Authors: J. Robert Janes
Kohler ⦠Kripo, Paris-Central ⦠where had he heard that name before? wondered Obergruppenführer Karl Otto Denke. The rue des Saussaises, he told himself, and something about the SS. A rawhide whip and their not liking this one. The scar on the left cheek â yes, yes that was it, so he could go to them if Kohler should reveal anything useful. âOkay, you've got a deal. Let her go, you two.
Vite, vite.
Orders from above.
Orders
, idiots!' He swept an arm across the table and, dumping the contents of the purse back into it, handed the bag to the boy.
Kohler took it from him. âThe cigarettes and the lipstick,' he asked the older
milicien
in French and snapped his fingers. âJust to calm her nerves, eh? Then maybe if she really is working for the terrorists, those
salauds
won't come looking for you.'
Unable to comprehend all that had been said, suspicion registered in the Bzp's countenance; doubt and fear were in those of the other two.
âSo, okay, we've got ourselves a deal,' quipped Kohler, âand the three of us will visit the shed.'
Out on the concourse, he told the corporal to make certain the suitcases were refilled. âWe wouldn't want her going home empty-handed, especially since her papers are in perfect order.'
She would change them within the hour. She had that look about her. One after another the storybooks were closed and the staircase of kids got to their feet to dutifully wait.
âTake care of her,' he said to the littlest one. Nothing else. Just that.
Madame de Bonnevies was in the kitchen, sipping the leftover of the daughter's tisane of linden blossom, perhaps sweetened with honey. She didn't look up when St-Cyr put the last of the things the girl had brought on the counter, but when he shook the matchbox the husband had used to hold its little corpses, the woman set the bowl down.
âAcarine mites in Caucasian bees,' he said. âAn address entitled, “Will no one speak for the bees of Russia?”â
âDanielle can perhaps help you, Inspector, but you will have to wait.'
âMurder seldom does.'
â
Merde alors
, I've already told you I know nothing of these. The child is exhausted. Have you no compassion? No thought for the worry she has caused her mother?'
The Inspector wasn't buying it. He set the matchbox down on the table in front of her and found his pipe and tobacco pouch.
âYour husband was freshly shaven, madame, and had dressed as if for an evening out.'
âI ⦠I don't know what he was up to. Believe me, I wouldn't have. Danielle ⦠Danielle is the only one who might be able to tell you.'
âThe girl stayed at the family's country house?'
She met his gaze, asked herself, What the hell has Danielle already told him? and said with a shrug, âIt's near Soisy-sur-Seine. She ⦠she goes there sometimes â it's on one of her “routes”, but she tries not to visit it too much. That way it's ⦠it's safer.'
âAnd unoccupied otherwise?' he asked and heard her acidly answer, âOf course. Fortunately the Occupier has found no need of it.' But then she calmed herself.
âMy father loved it, Inspector. Danielle never really knew him but feels the same and I know she ⦠she would like to live there, too.'
âAs your father did, madame, or as your son, before the war?'
Ah damn him. âMy son, yes. My father left the property to him.' There, he could make of that what he wanted!
The table, one of those exquisite pieces from the provinces, had the warmth of old pine boards that always seem to ask, How many have sat here in days gone by? Bare but for a decorative bowl which would, before the Defeat, have held fruit, it would have easily seated eight or ten.
And this one has realized I love the table, she warned herself as he sat down to examine the beets in the bowl.
âThe names in this directory, madame. If we could just run through them.'
âIt's ⦠it's been a long time, as I've already told you.'
âOf course, but â¦'
He paused to light that pipe of his and to look steadily at her until he had forced her to bleat, âBut what, Inspector?'
âOne name, that's all my partner and I need. Enough to make a good start and save much time.'
Again he forced her to wait. Taking out his little black notebook, the Inspector struggled to find a pencil stub and at last rescued one from his jacket pocket.
Alexandre's signet ring was among the debris that had come out of that pocket â he would have had to remove it from the corpse. Why had he done so? Why had he left it on the table like that?
Elastic bands were also there, burnt-out matchsticks, a cigarette butt that had dribbled its tobacco on the table, the
mégot
tin it was to have gone into, a tin that was years old and had once held sweets:
Anis de l'Abbaye de Flavigny â¦
âDoes the name Frau Uma Schlacht ring any bells, madame?'
âSchlacht?' she heard herself saying.
âAge: forty-four. Address: 28 quai d'Orléans. She's not one of the
Blitzmädels
, not with a schedule that allows for visits during the day.'
The Ãle Saint-Louis, and not one of the grey mice, the girls who had come in their droves from the Reich as telegraphists, typists, clerks, cooks, canteen help and other jobs like prison warders and interrogators.
â“Treatments: Mondays,” madame, “at four p.m.” What sort of treatments?'
âHow the hell am I supposed to know?'
âWould your daughter have carried out those treatments?'
âInstead of my husband?'
The woman was shaking, and as he watched her, more tears fell. âYou know that's what I mean, madame.'
âThen, no! Alexandre would have insisted on attending to this ⦠this foreigner himself.'
âThen did your daughter help him with other patients, other clients?'
She would toss an uncaring hand and shrug, thought Juliette, would say acidly, âAsk her, don't ask me.
Mon Dieu
, those two had shut me right out of their lives. We ⦠we hardly spoke.'
There, he'd make what he wanted of that, too, she told herself. A son who had left the house at the age of sixteen and now a daughter who had loved her father, not her mother because she hadn't wanted her to be born.
â“Two litres of mead a month, madame. Six hundred grams of pollen â apple or rose if possible. Honey in two 400CC jars.” Again Frau Schlacht prefers the apple or rose. “For facial masks and for the throat.” Is she a singer?'
â
Pouf
! You think you can pry answers from a head that is empty?
Quelle folie
, Inspector.
Quelle absurdité.
For the sake of justice, I hope you find his killer, but for myself, I sorely feel you are not up to it! A Sûreté? A Chief Inspector?
Pah
! I ought to have known not to hope.'
âI'll keep your objections in mind. But it says here “the honey, mead and pollen to be left, if necessary, at the Palais d'Eiffel”?'
A beautiful townhouse on the avenue Matignon, the
palais
, so named by those who worked there, had once been the residence of Alexandre Gustav Eiffel, the builder of the Tower.
âThe Offices of the German Procurement Staff, madame.
Das Deutsche Beschaffungsamt in Frankreich.
'
Of all the names in that little book, why had he chosen the one she most wanted him to avoid?
Intuitively anticipating her question, the Inspector slid the book across the table, forcing her to look at it. Inadvertently, when she had discovered Alexandre's body and had taken the book to search through it, she had slightly crumpled the top-right corner of the page. Alexandre had always been so meticulous, so fussy. Perfect pages elsewhere. In just such things as this would the detective find his answers.
âMy husband was a strong advocate of the healthful benefits of taking pollen, Inspector. A spoonful a day. The Père Michel has taken it for years ⦠Ah! here is his name. The Ãglise de Saint-Germain de Charonne. It's but a short walk. Père Michel could, perhaps, help you greatly and then ⦠why then, you could come back to see Danielle.'
She was desperate and would have to be given a breather, but one must do so curtly and leave her with doubt in mind.
He wagged a forefinger at her. âThat is exactly the help I want from you.
Merci.
' Hermann ⦠where the hell was he? âIf my partner should turn up with my car, please tell him not to hotfoot it about the city but to wait patiently. In the honey-house perhaps. He used to keep bees on his father's farm and will find much in there to touch on memories I sadly fear he has long been too busy to recall.'
Shed fourteen, line twenty was well to the north of the Gare de l'Est through a wind-blasted Siberia of rails and a taiga of switches. Trains came and went, huffing, belching steam and coal-smoke; electric ones, too, and noise like you wouldn't believe, thought Kohler. Donkey engines roared as track was lifted on to flatbed wagons destined for the Reich. Crates of produce were over there ⦠People ⦠a long double line of them. Kids held by the hand, mothers and older daughters â¦
Though the roundups of Jews and other so-called undesirables had largely gone on last year and Louis had documented as much as he could, there were still some who had hidden and then been caught. Gypsies, too, and Communists, Allied agents and
résistants
, et cetera.
Wehrmacht boys with carbines slung over their shoulders and dogs on the leash, patrolled the shuffling line, while those with the Schmeissers covered the flanks, and those who had come to supervise the deportations stood nearby.
Suitcase after suitcase was being left to one side of the tracks, but the âcarriages' the passengers were to take were still some distance ahead.
âWe're there,' said the Bzp Obergruppenführer, indicating a corrugated, rusty-roofed shed of grey concrete block that looked exactly like all the others.
âYour name â¦' began Kohler. âI seem to have heard of it years ago. Where'd you say you were from?'
âI didn't.'
âThen tell me.'
âMünsterberg.'
âNear Breslau?'
Kohler was just ragging him. Of course everyone in 1924 had heard of Karl Denke, the mass murderer and butcher who had smoked and then sold the meat of his victims. âWe weren't related.'
âI just wondered. Police work â you know how it is. I was in Munich; the wife at home on her father's farm. We hadn't yet had our two boys, Jurgen and Hans.
Mein Gott
, the inflation, eh? I wheeled a barrow full of marks to buy a dinner of boiled cabbage and a toothbrush!'
There'd been famine. Real hardship. From an official exchange rate of 4.2 marks to the U.S. dollar in 1918, the mark had fallen to 1,000,000 to the dollar in 1923. Those who had had work, had instantly spent their wages on anything they could get.
The smoked âpork' Herr Denke had marketed had sold very well. Buttons from the bones, too, and soap from the fat and ashes.
I can't let what's happening to the deportees set me off, said Kohler to himself. I mustn't.
They were climbing into cattle trucks and would freeze in them.
Jésus, merde alors
, how could anyone do this? He was glad Louis wasn't here to witness it; Oona neither, nor Giselle.
âLook, tell your
miliciens
to wait outside, eh? This is between the two of us. The less who know of it, the. better.'
Charonne was still very much the village it had once been. As he left the house and began to walk uphill along the cul-de-sac towards the rue Stendhal, St-Cyr knew he was being watched from more than one window. âA
manage de convenance
,' Madame de Bonnevies had said to Hermann and told him not to ask the neighbours. âLife is hard enough.'
Whispers ⦠rumours ⦠there would have been lots of those, for when all was said and done, the beekeeper had been an
original
, an odd character, an eccentric, and in any village or small town such idiosyncrasies always singled one out. Her money, too â they'd not have missed such a juicy thing.
But had she been carrying on an affair? If so, she would have done it discreetly but even then, the women of this street would have noticed and commented on a made-over skirt, a newly polished pair of prewar high heels â those silk stockings Hermann had mentioned; a
chapeau cloche
or beret set at a more determined angle, the hair perhaps curled.
Since the Defeat there had been a flood of anonymous letters to the authorities. Vichy and the Gestapo encouraged them, to the shame of the nation. Old scores were being settled, lies told upon lies. Even children â especially children â could be useful to those who would encourage such trash, but had there been letters of complaint about de Bonnevies?
Which of you smashed those hives and robbed them? he demanded silently. Is this why you watch me so closely?
The matter of the hives would have to be settled but for now it was the least of his difficulties. Something had caused madame to hide the fact she had known very well who Frau Schlacht was and that could only spell trouble for Hermann and himself if things turned sour.
At the intersection of the
impasse
, the rue Stendhal ran downhill past the graveyard and church to end in a set of stone steps. Although the day was almost half-over, the sun had failed to show itself. But here was history, he reminded himself. Architecturally there were those, he knew, who thought the Ãglise de Saint-Germain de Charonne frightful. Only its bell tower remained of the original structure. Fires, wars, dedicated, well-meaning parishioners and determined priests had seen what had been in place since the twelfth century all but completely rebuilt in the fifteenth, gutted of its transepts in the nineteenth and left with a clock in its bell tower to give the time of funerals, confessionals, weddings and christenings, in verdigris-stained Roman numerals.