The Tsunami File (31 page)

Read The Tsunami File Online

Authors: Michael E. Rose

Delaney woke from his siesta to the sound of gravel crunching outside. He went to the window and saw an older woman with a kerchief on her head crossing the courtyard. She was carrying a string bag of groceries. The housekeeper, apparently, returning to work after her own afternoon break. It was almost 6 p.m. He heard the big door open and close below his window and then the clatter of things domestic being done in the chateau kitchen.

He went downstairs and put his head into the kitchen.


Bonjour, madame
,” he said.

The housekeeper looked startled, and then smiled grimly. She had beefy, reddened forearms and hands, and what appeared to be a gold tooth.


Bonjour, monsieur. Bonjour
,” she said. She did not ask who he was nor did she introduce herself. Like Rochemaure, she had very few words to say to houseguests.

Delaney wandered to the living room and sat down. Rochemaure did not immediately appear. But a voice came from behind a closed door at the far end of the room, between the start of a long corridor that headed left to another wing of the house and a side exit door to the terrace and the pathway downhill to the pool. Rochemaure was on the telephone.

Eventually, he emerged from what looked like a small office. Delaney saw a photocopier and a computer inside. Rochemaure's mood had not improved.

“We eat quite early in the evening here, Monsieur Delaney, so as to give Ulrich an early night.”

“That's fine,” Delaney said.

“I will get him for you now,” Rochemaure said. He went immediately down the corridor to the left. Delaney flipped through magazines and resisted opening what was surely a liquor cabinet near the fireplace. Eventually, he heard voices speaking in French.

Rochemaure maneuvered Mueller into the living room in a wheelchair. The old policeman was fully dressed—no pajamas for this invalid. He wore brown corduroy trousers and a beige, vaguely military, short-sleeved shirt, immaculately pressed. His hair was grey but still thick and carefully combed. His grey mustache was perfectly trimmed.

He wore round spectacles set low on his large nose and these drew attention to his silver blue eyes.

But Mueller's shoulders were round with age and illness. His chest looked sunken and his legs were thin. His hands did not shake but they were covered with brown spots. It was the collection of faint red and purple lesions on his face and neck, however, that told Delaney the story. There could be no mistaking the telltale signs of AIDS, in an advanced state.

“Monsieur Delaney, this is Ulrich Mueller,” Rochemaure said in English.

Delaney went forward to clasp the old man's hand. The skin felt papery and dry. There was not much power left in what Delaney was certain would have been, in another time and place, a solid policeman's handshake.

“Thank you for agreeing to see me, Herr Mueller. I know you're not well,” Delaney said. “It is at the suggestion of my niece,” Mueller said in a slightly hoarse voice. His English was very good, almost without accent.

Mueller and Rochemaure watched Delaney trying to assess the old man's health.

“What is your guess, Mr. Delaney?” Mueller said with a bitter smile. “Can you guess what it is that's killing me?”

This was a test of some kind. Delaney waited a moment before answering.

“Go ahead,” Mueller said. “Let's not wait. Tell us your theory.”

“AIDS,” Delaney said. “I would say AIDS.”

“Well done,” Mueller said. “Mareike told me you were an excellent reporter. Very well done.”

Rochemaure looked furious.

“This is a stupid game you play, Ulrich,” he said.

“Why should we wait, Pierre?” Mueller said.

“Hmm? Let us get the preliminaries over and done with. Shall we, Mr. Delaney? So we can then have our little civilized French aperitif?”

“An aperitif sounds like a very civilized idea to me, Herr Mueller,” Delaney said.

Mueller started to cough dryly behind his spotted hand.

“Pierre, Pierre, a handkerchief, if you please,” he said. “A handkerchief and then a pastis with ice. If you please.”

The brief coughing spell did not seem severe enough, Delaney thought, to warrant a request for handkerchiefs. Mueller just seemed to want his partner to fetch and carry. Rochemaure pulled a neatly folded square from his pocket, as if accustomed to such ritual, gave the handkerchief to Mueller and then stomped out in the direction of the kitchen.

Rochemaure apparently thought it appropriate to demonstrate to the houseguest that serving duties were actually for the hired help. The housekeeper emerged from the kitchen after a few minutes, glumly carrying a clinking tray on which were positioned a bottle of Ricard pastis, glasses, a water jug, an ice bucket, tongs and a small bowl of pistachio nuts.

“Thank you very much, Madame Chagny,”

Mueller said.

The housekeeper said nothing and returned with no enthusiasm to her dinner preparations. Rochemaure reappeared from the kitchen immediately afterward, his little demonstration that he was no fetch-and-carry boy duly completed.

The evening was all very civilized, very south of France. They drank pastis in the stylish living room in the fading light as Mueller and Delaney circled each other—Mueller clearly trying to size up this journalist with a sudden interest in his life story, and Delaney trying to decide how explicit his questions could be and how soon he should ask them.

“Pierre is of course the mastermind of all of the changes made to this house, Mr. Delaney,” Mueller said.

He was looking slightly less tired as the conversation and the aperitif revived him.

“I came down here from Germany alone a number of years ago after I left the police. I heard that the Chateau de Bressac was for sale,” he said. “But it was a ruin. There were holes in the roof; pigeons were nesting in the attic. I was living only in the section of the house on this side, here on the ground floor, like a hermit. Then I was fortunate to get a recommendation about Pierre's work. I called him in Paris and used my policeman's power of persuasion to get him to come for a weekend to see what I had found.”

He looked over at Rochemaure.

“And you fell in love with the place, didn't you, Pierre?” Mueller said.

“I did, yes,” Pierre said joylessly. “It was a challenge I could not resist.”

“And now you see the fruit of Pierre's exceptional talents all around you,” Mueller said. “Those are even Pierre's paintings on the wall, most of them.”

“Congratulations, Pierre,” Delaney said. Rochemaure ignored him, drank pastis.

“It is not clear, you understand, what would have become of this place if an old German police chief had been responsible for the changes,” Mueller said. “Of that I can assure you. I would have made it into a replica of some Bavarian chalet, I would guess. Pierre saved me from that.”

“It's a grand house,” Delaney said. He wondered how much detail he would also be given about the domestic living arrangements.

“Of course we went through the usual trials of finding reliable local tradesmen to help us,” Mueller said. “I was not well and there was very little I could do by myself. Thankfully, there are now Polish plumbers even here in the Ardeche, Mr. Delaney. Estonian carpenters, stonemasons from Bulgaria. We no longer need the French at all for such jobs. It is a good thing, the new Europe.”

“It's a very big job, fixing up an old place like this,” Delaney said.

“Yes. But Pierre began spending more and more of his time here,” Mueller said. “He was the one who looked after things, and, in fact, after me as well, as my health got worse. I would say that we have almost become locals here now, as much as anyone can become locals in
la France profounde
.” “Not such a bad fate,” Delaney said. Rochemaure's expression darkened even further.

“There could be worse fates,” Rochemaure said.

Dinner at a small table set off to one side of the stone vestibule was also a stylish, civilized affair. And it gave Mueller more of the time he clearly still needed to size Delaney up.

Madame Chagny was an excellent cook, despite her attitude problem. Perhaps she was a drop-out from the same hospitality school as Rochemaure. She had prepared an appetizer of zucchini flowers stuffed with salt cod. Then lamb with caraway seeds and rosemary and eggplant. The noname local wine was the same red that Delaney had drunk at lunch and just as good at night.

“Mareike tells me you want to write an article about the last days of the disgraced head of the BKA,” Mueller said eventually, as they ate little
rondelles
of the Saint Marcellin cheese that preceded dessert. Madame Chagny was banging pots and plates as loudly as she could in the kitchen. Rochemaure silently smoked another in his evening series of Marlboros. He had also been drinking large quantities of wine.

“Not quite,” Delaney said. “I think it may be part of a bigger story, possibly. I'm also looking for connections to another big story. Did Mareike tell you about that too?”

“A little,” Mueller said. He looked somewhat warily over at Rochemaure. Delaney wondered how much, or how little, Rochemaure had been allowed to know about Mueller's life before France.

“Who would be reading such an article?” Mueller asked Delaney.

“I haven't really decided yet what publication I would do it for,” Delaney said.

“That is a little unusual, is it not?” Mueller said. “In my not always happy experience of how journalists work.”

“I'm not even sure I'll write anything at all, Herr Mueller,” Delaney said. “I'm really here just to gather information and see what I come up with. I'll decide afterward what to do with the information.

That's how I usually operate.”

“And why would I want to help you with something like that?” Mueller said. “Just tell you my little story, like that, with no clarity about how the information might be used.”

“Mareike seemed to think you might.”

“And why?”

“She thought the time might be right for you to have your say.” “Because I am dying?”

Delaney and Mueller looked steadily at each other. Rochemaure stubbed out his cigarette.


Merde
,” Rochemaure said. “
C'est de la merde
.”

“Are you dying, Herr Mueller?” Delaney said.


Merde
,” Rochemaure said again. “Why this crazy game?”

“Yes, I'm dying, Mr. Delaney,” Mueller said.

“You are an experienced journalist, this Mareike tells me. Do I not look like a man who is slowly dying?”

“I'm more accustomed to seeing the results of sudden deaths,” Delaney said.

“As I was, in my work as a policeman,” Mueller said. “Slow deaths were for old people, or so we thought. We always thought policemen should make their exits in a blaze of glory.”

“Maybe that's still possible,” Delaney said.

“The power of the press.”

“Something like that.”

“This is shit,” Rochemaure said, pouring himself a very large glass of red. “
C'est de la merde
.”

Dessert was Madame Chagny's excellent cherries
clafouti
and small coffees and Armagnac. Mueller played policeman for a while, quizzing Delaney about his life and his career and his publications and his credentials generally. Rochemaure played stricken lover; his mood darkened as the evening passed, his social skills all but disappearing along with the supply of wine and cigarettes. Delaney still held off playing journalist, or spy.

Talk turned to Mareike Fischer and her unorthodox policing methods. Mueller knew more about how his niece operated than she apparently realized.

“She sails very close to the wind,” Mueller said. “In drug squad work this is perhaps necessary. In the LKA in any case.”

“Undercover work is tough,” Delaney said.

“It is risky, always,” Mueller said. “For one's health and one's career.” “I would say,” Delaney said.

“Mareike's career in many ways is just starting. Her judgment is not always exact, but she is smart and has the hardness required for such work.”

Delaney wondered if the veteran BKA man would approve of certain details of how his niece actually operated in the rough and tumble of local police work. The BKA was more concerned with national security and intelligence and analysis than it was with biker gangs dealing amphetamine in rundown city houses.

“Mareike's judgment about you, Mr. Delaney, is that you could be trusted to do the right thing.”

“I'm glad she feels that way.”

“She formed this judgment very fast, in my view,” Mueller said. “Do you always have this sort of effect on people, Mr. Delaney?”

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