Authors: J. Robert Janes
Oelmann fired at them twice and that was enough. Thundering through the shallows, the mare broke back up onto the road and then in among the cluster of Renaissance houses. Her hooves clattered on the ancient cobbles. Marina von Strade stepped out from the shade of the café. Courtet reached for his hat.
The mare raced past them down the lane between the houses to finally pull up sharply at the post office. âAh
nom de Dieu
,' swore Kohler. âYou
knew
exactly where we were headed!'
Standing on her back, he pulled himself up onto the balcony and once within the inn, went along the hall to the room at the head of the stairs.
âLouis ⦠Louis, we've done it!' he cried breathlessly as the drawer popped open.
There wasn't a damned thing in it, not even a speck of dust.
Hands folded in her lap, her dress pinned in places, Juliette Jouvet sat on the edge of the bed with eyes downcast in despair. There was the loss of everything â the postcards, yes, yes! The silver necklace and diamond pin, the few louis d'or, the savings of a lifetime, the 10,000 francs also.
There was the presence of Herr Oelmann too, and she could still feel the nearness of him, the knife at her breast.
Herr Kohler reached out to her from the chair he had drawn up. âIs this the only place your mother would have hidden things?' he asked.
His voice was very gentle and she knew he regretted terribly what had happened to her. The emptiness that was usually in his eyes was gone but her heart was hard. âThis is the only place,' she said stonily. âSearch the rest of the house if you wish. It will do no good.'
Kohler nodded. He understood only too well that she would find it very difficult, if not impossible, to forgive him, that he, too, as one of the Occupiers from the North, was as much to blame for what had happened to her as was Oelmann.
âMadame,' he said, and again there was a sincerity and concern that only made her want to scream at him to leave her alone. He asked about
maman's
telephone call on that Thursday morning, and she had to repeat what she had told Hen Oelmann. â
“Them”
, that is all mother said. She would “take care of them”! She ⦠she could not tell me who she meant, could she? Monsieur Coudinec, the
facteur
in Domme, he always listens in. André could well have found out that ⦠that mother intended to poison him. This ⦠this is what I have thought.'
There, now they knew for sure she herself had wanted André dead and that she felt he had killed
maman.
âThe mushrooms,' said Oelmann. âBut “them” means someone else.'
âThe one Madame Fillioux went to meet,' sighed Kohler evasively. âSomeone from Paris perhaps.'
âThe father?' asked Oelmann sharply.
Ah
merde
⦠âPerhaps. Look, I really don't know, do I?'
âMother ⦠Mother must have been trying to keep me out of things,' said Juliette. âAfter she said she would take care of them, she begged me to go to the cave to remove the mortar and the lumps of pyrolusite. She did not tell me specifically what it was she wanted taken from the cave, only that I was to remove the things from our little cache. “I put them there some time ago,” she said.'
âWhen?' demanded Oelmann only to see her shrug and hear her say, âHurt me if you like. It will gain you nothing.'
âEither before or after she visited the cave with Professor Courtet,' offered Kohler. âLook, there's no sense in questioning madame further. She doesn't know anything else.'
Could he leave it? wondered Oelmann. Kohler wouldn't tell him everything unless he felt the fear of repercussions.
The Bavarian said, âDon't be asking the SS of the avenue Foch to put the squeeze on me, my friend. All they'll do is start asking questions of their own and thinking those paintings in that little cave of yours are a fraud and the film a bust. Egg on the Führer's face and in Technicolor â is that what you want? Don't be a
dummkopf.
'
âThere is always the
Sonderkommando-SS
we have in the Périgord,' said Oelmann quietly. âI have only to call them.'
âFor help? Ah
Gott im Himmel
, Herr Obersturmführer or whatever your rank is, you know only too well each undercover special commando in the
zone libre
reports daily to the avenue Foch.'
Up close, the threatening muzzle of the Radom pistol felt just like any other. âIt's simple,' shrugged Kohler. âTheir little grapevines are everywhere and each of them runs right back to Berlin as well and the ears of the Führer. Let Louis and me handle this. We'll fill you in. No problem.'
âEven after what I did to that one and my shooting at you?'
Oelmann couldn't be such a fool as to believe they'd cooperate, but there was no harm in pretending. âHey, it's all in a day's work. Louis and I don't ever want trouble with the SS.'
Kohler was just gassing about. The SS of the avenue Foch and Gestapo Paris Central had little good to say about him but could he and his partner be used?
Oelmann cocked the pistol and gave the Bavarian's temple a nudge. âPerhaps what you say is true, perhaps not. We shall have to see.'
The bastard curtly nodded at Madame Jouvet, causing her to shudder. He would now rejoin the world of film and be as smooth and charming as ever, if a trifle silent.
The door closed. They waited and when, finally, they heard Herr Oelmann's car start up, the détective heaved such a grateful sigh, she had to look questioningly at him.
The smile he gave was warm and conspiratorial. âFor now he's satisfied, madame. If it helps, I think he'll leave you alone and seek his answers elsewhere.'
âAre they all like that, the SS?'
She'd go to pieces if he didn't offer hope but she had to hear the truth. âMost of them. The only good ones are the dead ones.'
Tears began again. Her lower lip quivered. âBut ⦠but are you not also of the Gestapo and the SS, monsieur?'
âOnly under duress and only as a détective, and not SS. Louis and me, we hate the very thought of what they do and are just itching to get back at bastards like that.'
Once more she could see that what had happened to her was a great sadness to him but so, too, was his connection to those agents of terror. When his hand was extended, she found she had to accept it. He had a way with him and that was good. He did not accuse or blame her for having kept to herself that
maman
had intended to poison André, even though she had also meant to kill someone else, someone whose name might well have been on one of those postcards. Her father's. âAll right,' she said and found the will to smile. âLet us help each other.'
The cavalry were down in the river in shirt sleeves, bare feet and rolled-up trouser legs, laughing and tossing water from a wooden bucket over a horse that loved it. A tattered crowd of children had gathered and now squatted on their haunches or stood along the bank amused and passing judgment as the giant with the Fritz haircut shouted sweet endearments to a plough-horse.
âYou've found a friend, I see,' said St-Cyr, having walked in from the farm.
âShe's a beauty, eh, Louis? What took you so long?'
One had best remove the shoes and socks and give the feet a little cooling. âAnother murder,' he confided discreetly so as not to set the village abuzz too soon. âThe possibility of two assailants, one to divert, the other to make the kill â it's just a notion. I must ring up Deveaux and ask for the troops and a photographer. If possible, I will wait here for them.'
âGood. Yes, that's good, Chief. You can catch a meal and a glass of the
vin paille
at the café of the beautiful walnut, or whatever they call it. I've bummed a ride to Domme for Juliette with Marina and friends. I'm not just sure which of those gorgeous creatures is going to have to sit on my lap, but I'll be sure to behave myself.'
âYou do that. Now inform me, please, of what has transpired.'
âAn empty drawer, no postcards. Nothing. Sautéed mushrooms for two but not for herself. No, Madame Fillioux would have wanted to see the results of her little plan and would have gone to prison and the guillotine quite gladly.'
âShe meant to poison the one she was to meet in the glade as well as her son-in-law,' sighed St-Cyr, wetting a handkerchief to bathe his face and neck.
âA visitor from Paris, Louis? A recipient of some of the good madame's parcels? The father perhaps?'
âYes, yes, the father. Then it is as we have thought, Madame Fillioux expected to meet him.'
Kohler pulled off his shirt, handed it and the halter rope over, then took to dry land to remove the rest. With a bellow, he ran joyfully into the water to splash about and seek depth.
As naked as at the dawn of time, his voice filled the valley and broke the children up until they laughed and cried and clapped so hard their sides were cramped. The giant finally lay down in the shallows and let the water pour over him. âHe's like that sometimes,' said St-Cyr to one of the littlest. âHe has had a hard day and is trying to forget it, if only for a moment.'
Marina von Strade was ecstatic. âOo, he should be in our film,' she said with bright green eyes still hungering after the savage, her hands clasped beneath her chin. âNext to him, I could really play the part I have been given. Toto? Toto, darling, don't you think so too?'
Gérard Lemieux only grunted disparagingly as a jealous and lonely young Neanderthal buck might have done in a darkened cave.
âHe's magnificent,' enthused the woman. âHe's exactly what we need.'
Later they sat alone on the bank and shared another cigarette. âTo chase with a boulder requires strength and speed,' offered Kohler.
âUnless the boulder had been placed at the site of the killing ahead of time and a handaxe first used. The footprints, I believe, were those of a woman.'
âWhy cut the fishing line and free the worms?'
âA last touch. An act of supreme detachment and defiance perhaps but done after the hiding of the body, after the killer had carried the boulder well out into the river and had bathed.'
âA straight stalk, chase and kill.'
âBut perhaps with two assailants. The father and ⦠and someone else, a woman. Auger must have known too much. Perhaps he could have identified one of them.'
âNo one's stayed in that inn of hers for ages, Louis. I took a look through her register.'
âAnd what of Herr Oelmann?'
âForgery is a bad word and Berlin has ears. Russia's too cold but so is the concentration camp at Dachau.'
âAnd our Madame Jouvet?'
âScared out of her wits yet still not telling us everything. Has no immediate plans for suicide. Will see it through if friend Oelmann will let her.'
âShe's the third one, then. She's the next victim.'
âHey, I think maybe you're right, Chief. I'll try to keep it in mind.'
6
R
UEFULLY ST-CYR SURVEYED THE GREASY PAR
cels they had laid out on the sorting table. Three kilos of unsalted butter â could it be derancified? he wondered. The same of cheese that had gone so mouldy in the heat, the mice had had a feast. Two fat geese and, lastly, a loin of pork â perhaps five kilos of it and worth a fortune in Paris on the black market but never seen in the
boucheries
these days.
Every one of the parcels had been destined for the family's address in Paris. Running a fingertip back through the ledger, he could find no other record of Madame Fillioux's ever having sent parcels to that Paris address or to the one in Monfort-l'Amaury. Perhaps a few postcards, yes of course. Negative responses to the earnest pleas of her dead husband's parents for help. Negative until the Saturday before she died.
Again he went through the ledger. It was infuriating not to find a thing. The stench was getting to him. He was tired. He needed time to think things through.
When he saw an entry from Auger, he stopped cold and held his breath.
The sous-facteur had sent a parcel of seven kilos on the 15th of April of this year to place des Vosges, number seven, apartment five. Rundown, but still one of the loveliest and certainly the oldest square in Paris. Its symmetrical two-storeyed houses of soft rose-coloured brick with white stone arcades had formerly been the town houses of the fashionable but had long since lost out to the Palais Royal, the place Vendôme and, yes, streets like the boulevard Richard Wallace overlooking the Bois de Boulogne. Now it was the address of those who wished to rise above such a station but could not yet find the wherewithal to do so.
A Mademoiselle Danielle Arthaud, a niece? he wondered. A goose perhaps, judging by the weight.
Search as he did, he could find no other instance where sous-facteur Auger had sent anything to Paris, let alone to this Danielle Arthaud. Though he would perhaps never be able to prove it, he was certain Madame Fillioux had done the sending but if so, why had she not used her own name since she had used it on the other parcels?
Perhaps to let others know she was not alone â it was a thought most certainly. And Auger would have seen that his name had been used. It would have appeared on the return address, so she must have asked him if he would not mind.
â
Bitte
, everyone,' announced the Baroness. âPlease, Madame Jouvet has escaped from her dreary life as a teacher. Has anyone a spare dress that would fit her? Something a little dangerous but not too much. The timid awakening, yes? The freeing of the dove if only for an evening. She has two children, has just left a husband who beats her terribly. It is the story of her mother and father we are filming.'
Work at Lascaux had been completed. It was time for a little rest and recreation. A hush fell over the baronial hall of the château that housed the film crew and cast in their off moments. Perhaps some two hundred were crowded at long tables, all eating, drinking and until now, engaged in umpteen conversations or simply brooding and wanting to kill a latest rival over some trifling slight.