Beekeeper (12 page)

Read Beekeeper Online

Authors: J. Robert Janes

BOOK: Beekeeper
6.73Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

‘Included her among them …? As a virgin queen? Well?'

‘Don't be an ass, Inspector. He knew very well she wasn't a bee.' ‘Even so, Father, I'm going to have to talk to those two again.'

‘Of course. It's understood. Now that the introductions are over, feel free to contact them whenever necessary. They'll answer you truthfully, or they'll answer to me.'

Parting at the church, Father Michel watched as the Sûreté, somewhat disgruntled, it had to be admitted, plodded up the steps into the driving snow. Had he been right, he wondered, to short-circuit things and open that door into a very private and tragic matter now seldom mentioned?

‘I had to do it,' swore Father Michel. ‘Otherwise that one and his partner would have looked elsewhere and this they must not do.'

More snow began to fall, and with the wind, it made life miserable, thought Kohler, wishing he'd driven over instead of leaving the Citroën in the place de la Bourse. But he'd wanted to come upon Herr Schlacht on the quiet.

Most people didn't look up as they hurried along. Bundled up in anything they could lay hand to these days, all pretence of fashion had long since vanished from the minds of everyday citizens. Even the boys in grey-green had given up on their seemingly endless window-shopping. And as for the
filles de joie
who had migrated from the vast emptiness Les Halles, the central market, had become, the girls were listless and frozen stiff.

Bicycle-taxis vied with one another and with the bicycles. Pedestrians took their lives into their hands at the white-studded crosswalks. At the corner of the rue Réaumur and the rue Montmartre, sandbags were being unloaded from two Wehrmacht lorries. Here, too, as elsewhere in the city, the air-raid shelters were being converted into bunkers and machine-gun nests.

Instinctively, Kohler flicked a glance down the rue Montmartre towards the central market to gauge the field of fire, was right back at the front in 1914 and '15. Bang on. These boys knew what they were doing and that could only mean the OKW – Old Shatter Hand and von Stülpnagel, the Military Governor – still feared an uprising once the defeat at Stalingrad was officially announced, as it would have to be.

Louis and he had seen such pillboxes before heading south to Avignon. Unsettled by the thought, he went on up the rue Montmartre searching for the smelter.

A big Renault was parked outside the café À La Chope du Croissant. No sign of its owner, nor would Herr Schlacht have wasted time in that cafe.

A nearby signboard, in flaking off-white paint, read:
Imprimerie.
Printers.

Pushing open the tall, wooden doors, he found himself in a rubbish-littered, ice-encased courtyard. Soot all over the place. Soot in these days of so little coal. Soot and iron bars on the windows. Were all the doors locked? he wondered. In one broken window the wind teased a peeling paper notice in German and in French:
Jüdisches Geschäft.
Jewish business. All were gone now. Gone since July of last year. But the smelter would have coexisted with the printers for as long as the years immediately after the Russian Revolution, when so many had fled to Paris.

The courtyard was narrow and at its far end it must take a bend to the right. Tattered handbills rattled around inside the printing shop, the presses as silent as a frozen tap that had burst its lead pipe.

Merde
, where was the place? The smell of burning charcoal was in the air, soda, too, and bone ash.

As he neared the bend, the soft roar of pot-furnaces came to him. A little farther on, he came to a window and, reaching between the bars, cleaned off a bit of the glass to peer inside.

Flames danced, coals glowed. Crucibles were held by two-metre-long iron tongs. Everyone wore goggles, most asbestos suits, gauntlets and toe-capped boots …

The smell of nitric acid reached him and of hydrochloric, too.
Aqua regia
, Louis would have said. A mixture of the two, Hermann. One part nitric acid, three to four of hydrochloric; the name from the Latin for Royal Water. Gold can be dissolved by it and then later extracted.

End of lecture. Louis was always coming up with things like that, but Louis wasn't here. And why
did
he feel he needed backup? Why the constant tingling in his spine?

Among the half-dozen or so grey-clad zombies with their hoods and goggles that made them look like naval gunners in the heat of battle, Herr Schlacht watched a pour. White-hot, the gold was being cast into wafers the size of calling cards. An assistant, to one side, was polishing those that had already cooled.

Schlacht, though hidden behind goggles and under a wide-brimmed felt trilby and tweed overcoat, had the stance, the look of a Berliner. Solid – maybe weighing as much as no kilos. A real
Bürgermeister
type. The face was round, fleshy and double-chinned, the forehead wide and blunt, the nose not unlike Louis's but no boxer, no such refinements – simply a pugilist come up from the streets. The lips were a little thin, but maybe that was because the stub of a cigar was clamped fiercely between his teeth.

Two Alsatians, guardians of the smelter, slept on the cooling firebricks of a nearby hearth.

The pour came to an end, the goggles were pushed up until they covered the forehead.
Ja, das ist gut
– Kohler could almost hear Schlacht saying it. Gold and candles … What the hell else was this little entrepreneur into?

Again the tingling in his spine came to him, again he thought to step back from the window and did so this time.

Frozen in its little cage beside the door opposite to the smelter, a dead canary watched him through hollow-eyed sockets. The hanging wire cage had been dented several times and often straightened to no effect.
Mein Gott
, why had someone left the poor creature out here to sing its heart away until no more?

There was a notice on the door.
Avertissement: Peine de mort contre les saboteurs.
Sentence of death against saboteurs.

For the acts of terrorism on 15 November, 3. and 16 December 1942 …

Father, brother, mother, sister, cousins, too – all had been taken, since that was the rule these days. But whereas the
résistant
would have been shot right away, the other men would be held as hostages, as
Sühnepersonen
– atoners – until needed in retribution for some other act by some other poor idiot whom they wouldn't even know. And goodbye to the rest of the family. They'd all have been deported.

Oberg had added these little twists to the ordinance. The Brigadeführer und Generalmajor Karl Albrecht Oberg, Höherer SS und Polizeiführer.

Judging by the custom-made wafers, Herr Schlacht could well have friends in. high places and that could well be von Schaumburg's greatest worry.

Stepping into the canary's abandoned building, Kohler prepared to wait and find out what he could. Louis would preach caution. Oberg was simply not a nice fellow and they'd already had too many run-ins with him.

Behind closed doors, through slightly parted curtains, the neighbours watched and held their collective breath, thought St-Cyr. Once on the Impasse de champ de parc de Charonne, the feeling was only more intense. Father Michel had orchestrated the whole interview, but why, really, had he seen fit to take him back to 1912 and the sister?

A parted curtain fell into place, another and another. Were the women of these houses afraid of what Hermann and he might discover and what their parish priest could well have initiated? Certainly a field for vegetables was one thing, the smashing of the hives and theft of the honey directly related to it, but did their guilt run deeper? And why, really, had Josiane always, it seemed, to play the part of a witness?

All of these former villages, once suburbs, had had their gangs of toughs. As a boy, he had had to defy that natural fear of all such boys when venturing into the territory of others. And in the summer of 1912, as today, de Bonnevies, no matter his penchant for taking a drink in the neighbourhood café or visiting the local house, would still have been classed as an
original.
Had the sister been picked on because of it? Had she not been alone in the Père Lachaise at all but with a friend – a witness who had hidden in terror, only to later confess to her mother the names of those who had raped the girl?

Father Michel might always have suspected this and now could not fail to see a connection between the murder and the rape, or had he deliberately begun by almost accusing Juliette de Bonnevies and then used the past to distract the investigation so as to hide something else?

‘I don't quite trust him,' said St-Cyr to himself. ‘I can't afford to, not yet.'

Knowing that he had best talk to Josiane and her sister before the priest got to them again, he retraced his steps. Father Michel had made no mention of the Caucasian bees de Bonnevies had been examining, none whatsoever of the address to which the beekeeper had been making last-minute revisions. Either he hadn't known of these, or had simply chosen not to discuss them.

At the rue de Bagnolet, St-Cyr crossed over and, once beyond the parish church and heading down the rue Saint-Blaise past the café to a side street, was right back in his days on the patrol.

Like all such houses,
Le Chat qui crie
had no need to announce its presence to the rue Florian or to this Sûreté. But like them all, there was intermittent traffic, the steps either hesitant or dogged, and then, of course, the absolute ease of entry. Swift and secure, and no one the wiser, perhaps.

The Charonne métro station was just behind the house and perfect for those who liked to travel from another quartier for their little moments, but had it been closed to save on the electricity? Rapidly he counted off every second station, concluding that it must still be open.

Between the glass and the lace curtain of the door to the house, a small card stated simply:
Entrer.

‘Monsieur, what can the house do for you?'

Sûreté had registered in the sixty-year-old madam's eyes. Instant suspicion, total defiance. Outrage, even. So
bon
!
Oui, oui
! He'd heard it all before, and many times. ‘Josiane and Georgette, madame, and hurry.' He snapped his fingers. ‘A few small questions, nothing difficult unless, of course, you feel I had best call in a little help.'

Bâtard
! she silently cursed, tossing her head in a huff and saying tartly, ‘You may sit with the girls or wait here.'

‘Here will suit perfectly.'

He was already thumbing through her accounts ledger. There were no names of the clients there for him to peruse, only those of the girls, but once her back was turned, he would put the lock on the door and then what? she demanded.

St-Cyr … wasn't it St-Cyr those two had said?

She let a breath escape and murmured to herself. ‘The ave' Ménilmontant. The house at number six.' And now? she wondered. Why now it must be more than thirty years since that house had been raided. Would he have remembered her from among those who'd been swept into the
panier à salade
– the salad basket – the Black Maria?

Deciding that their brief encounter of today was more than sufficient to last her for the rest of her life, Madame Thibodeau hurried into the waiting room to hush the whispers.

‘Josiane and Georgette, that parasite from the Sûreté wishes to prolong his moment at the expense of the house. Take him up to the graveyard. Strip if you wish, but watch out with him. He's a bloodsucker.'

‘It's freezing up there. It's always so cold,' lamented Georgette.

‘Cold or not,
ma petite
, it is exactly what you will do. Now go. Hurry.
Hurry
! Then get him out of here!'

No cat would venture down the courtyard to the smelter, no rat either, thought Kohler, for here they'd all been trapped and eaten. He was certain of it, was damned cold and tired of waiting in the building across the way. But at last Herr Schlacht left the smelter. Seen briefly through the grime of a broken, iron-barred window, the Berliner appeared even more of a pugilist, very sure of himself and satisfied with the latest of the day's efforts. Business was booming, and all that really mattered to one such as this was business.

The chubby chin wore its midday shadow, not brown, not blue-black but something in between; the collar of the beige tweed, herringbone overcoat was tightly buttoned up under it. Pausing to relight the cigar stub, Schlacht then collected the shiny black attache case he had set on the paving stones at his feet. A man in his mid-fifties with beautifully polished, alligator-leather shoes – Italian? wondered Kohler. The case was hefted, the grey eyes passing swiftly over the window to come to rest on the canary in its cage.

Crossing the courtyard, Schlacht looked up at it through narrowed eyes and said, ‘
Meine Liebling
, are you cold? As cold as those who put you in your cage? Forgive me but I had to send them away. They were taking too much notice of things and I couldn't have that.'

Berliners, like Parisians, loved their birds, and this one, by his accent, was solidly of the Luisenstädter Kanal. Scrap metals, Kohler reminded himself. And, no doubt, crowded tenements near the Schlesischer Bahnhof in the Fiftieth Precinct.

‘The charge was over nothing,
meine Liebling.
A mere mistake on my part, but …' Schlacht savoured his cigar as if searching for the right words. ‘But these days, little one, such mistakes once made cannot be retracted and unfortunately seem always to lead to far-reaching consequences. You should have warned them to move, or at least to take no notice of my comings and goings.'

He was gone then. Too soon he had reached the bend in the courtyard and had passed from view.

As Kohler stepped from the building, he realized Schlacht had seen his footprints in the snow. Louis, he said silently. Louis, I think we've got a problem.

The room with the gravestone was in the attic of the brothel. Like all such
maisons de tolérance
, the house catered to the special needs of as many of its regulars as possible. But here …

Other books

Cold Skin by Steven Herrick
The God Engines by John Scalzi
Pig's Foot by Carlos Acosta
Laney by Joann I. Martin Sowles
Above Suspicion by Helen Macinnes
Little Bones by Janette Jenkins
New Title 1 by Dee, Bonnie
Then You Happened by Sandi Lynn