Monsieur Pamplemousse and the Militant Midwives (8 page)

Something clicked in Monsieur Pamplemousse’s brain. ‘How long have they been here?’

‘I can’t tell you exactly. I can find out if you like.’

‘Longer than a couple of nights?’

‘They arrived over a week ago. And I’ll tell you something else …’

Returning to the bank of video recorders, Bonnard pressed another switch. A picture came up showing an overhead view of the corridor outside Mrs Beardmore’s room. Her door opened and a man came out, looked around furtively, then set off out of shot. He was picked up a moment later approaching the elevator.

Monsieur Pamplemousse eyed the screen thoughtfully. So Monsieur Leclercq’s suspicions were correct after all.

‘There is no reason why she shouldn’t have a partner, of course,’ said Bonnard. ‘She’s paying for a suite. She can fill it with as many people as she likes within reason if that’s what she wants to do. But it’s odd that they never eat together.

‘I’ll show you what I mean.’

Reaching across the rows of buttons and faders he threw up a picture on another bank of monitors to the right of the main display. It showed a wide-angle shot of the same man in a corner of the hotel restaurant. He looked vaguely familiar. Well-groomed, natty, seen on a black-and-white screen he had what Monsieur Pamplemousse’s old mother would have called “a touch of the tar brush”. But that had been long before the days of PC and she
had never strayed far from the Auvergne where she had been born and brought up. Anyone from outside the region was an immediate object of suspicion.

‘Is it possible to see a close-up shot of him?’ asked Monsieur Pamplemousse.

‘Unfortunately, no. The kitchen has control of the restaurant cameras. They have nothing to do with security. It’s so that they can see how each table is progressing. It helps to keep the service running smoothly. We simply take a feed. I can tell you what he’s eating though.


Feuillantine de Langoustine
. It’s one of the chef’s specials. He’s had it three times already to my knowledge.
And
a bottle of Batard Montrachet to go with it. He doesn’t stint himself.

‘If it’s important, I can use an electronic zoom, but it will lose definition. It’s like a digital camera in that respect. Optical zooming enlarges the whole of the image on the sensor, with all the pixels intact. Electronic zooming simply takes a segment of the sensor and enlarges that, with the result that you end up filling the screen with correspondingly less pixels and definition suffers.’

‘Don’t worry,’ said Monsieur Pamplemousse. It all sounded too complicated for his untrained mind.

As the pictures switched around the various tables in the restaurant he suddenly caught sight of another familiar figure.

‘Can you hold it there?’

Bonnard pressed the still frame button. ‘Someone you know?’

‘The girl behind the group – eating by herself in a corner table.’

‘The one in a white dress that leaves a lot to be desired showing?’ Bonnard laughed. ‘She’s number two on the hotel’s current popularity chart and coming up fast. We could build up a steady sideline selling blow-up pictures of her.’

Monsieur Pamplemousse was reminded of one of his colleagues, Truffert, and his stories of the days when he worked on a cruise ship. According to him, the officers used to keep a watchful eye on passengers as they embarked, singling out females who were travelling alone and placing bets on which one offered the best prospects.

‘There’s nothing like a long sea voyage for breaking down barriers,’ was his favourite theme. Clearly hotels and ships had much in common.

‘Is she staying in the hotel?’

‘No, but she had
déjeuner
here the last two days. Always by herself.’

Monsieur Pamplemousse looked at his watch. It said 12.15.

‘Is she booked in for today?’

‘I’ll find out for you.’ Bonnard reached for a phone and cradled it under his chin. ‘Get me the restaurant.

‘Lunch isn’t too difficult,’ he said over his shoulder.
‘Evenings are usually booked up weeks ahead. Even so, there are always a number of tables kept available until the last minute for residents. Besides, I think there will be a few more free from now on.’

He carried on a brief conversation into the mouthpiece.

‘You’re in luck’s way,’ he said.

‘Could you book me in too?’

‘Same table?’

‘Please. I’d like it to be a surprise.’ He waited while the other did the necessary.

‘Done.’ Replacing the handset, Bonnard turned and eyed Monsieur Pamplemousse curiously.

‘It’s none of my business, but if you get half a chance you might sound her out as to whether she would like a game of
pétanque
.

‘As of today,’ he said, registering Monsieur Pamplemousse’s look of surprise, ‘it’s the start of “be extra nice to the customer week”. No spitting in the pooches’ dinner bowls when you think no one is watching. No helping them round corners with the toe of your boot. No saying they’ve been on a five-kilometre jaunt when they’ve only been halfway round the block and back. It’s all on camera. Like so …’

Switching to yet another recorder, he threw up some behind-the-scenes examples.

Mindful of the hotel’s icon in
Le Guide
, Monsieur Pamplemousse pretended he hadn’t seen them.
Monsieur Leclercq would be appalled if he knew the half of it.

‘We’re targeting the owners too. Indoctrinating them with freebie sessions aimed at introducing them to the French way of life; the Health and Fitness centre, cookery lessons, trips on the Seine; anything to smooth things over. Ten electrically-powered Segways are being flown over from America. They’ve been rechristened Trottinettes and will be available for escorted tours. The official rate is seventy euros, but once again the hotel is doing it for free.’

‘So where does
pétanque
come in?’

‘That’s another idea high on the agenda. We’re trying to drum up custom. There are those among us who can’t wait to see certain people bending over to pitch their boules in the Jardin du Luxembourg.

‘I don’t play the game myself, but I’m told that according to what is known as “The Fanny Legend”, if a team fails to score a single point they are supposed to kneel and embrace the backside of a voluptuous female effigy that is kept for the purpose. I suspect our team will be hoping for the worst so that they can do it for real.’

Monsieur Pamplemousse couldn’t help but think the members of the
Association Sportif Jardin du Luxembourg
might have something to say about that. They took the game seriously. Not only did they have mobile coat racks for use in the hot
weather, but they kept their boules in numbered boxes behind a let-down flap in the side of their hut. They wouldn’t take kindly to being invaded by a motley collection of outsiders from the Pommes d’Or. Speaking personally, for the time being he would stick to his usual haunt near the office.

‘I owe you one,’ he said, keeping those thoughts to himself. ‘I’ll see what I can do.’

‘My pleasure,’ said Bonnard. ‘Besides, I had orders from on high to make sure you got all you wanted.’

‘Good luck with your computers,’ said Monsieur Pamplemousse as he took his leave. ‘May their bugs be for ever little ones.’

‘Computers are like Krispy Kremes,’ said Bonnard, helping himself from the box. ‘They’re addictive. But at least Krispy Kremes are oven fresh. They do say the average computer mouse harbours four hundred times more bugs on its surface than any run-of-the-mill seat from a public toilet.’

‘There’s no answer to that,’ said Monsieur Pamplemousse.

‘Just don’t sit on one, that’s all,’ said Bonnard. ‘
Bon appétit
.’

Trailing a couple of lengths behind the
maître
d’hôtel
as he steered a discreetly circuitous course around and between the tables and pillars of the Pommes d’Or’s three Stock Pot restaurant, Monsieur Pamplemousse was acutely aware of two things. First of all, he was hardly dressed for the occasion, and secondly his movements were almost certainly being watched in various other parts of the hotel. He wouldn’t have admitted it to anyone else but, despite the inaptitude of the analogy, his legs felt all fingers and thumbs, and he found difficulty in maintaining his normal easy gait.

It was ridiculous, of course. Covert surveillance had never bothered him in the past. But then, he had generally been on the other end of it. It was the first time he’d felt himself quite so much centre
stage, as it were, caught in the full beam of the spotlight. The fact that the situation was entirely his own making, and he had no idea where it was likely to lead him anyway, didn’t help matters.

Even now, Bonnard was probably taking an anticipatory bite from one of his Krispy Kremes before pressing the RECORD button. Thank heaven his enthusiastic espousal of the latest in security surveillance didn’t embrace the addition of a sound track. That really would be inhibiting.

To be honest, he also missed having Pommes Frites at his side. It was like being bereft of his right arm.

Somewhere
en route
, between one pillar and the next, he registered the lone figure of the man who had already been pointed out to him on one of the Security Section’s screens. It could have been a repeat performance of their feed from the kitchen.

Mrs Beardmore’s husband, if that were indeed his station in life – perhaps Toy Boy might be a better job description; seen in the flesh he looked younger than Claye, which wasn’t difficult – was seated at exactly the same table near the far wall to his right. He was wearing a casual open-neck, light blue shirt beneath a single-breasted dark blue blazer.

It didn’t need more than a cursory glance to confirm that he was tucking in to a
feuillantine
de
langoustine.
He felt the man’s eyes following his progress across the room.

‘Well! Look what the wind’s blow in!’ Glancing up from her menu as he drew near, Elsie registered genuine surprise.

‘I am rapidly coming to the conclusion that the world is an even smaller place than it is said to be,’ replied Monsieur Pamplemousse. ‘I won’t stop long, but do you mind if I join you for a moment or two?’

Taking advantage of the proffered chair, he made to sit down before she had a chance to answer; not that he expected her response to be anything other than welcoming.

‘Would you care for a celebratory glass of champagne?’

‘’Ave you ever known me to say “No”?’ asked Elsie.

Catching the
maître d’hôtel’s
eye, he gave a nod. In truth, it was a loaded question; impossible to answer without running the risk of causing offence, although once again he doubted if that would happen. Elsie was Elsie, and it wasn’t in her nature to take offence.

During the brief moment the sliding of his chair into place afforded him, he did a quick mental replay of the last time he and Elsie had been together. As far as he could see, nothing had changed; the same deceptively innocent blue eyes returned his gaze, panning down and zooming in to a close-up of his
own as he sat down. The effect was also very much as he remembered it.
Irrésistible
! There was no other word for it. Little things: the chemical reaction in the pit of his stomach as parts of it turned to water; a noticeable quickening of the pulse rate.

‘Where’s Pommes Frites got to, then?’ said Elsie. ‘Don’t tell me they’ve put ’im inside after what went on last night.’

‘You’ve heard about it?’

‘’Eard? I not only ’eard. I saw it. Went past me like a dose of salts ’e did. Didn’t even stop to pass the time of day. Mind you, seeing the look in his eye I can’t say I’m sorry.

‘The last time we met, the first thing ’e did was stick his nose up you know where. Goodness knows what ’e would have done last night given ’alf a chance.’

‘As I recall,’ said Monsieur Pamplemousse, rising to Pommes Frites’ defence, ‘you were wearing a very short skirt at the time.’

‘And ’e had a nose like a wet truffle,’ said Elsie, not to be outdone.

‘He was only trying to be friendly,’ said Monsieur Pamplemousse lamely. ‘He can’t help himself.’

‘That’s what they all say,’ replied Elsie. ‘I’ve met ’is sort before.’


Pardon, Monsieur.
’ The
maître d’hôtel
handed him a menu before reluctantly taking his leave. Although clearly in an ideal world he would have
been only too pleased to linger, perhaps making the most of enumerating various specialities of the day, his long years of training denied him the pleasure.

Not that Monsieur Pamplemousse would have blamed him. Elsie had that effect on most men. She was like a luscious peach, full of juice and ripe for plucking; a walking temptation for anyone passing to sink their teeth into the warm flesh. Although, that said, he strongly suspected that when it came down to it, as with her counterpart in the wild, she would be equally adept at keeping tantalisingly just out of reach.

While waiting for the champagne to arrive he made pretence of scanning the menu.

Not only was Elsie the stuff of which many men’s dreams are made (and a good many women’s too, if they could only bring themselves to admit it), she cooked like the proverbial angel. So much so, she could probably have told the chef a thing or two if she had a mind to.

They had first met when she was working as an English au pair to Monsieur and Madame Leclercq. One of her own specialities, until PC intervened and the powers that be insisted on renaming it, had been a dish called ‘Spotted Dick’.

He rated it second only to her Yorkshire puddings, and his eulogising on such titbits of inside information at the staff get-together later that same year gave rise to a good many guffaws.

Unfortunately, human nature being what it is, the dice was heavily loaded against Elsie. Not content at having provided her with a pair of
doudounes
, the firmness and amplitude of which were far in excess of the national average, gilding the lily with more than a morsel of natural dexterity at the kitchen stove (a lethal combination in many men’s eyes), mother nature had bestowed on her a generosity of spirit which manifested itself in a simple desire to share her good fortune with all those she came into contact with. It was an attribute that immediately aroused the suspicions of other members of her sex; the distaff side of married couples in particular. And whether or not they had just cause, who could blame them?

In vain had Monsieur Leclercq made much of what he swore were her perennial headaches. No one, least of all his wife, Chantal, actually believed a word of it. From the word go, the writing had been on the wall as far as Elsie was concerned. Her stay at the Leclercq’s residence had been short and, it has to be said, a not entirely happy one.

Some while later, unbeknown to both Chantal and Doucette, for reasons best left unrecorded, and following a certain amount of behind-the-scenes pressure from Elsie herself, she had enjoyed a spell as the first and in all probability the last trainee female inspector working for
Le Guide
.

At the Director’s bidding, it had fallen to
Monsieur Pamplemousse to take her under his wing while he was working in the Bordeaux area. The vast sand dunes situated near Arcachon might well have told a tale or two on that score had the prevailing westerly gales not swept them clean at regular intervals during the succeeding winter months.

‘Anyway,’ said Elsie, breaking into his thoughts. ‘Where did you spring from?’

‘I was about to ask you the same question,’ said Monsieur Pamplemousse.

She reached across the table and gave him a dig in the ribs. ‘Couldn’t keep away from you, could I? I’m only ’uman flesh and blood when all’s said and done.’

Monsieur Pamplemousse began to feel doubly pleased the security system lacked sound.

Elsie reached under the table and withdrew a clipboard. ‘Ron gave me this just before I came over. Don’t tell anyone, but I’m ’ere on official business. I’m working as an ’ealth inspector for the French government, in I. All expenses paid.’

Monsieur Pamplemousse stared at her while the champagne arrived. It was the last thing he expected to hear.

‘You? A health inspector?’ he said, as soon as the waiter had gone.

Elsie tried to look hurt. Pursing her lips in a way that could have cracked a light bulb at fifty paces,
it had quite the opposite effect. ‘What’s wrong with that? You saying I’m un’ealthy or summock?’

‘No, of course not. But …’ Feeling hot under the collar, Monsieur Pamplemousse groped blindly for a passing straw. ‘After all,’ he said, ‘you are not French …’

‘Dear, oh dear,’ said Elsie. ‘Lose ten points and return to Go! That’s not the end of the world, you know, even if you lot think it is. We’re all in the Common Market now. Some of us is more in it than others, of course, but it’s all a matter of flashing the right bit of paper and Ron saw to that. It’s a work of art.’

Feeling for her handbag, she opened it and withdrew an official-looking document. ‘Apart from a small matter of the ink being ’ardly dry, you can’t tell it from the real thing …’ave a decko.’

Running his eyes over the piece of paper Elsie handed him, Monsieur Pamplemousse had to admit he couldn’t fault it. Even the embossed heading looked genuine. But then, he didn’t really know what to look for in the first place.

‘It’s like Ron says, so long as it looks kosher, who’s going to query it?’ said Elsie. ‘Most people ’aven’t seen the real thing anyway. Attach it to a clipboard like so …’ she paused to demonstrate, ‘and it’ll get you anywhere.’

‘Anyway,’ she raised her glass. ‘Bottoms up! I’ve got my kit of parts and I’m all ready to go.’

Knowing she was almost bound to tell him,
Monsieur Pamplemousse didn’t even bother to ask what they were.

Instead, he watched while she moved a small vase of flowers from the centre of the table to one side. ‘Close your eyes.’

Monsieur Pamplemousse did as he was told.

‘Open them.’

Glancing down he saw that in place of the vase there was now a small transparent plastic box. He could have sworn something black inside it moved, almost as though blinded by the light.

‘Meet Matilda,’ said Elsie. ‘Ron’s pet cockroach. He says they ’aven’t changed very much since Carboniferous times – that’s over two hundred and fifty million years ago. Ron has time to study these things in the prison library. He says it’s one of the best things about being inside.’

‘Why are you telling me all this?’ asked Monsieur Pamplemousse, dreading the answer and fearing the worst.

‘Matilda’s what you might call my insurance policy,’ said Elsie.

‘When Ron was working a scam as a catering adviser, ’e used to take ’er with him whenever ’e went out to eat in order to make sure ’e got good service.

‘Mind you, ’e always played fair. ’E used to show Matilda to the owner first. “’Ow would it be,” he used to say, all casual like, “’ow would it be if I found
one of these in your soup doing the breaststroke? It wouldn’t look too good, would it, ’owever beautifully it’s been garnished? Especially if it gets to be shown on prime-time television.” Ron can be very persuasive when he likes.’

Monsieur Pamplemousse gazed in horror at the object in the box, then hastily moved his chair closer to the table in an effort to screen it from any cameras that might be trained in their direction. At least they were outside Bonnard’s direct control, otherwise he would undoubtedly be zooming in for a tight close-up; probably choking on his Krispy Kremes in his excitement. Unfolding his own menu, he held it over the table for added protection.

‘Put it away,’ he hissed.

‘What’s the matter?’ said Elsie innocently. ‘A little cockroach won’t do you no ’arm.

‘Mind you, if you ’appen to be another cockroach and you’re male it’s a different matter on account of the fact that the female ones ’ave got funny habits; like if they’re ’ungry they’re not above eating the male even while they’re ’aving it off. They start at the ’ead and work their way down. I expect they save the best bit until last. It must be a matter of timing really when they get near the end as to which ’as top priority. I keep telling Ron – ’e wants to watch out!’

Monsieur Pamplemousse was hardly listening.
Visions of what might happen if Monsieur Leclercq got wind of what was going on flashed through his mind. And not simply the Director. The media would have a field day if they picked up on the story. He could see the headlines. ‘
LE GUIDE
INSPECTOR INVOLVED IN RESTAURANT SCAM.’ For a moment it felt as though his world was in danger of collapsing. He would never live it down.

‘You can’t do it,’ he said. ‘You
mustn’t
. Promise me.’

Elsie gazed back it him with her big round blue eyes.

‘Only if I ’ave to,’ she said, noncommittally. ‘My old grandfather always taught me – there’s no such word in the English language as “can’t”.

‘Besides, I don’t know what Ron would do if ’e lost Matilda. He only taught ’er to swim didn’t ’e? She’s a lovely little mover. ’E made me promise on no account must I ever give ’er up. Show them your credentials, that’s ’is motto. Say they can’t ’ave ’er because she’s scheduled to be exhibit “A” in any court case that comes up.’ Reaching under the table, Elsie gave his left knee a squeeze.

‘Don’t worry. Like I say, it’s an insurance policy. For use only in cases of emergency. We’d better make sure we don’t ’ave one, that’s all I can say.’

Withdrawing her hand, she took hold of his menu with the other. As she did so he realised the box had disappeared. ‘It’s a case of “Find the Lady” innit,’
said Elsie, flashing him a warning signal with her eyes.

‘My friend doesn’t fancy the soup,’ she announced, as a Head of Station waiter materialised, pad and pencil at the ready. ‘Tell you what,’ she continued, turning back to Monsieur Pamplemousse, ‘why don’t you ’ave some
Quenelles de brochet
? That’s what I’m ’aving. Sure you won’t change your mind and stay?’

Other books

Stop This Man! by Peter Rabe
Only Girls Allowed by Debra Moffitt
After Nothing by Rachel Mackie
Shopaholic & Baby by Sophie Kinsella
Kidnapped by the Taliban by Dilip Joseph
Downward Facing Death by Michelle Kelly
The Laughing Matter by William Saroyan
A Coin for the Ferryman by Rosemary Rowe
Talk of The Town by Charles Williams