“He’s been shot. There’s blood everywhere.” I swallowed hard, trying to clear my throat of the vasopressin tang, trying to rid my head of this memory I didn’t want.
“What else, Eve?”
“I’m holding a gun in my hand, a pistol. I’m the one who has done this.”
“You don’t know that.”
I turned to face Delpay once again. As much as I wanted to believe him, there was a part of me that was certain I was right. “It’s the only thing I do know,” I said.
I was late leaving the city. A theater near the hospital was showing a new American movie, and I went after my appointment, as I often did, hoping to catch a glimpse of something familiar on the big screen. My first few months at the convent I’d spent much of my time watching Sister Claire’s collection of American movies, trying to kindle a spark of recognition. Occasionally, I saw places I knew, or at least thought I knew: parts of New York City, the desolate landscapes of the old westerns, or Sleepless in Seattle’s rain-washed waterfront. But the rest of America, from the apocalyptic sprawl of Los Angeles to the arctic landscape of Fargo’s Upper Midwest, seemed completely alien to me.
The matinee let out at four, and by the time I picked up the Miles Davis CD Heloise had asked for and stopped at Sister Theresa’s favorite chocolatier, it was rush hour, the streets clogged with evening commuters. I had to battle my way out of the city in the convent’s rusty old Renault.
I was still hungover from my meeting with Dr. Delpay. My throat was dry, and there was a black hole of pain in the back of my skull. It had been several months since we’d introduced the “miracle drug” into our sessions, and so far there had been no miracles, none of the sudden breakthroughs we’d hoped for. Just this same bloody memory, one I wished I could send back to the oblivion from which it had emerged. And now the piracetam dream was back as well.
It was dark when I got off the highway and headed for Cluny and the little hill towns beyond. The Renault’s heater rattled and shook beneath the dash. I brightened my headlights and careened north on the narrow road, past sprawling vineyards, the grape wood bare and gnarled, each plant clipped and tied neatly for winter, limbs spread out, like bodies crucified.
The road dipped through a small village, a handful of stone houses huddled together around a café. I slowed slightly and watched the settlement slip by. The few windows that were lit shone like stage sets: a woman at her stove, a man smoking, a dozen green bottles on a shelf. It was six-thirty by my watch. If I pushed it, I could be at the convent well before seven. I shifted and punched the gas pedal, coaxing what speed I could out of the old engine, and turned onto the even narrower road that led up to the abbey.
As I neared the Tanes’ farmhouse, I eased my foot off the gas and peered past the Renault’s headlights, watching for the two retrievers. They were good dogs, but suicidally stupid, and had the bad habit of darting out of nowhere. There was no sign of the creatures tonight. The Tanes’ house was ablaze with lights, each window shining with an uncanny force. Two large spots on the old carriage house illuminated the yard and the driveway. A party, perhaps? Though there was nothing festive about the glare. Monsieur Tane’s white Peugeot was the only car in the drive. I blinked, heading back into the darkness toward the convent.
As I came around the last curve, I could see the stone priory and the chapel beyond. Something was wrong there as well. The abbey’s grounds were bathed in light, the winter trees casting stark shadows on the frozen ground. Half a dozen cars and several police vans were parked on the gravel apron outside the priory. A handful of figures lingered in the cold, all men as far as I could see, some smoking, some talking on cell phones. I recognized most of them as local police.
There was an air of tired catastrophe to the scene, the drama long since over and the players waiting for their next move. I parked the Renault behind one of the vans and got out, my heart beating in panic. It was Sister Magda, I told myself, finally succumbed to all those cigarettes and the goose fat she liked to spread on her toast, but even as I thought it I knew what had happened was far worse.
One of the men, an inspector named Lelu, started toward me. He had on a parka and, beneath it, a rumpled coat and tie.
“What’s happened?” I asked.
“There has been a terrible tragedy,” he explained. “I’m so sorry.” Shaking his head, he pulled a pack of Gauloises from his coat. “I can find no easy way to say this.” He tapped the cigarettes against his left palm, worrying the pack like a string of prayer beads. “There has been a massacre.”
It was a funny choice of words, the meaning so insane I had trouble processing it. “I don’t understand,” I said.
“A massacre,” he repeated, “here at the abbey. The sisters…” He paused.
“The sisters?” I asked stupidly. My legs felt like rubber bands.
Nodding, he put his hand on my arm. “Please,” he said gently. “You cannot stay here tonight. Madame Tane is expecting you. Sister Heloise is there as well. I will have someone take you down the road, and if you are capable, we will need to ask you some questions.”
“Yes. Of course.” I felt nauseous, dizzy, and off balance. I took a step toward the Renault and put my hand on the hood, trying to keep myself upright. “And the others?” I asked. “Where are they?”
Lelu glanced behind him and motioned for one of the other men to join us. “Mademoiselle,” he said, turning back to me, “I don’t think you understand. You and the sister are the only survivors.”
One of the inspector’s assistants drove me down to the Tanes’. He was young and nervous, more a farm boy than a cop. He seemed slightly stupefied, crippled by whatever he’d seen at the convent. We sat in the Tanes’ kitchen, and I answered what questions I could.
No, I could think of no one who might have had a reason to do something like this. I could not even think of a reason. Yes, I went to Lyon twice a month to see my doctor. Yes, I always spent the night before my appointment. There were certain medications that needed to be taken. Delpay could vouch for me. No, I was not a Benedictine myself. I’d been with the sisters a year, running things in the kitchen. And before that? I’d lived in the States.
Where? The young man wanted to know. He had spent some time in Florida, he explained, brightening, I supposed, at the thought of beaches and sunshine.
Around, I told him, my usual cover. I smiled weakly. Never Florida, though.
He looked up at me, suddenly understanding, finally hearing whatever slight tic it was in my accent that still betrayed me. “Oh,” he said, “you’re the one, the American.”
I nodded and smiled.
When we finished, he excused himself to go back up to the convent, saying there would likely be more questions, but for now I should try to rest.
Madame Tane brought me a glass of Armagnac. She was a sweet woman, in her own rough way, round and hard from years of farm living. Her children were grown and gone, scattered to desk jobs in Paris or Toulouse. She sometimes came to the priory kitchen when I was working, more, I thought, for conversation than for the sugar or yeast she would borrow.
She sat down across from me at the kitchen table, took my hand in her coarse paw, and watched me take a sip of the brandy.
“Where’s Heloise?” I asked.
“Upstairs,” Madame Tane said. “She’s sleeping.”
“Do you know what happened? How she managed to get away?”
“She escaped into the woods.” The old woman lifted her hand and crossed herself. “She must have hidden there all night. It wasn’t till late this morning that she came to us. That’s when we called the police.”
I shivered, thinking of the damp swath of forest behind the abbey, how cold the last few nights had been. “She’s all right, though?”