Authors: J. Robert Janes
The detective eased the bedside table drawer open and ran his pale blue eyes over the contents. He touched the neckerchief Madame's son had worn on parade as a
Hitlerjugend
and noted that it was tightly crumpled and damp.
âShe still cries,' said Mariette softly. âA mother must, is that not so, monsieur?'
The boy's pocketknife â black-handled and with an oval portrait of the German Führer and stainless steel eagle and swastika â was there, too, and as the detective fingered it, she heard herself saying, âKlaus forgot to take it with him when he last visited Paris in November. Madame ⦠Madame feels his leaving it behind was an ill omen for which she blames herself for not having sent it on to him by special courier. But you see, she did not know where to send it.'
âLorient, probably. It's on the Breton Coast. My partner and I were there not so long ago. A dollmaker. The Kapitän zur See Kaestner.'
âBut ⦠but could it have been the same boat and now you've come here, too?' she blurted, revealing at once that she, herself, might quite possibly be superstitious.
The detective looked up at her and shrugged, but there was not the emptiness that had just been in his gaze. Now there was a warmth, the loss of loved ones, the feeling, yes, that all were a part of this war and that he had had enough of it.
Unlike Madame, he spoke French and well, and this was a curious thing, but had it made her tongue loose? wondered Mariette and hazarded, for it was not her place to demand, âHave you seen enough, monsieur?'
âI'll leave in a minute. Don't worry. Just don't tell her I was here, eh? and remember your concierge, Madame Jouvand, is also on board and won't say a thing.'
He examined the Louis Vuitton
trousse de toilette
Madame had bought â an extravagance she had lamented but had not denied herself. He examined her jewellery, such as it was.
âMarcasite,' he said, fingering a bracelet. âOnyx and carnelian â most of these are from what was once Isaac Kahn's factory in Pforzheim.
Mein Gott
, does she not realize he was Jewish? I may have to report it. You remember I said so, eh?' And
grâce à Dieu
for that little bit of ammunition!
There were plastic bracelets and bangles, chrome neckchains â the gaudy, cheap and plain, when Madame could have had the very best.
There were sturdy black leather shoes fit for walking all day, lisle stockings, no silk ones, not her, thought Kohler â silk was for parachutes. There were stiff, prewar woollen skirts and jackets, a small pin on the lapel of one. âThe Honour Cross of the German Mother,' he said. âA bronze â¦'
A Tyrolean hat
à la
Fräulein Braun caught his eye and he asked, âLike Eva, does your mistress spend her time waiting for the light of her life to come home?'
âHe's never here. Well, not never. Only sometimes.'
âIn and out, eh?'
âShe hopes he will stay and invariably begs him to, but he's ⦠he's very busy.'
âSo, okay, tell me where you went last Thursday?'
The detective had not said why he had come to the flat. âShe ⦠she went out at about two in the afternoon. That ⦠that is all I know.'
A cautious answer. âDid she take anything with her?'
âI ⦠I do not think so, monsieur. Just her handbag. The big one.'
âYou can do better than that.'
The emptiness had come back into his eyes. He patted the bedspread and indicated she had better sit down beside him. âIt helps,' he said tonelessly. Would he now beat her, force her to answer â torture her? wondered Mariette and felt tears rushing into her eyes.
âLook, I won't hurt you,' he said. âMy partner and I don't do that sort of thing. I just have to know.'
âShe ⦠she went out, that's all. She did not say where to, nor when I had got myself ready, did she want me to accompany her. Always she does, but ⦠but not that time.'
âAnd when she came back?'
A hesitation had entered the detective's voice. âShe said, “There, it's done.”â
âWhat was done?'
Hurriedly the girl dried her eyes. âI ⦠I really don't know. Something she had to do. Something important, I think.'
In defeat, the girl's shoulders drooped, and she folded her hands in her lap.
âNow tell me about the beekeeper. Give me all you can about his visits. My partner will be sure to ask and gets bitchy if I forget something. You've no idea, Mariette. A Sûreté. A Chief Inspector, no less, but
impossible
!
. Merde
, you should hear him sometimes!'
âAnd where is this “partner” of yours at the moment?' she asked with wisdom well beyond her tender years.
âThe Salpêtrière.'
âAh!' She tossed her head and nodded. âThe sister. A tragedy Madame is only too aware of, since Monsieur de Bonnevies always speaks of Angèle-Marie at length when questioned by her.'
Startled, Kohler hazarded, âAnd she never fails to ask him?'
âNever. Not for some time now.'
âIs it because of something Madame de Bonnevies did? Well, is it?'
Merde
, why had he had to ask, how had he known?
Hastily the girl crossed herself.
âMay God forgive me, yes.
Yes
, it is because she suspects her husband is having
une affaire de coeur
with the woman. It's crazy. I tell her this. I plead with her but ⦠but Madame is of her own mind, monsieur. Of her own mind!'
The detective let a sigh escape. âAnd Herr Schlacht does mess about with the ladies, doesn't he?'
âA lot, but not with me. I swear it. She ⦠she put a stop to that before it ever got started. I screamed and she ⦠she heard me.'
There was more to this, there just had to be.
âShe badgered Monsieur de Bonnevies until finally he agreed that, yes, his wife was probably seeing Herr Schlacht,' said the girl.
âAnd not just for an isolated lunch at Maxim's?'
âOther places. He ⦠he did not know where.'
âA candle factory?'
The girl bit a knuckle and tried to stop herself from crying. âThe Hôtel Titania, on the boulevard Ornano.'
A
maison de passe
, a seedy hotel where prostitutes, licensed or otherwise, took their âlovers'.
âI know this because I ⦠I have followed Madame de Bonnevies there for Madame.'
The life had gone right out of the kid but he'd have to ask it. âDid you see Schlacht go into that hotel?'
âHe ⦠he came in his car.'
She'd have to be told. âThen watch yourself. If you feel you have to bolt and run, go at once to 12 rue Suger, in Saint-Germain-des-Près, and ask for Oona or Giselle. They'll know what to do and will probably hide you in the house of Madame Chabot, around the corner. Failing that, go to the Club Mirage on the rue Delambre in Montparnasse, but use the courtyard entrance and be careful, since the Gestapo's Watchers may still be taking an interest in the place. Ask for Gabrielle, and tell those Corsican brothers behind the bar that Hermann says it's urgent and they're to keep you out of sight or else.'
Shiny brass cowbells hung from dark ceiling timbers and made little sounds when vibrated by the din as Kohler squeezed himself into the Brasserie Buerehiesel. Loud laughter, boisterous, good-natured banter and argument competed with orders for meals, for beer and wine. Crockery clacked, copper pots were banged â there were no signs on the rows of bottles behind the bar saying
Nur Attrapen
, only for decoration. No coloured water. Not in this establishment.
Schiefala
, smoked pork shoulder, served with hot potato salad;
Baeckaeoffe
, a long-simmered stew of lamb, pork and veal with onions and potatoes; and
choucroute
, sauerkraut with several types of ham and sausage â the fabulous golden-crusted
tarte à l'oignon
also â were constantly on the move. One hustling waiter had seven heaped dinners perched in a row on an arm and three in his right hand. How the hell did he do it?
âMonsieur, your coat, please, and weapon. You do have a weapon?'
The coat-check girl was cute but firm. There were off-duty Felgendarmen on the door and hired especially to bring ease, so everything was okay in that department, but what the girl really meant was the SS ceremonial daggers so many of them would wear. They simply got in the way when sitting cheek to cheek in such long rows. âNo weapon. Not tonight.'
âThen please find yourself a seat if you can.'
âDanke.'
Neighbourhood pub and feedbag, the waiters, cook's helpers and cook-owner had all been Alsatian fifth columnists prior to the blitzkrieg of 1940 and were now in their element. Meteor Pils, straight from Hochfelden, was on tap; Ackerland too â both the light and the brown. âMortimer ⦠have you Mortimer?' he shouted at the balding barkeep who had little time and simply said in
deutsch
, âAh,
ein Kenner
,' a connoisseur, and filled a large, clear-glass stein with the dark, strong mother of beers.
âI needed this,' said Kohler, squeezing sideways to better look the place over.
A slab of Münster cheese, ripe and seasoned with caraway, passed by â well, actually, there were six slabs of it. There were signs for Schutzenberger beer on the walls, signs for sabots made by a François Schneider, portrait pipes carved by an Adolf Lefèbvre, signs for the red Vorlauf from Marlenheim that surpassed most French burgundies.
There were life-sized tin sculptures of storks wading in ponds or nesting on the roofs of half-timbered bits of home. There was even a gaudy poster of the Baron von Münchhausen in his hot-air balloon; others, too, of ruined castles â Hohenburg, Löwenstein and, yes, Fleckenstein which even Louis XIV couldn't quite destroy in 1680.
There were alpine scenes and alphorns, one of which some idiot had taken to blowing until silenced.
There were the business suits of the collaborators, of the butter-eggs-and-cheese boys with their
petites amies
and those of the Occupier. All down the long tunnel of two sets of tables, and under lamps whose light fought with the haze of tobacco smoke and the heady aroma, there were the uniforms, most with tunic buttons undone.
And there, sitting jammed into a far corner beneath the guild sign of a wrought-iron hunting hawk, and staring out over glass and bottle of
eau de vie
, was Frau Schlacht. The new permanent wave was perfect for the short, thick blonde hair which was parted on the left, the expression empty though, the lips tightly pursed as if deep in thought.
A cigarette, untouched for some time, wasted its life in a saucer before her. In a place of conviviality she sought solitude.
A chalkboard gave the menu. Five hundred francs for the
prix fixe
of
choucroute
, a thousand for the roast quail stuffed with goat's cheese and served with a creamy sauce of preserved white grapes. Other items were in between, and for a bottle of the Pinot Blanc: four hundred francs; for that of the Reisling, six hundred francs; the spicy Gewürztraminer requiring three hundred more.
When what looked to be a seat became free a few places from her, he squeezed himself down the long tunnel between the tables and gave a nod the woman completely ignored.
The
eau de vie de framboise
she downed required four kilos of raspberries per bottle of the brandy and was priced accordingly at four thousand francs, yet she sipped it constantly until her
pâté de foie gras
came
aux truffes sous la cendre
, wrapped in chopped truffles and baked under the ashes, and served with a dicing of beef jelly whose colour was that of old amber.
Her eyes were very blue, the forehead clear and smooth and broad, the lips good, the chin and nose and all the rest really something.
Kohler ordered another beer and the
Baeckaeoffe.
Louis would just have to wait it out at the Salpêtrière. This spider in her little corner was simply too important to leave.
When the seat directly opposite her became vacant, he moved in, but there was no surprise from her, no smile of anticipation or welcome. She simply stared at and through him, then went stolidly on with her pâté until every last bit of it was gone and the bottle half-empty.
Then she ordered two servings of the grated potato pancakes with toasted goat's cheese, and the chicken in mushroom sauce.
âIt is good,' she said. âI had the same last night and will do so again.'
A Berliner through and through, but
Jésus, merde alors
what a conversationalist! âDo you live nearby?' he asked. The racket around them intruded.
âNot far,' she said, and for a time that was all.
He'd take to studying her now, she felt, this giant of a Bavarian with the terrible duelling scar, the bullet graze across the brow, and the shrapnel nicks from that other war. He would want to get fresh with her, but would wait a little â he had that look about him. Great ease with loose and stupid girls, the younger the better, she told herself and said silently, Men! They are all the same.
âI have three daughters,' she announced straight out of the blue, but offered nothing further until he said, âI had two boys. Both were killed at Stalingrad.'
Moisture filled her eyes making them clearer, brighter, but causing him to despise himself for using the boys to crack her armour.
âI have lost a son, too,' she said and took a deep draught and then another of the
eau de vie.
âHe left his pocketknife with me and I did not send it on to him.'
Verdamm
! she'd be bawling her eyes out if he didn't do something. âWaiter ⦠Another beer, please!' he shouted. âAnd for you, Frau â¦?'
âSchlacht. Uma. A bottle of the Riesling, I think. Yes, that will suit.'
They would settle down now, this
Scheisse
, this
Schweinebulle
and herself, and maybe that crap about his sons was true, and maybe it wasn't. We will eat and I will let him strip me naked with those cop's eyes of his, she told herself. He will get nowhere but I will let him try just for the fun of it.