Authors: Nicolas Freeling
Houses in bad pretentious taste shot up and surrounded themselves with little trees and flowering bushes. All very nice. You were conveniently close to the town and to business, yet peacefully free of the hurlyburly: the old urban quarters along the Avenue des Vosges were getting alarmingly dirty and noisy. Even in the fifties the volume of motor traffic was becoming quite impossible: everybody said so. The Meinau, bordered by little serpentine waterways and rustic allotment gardens, was ideal: no roads led anywhere, and values kept going up: lovely.
It was in the sixties that alarming things began. There was a football stadium on waste ground just across the railway line to Germany: stadiums are low. Much worse, the municipality laid violent hands upon the Schulmeister estate and built controlled-rent blocks for the poor around the park and the âCanardiére' pond: decidedly low. The Route de Colmar became a vulgar brawl of congested traffic bordered by filling stations, all the way out to Illkirch: frightful. Last and worst, to relieve the traffic of heavy freight, seeking a way west out of Germany while avoiding the saturated city centre, the awful planners are driving new ring roads. The heavy articulated âstreet trains' come galloping through the rustic orchards, stinking and squealing past one's own front door.
There are still a dozen placid, outwardly unwrinkled streets of desirable residences in the Meinau. But the noose is drawn tight: they are fighting asphyxiation.
One would sell, but values have flattened out. And it's the same everywhere; you have somewhere nice and the poor appear alongside you. Where do all the poor come from? Why can't the municipality, run after all by our friends, do better at hustling them off to weird places like Hautepierre with the Spanish and the Arabs? There are flesh-creeping tales of these blocks, of urine-stained elevators, ten-year-old gangsters and women raped in underground garages. Maddened invalid pensioners shooting from their prison windows with .22 rifles. The horde of greasy unisex hornets on motorbicycles.
Arlette was ironing Arthur's shirts, a complicated syllogism. Ironing is female servitude, right? But no civilized man wears synthetic shirts. While cotton shirts must be ironed. You can send them to the laundry, but this is not economical. Men iron, if at all, clumsily and incompetently.
Lamentable conclusion: if the men are not to be laughingstocks the women iron the shirts. All wrong.
She was curious about Marie-Line. A bourgeois offspring from the Meinau. The sociopathic conditions seemed to Arlette just as menacing as those of the noisy smelly barracks of Neuhof or the Elsau. She knew these houses only from the outside; she was guessing.
A solid core of solid ugly villas, divided into two, maybe three flats now there are no servants any more. Polished bellpushes and clipped hedges. Veneer drinks' cupboards and real leather sofas. Italian-tiled bathrooms and matched-unit kitchens. Basement garages shielding well-washed and waxed cars.
These people have arrived. They are by God going to stay arrived. They will fight tooth and nail to ensure that their children do not lose class, face, standing. The marxist cliché is that capitalism is on its last legs. Maybe; tough ol' legs though. Marching about chanting slogans produces tightlipped grins behind the lace curtains, while the money flees quietly to Switzerland. The bourgeois are well fortified against riots by the ruck. What they fear most is the creeping attack from treachery within. Today's anarchists are rarely tubercular
orphans in damp cellars. Most are expensively educated well-brought-up adolescents in rude health. The old-style Marie-Lines came from physical slums: the new ones from moral slums.
Well after two o'clock. Damn this tiresome child. Arlette thumped crossly with the iron. A lovely day outside. Mid-autumn was best of all. When the mists lift â there are rather too many river-valleys in the Strasbourg area â the sherry-coloured light is full of mellow fruitfulness. Keats' truism is altogether too bland and feeble for the grape harvest in Central Europe, for the splendid cocktail of acrid invigorating smells. Who'd be indoors?
The buzzer went.
Marie-Line was still a child; thin bony fingers; flat boy's behind. The features well formed, the voice poised, the movements graceful. Almost, not quite, an adult.
It took no skill to see she was in a nervous state. Bit fiercely at her fingers, smoked greedily, fidgeted with her feet. As tall as herself and well nourished. Golden corn hair, pale face made paler by too much whitish make-up but set off nicely by a black sweater and a violet scarf. Very pretty face. Might coarsen and thicken disconcertingly soon, even without beer and fried potatoes. Marvellous classic nose, thought Arlette, her own twitching: that wasn't beer. Child has been at the whisky bottle.
She'd looked around, coming in, with a knowing air at the newness and selfconscious rawness of the place. âInterviewing' people at a desk takes practice: Arlette didn't have it yet. The girl seemed to know that. She'd taken a cigarette out of the box without being asked, and picked languidly at a punished finger. One can look very world-weary at eighteen.
âI'm Marie-Line Siegel,' she'd said coming in. âSorry about being a bit late.' Irritated at having been uncontrolled and vulnerable on the phone.
âD'you need that thing on?' stabbing a finger at the tape recorder.
âNot if you prefer it off,' said Arlette.
âI don't mind. Irritating that's all; thing going round. But what's the use of coming at all, unless I'm prepared to trust you? I don't know you. But one must trust somebody.'
âWhat made you decide to trust me?'
âI don't know. You're a woman, I suppose. Not that that⦠skip it. Are there woman detectives; I mean are there many?'
âI have no idea.'
âThen what â oh well, let's not quibble.'
âLet's come to the point.'
âYou're so right. Anyhow, my father's Doctor Armand Siegel.'
âWhat sort of doctor?'
âDentist. Lots and lots of sophisticated equipment. Great big panoramic radiograph. Squads of assistants and nurses, eligible females. Boy, do you appreciate it when the bill comes in, typed in a beautiful huge IBM typeface. Sorry; gassing rather. Sorry too, bit uptight about my father on the whole.'
âAnd your mother?'
âIs, better said was, Véronique Ulrich; that's another great doctor dynasty. She was a disgrace though; ran away. I kept on being told how wicked and ungrateful. I don't see her, so don't know how wicked she is. Average, I suppose. Leaves me alone; that was part of the bargain.'
âDivorce bargain?'
âNo, you don't know my family; they don't divorce. Too Christian and forgiving and suffering. Divorce is shocking. Be a sight better if they did. Then he could marry his exceedingly respectable mistress, Catherine-Rose Pelletier, who's in the cabinet of the Prefect, a career woman you see, pure and single-minded.'
âYou sound a bit uptight about her too.'
âCathy's all right. Makes rather a fuss about being cultural; Bach and stuff. But she doesn't pretend she's my new mummy. Quite cool and detached. Loathes me, I dare say, but too Christian to allow that. All these people are very honourable, but they're to piss on, you know.'
âWhy?'
The abruptness made the girl give a short uneasy laugh, turned adroitly into airy.
âYou're right, I'm being unfair. And talking too much. And sounding sorry for myself?'
âBe as sorry for yourself as you like if you deserve it.'
âJust that this is all very hupperclawss Strasbourg. Very right wing. You very right wing?
âYou mean do I vote for all those people calling themselves Republicans? No. Will I show you credentials? No. Take me as you find me.'
The girl laughed with less tension.
âGood. Sorry. You know, that's how one gets corrupted. They want to know who you are, meaning where you fit in, meaning how they'll behave. Wouldn't do to upstage somebody who might have a brother-in-law in Paris, knowing people.'
âI don't. But where do you fit in?'
âI like you,' with a real laugh. Big compliment.
âGreat.'
âOh, I'm still at school, in the last class, terminal A you know, philo and languages. Should be in C, where the bright ones are supposed to be, doing maths, if I'd been willing to do medicine. It wouldn't have been looked at askance, if you get me. Biology or something, that's suitable enough for a woman; they'd have admitted that. I wouldn't be seen dead with it, and maths bores me silly. Or I could have done B. Economic sciences you know, like Cathy. Frankly, they're the dropouts from both C and A. D of course is unspeakable; that's all the commercial ones who're going to make money.' One knew more now about Marie-Line, as well as about the school selection system.
âThey all want to make money. Normal in the circumstances.'
âYes, but these think of nothing but marketing and the cash flow. The one true religion. Yes, I'm crude; I hear nothing
else all day. So you do a philo baccalaureat in A, and where are you?'
âYou're in the Law Faculty,' said Arlette as though it were not rhetorical. âOr you're in the big troop of Arts, an apprentice school teacher. Or you do the phony ones like Sociology or Psychology, and read Marx only nobody does, and Freud which everyone does, alas.'
âYou know about it then.'
âDid it myself. You thought mostly then about getting a man.'
âWe've come some way since then,' with the tolerant contempt of eighteen for fifty. âThe men can't afford to get married, to let themselves get crippled and distracted by some passive sofa cushion. There are the cheap lays, and of course the gang of nymphos and lezzies, but if you've brains you don't sit all obsessed with sex.'
Arlette was wondering where the point was and when would they reach it. Be patient. You got confidences, the greatest banalities, told you solemnly like the Dead Sea Scrolls had got deciphered, and you must not yawn. She'll get there. It's what, after all, she's come here for. I have to pass a test first, that I'm not sex-obsessed.
âI know a boy,' said Marie-Line abruptly, âin the lycée. Doing Greek; slightly weird but he's interested in prehistory. He doesn't have it easy. He's from a poor family, they're not educated a bit, and while they're nice, and one respects them, they're pretty dense and kind of null. So he depends on me quite a lot. And I depend on him. It isn't jam and roses, this narrow sterilized background in a provincial flea-dump like Strasbourg.
âAnd we're economically dependent. I'd like to get a job only there's nothing I know. What's the use of that university anyway? Anyhow I'm up against it. I do what the daddy wants, which is get a right-honourable Bac and be a good girl, meaning cut Michel out of existence, or Dad and Uncle Freddy Ulrich will Take Steps.'
âWhat sort of steps?'
âShut me up in some psychiatric clinic,' quietly.
The quiet voice that is kept for bad news: âit seems the tests show a fairly massive cancer.' Arlette was startled.
âReally? Said openly as a threat?' She'd heard of it: there'd been a notorious case a few years back. Arbitrary Sequestration, the Penal Code calls it. But if done in the family, carefully and legally, it was not easy to combat. She'd have to look up the jurisprudence; there was a notorious hole in the legal procedures for a declaration of insanity. Or was this girl trying to make herself interesting?
âMade openly to me? Yes. I didn't pick it up listening at the door.'
âWell ⦠help you ask; help you shall get. I don't know what yet, nor how. I must have time to think. Intervening clumsily would make things worse. How urgent â immediate â is all this?' The girl looked at her with a sour smile, as though able to see a certain acid humour in it all.
âNot all that immediate. The threat's supposed to be enough. Quite a comprehensive threat. Enough for me. I'm frightened by it,' bleakly.
âYes.'
One no longer cut disobedient children off with a penny: they told you where to stuff your penny.
âDoes anybody else know about this threat?'
âMiohel you mean? I haven't told him â he'd do something wild. How would it help him, being saddled with thinking it was his fault? I tell you. Who else would I tell â doctors?' with contempt. âPriests maybe?' She looked at Arlette. âYou don't believe me.'
âDon't be silly. That's not the point. It sounds like a legal problem. Like pleading rape: you must know it's notoriously difficult to plead rape. Who was there, who's to say you weren't the willing partner they claim?'
Vistas were opening, and happening too fast. If a medical opinion said one was neurotic and in need of psychiatric care â to contradict that, did one have to apply to a tribunal for an independent expert?
âLike if you're raped you get a specialist lawyer, who knows the loopholes.'
âYou'd sure as hell get no lawyer here to touch this. Who's to pay it anyhow? I don't even know how to pay you. I've plenty in the savings bank, but I can't touch it.'
âYou don't have to worry about that yet. You â we â must gain some time. You must be meek for a few days. You can reach me here. But I must have somewhere to reach you, to leave a note or a message.'
â
Mauricette â
the pub in the Boulevard de la Victoire: we go there. Just write Marie-Line on the envelope.'
âThat'll do nicely.'
âI've been here too long,' looking at her watch. Good watch, real gold. First Communion present in a bourgeois family. Pass your exam and you can have a motorbike.
âWhatever you told me here is in confidence; you can rely on that. Have I your permission to ask my husband's advice?'
âHe's that professor of sociology isn't he? â whose name's on the door? Sociologists! â taking bribes from the government to say yes, that's a good place for an autoroute.' Must remember this adolescent definition â Arthur would like this!