'You're wrong. I did it. Everything Philippe says is true.'
'Including the beatings?'
Matthew looked down at his feet and said nothing.
'Will you come with us to the station in St Remy?' asked Gamache. Beauvoir noticed, as did the others, that it was a request, not an order. And certainly not an arrest.
'Yes.' Croft seemed relieved.
'I'm coming with you,' said Suzanne, springing up.
'What about Philippe?' Claude Guimette asked.
Suzanne suppressed the urge to scream, 'What about him?' Instead she took a couple of breaths.
Gamache stepped forward and spoke with her softly, calmly. 'He's only fourteen, and as much as he might not show it, he needs his mother.'
She hesitated then nodded, afraid to speak again.
Gamache knew that while fear came in many forms, so did courage.
Gamache, Beauvoir and Croft sat in a small white interview room at the Surete station in St Remy. On the metal table between them sat a plate of ham sandwiches and several tins of soft drinks. Croft hadn't eaten anything. Neither had Gamache. Beauvoir couldn't stand it any longer and slowly, as though his stomach wasn't making that whiny noise filling the room, picked up a half sandwich and took a leisurely bite.
'Tell us what happened last Sunday morning,' said Gamache.
'I got up early, as I usually do. Sunday's Suzanne's day to sleep in. I put the breakfast things on the kitchen table for the kids then went out. Bow hunting.'
'You told us you didn't hunt any more,' said Beauvoir.
'I lied.'
'Why go to the woods behind the schoolhouse?'
'Dunno. I guess because that's where my father always hunted.'
'Your father smoked unfiltered cigarettes and ran your home as a dairy farm. You don't,' said Gamache. 'You've proven you're no slave to your father's way of doing things. There must be another reason.'
'Well, there isn't. It was Thanksgiving and I was missing him. I took his old recurve bow and his old arrows and went to his old hunting grounds. To feel closer to him. Point finale.'
'What happened?'
'I heard a sound, something coming through the trees, like a deer. Slowly and carefully. Almost on tiptoe. That's how deer walk. So I drew my bow and as soon as the shape appeared I fired. You have to be fast with deer 'cause any little thing will set them off.'
'But it wasn't a deer.'
'No. It was Miss Neal.'
'How was she lying?'
Croft stood up, put his arms and legs out, his eyes wide open.
'What did you do?'
'I ran to her, but I could see she was dead. So I panicked. I looked for the arrow, picked it up, and ran to the truck. I threw everything in the back and drove home.'
'What happened then?' In Beauvoir's experience interrogation was really just asking, 'Then what happened?' and listening closely to the reply. Listening was the trick.
'I don't know.'
'What do you mean?'
'I can't remember anything after getting in the truck and driving home. But isn't that enough? I killed Miss Neal. That's all you need to know.'
'Why didn't you come forward?'
'Well, I didn't think you'd find out. I mean, the woods are full of hunters, I couldn't believe you'd come to me. Then when you did, I didn't want to destroy my father's old bow. It means a lot to me. It's like having him in the house still. When I realised it had to be destroyed it was too late.'
'Do you beat your son?'
Croft winced, as though revolted, but said nothing.
'I sat in your kitchen this morning and told you we thought Philippe had killed Miss Neal,' Gamache leaned forward so his head hovered over the sandwiches, but he only had eyes for Croft. 'Why didn't you confess then?'
'I was too stunned.'
'Come on, Mr Croft. You were waiting for us. You knew what the lab tests would show. And yet now you're saying you were going to have your son arrested for a crime you yourself committed? I don't think you're capable of that.'
'You have no idea what I'm capable of.'
'I guess that's true. I mean, if you can beat your son you can do anything.'
Croft's nostrils flared and his lips compressed. Gamache suspected if he truly was violent he'd have taken a swing at him then.
They left Croft sitting in the interview room. 'What'd you think, Jean Guy?' Gamache asked when they reached the privacy of the station commander's office.
'I don't know what to think, sir. Did Croft do it? Philippe's story hangs together. It's possible.'
'We found absolutely no evidence of Jane Neal's blood in Croft's truck, or Mrs Croft's car. His fingerprints weren't anywhere--'
'True, but Philippe said he wore gloves,' Beauvoir interrupted.
'You can't wear gloves and shoot a bow and arrow at the same time.'
'He could have put them on after he shot, once he saw what he'd done.'
'So he had the presence of mind to put on gloves, but not enough to call the police and admit the accident? No. On paper it makes sense. But in real life it doesn't.'
'I don't agree, sir. One thing you've always impressed on me is that we can never know what happens behind closed doors. What really goes on in the Croft home? Yes, Matthew Croft gives every impression of being a thoughtful and reasonable man, but we've found time and again that that's exactly how abusers appear to the outside world. They have to. That's their camouflage. Matthew Croft may very well be abusive.' Beauvoir felt stupid lecturing Gamache on the very things he'd learned from the man himself, but he thought they bore repeating.
'What about the public meeting, when he was so helpful?' Gamache asked.
'Arrogance. He admits himself he never thought we'd find him.'
'I'm sorry, Jean Guy. I just don't buy it. There's absolutely no physical evidence against him. Just the accusation of a very angry teenager.'
'His bruised son.'
'Yes. A bruise that's exactly like yours.'
'But he'd shot arrows before. Croft said only beginners got bruises like that.'
'True, but Croft also said he'd stopped hunting a couple of years ago, so he probably hadn't taken his son hunting since then,' Gamache reasoned. 'That's a long time in kid years. He was probably rusty. Believe me, that boy shot an arrow in the last two days.'
They had a problem and they knew it. What to do about Matthew Croft?
'I've called the prosecutor's office in Granby,' said Gamache. 'They're sending someone around. Should be here soon. We'll put it to him.'
'Her.'
Beauvoir nodded through the glass door at a middle-aged woman standing patiently, briefcase in hand. He got up and brought her in to the now cramped office.
'Maitre Brigitte Cohen,' Beauvoir announced.
'Bonjour, Maitre Cohen. It's almost one o'clock; have you had lunch?'
'Only a brioche on the way over. I consider that an hors d'oeuvre.'
Ten minutes later they were in a comfortable diner across from the station house, ordering lunch. Beauvoir put the situation to Maitre Cohen, succinctly. She grasped the pertinent details immediately.
'So the one with all the evidence against him won't admit it, and the one with no evidence can't stop admitting it. On the surface it appears the father's protecting the son. Yet when you first arrived, Chief Inspector, he seemed willing to let his son be charged with the crime.'
'That's true.'
'What changed his mind?'
'I think he was stunned and deeply wounded by his son's accusations. I don't think he saw that coming at all. It's hard to know, of course, but I get the feeling that had once been a very happy home, but hasn't been for a while now. Having me Philippe I think the unhappiness radiates from him. I've seen it before. The angry kid runs the home because the parents are afraid of him.'
'Yes, I've seen il too. You don't mean physically afraid, do you ?' asked Cohen.
'No, emotionally . I think Croft confessed because he couldn't stand what Philippe must think of him . It was a desperate, even momentarily insane action designed to win back his son. To prove to Philippe he loved him. There also seemed to be an element of, what?'