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Authors: Anne Shaughnessy

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XIV

 

THE GUEST

 

All
the scattered shoes and piles of newspapers were cleared out of Charles de Saint-Légère's rooms within two hours. The papers were consigned to the kindling pile in the kitchen while the shoes were bundled into Charles' wardrobe. The wardrobe was manhandled into the small storage room by Claude Kerouac, who had been coachman for the de Clichys when Elise's father was alive, and his nephew, Alcide. The chambermaids then descended on the room under Elise's direction and cleaned it from top to bottom.

The mattress was turned and aired, the linens and curtains were stripped and replaced by clean, freshly ironed ones, and the carpet was taken outside and beaten clean of dust.
The wooden floor was scrubbed, the furniture was waxed until it glowed, and Yvette placed a vase of her best roses on the table in the sitting room.

Inspector Malet sent two valises and some trunks over to the Rose d'Or later that afternoon.
He arrived that evening just at supper time and signed in under the name 'Paul de Colbert'. Elise noticed that he wasn't wearing his sword.

He greeted Elise and Yvette, and then followed Alcide to his rooms.
Alcide reported that he looked around the rooms, missing none of the changes that had been made, paused to sniff Yvette's roses, and then thanked him in a really pleasant way.

He declined a supper in his private parlor, and instead went downstairs shortly afterward to the common room with a pile of papers and pen and ink.
He ate a surprisingly light meal of bread and cold meat and drank a small glass of wine.

The crowd began to swell around nine o'clock, and Elise called in two of the younger maidservants to wait tables.
Malet moved his seat farther into the corner, away from the customers. He did not appear to have any trouble working in the noise and bustle.

Elise, who had found herself liking him from the start, brought over another glass of wine, and sat down to chat with him.
Word had gotten out that a new Police officer was posted to the Rose d'Or, and Elise caught several speculative glances from their regular customers directed toward Malet.

Malet intercepted one of those stares, returned it with slightly lifted eyebrows, and then turned back to Elise.

"Pay them no mind, M. l'Inspecteur," Elise said with a smile. "They have heard that you are replacing M. de Saint-Légère, who was very well-liked. They're wondering what sort of man you are."

"
They'll find out soon enough."

As
it happened, they found out that very evening.

A
customer, new to the inn, tried to force his attentions on one of the maidservants, a pretty little redhead named Marie. He tried to steal a kiss, and, failing that, had seized her and tried to take matters further by force. The girl, frightened, was reduced to tears.

Malet had stepped in at that moment.
He identified himself as an officer of the Police and called the customer to order. When the man tried to fight, he easily bested him and then ordered that Marie be brought over.

"
This man assaulted you, I believe?" he asked.

"Y
-yes, M'sieur," she said.

"
So. Did you put your hands on her, my good man?"

"
That's right! She enjoyed it! Do you have anything to say about it?"

"
That remains to be seen," Malet said. His eyes rested meditatively on the man's face for a moment, then flicked to Marie. "He claims you enjoyed it: did you?"

Marie, still a little shaken, mutely shook her head.

Malet looked back at the man. "She doesn't appear to agree with you," he said. "I find myself wondering how you would like it if your situations were reversed." His expression grew remote. "In fact, when woman-molesters and rapists are sent to prison, they often end up experiencing firsthand what their victims suffered, only tenfold, at the hands of the other prisoners. Not pretty for them." He looked over at Marie. "I saw what happened," he said. His voice was gentle. "If you wish to make a complaint, I will be happy to write it up for you."

The silence grew long.
Elise touched Marie on the shoulder. "Marie," she said.

Marie drew a long breath.
"N-no," she said. "Thank you, M. de Colbert. I don't want to-to think of it."

Malet inclined his head and then looked at Elise with lifted eyebrows.

"I must ask you to leave, Monsieur," she said with dignity to the man. "I do not wish to see you here again."

The man looked from her to Malet, his face growing red.

"You heard the lady. Leave at once." He watched the man leave, and then looked at Marie. "Will you be all right?" he asked.

She had regained her composure enough to hurry to the bar and pour a glass of very good cognac, which she gave to Malet with a flash of a glance at Elise.

**  **  **

The staff at the inn decided that they liked him after his championing of Marie, and he fit in well with them.
The next few days were peaceful, although they were interrupted by inquiries by some of Constant Dracquet's lower-ranking people regarding the presence of another Police officer at the inn. Elise answered their queries civilly and relayed them to Malet, who nodded in an unsurprised way, but made no comment.

Malet was always one of the first ones up.
Elise had been astonished to find him sitting in the kitchen the first morning, impeccably groomed and dressed, quietly reading the past day's Globe and pouring a cup of coffee from a pot that he had brewed himself. Judging from the plate before him and three broken eggshells on the table, he had also cooked his own breakfast.

She had apologized for her lateness, but he had merely smiled, consulted a beautiful pocket
-watch, and told her that he hardly expected anyone to be up before five o'clock, and he was accustomed to preparing his own breakfast. He apologized in turn for his own earliness and told her that he had arisen before his usual time because he had been wakeful the night before.

Elise had shaken her head.
"Very well, Inspector," she had said. "This time you may make your own breakfast: but do me the honor, in future, of allowing me to prepare it for you!"

He had inclined his head and returned his attention to the Globe.

"And next time, wait for your hot shaving-water!" Elise had added.

Malet had chuckled.
"Don't trouble yourself, Mme. de Clichy," he had said. "The cold water is fine."

"
I insist!" said Elise, determined to be up before him if it killed her.

It became apparent that he had resolved to allow her to arise before him, for she never heard him stir until she had descended the stairs, after which time she could hear him moving about.
It was a piece of consideration that touched and amused her more than anything else could have, and she always greeted him warmly when he came downstairs for breakfast.

His defense of Marie had served to disarm Yvette completely.
She was still shy of him, but he no longer made her nervous, and she treated him, to Elise's amusement, much like one of the inn's favored guests, bestowing smiles and silence with equal generosity.

Malet reviewed most of Charles de Saint
-Légère's reports during that time, and he grew to admire the man's character and ability. He had reread Charles' outline of the bribery attempts, filled in with information obtained unobtrusively from the inn employees, and conferred with four other men from the Police whom he had hand-picked for their sterling records and their ability to handle extremely sensitive matters. They had been given their instructions concerning Dracquet. As for Malet, his inkling was that the plot was of international importance. He paid special attention to news from London and Spain. It was a busy time, but full of thought. It only remained to sit back and wait.

And
enjoy his time at the Rose d'Or...

             
**  **  **

Two evenings after his arrival at the Rose d'Or, at suppertime, Malet was sitting in the common room and reading a closely written, stamped report that had just been delivered to him at the inn.
He had been too engrossed in it to notice when Elise brought his supper, a roast pheasant from Alcide's father's farm, over to him, and set it before him along with a glass of her English ale, which he had not yet tried.

"
M. l'Inspecteur," Elise said for the third time.

Malet started and looked up at her, and then saw Alcide with the tray containing his supper.
He colored faintly and apologized for being preoccupied.

Elise chuckled and said,
"Not at all. You're always the soul of courtesy, M'sieur. It must be quite important. If you wish, I can have this taken back and kept warm until you're ready for it."

The report was an outline of Dracquet's known activities within the past twelve months.
Malet set it aside and rose. "I wouldn't dream of being so rude," he said with a nod to Alcide. "I have read enough, and I find that I am famished: this smells delicious! But have you dined yet, Mme. de Clichy?" he asked, eyeing the pheasant after Alcide had left.

Elise hid a smile.
This part of their conversation had followed the same lines since his first evening at the inn three days before. Now it was becoming a ceremony between them, and she had discovered that she enjoyed being with him. "Not yet," she said.

"
Then would you honor me with your company at supper?" he asked. "There's plenty here for two, as you can see, and I'd be delighted to share it with you."

"
Thank you, M'sieur," she said. "I believe I shall." She sat in the chair that he had drawn aside for her, and busied herself with arranging her skirts while he carved the pheasant.

He nodded toward his glass.
"And what is this?" he asked.

She smoothed the napkin over her lap.
"My English ale, M'sieur," she replied. "You haven't tried it yet. I am known for it, and my customers generally like it: I thought you might, as well."

He set a choice portion of breast meat on her plate and selected a drumstick for her as well.
"English ale?" he said, his eyes widening a little. "I see..." He gave it an odd look and added, "I fought the English in Spain: are you sure it won't poison me?"

Elise smothered a chuckle and said severely,
"It's good for you: try it."

She watched him take a sip, reflecting happily on the fact that she had come to like him so well in such a short time.
They could converse comfortably on any subject, and she had come to recognize his subtle flashes of humor. He treated her not simply as a lady, but also as an intellectual equal, capable of clear thought, or as one whose opinions had value to him, and whom he felt able to needle slightly.

"
It'll probably poison me," he mused at last. "At least it will be a pleasant death."

Elise reached for the glass.
"I don't want you to die!" she said. "I will take it away at once."

"
No, no," he said as he whisked the glass beyond her reach. "Suffering's good for the soul: this is a very satisfactory mortification. I wish all pain could be like this."

"
Well!" she said, raising a forkful of pheasant to her lips. She firmly suppressed a smile.

Malet looked suddenly contrite.
"I was only joking," he said.

"
I know."

"
Then may I please have some more?" he asked.

XV

 

             
THE SOJOURNER IN A STRANGE LAND

 

Inspector Malet seemed exhausted and withdrawn the next evening when Elise brought his supper over to him, though he observed their little ceremony regarding supper and, as usual, gave her the choicest bits. The meal was a simple dish of escalloped veal in pastry with potatoes and onions, something at once elegant and simple, but he did not seem to be hungry. He picked at it while she relayed a query from one of Dracquet's men regarding what hour might find their Police officer at the inn.

Malet said,
"Tell him my hours are very irregular, and then don't elaborate, if you please."

Elise chuckled.
"Those are almost my exact words," she said.

He nodded and turned his attention back to his supper while she sat there talking of this and that and trying to make him smile.

He requested a second glass of ale and drank it quietly, then cut through her chatter with an incisive question on the political situation in Paris at the moment that made her pause and then answer.

"
Tell me, M. l'Inspecteur," she said after giving her reply, "Why do you credit me with the wit to answer a difficult question like that?"

He cut off a piece of veal with the edge of his fork and then, having speared it, paused and looked up at her.
"Do you think you don't have the wit to answer it?" he asked with a slightly quizzical lift of his eyebrows.

BOOK: The Orphan's Tale
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