‘Number 3,’ swore St-Cyr, catching a breath and vowing to smoke only certified tobacco, not the sometimes necessary experiments with dried, uncured beet tops, celery leaves and other things.
The doorknob was of white porcelain, the lock not difficult. Through the lace curtains of a grimy mansard window, daylight filtered to touch the terracotta pots of a tiny kitchen garden — herbs, chives, green onions, lettuces, geraniums too — and among these, as if it belonged there for ever, a plump white rabbit stirred in its little cage but otherwise ignored them.
She hadn’t been able to bring herself to kill it, thought St-Cyr, parting the curtains. So many kept meat on the hoof in their flats and rooms these days. Guinea pigs, the latest Paris food fad, chickens, pigeons — cats that had been captured, kidnapped dogs too, if they could be silenced and were obedient.
The small glass pitcher she had used to water things had shattered with the frost but there was water in the rabbit’s dish and even winter grass that must have been recently scavenged from one of the parks or country roadsides.
Beyond the roofs of houses that would some day surely be demolished, he could see the river and above its far bank the racecourse and stables. Upstream, a little to his left, was a narrow weir and footbridge, the Pont Barrage, and to his right and downstream, the much wider, larger Boutiron Bridge.
Though still well within the town, they were some distance from the Hotel du Parc. ‘The blackout curtains have been opened, Hermann.’
‘Louis, Bousquet is already taking the lift.’
The sound of it came clearly through the walls. An iron four-poster, one of its brass knobs long gone, was unmade, but the pillows had been smoothed. A clutch of hairpins marked the place where Celine Dupuis had last sat.
There was a photograph of her daughter, another, in uniform, of the husband who’d been killed during the Blitzkrieg, a third of her parents and the house at 60 rue Lhomond.’
The leather-clad alarm clock from the early thirties had stopped at 11.22. The alarm, though, had been set for 7 a.m.
‘A rehearsal?’ asked Kohler.
‘She left in a hurry on Tuesday,’ muttered St-Cyr. ‘Flannelette pyjamas, heavy woollen socks, a cardigan, knitted gloves and a toque are in a heap on the carpet next to that wicker fauteuil she must have rescued from the hotel’s garden. On that side table below the wall mirror whose gilding has long disappeared there are a tin basin and a large enamelled pitcher of water whose ice she would have had to break had she not been in such a hurry. The facecloth, towel and carefully rationed sliver of soap are neatly piled and were unused.’
‘Louis, the lift. It’s stopped.’
‘Must you keep on about it? There are still two sets of stairs for him to climb. Just let me memorize the room.’
‘You haven’t time. Why not concentrate on the bed? Women who’ve been out working late at night and have to get up early invariably hug the pillows for a stolen moment after the alarm’s been shut off. If I were you, mein brillanter Oberdetektiv, I’d be asking myself who the hell slipped in here to tidy up?’
‘The same person who fed and watered the rabbit?’
‘And opened the blackout curtains?’
‘Or the one who …’
‘Nom de Jesus-Christ, do you two not listen?’ demanded Bousquet, fedora in hand as he stormed breathlessly into the room. ‘I told you to go to the morgue I …’
‘You felt it prudent to beat us here, Secretaire,’ said Louis, not backing off. ‘You had, I think, to take another look in case whoever left her identity card but not her handbag had also left something you had missed.’
‘Nothing … There was nothing else.’
‘No ration tickets? No residence permit?’ They were all but shouting.
‘All right, all right! Those must have been in that overcoat you found, Kohler, and were taken from it, or were in her bag which has yet to be found, and yes, whoever killed her came back here afterwards to leave the card!’
‘And these?’ asked Louis, removing the first of the freshened pillows to expose a neat little pink-ribboned bundle of letters in their scented envelopes.
‘Those weren’t there when we found her carte d’identite on Wednesday morning,’ managed Bousquet, sickened by what must have happened. ‘We searched. Mon Dieu, but we did. Menetrel insisted on accompanying me and at the time I realized those must have been what he was after, but they simply weren’t there then.’
Not then. ‘So this unknown visitor must have come back?’ asked Louis.
‘Yes!’
‘And recently, too,’ said Kohler, indicating the curtains. ‘Had we not been here, Secretaire, I wonder what might have happened to you? A big place like this and you here all on your own.’
‘And waterers of rabbits are killers, are they?’
He had a point. ‘Were no fingerprints taken after that visit?’ demanded St-Cyr.
‘Ah! don’t be so difficult. It was a crisis.’
‘And how, please, did you and the doctor find her carte d’identite?’
‘Why should it matter?’
‘Just answer, please,’ said Louis, keeping up the pressure.
‘On the bedside table, leaning up against that photograph of her husband.’
‘As a warning?’
‘As a reminder, perhaps, of our lost heroism. All right, it was deliberately left there for me, or so I felt at the time.’
‘Why you, Secretaire?’
‘I … I don’t really know.’
‘And Dr Menetrel?’
‘Felt the same, I’m certain.’
‘A visit that was done after the killing and that anticipated your coming here,’ said Louis. ‘And then another, which anticipated our own and yours again. It’s odd, is it not?’
‘Look, people come and go in this place at all hours up to and even beyond the curfew. Anyone could have slipped in and out if asked to — the killer too, of course. Old Rigaud, the concierge, was having a hell of a time keeping track of the residents and finally went on strike. They were driving him crazy simply for the fun of it, so we had to let him stay on.’
‘Please wait downstairs or in your car, Secretaire. Hermann and I won’t be long.’
‘Will there be fingerprints on those?’ He indicated the letters.
‘Other than the Marechal’s, Madame Dupuis’s and those of any number of postal clerks, since the letters were mailed? Not likely, but they’ll have to be dusted.’
‘Then don’t tell the doctor what you’ve found. Let him continue to worry about them. Learn that it’s always best to keep him in the dark and distracted.’
‘Merde, Louis, he’s really edgy,’ sighed Kohler when Bousquet had left them. ‘Does he think he’s the target?’
‘He must, but does the killer or the one who took her to the Hall have a room here, Hermann, or do both of them? And is this what our secretaire is now wondering since you so kindly pointed it out to him?’
‘Someone so close to each of them, he, she or they can come and go at will and all are targets.’
‘Petain and his right hand; Laval and his. And why, please, did Monsieur Bousquet not drag along the local flics, eh? Look for little things, Hermann. Things that will tell us not only who our victim really was but why the Secretaire General de Police should have such a lapse of duty.’
‘Things that may have been missed by our visitor or left on purpose, Dummkopf. Things we might never know the reason for their being here but others will.’
A Saint Louis crystal perfume bottle was still in its presentation box, tucked away at the back of her dressing table drawer. Right inside the lid, and probably never read by Petain, there was a note: Marechal, please accept this small token for your dear wife in recognition of our esteem and devotion to you both. It was signed M. Jean-Paul Brisset and Mme Marie-Louise of 32a bis rue Dupanloup, Orleans. Though their numbers had dwindled, Petain still regularly received such gifts from supporters all over the country. A bit of lacework from Normandy, a Sevres soup tureen or vase, silver tea and coffee services, paintings too, signed and sent by their artists, books by their authors. All such things ended up in storage rooms at the stately home, the maison de maitre, he had rented as a weekend retreat in the tiny village of Charmeil just six kilometres by road to the north-west of Vichy.