Murder in the Bastille (25 page)

BOOK: Murder in the Bastille
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Sunday Afternoon

BELLAN EMPTIED THE WHISKEY flask down the toilet, pulled his jacket off the hook in the dormitory, and left. In the Métro, he fingered the folded pamphlet for parents he’d picked up at the Mairie. He climbed the Montgallet Métro stairs and almost turned back.
Non
, keep going, he told himself.

Place de Fontenay, in the shadowed twilight, was crowded with children returning home from lessons and couples going out. Clusters of discount computer shops in nineteenth-century storefronts lined the street. The old, faded lettering
tapisserie
was visible under a sign reading TEKNOWARE. Bells pealed from a distant church.

Bellan saw the Jardin de Reuilly, a vast open green space with its state-of-the-art covered indoor pool. The girls would love it; Monique could start swimming lessons.

Bellan paused at the door of 11, rue Montgallet, under the sign
Services Sociaux Assoc de parents d’enfants déficients men-taux
. Three cigarettes later, he still paced in the doorway.

Would it matter to Marie if he went in? Would she believe him? And what would a meeting of blathering, self-involved parents with Down syndrome children tell him that he didn’t know? That he didn’t feel already? Who needed a moan and groan session . . . he got enough of that at the Commissairiat with all the staff cuts.

He turned to leave and bumped into a middle-aged man, out of breath, who held the hand of a young girl. A Down syndrome girl who was laughing.

“Excuse us, we’re late,” he said. “The soccer game ran into overtime.”

Bellan noticed the girl’s striped jersey, black shorts, muddy soccer cleats, and socks. And her flushed face, wreathed in smiles.

“Who won?”

“My daughter Arlette’s team. She’s the goalie,” he said, beaming. “On to the quarterfinals!’

Arlette hugged her father, then reached out her mud-spattered palm to Bellan.

“Well done,” he said, shaking her hand.

“After you, monsieur,” the man said, reaching for the door. “We don’t want to make you late, too.”

Bellan’s hand twisted in his pocket. He couldn’t do what Marie or anyone wanted him to. Only what his heart told him to. And for that he had to take the first step.

“I’m already late.
Merci
,” Bellan said. “But I’m here.” He took a deep breath and went in.

Sunday Evening

AIMÉE STROKED MILES DAVIS. His wet nose nudged her neck and his dogtags tinkled over the hospital bed.

“I think you have a princess complex,” said René, a shadowy figure beside her.

“Why?” She felt her taped-up ribs. Smelled roses somewhere near her. A glowing rectangular blur of white passed in the distance. A nurse?

“In pre-op you said some funny things under anesthesia.”

She froze. “
Mon dieu,
what did I say?”

She heard him laughing.

“Of course, it’s all the opposite,” she said, on the defensive. Had she mentioned Guy? Stupid, that would go nowhere. “Everyone babbles the opposite of what they really think. Thanks for the roses,” she said, hoping to cover her embarrassment.

“Don’t thank me, the card is signed
Guy
,

he said. “You said something about losing your crown.”

Crown? Oh no. Her father had always called her his princess.

“But I couldn’t find a crown so I brought you this instead.”

She felt something long and slim pressed in her hand. It shone and gleamed, like a dancing flicker of stars. Distorted but steady. She began to focus. Her dizziness had disappeared. “A wand . . . to make your dreams come true.”

She could see it now. She grinned. “They already have.” In more ways than one, she thought. “You sent Vincent’s file to the
Proc.

Miles Davis responded with a resounding bark.

And a gust from the Seine blew in the hospital window, shifting the sheets, freshening the air, a foretaste of a mild winter.

*60 to 65 degrees Fahrenheit.

*At a conversion rate of seven francs to one dollar, this was a price of $10,000,000.

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