Authors: J. Robert Janes
Deveaux refilled the cup and gave him the look of a priest at confession. âWhether or not the Neanderthals wiped themselves with swastika leaves or prayed to that symbol is no concern of ours. Let history take care of itself and let Herr Goebbels claim whatever idiocy he wishes since he, and the others, have the muscle, eh?' Effusively he threw out his hands. âThose prehistorians, Jean-Louis, they're like old women. Insidiously jealous of one another, insanely so and envious to the point of greed. Ah! so they want to warp history a little to gain prestige and power for themselves, others will come along to correct their mistakes and show us all what idiots came before them. You know that, I know it too. A year, two years â this war can't last for ever, can it? Time sorts out all things. God waits only for the bell of truth and so must the rest of us since He's the ringer.'
âYou're trying to tell me something, Odilon. Since it isn't a request to see what I have in this bag, why not enlighten me?'
Ah
nom de Dieu
, must Jean-Louis be so stubborn? âThat bag, I could ask you to open it but I'm close enough to retirement to want my pension. André Jouvet was in Sarlat on the Monday from noon until the four o'clock bus. Several reliable sources have confirmed this. He
can't
be the killer of Madame Fillioux though one of his friends might have done it. We are still working on this.'
âAnd what else, Odilon?'
Regrettably it would have to be said. âThat woman paid three visits to Lascaux.'
Curses were heard from among the parcels, footsteps in the room above. âThree visits?'
âYes. The first was in the late fall of 1940 when the country was still on its knees and trying to wake up to the Defeat and partition. The cave at Lascaux was closed, of course, but Madame Fillioux, their only visitor in nearly two months, paid to have it opened and spent several hours inside alone. Like others who are passionately interested in such things, she just had to see the paintings. There was a sketchbook with her and some chalks, a pencil too.'
âAnd the other visits?'
âHave more brandy. You're still looking too pale. Last summer, in early August, from the 4th until the 7th, an extensive visit, again spending hours alone sketching the paintings. This time on tracing paper. “A scientific study,” she said. “Research for her husband.”'
âHer husband?'
âAh yes, that is what the owner has told me. “I remember her well,” he has said. “Her sketches, they were magnificent. That one has a real feel for those times.”'
Merde â¦
âAnd the third visit?'
âMid-November, after she and Professor Courtet had paid the Discovery Cave a visit. A few hours was all she could spare. Sous-facteur Auger would have known of the three visits but did Juliette? The first visit, yes most certainly but the others ⦠ah, that might not be so.
âAnd Herr Oelmann, does he know of the visits?'
The sous-préfet reached across the table for the top of his thermos and drained it. âHe was at Lascaux during the filming and will have looked through the guestbook the owner keeps. When one visits, one prints their name and address and gives the signature, then later adds a comment on leaving. If I can look, so could he. Besides, because of the Occupation, not many have visited that cave.'
âThen you would have seen if Juliette had paid it a visit?'
âSo as to duplicate the paintings, eh? Ah
merde
, you're serious!' Deveaux pinched his nose in thought. âPerhaps it is that Juliette has used another's name. For me she's not that kind of woman but.â¦' He paused. âBut I have to tell myself that no checks are ever made of any visitor's identity card.'
âWho else visited Lascaux?'
They had come to the crux of it at last. âDanielle Arthaud “and friend.” 25 May 1941, a Sunday, and not quite three weeks before Madame Fillioux's annual visit to the Discovery Cave.'
âWould our victim have read through the names?'
âMost probably since the entry was on the same page as her visit in August.'
âAnd Courtet?'
âThe Professor? Ah! I have forgotten. Six visits at various times, some in the company of other prehistorians â one with Hen-Eisner, of course, and two visits all by himself. “A most welcome guest.” Hen Eisner has also paid visits without Courtet.'
âSo, we are left with Danielle Arthaud “and friend.”'
âA stonekiller.'
The initial postcard from Danielle Arthaud to Ernestine Fillioux was dated Sunday, 25 May 1941, the very same day Danielle “and friend” had been at Lascaux, a worry to be sure. Ah
nom de Dieu
, what was this?
Alone at last in a room at the hotel in Beaulieu-sur-Dordogne, St-Cyr had set the four bundles of cards before him on the bed. In keeping with the law, since the 30th of September 1940 until the end of 1941, only those cards with printed messages had been in use. One filled in the blank spaces, a word for each, and crossed out the others where necessary. Making sense of a tragedy or some urgent problem was all but impossible but one did not stray from the printed words and spaces. If one did, the card was simply torn in half but not destroyed, ah no, they did not do things like that, the Gestapo and the French Gestapo or the Vichy police of the postal system. The card was saved, the sender questioned and then the recipient, who might not know a thing, was forced to give a very thorough account of themselves or else.
From among the others he chose the first card from the smallest bundle. It was dated 10 October 1941.
Hermann ⦠Hermann, he said and, reaching for his pipe and tobacco pouch, threw everything back into the carpet-bag. Deveaux would have to give him a lift. Death caps and fly agaric.⦠No wonder Madame Fillioux had picked her mushrooms and hidden the postcards. Danielle Arthaud's âfriend' must be Henri-Georges.
Juliette Jouvet had not yet rejoined him, a worry to be sure, thought Kohler, and one from which the Baroness constantly sought to divert him. It was as if she could not let him leave but had to lead him down a path of her own, ah
merde.
â¦
The screen was filled with colour. The girl with the dog and the pigtails was long-legged, purposeful and spunky to say nothing of her eyes, her lips and voice.
âI like it,' he said, grinning appreciatively in spite of his worrying. The film was being shown in the château's
Salon Bleu
, a sumptuously gorgeous room whose mirrors and chandeliers added touches of psychedelic wonder to the young, the not-so-young and old alike. The one hundred or so gathered were spellbound. Since the dialogue was in English few could understand, cue cards were being held up over on the far side of the screen but few cared to read them. As Willi von Strade had said, keep the story simple. A tin woodman, a scarecrow and a lion were with the girl and her dog on a yellow brick road through a forest whose celluloid leaves trembled whenever the girl sang, and sing she could.
There was a witch, of course. One had to have that. âThe British Board of Censors have ruled the film suitable only for adults,' snorted the Baroness. âApparently those antiquated octogenarians feel it is not good to show a young virgin all alone in a forest with three men.'
âBut that lion ⦠he looks like a Neanderthal who has just awakened from his cave.'
âA Neanderthal. Who's to say what they really looked like?' she said, searching the crowd for her Toto. âThe British Censors also ruled
Snow White
forbidden to the under-sixteens. Again it was a young virgin in a forest but in that film she was asleep on a bed of leaves, having been discovered by seven lonely dwarfs who longed to awaken her when only her prince could do so.'
The sudden kiss was fiercely warm, wet and hungry. Pressed against the wall and trapped, Kohler had to succumb. Through half-shut eyes he saw Toto Lemieux sitting between two teenagers, pretty things with bright, shining eyes and soft lips. The nearest girl had her hand secretively on something she shouldn't have but watched the film so raptly no one would have guessed.
â
More
,' grated the Baroness. âLet that bastard see that I have taken a new lover, yes? It's good for my ego. Besides, Toto has to be taught a lesson.'
âJust like Danielle?'
She pulled away to pout and stare across the audience at her dog. She pressed her seat against his hand and, catching it fiercely, held it to her thigh. âToto can sustain an erection for nearly forty minutes if I give him just enough. Did you know that such a thing was possible? Neanderthal's bones were massive â far thicker and heavier than our own â but what about the rest of him? Perhaps they died out long ago without a trace, as most prehistorians think. Perhaps, though, as Courtet and Herr Eisner now believe, thanks to the work of Henri-Georges Fillioux, they inter-mated with the Cro-Magnons and we are the result of both. That would have been the case, wouldn't it, if our cave goes right back to the beginnings of time? But no matter. I like to think that just as they were so very strong, they, too, could sustain themselves and bring joy to their women.'
Ah
merde
again.⦠âLook, I've got to find Madame Jouvet. She might.â¦'
âNeed you? Is it that you fear for her safety in our Danielle's hands?'
âYou tell me.' He had no interest at all in her or in why Toto could sustain an erection for so long and yet not climax.
âGo and find her then. See if I care.'
So Lemieux was also on cocaine, but as an aphrodisiac. âLook, I've got a job to do.'
âAnd so have I.'
He left her then, but watched through one of the french doors as she, too, slipped away. When he reached the wine cellar, there was no sign of her, yet he swore she had led him to it.
Mould and cobwebs were everywhere and the racks of bottles yielded up the ages on labels, some almost too stained to read.
Mercier ⦠Bollinger
⦠Krug and
Heidsieck ⦠Moët-et-Chandon
, ah
Gott im Himmel.
Crouching, Kohler wiped off a label. The 1912. He found another and then another.
When he found the 1889, there was only one bottle left but places where two had lain were free of dust.
The château's silhouette stood above the trees against the night sky, its turrets and walls darker than the steeply pitched roofs and chimneys. Though far from the bombing routes, the black-out ordinance was being strictly obeyed as it was throughout the whole of France. Not a chink of light showed but because of this the place appeared all the more menacing.
Sous-préfet Deveaux reluctantly brought the Peugeot to a stop on a gentle rise before switching off the ignition. âJean-Louis, listen to me. Go easy, eh? Herr Himmler and Herr Goebbels? Who wants to have breakfast with them if your chin is resting on a silver platter and a waiter has his thumb at the back of your head?'
âOdilon, my partner's in there and so is Madame Jouvet.'
âYes, yes, that's just what I'm saying. That bag of yours â ah! you know I can't keep it in the car for you. It's my neck if I do. Postcards Herr Oelmann wants? Sketches of cave paintings that woman may have subsequently forged? Do you still refuse to understand what you're dealing with?'
Damn the weakness of the civil servant! âIs there still something you should tell me?'
Ah Paris, why the hell did he have to be so difficult? âThat place, there are rooms and rooms, staircases few will know of, bolt holes and secret panels behind which are hidden passages because that's the way the people that built it had to live.'
âFillioux won't know of them. How could he?'
A call to the
préfecture
in Sarlat had established no one of that name had registered among the cast and crew. âIt's not just him that worries me. These old places. Lovely, of course. Quite splendid if you can heat them and do the repairs but steeped in history and deceit'
âJust tell me, Odilon. Prepare me.'