Authors: J. Robert Janes
In addition to the ten or fifteen million dossiers and cards dealing with outright crime, there were the millions of other bits and pieces that might eventually prove useful. One never knew. Apply for a passport or a visa in pre-war days, or even now, or a new set of papers, and you got a card here. Apply for a hunting licence in days past when such a thing was possible, and you got a special card, complete with registration number. Nice for the Occupier. No problem in finding stray rifles and shotguns that should have been turned in. Apply for a marriage licence, birth certificate or divorceâyes, here divorce had been legal before the war, though now Pétain and the government in Vichy frowned on it, the hypocrites. Age, date of birth, sex, race, colour of eyes, nose, height, weight, religion, address and those of the closest relatives, place of residence, job, education ⦠it was all here, locked up in silence until the wheel was spun, a drawer opened or the pen taken up.
The labyrinth of missing persons was discouraging. To all those who had been listed because of suspected or proven crimes, were added those who had simply walked away without telling anyone. Then there were the thousands who had died or become separated from their loved ones during the blitzkrieg, when the roads had had to be âcleared' of refugees for the advancing Panzers and the boys in their Messerschmitts and Stukas had had a field day.
Ãmile Turcotte was lord and master here, a hawk-eyed, miserly little bastard with no sense of humour, the rake of a guardsman's moustache and, too often, the defiant gaze of a wounded librarian. They'd got through all the usual refusals far too quickly. The préfet had tipped him off and had told him to co-operate or else, so as to bleed this Gestapo of information.
Well, that was fair enough, though Turcotte was not a servant of the préfet but one of their own and ought to have known better.
âShall we spin the wheel again?' quipped the librarian.
Kohler snorted and sadly shook his head. It had taken them nearly an hour to find this one. For now he had enough on what must have happened to the other girls.
And Joanne? he wondered. Would there yet be time to save her and if so, what would they find?
âLook, I need a bit on that robbery. For a start, give me what you have on the manager of the main Paris branch of Crédit Lyonnais.'
This, too, the préfet had warned of. âThat is not possible.'
âIt had better be. I'm not used to threatening my fellow workers but if I have to â¦'
The acid seethed. âThe last time you ⦠you tried to steal my tobacco tin for Louis!'
That had been about a month ago. âThen this time I'll simply requisition it.'
The dark olive eyes flicked away in uncertainty. Kohler was trouble. âA moment,' grumbled Turcotte. The préfet, he ⦠he wouldn't like it but â¦
âNo moments,' grinned Kohler, clapping a hand firmly on a thin shoulder. âHey,
mon fin,
I think I'd better come with you in case you run into an accident.'
Such records were in another section, and even that God of Louis's could never have found them, but Turcotte had a nose for it and the memory.
When he pulled the file, right away the banker's name came up: André-Philippe de Brisson, the address: 35 rue de Montpensier, almost directly across the garden of the Palais Royal from the house.
âEighteen million, Inspector,' muttered the old woman abstractedly. âPoor Monsieur de Brisson will be beside himself and will forget absolutely to tell his daughter to let the cat in. It is the toughs these days, the police.'
âAh no, madame, surely not the police,' urged St-Cyr. One had to speak loudly.
âYes, yes, the police.' She would purse her lips and glare at him. She would have to dismiss the girl. One could not have one's days interrupted by the Sûreté. How shameful.
The maid had let him into the house which was next door to the house of Monsieur Vergès. The hour of the apéritif had come and gone with two glasses of well-watered port he had not been given a chance to share.
Little had been accomplished. The bank manager's house was across the garden. âThe daughter, Madame Lemaire?' he hazarded. âDoes Mademoiselle de Brisson let the cat in through one of the attic windows perhaps?'
âThe cat â¦? What cat?'
âThe robbery, madame. You were only just saying â¦'
The thin shoulders beneath the mound of sweaters and shawls quivered with indignation. âPlease do not interrupt me, Inspector. I know perfectly well what I was saying.'
The woman drifted off into silence and left him waiting, though not purposely. Fortune had passed by, leaving faded, once plush, wine-purple armchairs with holes in their arms and loose threads trailing to the floor to join frayed tassels.
There were two of these armchairs, one on each side of a smoke-blackened grey marble chimneypiece; no fire, no fuel tonight. A cross, a small ormolu clock, a photo in its frame, two plates of dubious value and a vase from someplace occupied the mantelpiece beneath a gilded Louis-Philippe mirror that had lost the top left corner of its carving. An accident years ago.
A pair of flanking, gilded sconces, mounted on the cracked, pale yellow walls, held stubs of candles in each of their three holders. He felt the stubs had been left for propriety's sake though the thought of melding all six together would have presented a dilemma whenever it registered.
Impatient at the continued delay but telling himself to go easy, he cleared his throat and said, âThe robbery, madame?' But now the grey eyes that had only this past moment been so fiercely defiant, drifted into memory at the thought of food as she touched the faded menu at her side.
âThe ninety-ninth day of the siege, 25 December 1870,' she said, wistfully reading it.
The Franco-Prussian War. The winter of 1870-71. How old had she been? he wondered. Fifteen or twenty, no more â¦
â“Hors-d'oeuvre: Langue de kéabau en gelée écarlate. Cervelle d'éléphant. Animelles de zèbre à la crème sur canapés.
”'
Jellied water buffalo tongue, elephant brains, and zebra testicles sliced, in cream, and on little wedges of toast.
The city had been ringed by the Prussians. Napoleon III had been taken prisoner. No food could enter Paris ⦠âMadame â¦'
âPlease do not interrupt me, Inspector. I read this every day to remind myself of the brave and to beg God to let them return since men such as yourself have not stopped the Boches.'
A purée of emu with croutons, a consommé of kangaroo thickened with tapioca, garnished with dried royale and sprinkled with chervil, no doubt. On the ninety-ninth day of the siege, the Paris zoo had been emptied and the contents shared.
The menu was perhaps from the restaurant Le Grand Véfour that was off the north-western corner of the garden with an entrance on the rue de Beaujolais. It had been founded in 1760, was still open and still much the same. A classic. Balzac had eaten there.
Duchess potato croquettes dipped in egg and breadcrumbs and fried in very hot, deep fat ⦠Camel stew, braised shank of antelope ⦠âMadame, an important investigation. A girl is missing. To prevent a tragedy it is imperative that we â¦'
A girl ⦠âShe is waiting in the doorway. Nanette, please show the inspector out.'
Baked mongoose, stuffed lemur with truffles ⦠As a young woman, madame would perhaps have had the second service and have sipped a Romanée Conti 1856 by candle-light while the city, besieged, prayed for the brave to defend its honour.
âShe's like that always now, Inspector. My mistress is really a very dear lady who has been extremely kind to me. She doesn't mean to be difficult.'
Marianne, his dead wife had been a Breton, thought St-Cyr. This one, too, had the fair cheeks and china-blue eyes, the blonde hair that was like silk and the warm if hesitant manner.
âWhat will you do when she passes away?' he asked as they paused by the door to the outer hall and stairs. âPlease, I know it's a matter you've told yourself many times you must face.'
The girl's eyes were downcast. Moisture gathered rapidly in them.
âI ⦠I don't know, Inspector. Madame, she has no one but me. No one any more. They're all dead, don't you see?'
He nodded gravely and said, âPermit me, then, to give you my card. Please, I'll see what I can do to help.'
âBut me? Why me? Why should you do such a thing?'
She had instantly thought the worst. âBecause I know what the alternatives are, mademoiselle, and can perhaps find a suitable situation for you with two dear friends who may just be looking for a little help. It's not impossible. Both are older women of great experience and understanding. They have a shop on the place Vendôme. Look, I must visit them soon and will broach the subject so that when the worst should happen, we will have a little preparation.'
She tried to smile but tears flooded from her. He gave her his handkerchief, she muttered,
âMerci,
' and when her cheeks were dry, her eyes still moist and bringing back such memories to him of Marianne, he said, âDid you see who came to remove the furniture from the house next door, the house of Monsieur Vergès?'
It would be best to nod quickly. âFour men in two
gazogène
lorries from the firm of Dallaire and Sons last night.'
Sunday evening ⦠Her chest lifted, a breath was held. He would be brief since there was more. âAt about what time?' he asked.
There was a firmness in his voice that made her realize she would have to tell him. âAt 6.07 p.m. I had just taken Madame her first glass of port and had returned to the kitchen to see what I could do best to make her supper a little more attractive.'
After dark, then. âSome parsley, perhaps?'
The girl brightened. âYes. Why yes, that's it exactly!'
âAnd did you call the matter of the movers to her attention?'
âNo. Ah, no. I â¦' She would lower her eyes because he would not think well of her now. âI knew how upset she would have been, Inspector. Monsieur Vergès has always been so very kind to her. Though he doesn't come to his house any more, his presence is still felt. Flowers ⦠flowers are still sent each year on her birthday.'
Then she has someone after all, but you're afraid of himâwas that it? he wondered, looking her over. The girl was no more than twenty-two years of age and had been with Madame Lemaire for the past five years. Though probably not entirely innocent, she was still a âgood' girl and had not put herself on the streets as had some. âThe son of Monsieur Vergès, Mademoiselle Nanette? The sender of the flowers perhaps. Did he ever come to the house next door?'
Stricken, she threw him a look of anguish. âNo. Ah no, Inspector. Not that one. Not that I ⦠I know of.' Swiftly she crossed herself while dropping her eyes and saying inwardly, The drooler ⦠the drooler â¦
He would have to be gentle and must soften his voice. âThen tell me what you heard from that house, Nanette. You were waiting for sleep perhaps. Madame had already â¦'
Her shoulders straightened. Her chin lifted. Her gaze was steady. âShe goes to sleep very early, Inspector, but like a lot of old people, often awakens in the night and is sometimes up for hours.'
âWhat did you hear?'
The Inspector would hate her for it. âA woman crying. My room ⦠It's in the attic at the back, you understand.'
Overlooking the balcony and the garden. âAnd did you tell Madame of this crying?'
His gaze demanded the truth. âNo, I ⦠I was afraid to. Madame has a heart murmur, Inspector. Sometimes things upset her and â¦'
âAnd you were afraid she would be very upset since neither Monsieur Vergès nor his son apparently ever came to the house.'
âYes.'
The tears were very real and many. The lovely lips quivered with remorse. He hated to do it to her but had to know. âHow often did you hear this crying?'
She mustn't tell him everything. She mustn't! âSometimes every night for days but ⦠but then it would stop and ⦠and there would be peace until â¦'
He couldn't keep the sadness from his voice. âUntil a few days or weeks had passed, or a month or two perhaps, when again there would be much weeping but not, am I right, from the same person?'
So much was registered in the girl's eyes. Fear, doubt, anxiety, shame. âWhat has happened in that house, Inspector? Please, you must tell me.'
Ah damn, what was she hiding and why was she too afraid to tell him?
âNanette ⦠Girl, has he gone?' came the voice of Madame Lemaire.
âYes ⦠yes, madame! I am just bringing the supper.' Frantically the girl turned to him. âPlease, Inspector, her heart.'
âI'll be back. Say nothing of this to anyone. Your life may well be in danger.'
After he had gone, she pressed her forehead against the door and wept. She hadn't told him of her attempts to find out what had been going on in that house since the Defeat. The Defeat! She hadn't told him what she had seen.
Taking the business card from her apron, she opened her blouse and slid it down under her brassière until it nestled against the plump warmth of her left breast.
âI will sew it into the lining,' she whispered, âI will keep it with me always. And when I have to wash the brassière?' she asked herself, with all the practicality of her ancestors. âThen I will put it under my pillow at such times.'
He would hate her for what she had seen and said nothing of.
2
T
HE BOY WAS WAITING IN THE FREEZING DARK
ness of the rue Laurence-Savart beside the gate to number 3. He had been there for hours.
âDédé, what is this?' asked St-Cyr. âYou'll catch pneumonia.'
âIt's nothing, Monsieur the Chief Inspector. Nothing.'
âOf course, but you know I would have come up the street to visit with your dear mama and papa, and your brothers and sisters. We agreed, isn't that so? A wash, a cup of bouillon and then the conference. That's why I'm here. How are they bearing up?'