Read The Late Monsieur Gallet Online
Authors: Georges Simenon,Georges Simenon
âWhy not?' murmured Maigret.
âDidn't anyone tell you that the shot was fired from at least six metres away? And the room is only five metres wide, so the murderer must have been outside, taking advantage of the fact that the nettle lane is deserted. He
couldn't have got into the yard to fire his gun, and besides, people would have heard it. Another little drink, gentlemen? It's on the house, of course.'
âSo that makes two!' said the inspector.
âTwo what?' asked Grenier.
âTwo coincidences. First the fair had to be in full swing, to muffle the sound of the shot. And then all the rooms looking out on the yard had to be occupied â¦' He turned to Monsieur Tardivon, who had just refilled their glasses.
âHow many guests do you have here at the moment?'
âThirty-four, counting the children.'
âAnd none of them have left since the crime was committed?'
âYes, I told you. Seven have left: a family from the suburbs of Paris â Saint-Denis, I think. A mechanic of some kind, with his wife, his mother-in-law, his sister-in-law and their kids. Not very well-educated people, incidentally. I
can't say I was sorry to see them move to the Commercial. We all have our own kinds of regulars, and here, as everyone will agree, you meet only a nice class of guests â¦'
âHow did Monsieur Clément spend his days?'
âI couldn't really say â¦Â he went for walks. Wait a moment, I had an idea that he has a child somewhere around here â¦Â a child out of wedlock. That's just an idea, because in spite of yourself you try to work
things out. He was very polite,
and there was always a sad look about him. I never saw him eating at the table d'hôte â we do have a table d'hôte in winter, but he liked to sit in a corner dining by himself â¦'
Maigret had taken a notebook out of his pocket, an ordinary notebook with a black waxed cover, the kind a laundrywoman would use. He made some notes in pencil.
His colleague from Nevers, a forced smile on his lips, was following Maigret's every movement with his eyes.
âWell? Have you come up with an idea already?'
âNo, nothing of the sort! I have two telegrams to send now, and then I'm going to bed.'
The only people left in the café were the locals finishing their game of billiards. Maigret glanced at the nettle lane, which had once been the central avenue going up to the little chateau and still had two rows of fine oak trees lining it.
These days dense vegetation had invaded everything, and there was nothing to be seen at this hour.
Grenier prepared to set off for the station, and Maigret retraced his steps to shake hands and say goodbye.
âGood luck,' said Grenier. âBetween ourselves, this is a brute of a case, don't you agree? Nothing sensational, and no kind of useful lead either. Sooner you than me, to be frank
with you.'
Maigret was shown to a room on the first floor, where mosquitoes began to whine around his head. He was in a bad temper. The job ahead was a gloomy prospect, a nondescript case with nothing interesting about it.
And yet once he was in bed, instead of going to sleep he began seeing Gallet's face in his mind's eye, sometimes only one cheek, sometimes only the lower part of the face.
He tossed and turned awkwardly in the damp sheets. He could hear the murmuring of the river as it lapped against the sandbanks.
Every criminal case has a feature of its own, one that you identify sooner or later, and it often provides the key to the mystery.
He thought that the feature of this one was, surely, its sheer mediocrity.
Mediocrity in Saint-Fargeau! A mediocre house! Undistinguished interior decoration, with the portrait photo of the boy about to take his First Communion and the one of his father in an overly tight jacket, both on the piano.
More mediocrity in Sancerre! A low-budget holiday resort! A second-class hotel!
All these details added to the dull, grey atmosphere surrounding the case.
A commercial traveller for the firm of Niel: fake silverware, fake luxury, fake style!
A funfair, and one with a rifle range and firecrackers into the bargain â¦
And then there was the distinction lent to it all by
Madame Gallet, whose hat adorned with paste diamonds had fallen into the dust of the school playground.
It was a relief to Maigret to find out, in the morning, that the widow had taken the first train back to Saint-Fargeau, and the coffin containing the remains of Ãmile Gallet was on its way back to Les Marguerites in a hired van.
He was in a hurry to get this case over and done with. Everyone else had left: the magistrate, the doctor with his seven guests coming to dinner, and Inspector Grenier.
As a result, Maigret was left alone with some precise tasks to carry out.
First, he must wait for replies to the two telegrams he had sent the previous evening.
Then examine the room where the crime had been committed. Finally, think about all those who
could have
committed the crime and who were therefore suspects.
He did not have to wait long for the reply from Rouen. It came from the police of that city:
Have questioned staff of Hôtel de la Poste. Cashier, Irma Strauss, said a man called Ãmile Gallet sent her an envelope containing postcards to be forwarded. Received 100 francs a month for her trouble. Has been doing this for five years, and
thinks that the cashier before her did the same.
Half an hour later, at ten o'clock, a telegram from the firm of Niel arrived:
Ãmile Gallet has not worked for our firm since 1912.
This was the moment when the town crier began doing his rounds. Maigret, who had just finished breakfast, was
examining the hotel yard (which had nothing in particular about it) when he was told that
the road-mender would like a word with him.
âI was on the road to Saint-Thibaut,' he explained, âwhen I saw that Monsieur Clément. I knew him, see, because I'd met him a few times, and I knew his jacket. There was a young man just coming down the road from the farm,
and they met face to face. I was sort of like a hundred metres from them, but I could see they were arguing â¦'
âAnd did they walk away from each other at once?'
âOh no, they like went up the hill at the end of the road. Then the old man came back on his own, and it wasn't 'til half an hour later in the square that I saw the young man again at the Commercial.'
âWhat did he look like?'
âTall, thin â¦Â with a long face and glasses.'
âWhat was he wearing?'
âCouldn't rightly say. Might've been something grey â¦Â or black. So do I get the fifty francs?'
Maigret gave him the money and set off for the Commercial Hotel, where he had drunk his aperitif the evening before.
Yes, he was told, the young man had had lunch there on Saturday 25 June, but the waiter who served him was now on holiday at Pouilly, some twenty kilometres away.
âAre you sure he didn't spend the night here?'
âHe'd be in our register if he had.'
âAnd no one remembers him?'
The cashier recollected that someone had asked for pasta without any butter, and she added that it had to be cooked specially for him.
âIt was a young man sitting over there, to the left of that pillar. He had an unhealthy complexion.'
It was beginning to get hot, and Maigret no longer felt the same bored indifference as he had early in the morning.
âDid he have a long face? Thin lips?'
âYes, a kind of a wide mouth with a scornful look to it. He didn't want coffee or a liqueur or anything â¦Â some guests are like that, you know â¦'
What had made Maigret think of the photograph of the lad dressed for his First Communion?
The inspector was forty-five years old. He had spent half his life in various branches of the police force: Vice Squad, Traffic, Drug Squad, Railway Police, Gambling Squad. It was quite enough to dispel any vaguely mystical ideas and kill faith
in intuition stone dead.
But all the same, for almost twenty-four hours he had been haunted by those two portrait photographs, father and son, and also by an ordinary little phrase from Madame Gallet: âHe was on a diet â¦'
It was without any very clear idea in his mind that he made for the post office and a telephone, and asked for the town hall of Saint-Fargeau.
âHello. Police Judiciaire â¦Â can you tell me when Monsieur Gallet's funeral is taking place?'
âAt eight o'clock tomorrow.'
âIn Saint-Fargeau?'
âHere, yes.'
âOne more question! Who am I speaking to?'
âThe Saint-Fargeau schoolteacher.'
âDo you know Monsieur Gallet junior?'
âWell, I've seen him several times. He came for the papers this morning.'
âWhat does he look like?'
âHow do you mean?'
âIs he tall, thin?'
âYes â¦Â yes, rather.'
âDoes he wear glasses?'
âWait a minute. Yes, now I remember. Horn-rimmed glasses.'
âYou don't happen to know if he's unwell?'
âHow would I know? He's pale, certainly.'
âThank you very much.'
Ten minutes later, the inspector was back at the Commercial.
âMadame, can you tell me whether your guest at lunch on Saturday wore glasses?'
The cashier searched her memory and finally shook her head. âYes â¦Â well, no, I can't remember. We get so much passing trade in the summer! It was his mouth I noticed most. In fact, I even said to the waiter, that man has a
mouth like a toad's â¦'
It took Maigret longer to track the road-mender down, because he was busy drinking his fifty francs away with some friends in a little bistro tucked away behind the church.
âYou told me that the man you saw wore glasses.'
âThe young one, that's right. Not the old one.'
âWhat sort of glasses?'
âWell, round, know what I mean? With dark rims â¦'
On getting up that morning, Maigret had been glad to hear that the body had been taken away. And Madame Gallet, the magistrate, the doctor and the local police officers had also left. He hoped that now he could focus on an objective problem at
last, and put the strange appearance of the old man with the beard out of his mind.
He took the train for Saint-Fargeau at three in the afternoon.
For a start all he had seen of Ãmile Gallet was a photograph. Then he had seen half his face.
Now all he would find would be a coffin permanently closed. And yet, as the train moved away, he had the disagreeable feeling that he was running after the dead man.
Back in Sancerre a disappointed Monsieur Tardivon told his regulars as he offered them a glass of Armagnac:
âA man who looked the serious kind â¦Â a man of our own age! And he heads off without even going into the room! Do you want to see the place
where he died
? Funny thing, that. However, the Nevers police are no
better â¦Â when they took the body away they drew its outline on the floor first, in chalk. Mind you don't touch anything â¦Â huh! You never know where a thing like this will lead you.'
Maigret, who had spent the night at home in the Boulevard Richard-Lenoir, arrived in Saint-Fargeau on the Wednesday a little before eight in the morning. He was already out of the station when he had second thoughts, retraced his steps and asked
the clerk in the ticket office, âDid Monsieur Gallet often travel by train?'
âFather or son?'
âThe father.'
âHe went away for three weeks every month. He travelled second class to Rouen.'
âWhat about the son?'
âHe arrives from Paris almost every Saturday evening on a third-class return ticket, and goes back by the last train on Sunday â¦Â Who could ever have foreseen that â¦! I can still see him opening the fishing
season â¦'
âFather or son?'
âThe father, for heaven's sake! By the way, the blue skiff you can see among the trees is his. Everyone's going to want to buy that skiff. He made it himself out of best oak, thinking up all sorts of little improvements. It was
like the gadgets he made â¦'
Conscientiously, Maigret added this little detail to the still very sketchy idea he had of the dead man. He looked at the skiff, the Seine, tried to imagine the man with the
goatee beard sitting
perfectly still for hours with a bamboo fishing rod in his hand.
Then he set off for Les Marguerites, noticing that an empty, fairly well-appointed hearse was travelling the same way. There was no one to be seen near the house, except for a man pushing a wheelbarrow, who stopped at the sight of the hearse, no
doubt interested to see the funeral procession.