We did that, down a long, dark-paneled hallway lined with heavily framed oil paintings, to a pair of double doors that, once thrown open, led into a towering library with twenty-foot-high windows overlooking the valley below. I felt transported back either to the England of centuries ago, or to the Hollywood set of My Fair Lady. Sammie merely stared, her mouth unashamedly open. Sprinkled among the bookcases were inset curved display cabinets, softly lighted and closed off behind glass doors, holding a variety of precious objects from women’s ancient baubles to jeweled snuff boxes and ornate ivory calling-card cases. Perched above the carved mantelpiece, in an obvious place of honor, was a hideous-looking carved mask of what looked like a gargoyle, complete with devilish eyebrows and a snarling mouth. To my untrained eye the entire collection seemed of museum-grade material, and there was a lot of it.
“How may I help you?” came a voice hidden beneath the glare from the windows.
I spoke to the light, waiting for my eyes to adjust. “I’m Joe Gunther. This is Special Agent Samantha Martens-Vermont Bureau of Investigation. We were wondering if we could ask you a few questions.”
“You said that on the phone. Do you like objets d’art?”
I was beginning to make out a huge desk beneath the windows, and behind it the outline of a small, wispy-haired man. “Less the value and more how it looks.”
“Meaning you don’t like the mask.”
“What is it?”
“Very old, for one thing, and as you guessed, very valuable. An homage to Greek mythology. It’s a faun. Feel free to look more closely.”
I did so, moving from case to case as I might have at an exhibition. Special lighting made each object glow as if from within. I imagined that at night, with the room dark aside from these bright, shimmering pools, this library took on the feel of a magnificent tomb buried far beneath a pyramid.
“You been collecting long?” I asked.
“Most of my adult life.”
“What made you start?”
There was a pause, suggesting I might have overstepped some boundary.
“Surely, this is not why you asked to see me.”
“Right. Actually, we’re investigating the death of a man found frozen on the mountain.”
“The fifty-year-old corpse,” said the shadowy outline.
I walked up to the desk, trailed by Sammie and the butler. The voice emerged as a thin, pale invalid, sitting in a wheelchair, vaguely reminiscent of Marcel Deschamps. “You heard about that?”
“I subscribe to the local paper, Mr. Gunther.”
Uninvited, I sat in one of the large armchairs facing the desk, enjoying the slight squeak and smell of leather that accompanied the move.
Roger Scott waved a hand at the man behind us. “Go, Robert.”
We all patiently waited until Robert had closed the doors behind him.
“He the only one working here?” I asked.
“I have others. He’s the only one that lives with me. Why do you ask?”
I looked around. “Big house, a lot to run. I just wondered.”
“Because I’m in a wheelchair? The house was built to accommodate that. It’s much more efficient than it looks.”
There was a hint of pride there I decided to exploit a little. “It is amazing, and filled with beautiful things. How long have you lived here?”
“I moved in forty-one years ago, although I’ve added on as my income allowed.”
“But you were in Stowe before then, right?”
The pale face smiled. “I have a feeling you already know the answer to that. I came here right after the war and built a house nearby-on the same acreage, in fact.”
“You’ve done very well for yourself.”
“Meaning, where did I get my money? I inherited it, Mr. Gunther, and then built on it through some fortunate real estate deals. What does any of this have to do with the frozen man?”
“We think you knew his son,” I said. “Antoine Deschamps. You fought together in Italy.”
I wasn’t sure what I’d been anticipating, but I didn’t expect the burst of laughter I received.
“We all fought together-in Montana, in Burlington, in the Aleutians, and in Italy. That was one of the hallmarks of our unit.”
“The First Special Service Force.”
“Yes. Back then, people used to confuse the name with the Special Services branch of the Army-basically the music bands. That was on purpose, to help keep us under wraps. But it wasn’t a mistake anyone made twice.”
“Rough outfit.”
“Energetic, yes. We were a throwaway group-a suicide battalion, if you want to get melodramatic. We felt we had nothing to lose by enjoying ourselves while we were still alive.”
“And your Colonel Frederick encouraged that attitude?”
“Ah, you’ve been doing your homework. Probably rented that movie, The Devil’s Brigade.”
“No.”
“Just as well. Typical mythology, although it captured our reputation for doing the impossible.”
“How was Antoine Deschamps at that?”
Roger Scott shook his head slowly for a moment. “Not yet. I want to ask you a couple of things first, given the courtesy I’ve just paid you. Why is any of this relevant to the investigation of a man found frozen to death out there, even if his son and I did fight in the same unit?”
“We think Jean Deschamps came to Stowe to meet you. Did he?”
“No. What did he want? Details about his boy’s death?”
“You know about that?”
“Not really. I have to admit, I may have been leading you on a bit. I didn’t actually know Antoine Deschamps-not well, at least. We were in different regiments. I heard he was killed outside of Rome. I didn’t see it, though. I wouldn’t have been of much use to his father.”
“How do you know that’s why he came here?” I asked.
“It’s what a parent would want to know. Did he suffer? Was he a hero? Did he have any last words? I was ignorant of all that. I could have told him his son was an abusive, foul-mouthed, skirt-chasing, self-serving thief and a liar, but then so was I and every other Force-man. It’s what Robert Frederick trained us to be.”
“Actually,” I tried again, “I haven’t been totally candid. Jean Deschamps thought Antoine was murdered in Italy, not killed in combat.”
Scott absorbed that thoughtfully. “Could be. It was known to happen.”
“Was there anyone who springs to mind in that context? Someone who hated Antoine enough to want him dead?”
“Not that I knew of. Passions could run high, of course, and every one of us had been taught to kill a dozen different ways. Rumors were that about half of us had been pulled out of prison to quote-unquote volunteer, although I suspect that’s part of the mythology again. Still, there were some fierce fights, and I always suspected not all our casualties were combat-related.”
I waved my hand at the room around us. “You don’t seem cut from that kind of cloth.”
“I had a wild streak, but you’re right. I wasn’t alone, though. There were a lot of pretty regular people mixed in-teachers, musicians, cowboys, you name it.”
“How ’bout someone named Charlie Webber?” I asked.
Scott’s face hardened. “He was no poet. Why do you mention him?”
“How do you know about him?” I asked instead. “He was in the same regiment as Antoine.”
“Some were better known than others. You have to understand-the Force hovered between fifteen hundred and two thousand men. That’s small by Army standards, but it’s still a large number. And the turnover was impressive.” He paused, thinking back. “After a while, getting to know people proved to be counterproductive.”
“But you knew Webber.”
He refocused on us. “Yes. Charlie Webber. Few people didn’t. He died, too. Should’ve been from a bullet in the back, delivered by one of us, but instead it was from natural causes, as we used to refer to combat deaths back then. The man was a psychopath, in my opinion. Is he the one you think killed Antoine?”
“We heard they’d had a falling out at Anzio but then later became best buddies, glued at the hip.”