Read The Foundling's War Online

Authors: Michel Déon

The Foundling's War (49 page)

Passers-by gathered around him, and slowly a policeman made his way towards the commotion.

 

On the stairs up to Nelly’s studio Jean met Marceline wearing a sheepskin coat that made her look twice her normal size. She kissed Jean.

‘I nearly missed you,’ she said. ‘Justice exists after all. France
recognises her good children. And she needs them now, how she needs them! Obviously anyone can make a mistake. I was telling the minister yesterday morning. He completely agreed, but he can’t be everywhere, poor man.’

‘No, of course not.’

‘One must try to understand.’

‘Oh, I do understand.’

She looked reassured.

‘I’m very
partisauntie
for reconciliation between all the French. That’s my programme.’

‘People are saying you’re going to stand in the elections?’

Marceline put on a knowing air.

‘“People”
have
asked me. I have to think about it. There are some good men in the MRP, but their hearts are rather over to the Left, and I’m more to the Right. Well, there’s room for all sorts in the good Lord’s house.’

Her life was taking on a new meaning. She believed in it. A wind of purity was blowing through the corridors of power. Monsieur Michette had had to retire.

‘In my position,’ she said, ‘there would have been too much talk. He’s retired to Carjac. Zizi’s keeping house for him. I’m very understanding. Morals have changed too.’

She had something else to say, and was finding it difficult to say it.

‘I’ve just come back from
Switzerland
.’

The look that accompanied her words was so knowing that Jean found himself nodding encouragement to her.

‘Yes, I saw “our” friend. He looks very happy with his wife. A very attractive woman. Distinguished too …’

‘Did he say anything to you about me?’

‘Yes. Your transfer to London worried him a lot.’

‘Reassure him. There’s no danger. Tell him Rudolf played the fool, and he’s very good at it.’

‘People are nasty here at the moment. He was seen with the
Germans very often. When people question me, I tell them I was seen with them too and that I was worming intelligence out of them. Constantin thinks you shouldn’t stay in France …’

‘That’s exactly what I think.’

‘But he’s wrong! France needs men like you.’

‘I doubt it.’

Marceline was sincerely disappointed.

‘Come, come, you mustn’t get disillusioned so quickly!’

‘I’ve made my decision. Not on Palfy’s advice; he’d like to see me a million miles away. Nothing he says is ever disinterested. But I haven’t forgotten that he saved my bacon. Wish him good luck from me.’

Marceline remained convinced of Palfy’s innocence. He had set her off on her current adventure. Jean did not want to disabuse her.

‘Think about it!’ she said.

‘I’ve thought about it.’

‘What about Nelly?’

‘She’ll find someone to comfort her.’

‘It’ll be like Corneille in real life!’

‘I don’t think so.’

She kissed him again and pulled a bottle of champagne from her coat pocket.

‘I’m losing my marbles! I almost forgot. Wish me well at midnight.’

Jean was sorry to have disappointed a woman of such strong convictions, whose innocence was still intact, and he kept her a few minutes longer, in time for Nelly to appear.

‘Mmm, lovely, Marceline, champagne. You’re an angel! Stay with us, we’re having a party.’

‘In that case I’ll take you to dinner at La Coupole.’

Jean would have preferred not to go out, to savour his newly won freedom in the intimacy of Nelly’s company, but Marceline insisted.

‘I won’t stay late. I know what love is. I’ve seen plenty of men in a hurry.’

Boulevard du Montparnasse was plunged in darkness, but behind
La Coupole’s blue-tinted windows the big, brightly lit dining room dazzled them. Jean felt almost dizzy. After a universe measured in square centimetres, the restaurant’s space, the height of its ceilings, the smoke, the heavy smell of sauces from the dishes that the waiters in their aprons passed under their noses no longer seemed real. An absurd reflex held him back, as if he had no right to what, after life in prison, seemed like an insane luxury. A head waiter recognised Nelly and led her to a table in the corner.

‘Here you can see without being seen!’ he said conspiratorially.

He was exaggerating. Jean discovered that in two years Nelly had gone from being a gossiped-about, faintly notorious actress to a
full-blown
celebrity. Journalists came to talk to her, then some actors who were about to perform in a nearby theatre. There was a flash as a photographer took her picture. He asked for Marceline’s and Jean’s names for the caption.

‘She’s my confidante,’ Nelly said. ‘And he, oh, well, yes, darling, ta-da! This is my lover, Jules-who.’

When the photo duly appeared the next day, Jean Arnaud found out that from now on his name, as far as gossip columnists were concerned, was Joolzoo. Marceline, beside herself with happiness, radiant with wine and a glass of chartreuse, beckoned a short man in a cape who was going from table to table offering to draw caricatures. Looking up, Jean recognised La Garenne at the same time as he recognised Jean. He paled and, spinning round, turned his back on them and dashed for the exit, as if pursued by some terrible danger. Stripped of the treasures he had collected in his garret in Rue de la Gaîté, he had returned to his old trade as Léonard Twenty-Sous. The head waiter, who had seen what had happened, leant towards them.

‘You must tell me what you said to get rid of him so fast, our Léonard Twenty-Sous. He usually sticks like glue, that one. We put up with him out of sheer weakness.’

*

Finally alone in the studio at Saint-Sulpice, Jean and Nelly fell into each other’s arms.

‘It can’t be true!’ she said, stroking his hair.

‘But it is true!’

They opened Marceline’s bottle and lit a fire. At a minute past midnight Maître Deschauzé telephoned.

‘I wanted to be the first to wish you a happy New Year. It’s all over. All that’s left is for you to start again on the right foot. I have a message for you. Monsieur Urbano de Mello hopes very much you’ll visit him in Lisbon. He’ll support your request for a visa at the Portuguese consulate, if you so wish … I’d like to talk to you about it. I’m not far from you. I can pop over.’

Nelly, listening on the second receiver, signalled no.

‘I’d prefer tomorrow or the day after,’ Jean said.

‘The problem is I have to go to the country tomorrow.’

‘Well, I’ll wait for you to come back. There’s no hurry.’

‘I promise it wouldn’t inconvenience me at all to drop in on you and your charming lady friend now.’

‘No, no, you mustn’t put yourself to any trouble. We’ll talk about it later. Good night and thanks.’

Nelly giggled.

‘Talk about obvious! I’ll admit he’s not bad physically.’

Jean looked at her. He was very fond of her. They had had fun together and would never forget each other. But you didn’t keep a girl like Nelly, and besides he had no desire to keep anyone. No one could know just how much he had been freed earlier that day. A few days more and it would all have faded, down to the last traces of prison smell.

‘What are you thinking about?’ Nelly demanded.

‘That you’re going to make a wonderful career in the theatre and cinema, and I’m going to feel a little pang in my heart every time I see your name in lights.’

They were sitting in front of the fire, the champagne bottle between them.

‘Do you remember?’ she asked.

‘Yes. I’ve thought about it often. And then Claude’s arrival.’

‘Have you forgotten her?’

‘I don’t forget anything.’

‘Jules-who, you’ve learnt a lot of things. Now you have to make the most of them.’

‘That’s certainly my intention.’

She smiled sadly and started to undress.

‘When are you leaving?’

‘As soon as I can.’

‘Are you going far?’

‘As far as possible.’

‘Tierra del Fuego?’

‘Perhaps.’

She took his face in her hands and came closer to kiss him on the lips.

‘I just can’t believe I love you as much as I do,’ she said. ‘Do you want me to leave the theatre for you?’

‘In six months you’d be bitterly criticising me for it.’

‘Ohh! You’re right, you’re so right, my scrumptious boy! I’ll never have another lover like you.’

Her eyes glistened with tears. Jean knew he would never have another woman like her either, and that to have known her was an infinite stroke of luck. He was suddenly overwhelmed with cheerfulness.

‘We’re not going to get soppy, are we?’

‘Oh no!’

‘We’re winners.’

‘Yes, both winners.’

‘And we’ll show them we’re better than everyone, and less idiotic.’

‘And less idiotic.’

They stretched out next to each other on the rug, their feet warmed by the fire, holding hands.

He turned his head to look at Nelly’s fine profile, her pretty nose, her red mouth in her pale face. She lay completely still and her bare breasts hardly rose and fell. She looked like a young boy.

‘I don’t know if I dare ask you to promise me something, darling Jules-who.’

‘Say it.’

‘You’ll think I’m ridiculous.’

‘I bet I won’t.’

‘All right. I’m the daughter of terribly bourgeois parents and I still have their values … well, it would just make me awfully sad if I heard you’d turned into a reprobate like your friend Palfy.’

‘I don’t have his skill. Look: he’s sitting tight in Switzerland, having married my mother, who, when they first met, pretended she could never remember his name, while I’ve been spending my time in prison. Logically I should be taking him as my role model, but some tiny thing has always stopped me.’

‘Yes, I know.’

She looked reassured and squeezed his hand.

‘I believe in you,’ she said.

‘That’s the only thing you could say to me that matters, and I shan’t forget it. There’s you and the major, which is extremely strange, because the two of you couldn’t be more different … How serious we’re being!’

‘Once in a while it’s all right.’

‘Not too often.’

‘Oh no, not too often,’ Nelly said. ‘Life would be unbearable.’

‘I’ve learnt that too.’

‘You’re not unhappy?’

‘Not in the slightest, now I know that you believe in me. I don’t think anyone has ever actually said it to me, and it makes me feel …
how can I explain? … elated, yes, as though it’s made me forget these four wasted years. I feel as if I’m finally not a little boy any more.’

‘And you don’t feel glum about getting older?’

‘No, at my age it’s marvellous. Later on, well, we’ll see …’

1.
The Garde Nationale Mobile was the forerunner of the French territorial infantry, also known as
les Territoriaux
or
les Pépères
, a sort of Dad’s Army for those between the ages of 34 and 49, although it also remained a separate auxiliary force for domestic defence, and after the French armistice in 1940 regained some importance.

2.
A
mich
(slang) is a man who pays a prostitute.

3.
De l’amour
by Stendhal (1822).

4.
The line separating French territory into an occupied zone and a free zone in the armistice of 22 June 1940 was referred to as the
Demarkationslinie
or ‘demarcation line’.

5.
Eugène de Rastignac’s words addressed to the city of Paris at the end of Honoré de Balzac’s novel
Le Père Goriot
.

6.
Baron Frédéric de Nucingen is another character in Balzac’s
La Comédie humaine
, a fabulously wealthy Parisian banker, who first appears in
Le Père Goriot
and later in other novels in the series, notably
La Maison Nucingen
.

7.
The common name for France’s colonial army, from 1900–60.

8.
The FFI (Forces Françaises de l’Intérieur or French Forces of the Interior) were the result of the combination in early 1944 of the main military groups of the Resistance in occupied France.

9.
An institution created in the First World War and revived in the Second to bring financial and social aid to French soldiers, their families, and civilian casualties.

10.
The Police Headquarters’ Literary Review
.

11.
The Society for the Keepers of the Peace.

12.
Intrigue and Love
, Friedrich von Schiller’s bourgeois tragedy, whose plot owes much to
Romeo and Juliet
and contains an anti-British message.

13.
A French company manufacturing aircraft engines, motorcycles and bicycles until the 1950s.

14.
Cartoon characters created by the illustrator and scientist Marie-Louis-Georges Colomb, known as Christophe. Cosinus invents a series of wildly outlandish means of transport, but himself never leaves Paris.

15.
The church of Saint-Gervais in Paris’s Marais district, hit by a German shell from the long-range gun ‘Big Bertha’ on Good Friday, 29 March 1918. The shell killed 88 people and wounded 68, the worst single loss of civilian life in Paris in the First World War.

16.
The tax collectors of France who, under the
ancien régime
, collected duties on behalf of the king.

17.
Year II of the Republican calendar, which approximates to 1790 in the Gregorian (western) calendar.

18.
Crème chantilly
with chocolate inside.

19.
Dépôt = part of the Paris Conciergerie on Quai de l’Horloge, used for prisoners awaiting judgment.

20.
Les Thibaut
, a multi-volume
roman fleuve
by Roger Martin du Gard.

21.
Originally known as Jeanne Laisné, Jeanne Hachette (‘Jean the Hatchet’) was a French heroine who in 1472 helped prevent the capture of the town of Beauvais by the army of Charles the Bold, Duke of Burgundy.

22.
Raoul Ponchon (1848–1937), a friend of Arthur Rimbaud’s.

23.
A Paris street kid.

24.
4 August, the night when the nobility traditionally renounce their privileges.

25.
Angélique Arnauld (1591–1661), an abbess and important figure in Jansenism, the branch of Catholicism to which Blaise Pascal adhered.

26.
Jean Duvergier de Hauranne (1581–1643), abbot of Saint-Cyran, who introduced Jansenism into France.

27.
Théâtre Français, by which the Comédie Française is also known.

28.
Édouard Bourdet (1887–1945), playwright of dramas of manners and artistic director of the Comédie Française from 1936 to 1940.

29.
The Jerónimos monastery (Mosteiro dos Jerónimos) at Belém.

30.
The leading French engineering training institution.

31.
Literally ‘youth sites’, the Chantiers de la Jeunesse Française were a paramilitary organisation set up in 1940 after conscription was abolished in the wake of France’s defeat.

32.
One of the novels in Honoré de Balzac’s series,
La Comédie humaine
(
The Human Comedy
).

33.
The elite French equestrian corps.

34.

Pincer l’oreille à Jules
’ = a military euphemism for emptying the latrine buckets.

35.
Francs-tireurs et Partisans, the French resistance group created in 1941 by the French Communist Party.

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