“Stay here and give these to the rector when he comes. Do not put them down or give them to anyone else. Tell the rector to keep them wrapped. Frère Brunet will tell him the rest. Then wash your hands. Thoroughly. With soap. I’m going to see Mme LeClerc. I’ll be back as soon as I can.”
Leaving Fabre holding the package at arm’s length as though it might explode, Charles went to the street passage. The porter got up from his stool.
“Frère Martin,” Charles greeted him, “tell me again about whoever brought the gaufres.”
“I told it all to the boy. Poor cabbage, you’d think he’d never seen death.” Martin repeated his story, but it wasn’t quite the story Fabre had told. Martin was certain that the person under the mourning veil was a woman. Small, he said, and by the voice, young.
“Little hands, maître. Gloved. Hot weather for that, but carrying poison, that explains it.”
“Who else has come and gone in the last hour or so? Professors, students? They may have seen something, if I can find them.”
The porter shook his head. “No one at all. Did young rooster head tell you those gaufres maybe came from next door? Little Marie-Ange brought me one yesterday. But it wasn’t poisoned, as you see!” He laughed heartily as he opened the postern for Charles.
Life, Charles thought sourly, was much less harrying for the unimaginative . To his relief, the bakery door stood open, no doubt to let out the strong smell of burned pastry that met his nose. Mme LeClerc, arranging cream cakes behind the counter, whirled when she heard him and her hard, unwelcoming expression stopped him in the doorway.
“Oh, it’s you,” she said, with a relieved smile. “But you should still be resting, maître!”
He managed a smile. “I’m well enough. Forgive me for startling you, madame.” His eyes went toward the back of the shop, where he heard Pernelle’s voice.
“Yes, maître, she is there, helping clean up our ass-brained apprentice’s mess. Roger would insist on letting him practice pastry on Sunday. Are you come to see your lady?”
“One small moment. Madame, did you sell gaufres yesterday to a woman in a mourning veil?”
“I did not. Why?” She finished arranging the cakes on their wooden tray and stepped back to look critically at them, her head on one side.
“But you did make gaufres?”
She looked up. “How did you know?”
Not wanting to get Marie-Ange in trouble, Charles didn’t reply. Instead he said, “We’ve had another tragedy in the college. Someone left poisoned gaufres for Antoine.”
“Mon Dieu!” She pressed both hands to her mouth. “Is he—?”
“He didn’t eat them, madame, he’s well. Sadly, however, his tutor did. And died.”
“St. Benedict protect us! As I hope for salvation, maître, I never poisoned any gaufres!”
“Calm yourself, madame, I never thought you did. But I wondered if someone might have bought them here and then poisoned them.”
“Poison?” Marie-Ange burst out of the workroom, towing Pernelle behind her. “Who is poisoned?”
“Marie-Ange, no, I told you to keep mademoiselle out of sight!” Madame flapped her apron at them and Pernelle stopped, smiling at Charles. Marie-Ange ran to him and pulled anxiously at his sleeve.
“Is it Antoine, maître?”
“Not Antoine, his tutor,” Charles said. “Antoine is fine.”
The little girl’s worried frown relaxed. Pernelle ignored Mme LeClerc’s clucking and walked quickly down the shop to him.
“More murder? You look terrible, Charles.”
“More murder, yes.” But he was smiling. The shadows under her eyes were gone and the pink in her cheeks contrasted prettily with the shabby gray kirtle and bodice she wore, which were clearly Mme LeClerc’s. A flour-dusted apron bunched the wide gown in thick folds around her waist, and the skirt barely covered her white-stockinged calves.
“Veiled, you said, maître?” The baker’s wife was frowning and staring at nothing. “I did see a woman in mourning pass by today.”
“When? Are you sure it was a woman?”
“An hour or two ago. I assumed it was a woman. But those mourning veils hide most everything, don’t they?” She shook her head scornfully. “Those veils! If you’re so much in mourning you don’t even want to see where you’re going, then why be out in the street? Why not stay home with the shutters closed and black bed hangings and all? Unless you just don’t want to live anymore and you’re trying to get run over, sin though that would be, though it’s so easy to be hurt in traffic, it’s hardly fair to count it as sin. But losing loved ones takes us all different ways, I suppose. Still, in that flaunting petticoat of hers, she can’t have been all that deeply mourning, now can she?”
“Was the woman you saw carrying anything?” Charles asked, not daring to look at Pernelle, who was openly laughing at Mme LeClerc’s observations.
Before Mme LeClerc could answer, someone coughed politely and they all turned toward the street door. A solidly built man in brown breeches and jacket stood there. He was smiling at them, but most of his smile was landing on Pernelle, who caught Marie-Ange by the hand and disappeared into the workroom. Mme LeClerc moved briskly around the counter. Taking his cue from her hurry, Charles smiled affably and stood between the man and the back of the shop. The newcomer was wigless. His hair only reached the nape of his neck and he wore both a sword and a pistol on his thick leather belt. Everything about him said police.
“Monsieur? Back again?” Mme LeClerc said sharply, demanding the man’s attention. “I told you before that we are not open.”
“You did, madame,” he said, with an easy smile. “But if you sold me a little cream cake, I think no one would know.” He nodded toward the workroom door. “For not being open, you have a lot of help today. From far away, as I could tell from the young woman’s voice when you gave me that magnificent brioche a while ago.”
Charles tensed. So much for La Reynie’s lack of interest in the Provençal-speaking fugitive in the beggars’ Louvre, damn the man. His flies there must have told him she had left. Of course he would start searching at the college door. Charles moved closer to the man.
“I always have plenty of help,” Mme LeClerc said tartly. “And my niece will not thank you for calling her a foreigner.” She waved away the man’s sous and handed him a cake. “Adieu, monsieur .” A pointed “good-bye” instead of the shopkeeper’s hopeful “see you soon.” She walked purposefully out from behind the counter and toward the street, forcing him backward. As he went, he studied Charles as though memorizing him. Then the man dodged among carriages and riders to lean against the bookshop wall across the street, nibbling at the cake and watching the bakery through the traffic.
“Police,” Mme LeClerc said flatly, slamming the door and shaking her head. “He keeps trying to see Mademoiselle Pernelle.”
“And you let her speak to him?” Charles demanded.
“Of course not!” She dropped the bar across the door. “I should have barred the door before, but I thought that would only convince him we had something to hide. When he walked in the first time, I had just called out to the back room that I wanted the work table scrubbed and she was answering me. The man’s master had been here earlier.”
“What? Lieutenant-Général La Reynie?”
“Himself. Pretending he was only making sure we were not selling when we shouldn’t. Your Pernelle was in here helping me scrub these counters. And since then, his man”—she glanced pointedly across the street—“has been making me nervous as a wet hen. I don’t like it. I’m sure she’s done nothing that’s police business, nor you, either!”