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Authors: Georges Simenon

BOOK: A Crime in Holland
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So this feller says to the captain …

The voice grew louder as the set was tuned. A few more crackles.

… And the captain, he's a good sort. But the other feller, nudge nudge, know what I mean? …

And this voice, that of a Parisian music-hall performer, echoed around the impeccable parlour, where everyone was standing absolutely still.

‘Right, sit down, everyone,' Maigret thundered. ‘Let's have some tea. Talk among yourselves.'

He went to look out of the window, but the shutters were closed. He opened the door and called:

‘Pijpekamp!'

‘Yes,' came a voice from the gloom.

‘Is he there?'

‘Yes, behind the second tree!'

Maigret came back inside. The door slammed.

The sketch was over and an announcer's voice said:

And now record number 2-8-6-7-5 from Odeon!

Some scratchy sounds. Then jazz music. Madame Popinga was huddled against the wall. Underneath the surface broadcast another voice could be heard, singing nasally in some foreign language, and sometimes there was a further spell of crackling before the music came through once more.

Maigret looked over at Beetje. She had collapsed into an armchair and was weeping bitterly. Through her sobs, she was whispering:

‘Oh, poor Conrad, poor Conrad!'

And Barens, all the blood having drained from his face, was biting his lip.

‘Tea!' Maigret ordered, looking at Any.

‘We didn't bring it yet. They rolled back the carpet. Conrad was dancing.'

Beetje gave an even louder sob. Maigret looked at the carpet, the solid oak table with its lace cloth, the window and Madame Wienands, who didn't know what to do with her children.

10. Someone Waiting for the Right Moment

Maigret dominated them by his size, or rather his bulk. The room was small. Standing with his back to the door, he seemed too big for it. He looked serious. Perhaps he was never more human than when he said slowly, in a neutral voice:

‘The music goes on playing. Barens helps Popinga to roll back the carpet. In a corner, Jean Duclos is talking to Madame Popinga and Any and listening to his own voice. Wienands and his wife are thinking it's time to leave because of the children, and are talking about doing so in low voices. Popinga has drunk a glass of brandy. That's enough to make him merry. He laughs. He hums the tune. He goes over to Beetje and asks her to dance.'

Madame Popinga was looking fixedly at the ceiling. Any's piercing eyes were directed at the inspector, who finished what he was saying:

‘The murderer knows who is going to be the victim. Someone is watching Conrad dancing and knows that, in two hours, this man who's laughing a bit too loudly, who wants to be jolly in spite of everything, who is hungry for life and emotions, will be nothing more than a corpse.'

The shock made itself felt, literally. Madame Popinga's mouth opened to utter a cry that never came. Beetje was still sobbing.

The atmosphere had changed at a stroke. They might almost have been looking around expecting to see Conrad. Conrad dancing! Conrad, who was being watched by the eyes of the assassin!

Only Jean Duclos spoke, to say:

‘That's a bit strong!'

And since no one was listening to him, he went on to himself, hoping Maigret might overhear him:

‘Now I see your method, and it isn't original! Terrorize the suspect, suggest certain possibilities, place him in the context of the crime, to force a confession out of him. Sometimes when this is tried, the criminal repeats the same gestures in spite of himself.'

But it came across just as muffled muttering. Such words were hardly appropriate at a moment like this.

Music was still coming through the loudspeaker, and that was enough to lift the atmosphere a little.

Wienands, after his wife had whispered something in his ear, stood up timidly.

‘Yes, yes! You can go,' Maigret told him, before he could say anything.

Poor Madame Wienands! A well-brought-up and most respectable citizen, who would have preferred to bid everyone goodbye politely, to get her children to do the same, but who didn't know how to manage it, and ended by shaking hands with Madame Popinga, without finding any of the right words!

There was a clock on the mantelpiece. The time it showed was five past ten.

‘Not time for tea yet?' asked Maigret.

‘Yes, it is!' Any replied, as she got up and went to the kitchen.

‘Excuse me, madame. But didn't you go to make the tea with your sister?'

‘A little later.'

‘And you joined her in the kitchen?'

Madame Popinga passed her hand across her forehead. She was making an effort not to slump into stupor. She stared despairingly at the loudspeaker.

‘I don't know. Wait a minute. I think Any came out of the dining room, because the sugar's kept in the sideboard there.'

‘Was the light on?'

‘No. Maybe. No, I think not.'

‘And you didn't speak to each other?'

‘Oh yes! I said: Conrad mustn't have any more to drink or he'll start misbehaving.'

Maigret went into the corridor, just as the Wienands were closing the front door. The kitchen was well lit and meticulously clean. Water was being heated on a gas cooker. Any was taking the top off a teapot.

‘Don't bother actually making the tea.'

They were alone. Any looked him in the eye.

‘Why did you make me take that cap?' she asked.

‘Never mind. Come back in.'

In the parlour, nobody spoke or moved.

‘Are you going to let this music go on playing for ever?' Jean Duclos managed nevertheless to protest.

‘Perhaps. There's one more person I wish to see: the maid.'

Madame Popinga looked at Any, who answered: ‘But she's in bed. She always goes to bed at nine.'

‘No matter. Get her to come downstairs for a few minutes. She needn't bother getting dressed.'

And in the same flat voice he had used at first, he repeated obstinately:

‘You were dancing with Conrad, Beetje. Over in the corner, other people were having a serious conversation. And someone knew there would be a death. Someone knew this was Conrad Popinga's last night on earth.'

The sound of steps was heard and a door banged on the second floor of the house, where the attic bedroom was. Then a murmur of voices. Any came in first. A shadow remained standing in the corridor.

‘Come on,' said Maigret gruffly. ‘Someone tell her not to be afraid to come in.'

The maid had indistinct features in a large plain face, and looked dazed. Over her cream flannelette ankle-length nightdress, she had simply thrown an overcoat. Her eyes were half-closed with sleep and her hair tousled. She smelled of her warm bed.

Maigret spoke to Duclos:

‘Ask her, in Dutch of course, if she was Popinga's mistress.'

Madame Popinga turned her head away in pain. The sentence was translated.

The maid shook her head energetically.

‘Repeat the question. Ask her whether her employer ever made any advances to her.'

More protestations.

‘Tell her if she does not tell the truth, she risks a prison sentence. Divide the question up. Did he ever kiss her? Did he sometimes come into her bedroom when she was there?'

The girl standing there in her nightdress burst into tears, and cried out in her own language:

‘I haven't done anything. I swear I haven't done anything wrong.'

Duclos translated. With pinched lips, Any was staring at the maid.

‘Was she in fact his mistress, then?'

But the maid was unable to speak. She was protesting vehemently and crying. Asking to be forgiven. Her words were half drowned by her sobs.

‘No, I don't think so,' the professor finally translated. ‘From what I can gather, he did pester her. When they were alone in the house, he kept hanging around her in the kitchen. He kissed her. Once he came into her bedroom when she was getting dressed. He gave her chocolate in secret. But it didn't go any further.'

‘She can go back to bed now.'

They heard the girl go back upstairs. A few minutes later, there was the sound of footsteps coming and going on the second floor. Maigret spoke to Any:

‘Would you be good enough to go and see what she's doing?'

The answer was not long in coming.

‘She wants to leave here at once. She's ashamed. She doesn't want to stay a minute longer in this house. She begs
my sister's forgiveness. She says she'll go to Groningen or somewhere. But she won't stay in Delfzijl.'

And Any added aggressively: ‘Is that what you wanted to achieve?'

The clock was now showing ten forty. A voice from the loudspeaker announced:

Our programme is over. Good night, ladies and gentlemen.

Then the sound of some other station's music came faintly through.

Maigret irritably switched the wireless off, and there was suddenly total silence. Beetje was no longer weeping, but was still hiding her face in her hands.

‘And the conversations went on after that?' asked the inspector, with obvious weariness.

No one replied. Faces now looked even more drawn than in the Van Hasselt ballroom.

‘Please accept my apologies for this painful evening.'

Maigret was speaking principally to Madame Popinga.

‘… but don't forget that your husband was still alive. He was here, in rather high spirits because of the brandy. He probably drank some more …'

‘Yes, he did.'

‘He was a condemned man, you understand! Condemned by someone watching him. And others here, now, are refusing to say what they know, and are making themselves accomplices of the murderer.'

Barens gulped and started to shake.

‘Aren't they, Cornelius?' said Maigret point-blank, looking him in the eyes.

‘No! No! That's not true.'

‘So why are you shaking?'

‘I … I …'

He was about to have a panic attack, as he had on the way to the farm.

‘Listen to me! It's about the time Beetje went off with Popinga. And
you
went out straight afterwards, Barens. You followed them for a while. And you saw something …'

‘No. It's not true.'

‘Wait. After the three of you had left, the only people in the house were Madame Popinga, Any and Professor Duclos. These three all went upstairs.'

Any nodded.

‘And each of them went into his or her bedroom, yes? So tell me what you saw, Barens.'

He was casting about him desperately now. Maigret fixed the squirming boy with a look.

‘No, no! Nothing.'

‘You didn't see Oosting, hiding behind a tree?'

‘No.'

‘But all the same, you were hanging around the house. So you saw
something
.'

‘I don't know, I don't want to … No, it's impossible.'

Everyone was looking at him. He dared not look at anyone. Maigret remained pitiless.

‘It was on the road that you first noticed something. The two bikes had gone off together. They would have to pass through the place which is lit up by the lighthouse. You were jealous. You were waiting. And you had to wait a long time … A time that didn't correspond to the distance they had to cover.'

‘Yes.'

‘In other words, the couple stopped in the shelter of the timber stacks. That wasn't enough to frighten you. It would merely have made you angry, and perhaps despair of your chances. So you must have seen something else that frightened you. Something frightening enough, in any case, to make you stay put, although it was time for you to be back at college. You were between here and the timber yard. You could only see one of the windows of the house.'

At these words, Barens gave a start and lost control completely.

‘You can't … You can't know that. I … I …'

‘The window of Madame Popinga's bedroom. And there was someone at the window. Someone who, like you, had seen that the couple took far too long before they appeared in the beam of light from the lighthouse … Someone who knew therefore that Conrad and Beetje had stopped in the shadows for a long time …'

‘It was me!' said Madame Popinga, in a clear voice.

Now it was Beetje's turn to react, and to stare at her, wide-eyed with terror.

Contrary to expectation, Maigret asked no further questions. Indeed, this created an atmosphere of unease. People in the room felt that having reached a culminating point, everything had stopped dead.

And the inspector went to open the front door, calling:

‘Pijpekamp! Come here, please. Leave Oosting where he is. I imagine you have been able to see the lights going on and off in the Wienands house. They must be in bed.'

‘Yes.'

‘And Oosting?'

‘Still behind the tree.'

The Groningen inspector looked around him in astonishment. Everything was very quiet. The faces were those of people who had spent night after night without sleeping.

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