou don't know what it's like here! They have their ways. People like me are nothing to them.
Nothing
, do you understand?'
âWho do you mean?' urged St-Cyr.
âThem! I â¦' The girl shrugged and wiped her eyes with her fingertips.
âListen to me, mademoiselle â¦'
âGo easy, Louis. She's really upset.'
âAnd so will we be,
mon ami
, if there are more killings!'
âMore killings â¦?' shrilled Thérèse. âMyself and Sister Marie-Madeleine, perhaps?'
Louis calmed his voice. âPlease, mademoiselle, you are our closest link. You owe it to her to tell us everything you know of what happened.'
âSo as to empty my head before I am drowned in the river, monsieur? Drowned in an
accabussade?
'
Ah
nom de Dieu
, what the hell was this? wondered St-Cyr. Six hundred years ago husbands, masters and fathers could deal with recalcitrant and errant females in their charge by locking them into a wooden cage which was then repeatedly and publicly dunked in the river like a crayfish trap.
âAn
accabussade?
' he asked.
âI ⦠I didn't mean to say that. It ⦠it was only because of Mireille's telling me what had happened to the other Mireille, the one she was named after.'
There, she had told them, but they would never understand. How could they?
In a whisper, she said, âSister Marie-Madeleine knows far more about it than I do. She ⦠she came here late on the night before Mireille was murdered. They spoke quietly. I know they must have talked of this other Mireille, of what it must mean, but I ⦠I do not know what they said up here in the tower â how could I? I sleep downstairs under one of the tables. Mireille let me do that. Mireille was my friend, my best friend!'
It was Louis who asked of Xavier. Still choked up, she blurted, âBefore the sister left, and still well before dawn, he ⦠he brought us things from the farm. He'd been away for the harvest. He always goes home for it. A week, ten days â¦' She ran a hand through her hair in anguish and wiped her nose on a sleeve. âThe bishop ⦠he has to let him. It's part of the agreement the Church made with Xavier's father. In return, the
monseigneur
sends a car to ⦠to collect the olive oil and ⦠and other things.'
â
Verdammt
, Louis, that little son of a bitch was here in Avignon before the murder. He's been here since then and didn't run away at news of it!'
Thérèse wanted to ask who had lied to him but knew she was too afraid, and to hide her fear, tried to straighten her dress. âMireille was “special” to Xavier. He was always dropping in, often using the excuse of things he and the others had found. Cloth, fabulous dresses, skirts and silk blouses, waistcoats of gold lame, buttons and thread â we had to take these things for the costumes. We had to! This time more food from les Baux, but fish he had caught in the river, hares and rabbits too, sometimes. Once a
grive
â did you find it, messieurs?' she asked and hastily wiped her eyes with the hem of her dress.
âTell us,' urged Kohler gently.
He had such nice eyes, this detective, but such terrible scars. âLet me go downstairs and get it,' she said.
Louis nodded and Kohler went with her. The cigar box, one among several that were used to store buttons, held a mummified thrush.
Hastily the girl crossed herself and said, âIt was shot by the
monseigneur
. Xavier was positive of this and laughed when he presented it to Mireille last year in late November, but by then it had been dead for about a month. Yes, a month at least.'
Thrushes were tasty, thought St-Cyr. Not gutted, they were hung and allowed to rot and then were roasted on a spit so that the juices from their entrails could rain on to the backs of their fellows. Before the war, those who could hunt them had taken hundreds in a single day's shooting. The best time was in the autumn and at dawn, just as the birds were feeding and preoccupied. âBut why would she have wanted this in the first place?' he asked.
He was genuinely puzzled. Dear God forgive and protect her, then, for telling him. âShe ⦠she said she had to see what His Eminence could kill with such impunity no remorse was felt, only joy. She â¦'
They waited for her to continue. Finally the one called Kohler asked, âWho accompanies the bishop when he's out hunting?'
Her heart sank, and she could feel it doing so. âThe Kommandant, the préfet, Maître Simondi and ⦠and others. The Chief Magistrate. Lots of others, for the bishop and Maître Simondi, they ⦠they know many important people. All are friends and business associates. Isn't that the way of things among such people?'
âWhat about Xavier?' asked the one from the Sûreté.
âXavier?' she squeaked. âThe dogs are in his care. He's very good with them and ⦠and knows exactly where each one is at ⦠at all times.'
Kohler resisted the temptation to show her the
dochette
. There'd be time enough to settle that little matter. âAfter Xavier left the house on Monday well before dawn, what did your friend and mistress do?'
There had been two of the hooded, ankle-length cassocks to finish. Hideous things they had hated having to make, but Préfet de Passe had warned her not to mention them â¦âShe worked all day on her costume. Everything had to be absolutely perfect. Late in the afternoon she must have gone to the
bains-douches municipaux
, at the other end of the street.'
The public bathhouse. âShe didn't practise?' asked Kohler gently.
âI ⦠I don't think so. I was away and didn't get back from the
mas
near Saint-Michel-de-Frigolet until well after dark. By then Mireille was ⦠was all but ready.'
âYou went to see her mother?' asked the one from the Sûreté.
âWho issued your
laissez-passer?
' asked the other one.
The two of them were crowding her again and she wanted to cry out, Please leave before it's too late for me! She wanted to weep in despair and clench her fists. âThe Kommandant himself, and yes, I went to see Madame de Sinéty. Mireille ⦠Mireille wanted me to take a letter to a friend.'
âWhat friend?' breathed the Sûreté softly.
They wouldn't leave things alone now! âDédou Favre, the boy she loved.'
âAnd did he love her in return?' asked the Sûreté.
Would they arrest her for delivering the letter? âHe doubted her. He always felt she might give him up to ⦠to the authorities.'
âIn order to advance her career?' asked Kohler. âHey, don't worry about your having broken the law.'
âThen yes, but you ⦠you have to know Dédou to understand. He's terribly afraid of what they'll do to him if he's caught. It's only natural because he's on the run and in hiding.' There, she had told them. That, too.
âAnd did you deliver this letter to him personally?' asked St-Cyr.
âNo! I ⦠I couldn't find him so I left it in the mill, in a special place he would know of. He and Mireille had used it lots of times. The stones ⦠a crack between the stones.'
When the detectives were gone from the house, she went down into the workrooms to search for the hooded shrouds â she could call those hateful things nothing else. They were not grey or black. They were of coarse white woollen cloth and when, at last, she had found them â rolled up with her mattress, her
paillasse
! â their empty eyesockets stared accusingly up at her, she realizing then that Monsieur le Préfet hadn't taken them as he should have but had left them here for her as a further warning.
â
La Cagoule
,' she wept and, flinging them from her, stood among the silks and satins, the patterns of the past, with head bowed.
It was Madame Guillaumet, the concierge, who, coming upon her like this and seeing the hooded shrouds on the floor at the girl's feet, said, âThérèse, what have you to do with those?'
They sat in the Renault, staring bleakly out at the wind-ravaged rue du Rempart du Rhone. Each waited for the other to speak, until Kohler could stand it no longer. â
La Cagoule
, Louis. Two of their outfits were rolled up in that kid's straw mattress but I didn't let on I'd found them.'
âDe Passe?' asked St-Cyr emptily.
âIt has to have been him. No wonder she was afraid.'
âShe spoke of being put into an
accabussade
â¦'
âThat little bit of history can't apply to the present, can it?'
Hermann was really worried, but it had to be said, âOur victim must have been aware of those cassocks.'
âAn order, Louis, but it's not even mentioned in the book she kept to herself.'
âAh
mon Dieu
, Hermann, what had she discovered?'
Unbidden, Kohler hauled out his cigarettes and offered one, only to see Louis shake his head and find pipe and tobacco pouch.
Not until the pipe was going to his satisfaction did the Sûreté say, âDe Passe agrees to turn aside while Rivaille works on our victim to see if he can't convince her to betray her boyfriend â let us put it no other way.'
âThe bishop lends her things and sends the sisters to watch over her corpse in an attempt to retrieve at least two of the items before we take too great an interest in them.'
âA ruby ring,' said Louis, âand a pendant box. One of the thorns supposedly from Christ's crown.'
âThe elder of the nuns succeeds with the ring, but not with the box. The younger one is marked down by her as knowing too much.'
âThat sister was a close friend of our victim. They spoke in private on the night before the murder.'
âDid Sister Agnès realize this at the morgue, Louis?'
âI'm certain of it, but ⦠ah
merde alors
, we must think as Mademoiselle de Sinéty would have had us think!'
âThen start by telling me are you certain it was the bishop himself who loaned her all those trinkets?'
âSimondi?'
âWe'll have to ask him.'
âBut must proceed carefully, since the
Cagoule
may well be involved,' mused St-Cyr.
âBoth Rivaille and de Passe are members of the Black Penitents.'
âOur singing master may also be one of them.'
âBut is Simondi the leader of the local
Cagoule
, Louis? Is de Passe or Bishop Rivaille?'
The Hooded Ones. The action squads of the
Comité secret d'action révolutionnaire
, a fanatical far-right political organization of the 1930s that had dedicated itself to the overthrow of the Third Republic by any means. In Nice, in 1938,
cagoulards
had murdered the Rosselli brothers, two prominent anti-fascists Mussolini had wanted eliminated.
In return for the favour, a substantial shipment of small arms had crossed into France from Italy only to be intercepted by agents of the Deuxième Bureau.
The leaders of the CSAR had been arrested. They'd been brought to trial in July of '38 but the war had soon intervened.
âEnd of story,' said Kohler, picking up the thread of Louis's thoughts, âbut sadly not so, eh?'
âNo, not.'
On the night of 2/3 October 1941, perhaps as Bishop Rivaille was looking forward to a morning's shooting courtesy of the Kommandant's ignoring the ordinance against hunting and possessing guns of any kind,
cagoulards
in Paris had dynamited seven synagogues in a show of solidarity with Nazi policies against the Jews.
âAnd now?' asked Louis, lost to it and still staring at the street. âNow Ovid Peretti has twice made a point of warning me to watch our backs, and the bishop dreams of returning the Papacy to Avignon.'
âIt all has to mean she was killed because she damn well knew too much,' swore Kohler.
âBut what, Hermann? That is the question.'
They began to look through the order books, comparing the one she had kept privately with that from which de Passe had torn so many pages. âAll references to Simondi's post-dated cheques have been removed,' said Louis. âSome of these have even put payment off by as much as six months and yet all are for the most insignificant of sums.'
âOverextended, is he?' snorted Kohler. âHe owns several cinemas and theatres but loves music more than money, or so von Mahler took pains to claim.'
âBut is Simondi alone in owning them or merely the front man?'
In several places where the pages had been removed, the complete copy revealed she had used alchemical glyphs for the signs of the zodiac as a shorthand for the names of her customers and had paired these with measurements and other notations for each costume. Where more than one customer had been born under the same sign, she had used a vertical line, placed on one side of the glyph or on the other, to distinguish them. âBut again, Hermann, why would the préfet remove such pages unless he had been warned by Bishop Rivaille that she had left the riddle of it all on her belt?'
A rebus ⦠the talismans,
enseignes
and cabochons, the signs of the zodiac themselves â¦âSalvatore Biron is adamant there wasn't an audition, Louis, but there was one. He was delayed and claims to have come upon the body seconds after the killing, only to hear a sigh that clearly couldn't have been hers.'
âBut was it the killer's or that of someone else â a witness perhaps?'
âAnd why didn't he run into whoever had tidied up?'
âA lock of her hair was cut off and that would have taken time â¦'