Authors: J. Robert Janes
âAll right, he has one too.'
âGood. Now tell me a little about our victim.'
âThere isn't much to tell. She made the costumes as well as doing sewing for others. Right from when she started working for Maître Simondi, and it's some years now, I think she had it in mind to join the singers, but theirs is a tight little group, you understand. They're very possessive of their positions and guard them well. Jealous of one another, oh
bien sûr
, but fiercely united too. Simondi is very particular who he lets in and they know this and govern themselves accordingly. She had a very high voice, clear and sweet, but the Italians are fussy when it comes to Monteverdi and others of their composers, and the six-part singing places terrible demands on its participators, or so I am often told.'
âSix parts.'
âThree young men, two girls, and the boy, Xavier. Mademoiselle Mireille would fill in when the soprano or the shepherd boy was ill or away. She could also play the lute beautifully and sometimes was allowed to accompany them.'
âAnd Brother Matthieu ⦠does he have any part in looking after the group?'
Biron's head was tossed as if struck.
âHim? Why should he have?'
âI'm simply asking.'
âThen the answer is he has
nothing
to do with the singers. Hah! He sings his own tune and makes a big noise of it, but he ran, you know. His God deserted him on the battlefield and ever since then he has been trying to find Him.'
âAnd the shepherd boy?'
âXavier is trouble, but has a voice that enraptures the bishop.'
âJust like our victim's.'
Biron fussed with the lantern. He clucked his tongue and muttered impatiently, âI really wouldn't know, Inspector. The grenade left me deaf in one ear.'
And blinded in that eye. âCome on. Let's take a little walk. Show me through the palace. I want to get the feel of it.'
As she must have had â was this what the detective was implying? âWhat are you looking for, Inspector?'
âReasons as to why she was here at that hour and obviously not alone.'
The morgue was across town, near the Porte Saint-Lazare, deep in the cellars of the hospital and adjacent to ramparts that had been built in the fourteenth century. It wasn't pleasant, thought St-Cyr. Hearing that the exemption for students was soon to be annulled and that all Frenchmen born between 1 January 1912 and 31 December 1921 would have to register for the
Service de Travail Obligatoire
â the forced labour in Germany â medical students had spent the night dissecting corpses to fulfil assignments before they escaped to join a
maquis
or resigned themselves to fate. Preservative jars yet to be removed held every imaginable organ. The younger of the sisters vomited repeatedly into a deep stone basin which had, unfortunately, been used for other things.
âSister Marie-Madeleine, I really must insist. Please get a hold of yourself!' scolded the elder of the two.
âI can't! Sister, what is this place? Hades?'
âNow listen, she's dead, do you understand?
Dead
. Take two deep breaths and hold them until your stomach settles.'
âSister Agnés â¦' hazarded St-Cyr.
âWell, what is it?'
âWhy not take her upstairs? A tisane of linden blossoms or of camomile?'
The Chief Inspector was simply trying to get rid of them. âThat is impossible. The Holy Father told us to remain with the child.'
Could nothing turn her stomach or her mind? âBut surely not when Coroner Peretti cuts into her?'
âCuts? But ⦠but why should he do such a thing?'
âThe stomach contents, Sister. The large intestine. What she last ate and drank. Such things can tell us much.'
In tears, Sister Marie-Madeleine rushed to the nearest drain to empty whatever remained in her own stomach. Wrenching on the tap, she splashed her face. Pale and shaking, she turned to confront them but steadied herself against the stone pallet. âSister, you're used to the slaughterhouse but me ⦠Mireille was
not
an animal!'
She wept. She clenched her fists in rage at herself, and begged the sister to release her from her duty.
Finely boned, her face thin, the large dark brown eyes revealing the depths of her despair, she was only twenty-one, if that, thought St-Cyr. The elder sister, in her mid-sixties, stepped up to her charge and let her have it across the face, once, twice and â¦
â
Doucement
!' he exclaimed. Now just a moment.
The last slap resounded. It knocked the tears from the young one, causing her to grip her cheek. âForgive me,' she blurted. âI needed that, didn't I, Sister?'
They faced each other, these two who were married to God. Her dark eyes livid, the older sister's jowls quivered at the retort. An attendant in a filthy, bloodstained smock snickered joyously through the silence from across the room.
âShe has nerves of steel,' said the younger one bitterly.
âSister Agnés, let's all go upstairs,' cautioned St-Cyr. âNo one will touch the body, but if you wish, I'll have the attendant put her into one of the lockers and will personally present you with the key.'
Touché
, was that it? wondered Sister Agnes, folding her arms across her ample bosom and drawing herself up. âLeave if you wish. For myself, I will remain and so will she.'
The bare hands with their bony knuckles were thickly calloused and raw from constant work in the kitchens and fields.
âVery well,' sighed St-Cyr. âPerhaps you would be good enough to tell me what you know of the victim.'
It was Sister Marie-Madeleine who, finding an inner strength that was admirable, answered, âShe was of the lesser nobility from the provinces â what the Parisian nobility used to derogatively call
les hobereaux
after the little falcon that is satisfied with small prey â but her family had fallen on hard times.'
âWhen?'
A fleeting smile revealed the stomach, not the grief, had been conquered. âSix hundred years ago. De Sinéty was a name to be proud of in the Avignon of those days, Inspector, but there were some who were jealous of such wealth and position and took steps to remove it.'
âThe girl was from the hills,' spat the older nun.
âShe was
not
, Sister, and you know it. She was very well brought up and, as a result, was an elegant seamstress who could work wonders with very little. Oh
bien
sür her mother fell on hard times and had to move out to a
mas
to try to eke out an existence by buying a flock of sheep others would then have to tend, but Mireille ⦠She came to live and work in Avignon, Inspector, for Maître Simondi, and took home every sou she could.'
âAnd this farmhouse and farm, where are they?' he asked.
âIn the hills behind Saint-Michel-de-Frigolet,' said Sister Agnes, glaring defiantly at her companion who gazed right back at her with the sympathy of one who was trying to understand and to forgive such venom.
âFifteen or so kilometres to the south of Avignon, Inspector,' said Sister Marie-Madeleine. âMireille lived here in the Balance Quartier which is just below the Palais.'
âA place of slums and gypsy hovels,' seethed the older nun.
âRooms of her own, Sister,' entreated the younger of them, âwhose rent was paid each week and always on time.'
âYou know it was sinful of her to live in that house. You know the Holy Father wanted her to move out of that
quartier
and had arranged far better lodgings.'
âBut she had refused his offer?' hazarded the Sûreté, startling them both and causing the younger one to blurt, âForgive me, Sister,' and to silence her tongue.
âThere are no more gypsies. It's all over with those people,' said Sister Agnès. âThey've been sent away just like the Jews.'
To camps in Eastern Europe and in the Reich, said St-Cyr sadly to himself, he, too, falling into silence but adding, Hermann, I don't like this. The younger one knows too much, and the older one is now only too aware of it and will be certain to inform the bishop.
Kohler let the concierge continue ahead of him. They were upstairs again, on the first floor, and had passed through and beyond the room where the girl had been killed. The chamber they were now in, the Grand Tinel, was huge. Light from the still-smoking lantern made a feeble pool about Biron but seldom touched the walls and not the vault of the ceiling above.
âWhat is it?' asked the concierge uneasily as he sensed he was no longer being followed and turned to look back.
âJust keep going. Don't stop until you get to the end.'
âA fire here in 1413 destroyed the magnificent frescoes with which Giovanetti decorated the walls. The ceiling also.'
âI'm not interested in the past, not yet.'
Had the detective cared nothing for the palace's history he'd been given? Nothing for the painstaking details of the restorations whose work had ceased because of the Occupation? âWe are now once again in the “old palace” Inspector. By “old” I mean the Palais of Bénédict the Twelfth, which was built between 1334 and 1342 and well illustrates the austerity of the Cistercians, whereas in the “new palace” there are the pointed arches of the Renaissance Gothic, the splendid frescoes and magnificence of Clément the Sixth, who was a Bénédictine and therefore far more worldly.'
âHe built his palace on to the other one between 1342 and 1352. Keep talking.'
Their voices easily filled the hall â superb acoustics, an ideal setting for a concert ⦠The grey overcoat and black beret of the
grand mutilé
receded, the concierge lopsidedly rocking as his weight fell on the prosthesis that had replaced his right fore-leg.
When he reached a canopied fireplace at the far end of the hall, Biron, dwarfed by the size of the room, held the lantern above himself as he turned to face the Inspector who had remained at the other end. âIt is forty-eight metres long by ten and a quarter wide but is not nearly so wide as
la chambre de la grande audience.
'
The Great Audience Chamber was on the ground floor of the new palace, recalled Kohler, and, to let Biron know he'd been paying attention, said, âThat one's length is about the same as this but the width is nearly fifty-two metres and it has fantastic arches in the ceiling. Can you sing?'
âWith the voice of an
étourneau?
' A starling. âInspector, what is it you really want of me?'
âAnswers,
mon fin
. Answers.'
It would have to be said. âThe madrigal singers use this chamber as their practice hall.'
âFor auditions too?' hazarded Kohler, the rich baritone of his voice filling the hall and startling the concierge who uneasily muttered, âThose also but ⦠but none was scheduled. I would have been informed.'
âSo she wasn't here to audition and yet was dressed like that?'
No answer was forthcoming. âWho judges the auditions?'
Biron hesitated. âThe singing master, Monsieur Simondi and â¦'
âThe bishop?'
âYes.'
âWho else?'
Ah
merde alors
! âOne other. Always there are three, and always the third person's identity is kept secret so as to make the audition entirely fair.'
âKept secret by whom?'
âThe bishop and Monsieur Simondi. Well before each audition they always discuss this and then ⦠then agree upon who to ask.'
âIf she
had
come here for an audition â¦'
âShe couldn't have.'
âBut if she had â¦'
âShe
didn't
! I'm always informed of them beforehand. The candles, the black-out curtains over the windows, the chairs â¦'
Finally they were getting somewhere. âWhere would the chairs have been placed?'
Must the Inspector pry into everything? âTwo metres from the wall nearest yourself. The singer then enters from the doorway in the far left corner here behind me and comes to stand an equal distance from this wall. Here the floor is marked with a cross for just such a purpose.'
She'd have been all keyed up. âWould she have recognized the third judge if there had been an audition?'
Biron gave an exasperated sigh. âAvignon is a large town, Inspector. Some who fled here during the Defeat have been allowed to remain. The contestant might realize the judge was new to us citizens but wouldn't likely know who he was.'
âOr her â could it have been a woman?'
Ah damn this one and his questions! âSometimes but ⦠but not often and then only after a first refusal.'
âStay there. I might need you to.' Switching on his torch, Kohler shone it along the wall but, search as he did, he couldn't find the chairs.
âInspector, they are kept in the stairwell to my right. This area by the fireplace was once a pantry and separated from the hall to hide the
dressoir
upon which the Pontiff's meals, brought from the Kitchens Tower to my left, were placed so that after rewarming them at the fire, they could be properly served on the finest pewter and then taken to his table and to those of his distinguished guests, the lords and ladies of the â¦'
âJa,
ja
, skip the details, will you?' Was Biron always such a windbag? If so, it was no wonder the troops threw stones at the statues and yelled their lungs out during his guided tours. âGet the chairs. Bring them out here and set them up.'
âOf course. But please forgive the wounds I received at the hand of my own grenade. They will cause me to drag the chairs across the floor.'
Kohler let him be and shone his torch up over the outer wall. There were windows inset into tall, arched alcoves. The leaded glass wore the Occupation's coat of laundry blueing. Heavy black curtains had been installed but had been flung open here and there, the irregularity of their openings causing him to wonder if the girl had waited in any of the alcoves, listening for the slightest sound. Ah yes, after the rustling of her skirts had first been silenced and the sounds of the tiny silver bells, the trinkets, the scissors and the coins had been finally quietened by her.