“You, the maid, come over here.”
“Yes, sir, thank you, sir.”
“Tell us your name.”
“Yes, sir. It’s Marcia, sir.”
“Marcia what?”
“Marcia Nanpétrin, yes, sir.”
“Where do you live?”
“At Madame Magistral’s, sir. Since I was ten.”
“How old are you now?”
“Twenty, sir.”
“Do you have parents?”
“Yes, sir, in the mountains, far away. Up in the coffee farms.”
“You were the first to hear the bottle crash. Tell us what happened?”
“Here is what happened, Commandant! I was leaving Madame Magistral’s house when I saw the door of the shack open-it had been closed for eight days. The mulatto came out, eyes closed and hand lifted high. He walked like a blind man, hesitating, and then he threw the bottle under the balcony. I saw flames running along the ground and then the mulatto threw himself on the ground screaming and the black guy and the white guy came out of the shack, and the white guy stamped out the flames and lay down on the mulatto and starting saying something in his ear.”
“That’s it?”
“That’s it, yes, sir. I swear on my mother’s life.”
“Fine, go stand by the wall and wait.”
“Yes, sir, thank you, sir.”
“Come forward, you. Last name, first name, address and occupation.”
“Cécile Magistral, born and residing in this town, teacher at the Holy Sisters School.”
“What do you know about this twisted plot against the security of the State?”
“I don’t know anything about it, Monsieur.”
“Talk or you’ll regret it.”
“I have nothing to say.”
Two men came down from the platform on which the table stood and loomed before Cécile.
“Talk,” one of them said.
“I swear I don’t know anything.”
“You want a beating? Huh!”
One of them tore off her blouse and grabbed a bundle of leather straps that lay on the table.
“She doesn’t know anything, she doesn’t know anything,” Simon yelled.
“Tell them, Cécile,” I begged. “Tell them what you know.”
“I don’t know anything,” Cécile said.
“Fine. I am going to loosen your tongue. You’ll see.”
He shoved her to her knees and struck her. The straps marked her flesh with long red streaks.
“No! No!” I couldn’t stop yelling.
“Let him kill me,” Cécile shouted to me.
“No! No!”
“I won’t be able to live after all of this. Let them kill me!”
Two patrol members had to hold me back. I had rushed at them like a lion. They twisted my arms and I fell to my knees.
“Cécile, think of your mother,” I begged again, “tell them what you know.”
“I don’t want to live anymore, I don’t want to live anymore,” she sobbed.
“You bastards,” Simon shouted.
And he leaped on one of the men and hit him in the head with his handcuffed fists.
“Shoot him,” ordered the patrol member who had remained at the table with the commandant.
“I am French, I invoke my flag,” Simon protested.
“We shit on your flag,” one of the men answered. “You struck law enforcement personnel.”
“My embassy will be notified. You’ll have to answer for my death.”
“You were conspiring against the security of the State.”
“You’re lying There was never a conspiracy.”
“And the petrol bombs? Where did they come from?”
“They’re no more threatening than firecrackers, they’re stuffed with rotting cotton and clairin. I demand to be transferred to Port-au-Prince and allowed to contact my lawyer.”
“Hah! Hah! Hah!” one of the patrol members sniggered. “He thinks we have time to waste. How many days did you stay locked up in the shack with the conspirators?”
“I repeat, there was never any conspiracy,” Simon roared.
“Let him be,” said the commandant, who seemed preoccupied by an inconvenient thought. “Let’s take care of these two first.”
“Come with me,” said one of the men. “See these goodies? They will make you as soft as a woman’s hand.”
And, tearing off our shirts, he burst into hideous, demonic laughter.
“Look at that, thin as a rail. You won’t be able to make it through an hour of torture. Commandant Cravache, give me the studded whip.”
“I’m the only guilty one,” I cried. “I made the weapons myself while they were both sleeping.”
“Who were you trying to set on fire?”
“The devils,” I responded.
“What devils?”
“The ones who invaded the town.”
“He’s a mad fool,” Simon yelled. “Don’t you understand that?”
“I wonder which one of you is best at playing the fool?” the commandant replied.
He came down off the platform, grabbed some kind of pliers off the table and dangled them before me:
“I will tear out your flesh, I will flay you like a hog, but you will talk.”
“I’m the only guilty one,” I repeated.
“Who were you after?”
“The devils.”
The commandant smashed my face with the pliers and blood ran down my cheek.
“You’ve already been beaten with a stick, right? That can be tiring for the person doing it, but this”-holding the pliers under my nose-“is a game that can last for hours. It is reserved exclusively for little plotters such as yourself. Tie him to a chair!”
Two men rushed over, grabbed me and bound me to a chair. The commandant held out the pliers to the patrol member who was still smiling in his seat, saying to him:
“Go ahead, Sataneau, do the honors.”
And the man took the pliers and came toward me. He was very small with a somewhat elongated head and slanting eyes framed by large pointed eyebrows. He smiled and his lips revealed brilliant white, pointed teeth. The face of the man leaning over me suddenly blurred, melting before my very eyes into a blinding metallic plate.
I bowed my head, and with my mouth contorted and eyes closed, cried out:
“The devils! They are here. The devils!…”
I knocked over the chair and fell at their feet, screaming and twisting despite being tied up.
“What the fuck is this nonsense about devils?” the commandant asked in a worried voice.
“He sees them all the time,” Simon replied. “He claims they’re hiding somewhere in town.”
The man was standing, pliers in hand, watching me twist at his feet.
“There is something unnatural about all this,” he said. “Let’s exterminate them and be done with it.”
The devils opening the gates of hell
Will escape by the thousands
Black, red, sparkling with weapons and gold
To sow death and gladden Lucifer…
André began to recite. His voice seemed to come from another world. I was twisting and foaming at the mouth, pricking up my ears to hear what was being said.
“What’s that idiot saying?” the commandant asked.
“He’s talking about devils too,” one of the patrol members replied, visibly disconcerted.
“René described them to us,” Simon said in a declamatory tone. “He has seen them every God-given day.”
“I’ve seen them too,” André said softly.
“You, idiot, you’ve supposedly seen them too?”
“I’ve seen them.”
“When?”
“Every evening for eight days.”
“And who are they after?” the man with the pliers asked.
“I don’t know.”
“Who are they after?” the man with the pliers snapped, leaning over me.
“Untie me! Untie me!” I begged him, writhing. “They’ll be back!”
“Untie him,” ordered the man with the pliers. “And have Dr. Prémature come.”
“Will do, chief,” the corporal answered.
And he ran to the exit.
“He’s pretending to be a madman,” the agitated commandant said nervously, “but I have learned that you can’t be too careful even with real madmen. Admit this is an act. Admit that you’re not crazy,” he grunted, hitting me on the head.