Authors: J. Robert Janes
âTwo murders and two suicides, Hermann. Each so vastly different from its predecessor, yet bound to it by the centuries. Beyond the lies, there has to be the truth.'
Don't squander patience on this Sûreté, thought Alain de Passe as he stepped into the loft. Put it to St-Cyr and get it over with, but first â¦âJean-Louis, where's Kohler?'
Notebook in hand, postcards were being carefully examined but left exactly in place for the police photographer.
âAh, Préfet, it's good of you to come. Hermann? Gone for help, I think.'
The grey eyes narrowed under their coal-black brows, the cleanly shaven chin stiffened belligerently. â
Imbécile
, don't piss about with me! The car's still here.'
âThen my partner went on foot. The farmhouse, probably.'
â
Couillon
, there hasn't been anyone in that house since last autumn.'
Asshole ⦠and he was already shouting at him. âLast October, Préfet? Right after the party, the “picnic”?'
â
Maudit salaud
, what are you talking about? Parties? Picnics? When the harvest here is done, the family move on to another. That is the only reason there is no one in that house at present. Come spring, they will return.'
âThen tell me what you make of this.'
âThis? A former
transporté
, an
ancien du grand collège
? He killed Mireille de Sinéty, idiot, and took his own life when he felt it prudent. I would have thought it obvious, but then you and that partner of yours never considered it worthwhile to spend a few moments consulting with me at the
préfecture
.'
If not Madame Simondi as the killer, or Genèvieve Ravier or Xavier, then Brother Matthieu. âA hardened criminal, Préfet? A former resident of the Ãies du Salut?'
The Islands of Safety, the penal colony that was just off the coast of French Guiana. More specifically, Ãie Royale and Ãie Saint Joseph. Notorious for the tiny triangle they formed with the Ãie du Diable, Devil's Island, there being no more than 200 metres of shark-infested ocean between each of them and only the immensity of a tractless jungle to tempt escape.
âIn 1922 Brother Matthieu violated and murdered a sixteen-year-old farm girl. Oh
mais certainement
, he vehemently denied having done so. He claimed to have come upon her quite by accident and after the fact, had been out collecting morels, and gave her the last rites. But you see, his rosary was found clutched in her fist and he hadn't gone for help, nor had he told anyone about her. He'd been too afraid, he claimed. But with his history of wanting female hair and postcards like those, what was the examining magistrate to think, and then the court? Her blouse, shift and brassiere had been torn away and her throat opened with a pocket-knife not dissimilar to the one he has left on that napkin.'
It gets worse and worse, said St-Cyr to himself, but is it yet another part of the song they must sing?
De Passe took out a cigarette case and offered one and a light, as a chief administrator should to a detective of long standing. âThey gave Brother Matthieu fifteen years, but reduced the sentence to twelve in consideration of his war wounds and his being a man of the cloth. The girl had been seen teasing him about his face and had been known to flaunt herself in front of the boys, but by rights he should have got the guillotine.'
The islands were tiny â the Ãie du Diable being less than two square kilometres in area and flat under the blistering equatorial sun but, unlike the other two, it had been reserved for the politicals. The penal colony had been closed in 1938 but several had been left to languish, the war having delayed their repatriation indefinitely for all they knew, since no news of its progress would likely have reached them.
âThe Church couldn't turn its back on him, Jean-Louis. I myself always felt the bishop too kind. I warned him of repeat offenders. I cautioned prudence, but â¦' He gave a tiny shrug. âHenri-Baptiste is a true servant of God. He said that it wouldn't be right of us to condemn a man beyond the years of his sentence.'
The cigarettes were American and had, no doubt, been confiscated from a downed airman. âBut why should Brother Matthieu kill Mireille de Sinéty, Préfet? Oh for sure he had a key to the Palais and couldn't be found when the concierge went looking for him, but a girl with the voice and fingers of an angel ⦠one whom everybody revered and admired? What possible reason could he have had, since she wasn't sexually interfered with in any way?'
Jean-Louis wasn't going to take the proffered help and leave the matter well enough alone thought de Passe and said, âYou know the de Sinéty girl intended to confront Henri-Baptiste and the other judges with what she mistakenly felt had happened to Adrienne de Langlade.'
It was time to put out the cigarette and to do so carefully. âAnd what
did
happen to Adrienne, Préfet?'
Would they now attempt to stare each other down? wondered de Passe. St-Cyr and Kohler had seen the police photographs of the girl's body but had told the clerk not to notify him of this. âShe disappeared.'
Such levelness of tone was all too clear. âAnd when, please, did she “disappear”?'
â
Maudit salaud
! Did you think that file deliberately thin â is that it? It
is
! But you ⦠you think I'm hiding things from you? Me?' He tapped his chest. âHow could you when I want more than anything to clear this matter up?'
It would be best not to shout as well. âThin? There is so little in it, Préfet, Adrienne de Langlade's passing hardly drew breath.'
The bastard! âThen understand,
mon fin
, that we couldn't pin things down. César came to me on the thirtieth of October last. He couldn't understand her having left without telling anyone. He felt betrayed but thought she could well have paid her parents in Paris a little visit.'
That could have been so easily checked with the Kommandant. âAnd did she?'
âJean-Louis, listen to me. These things ⦠You know how they are. A pretty girl goes missing. We wonder what could have happened to her and, yes, we think the worst. Telegrams are sent to the district
prefecture
of the family but ⦠Ah! What can one say, but that they revealed she wasn't there.'
There'd be a record of those as well as the Kommandant's issuing of the necessary
laissez-passer
for such a trip, and he could see St-Cyr thinking this but couldn't stop now. âNearly three weeks later her body turns up, but the flooding is so extensive we hardly have a moment. There are no signs of violence other than those of the flood. Decay is advanced â you yourself saw the state the corpse was in. What were an overworked, exhausted préfet and his men to have done?'
There'd been the frayed end of a rope tied to her right ankle but he'd leave that for now, thought St-Cyr, and so much for there having been âno signs of violence'. âYet Mireille de Sinéty suspected Brother Matthieu of the killing, Préfet? This is what you're saying.'
Jean-Louis still wasn't going to look the other way. Pride was one thing, stubbornness another, misguided patriotism yet another.
âThat girl was mistaken. Tragically so.'
âThen how, please, did Brother Matthieu learn of her intention to accuse him if, as we have been given to understand, she only confided in a very few?'
Merde alors
, the son of a bitch! âA few? What few, please?'
Bon
! âFor now that information must remain confidential, Préfet. But I can tell you Dedou Favre knew what she intended to do.'
One had best look away and drop the voice. âThe Favre boy. Another tragedy.'
âFor which you are not to get off so lightly. You had that boy arrested before dawn last Monday, Préfet. Did you use the coal shovel on him?'
Kohler had still not appeared. Jean-Louis had his back to the portal and was dangerously close to it. A slip ⦠A step backwards? wondered de Passe. âThe boy gave us what we wanted.'
âThe location of his
maquis
? We know this because you sent the Kommandant out to bring him in, certain he'd bag a few but not the one you had in custody.'
Four steps, possibly five, separated them. âI did what I had to. These are difficult times. Von Mahler would have been far too soft on the boy.'
âOf course, but you desperately had to find out exactly how much Mireille de Sinéty really knew and then ⦠then you had to make certain the girl was silenced.'
âPardon?'
âYou heard me.'
A fist was clenched. Spittle erupted. âHow dare you?
He
killed her. A former resident of the
grand collège
. No examining magistrate will argue with this, Jean-Louis, only with what you and that partner of yours
think
is the truth!'
De Passe had inadvertently stepped on the artichoke hearts. He seemed not to have noticed as he wiped his mouth.
âThen listen to me most carefully, Préfet. Adrienne de Langlade was murdered. You know it, we know it, and so did Mireille de Sinéty, Dedou Favre and the others she confided in.'
âWhat others? I ask it again, damn you!'
âThat's not for you to know yet. You were present here during the picnic at which she was drowned in that iron
accabussade
. You were a part of what happened to her, Préfet. Admit it!'
You fool, said de Passe, silently cursing him. âI was not present.'
âYou
were
! With all the arrogance and stupidity of privileged men who think they can hide what they've done, you and your companions left telltale things.'
âNom de Jésus-Christ, bâtard, what things?'
âPhotographs.'
âThere are no photographs. None were taken.'
âBut then you must have been here, Préfet, and have just admitted it.'
From the crest of a low hill near the eastern shore of the island, Kohler watched as de Passe's car left in one hell of a hurry. Long lines of spindly poplars crossed the
bocage
at regular intervals, hiding the car and there to shield the cropland from the worst of the mistral. Idly he wondered if he could calculate the préfet's speed, given the width of the strips of land between the rows of trees and the time it took to cover five or ten of them.
Mathematics â that kind â he'd had enough of in the Great War. Where more shelter was needed â for melons, strawberries and other tender crops â woven screens of reeds had been used. But the landscape was a tangle. The flood hadn't been kind and Simondi had thought it best to leave well enough alone and not call in the clean-up crews.
Hence the préfet's speed? he wondered, knowing Louis must have said something.
De Passe hit a washout and very nearly left the road. Long before he would have reached the bridge, Kohler had lost sight of him, yet kept on gazing that way.
â
Mein Gott
,' he said. âHow the hell are we to find anything in this?'
The poplars looked bleached and old in the sharp, cold light of the afternoon. Some still had a few dead leaves clinging to their branches and these mirrored the sunlight so that as he looked across the fields, he saw these lights blinking at him.
Longing for a gentler time, he started out towards a tangle of battered, woven screens of reeds. When he found the dog, it was chained to the trunk of one of the poplars and all but hidden among the mats of reeds. Ice was thickly clumped about its paws. It didn't bark, didn't whine. It just shook hard, was so tired after twenty-four hours or so of trying to break free that it could only raise its sorrowful deep brown eyes to him. Frost clung to its whiskers.
âNino,' he crooned and grinned like a schoolboy in spite of the state the poor thing was in. âHey, you've found a friend. Come on, let me get you out of this.'
Undoing the chain, he lifted the dog and soon had her tucked inside his greatcoat. Freezing, she shivered constantly while he had a little look around.
There was a filthy woollen sock lying on the ground nearby, and in its mended toe a
pétanque
ball. Metal and hard as hell. âXavier was to have killed you,' he said, opening his coat a little to comfort her. âBut the one who could finger a
maquis
couldn't bring himself to do it and left you to die all on your own like the coward he is.'
When he got back to the mill, Kohler lit a fire in the kitchen stove and began to warm a saucepan of water. Still there was no sign of Louis and he thought this odd, but the dog had to be cared for. He couldn't leave her yet. âAnd you need a little something to eat,' he said.
âLouis,' he called out. âHey, Louis, guess what I've found?'
There was no answer. The loft was much as they'd left it. The frugal legacy of the
gueule cassée
was still spread out on its napkin, the humble repast to one side â¦
The grappa was fierce, the view from the portal bleak. Brother Matthieu seesawed gently. âLouis â¦' he bleated, sickened suddenly by the thought that something untoward must have happened to his partner.
There were no signs of blood in the loft, none of a struggle. Had de Passe had a pistol? He cursed himself for not having sensed trouble and come back sooner. âBut I wouldn't have found you, would I?' he said frantically to Nino.
Man's best friend wolfed the greasy, oil-soaked artichoke hearts and finished up the stray crumbs of the
chèvre
before starting in on the olives.
*
The Villa Marenzio had become too quiet, thought Christiane, pausing to listen intently to the house. Marius and the others had stopped arguing and raising their voices over the chances of the singers surviving as a group, but Brother Matthieu
had
hanged himself and now ⦠now ⦠Were Marius, Norman and Guy whispering to each other about Genèvieve and herself? Were they saying it was all her fault and that each part of the song must live in absolute harmony with the others?