Authors: J. Robert Janes
âYou wear no jewellery â¦' he hazarded, and she could see that the closeness of her was disturbing him in more ways than one.
âWhy don't you have a cigarette?' she asked softly. âIt will help, I think.'
Verdammt
! The girl was electric. âPlease just answer.'
He fidgeted. He looked her up and down and then fully met the frankness of her gaze. âDid Mireille wear lots of little things?' she asked.
He waited. She would have to tell him and would therefore be firm about it. âTo be complete, we should each have worn such things during every concert but you see, the Church, though its collections are very good, no longer possesses enough, and even the private collection of His Eminence Bishop Rivaille is â¦' She shrugged. âInsufficient. Mireille was a perfectionist, Inspector. That was a part of her problem. Always she would insist; always the
monseigneur
or César would say it just wasn't possible and she would “sigheth oh so gently, then ⦔'
âOkay, okay, I get the point. Bishop Rivaille was the source of the trinkets your
costumière
wore to her death.'
âThe rings and ⦠and other things but.' Again he would have to be told. âBut not all of them.'
Herr Kohler's sigh was one of exasperation and she could see that he was distressed at the thought of others having loaned Mireille things. âShe knew people who were well versed in the past, Inspector. Some she could count as friends; others still as enemies but only because of what had happened to her family during the Babylonian Captivity. Once tainted, always tainted, is this not so? And there are whispers even in a little place like Avignon and especially under
les Allemands
, though they do not encourage such things as whispers, do they?'
Merde
, but she was really something. âWould one of these other custodians of bric-a-brac have sat in judgement of her on Monday night?'
Herr Kohler's eyes had emptied themselves of all feeling. Suddenly she wanted to get up, to stretch her legs, but knew his knees were deliberately touching hers for just such a signal. âI really wouldn't know, Inspector. Mireille kept things to herself â that was a part of our problem with her. She had secrets she shared with no one, whereas we of the singers have none any more.'
âWhere were you on Monday night?'
âHere with the others. Ask any of them. All will tell you the same thing. We are our own alibi, Inspector, or had you not thought of this? Christiane will only echo my words, as she often does in part song.'
The cote-hardie was of an emerald green velvet whose sheen rippled softly as Christiane Bissert moved about her bedroom. The bodice was of white silk with gold piping and brocade, and was crisscrossed by lacing that extended from the belted slender waist to the gently curving neckline.
Beneath the cote-hardie, the gown was of burnt sienna with the faint imprints of halved pomegranates, and as with the victim, thought St-Cyr, jagged cuts from the hem upwards for about thirty centimetres revealed tantalizing triangular wedges of the gown.
With the raven curls and the dark, now uncertain eyes, the girl was an enigma. She had said so little since coming to her room it was as though, once its door had been closed behind her, she had lost all confidence and had become another person.
He said how lovely the room was.
âA fire? Would you like one?' she asked hesitantly.
The bed was that of a Provençal bride, its coverlet white and trimmed with white lace. A simple wooden crucifix was attached to the wall above the ornately carved headboard. A small, stiff leather suitcase lay under carefully folded slips, silk stockings and underwear. There were three perfume vials as well, and he wondered if she had just received the largesse.
âGina looks after us. Gina picks up,' she said, searching desperately for the right words. âThat suitcase is mine. She uses it to keep our laundry separate.'
And the perfume? he wanted to ask but let the matter rest â she could see him thinking this and cursed herself for not having put the things away and stuffed the suitcase under the bed.
On a round, marble-topped table by the windows, there was a vase of dried flowers and a half-empty bottle of Campari amid a clutter of books, some of which were still tied in their bundles.
He picked up the bottle, and with a sinking feeling in her heart, she knew he would miss nothing.
âCésar loves his apéritif. Would you like some?' she asked and saw those priest's eyes of his looking at her.
âThat would be nice,' he said. âPlease. Allow me.'
He gave her time. He let her take a sip to recall the cafe this morning. Then he said, âI understand his wife is an absinthe drinker.'
Ah
maudit
, Madame Emphoux, that bitch! âIt's only talk. Absinthe is no longer legal so how, please, could this be possible?'
Among the books were several of Simenon's train novels, inexpensive paperbacks, but also hardbound first editions of
Gone With the Wind
and
The Sun Also Rises
.
Her dressing table doubled as a writing desk, and on this, among the tidy clutter, were a Parker fountain pen with a verd antique finish, and monogrammed notepaper that didn't bear her initials.
Next to these items there was a beautifully engraved gold compact with the linked gold chain of the
belle époque
, complete with diamonds and the enamelled portrait of a reclining nude on a bed of flowers amid a deep blue background.
âTiffany and Company,' he said of the compact, completely ignoring the matter of the absinthe. â1900 or thereabouts. It even has a little compartment to hold a lady's dance cards.'
âI love it.'
âWhose was it, please?'
Ah damn him! âMy grandmother's.'
A lie. â
Bon
, so â¦' He tossed off his Campari and said, âA few small questions. Nothing difficult, I assure you.'
She, too, tossed off her drink, grimaced at its bitterness and, sitting on the edge of her bed, glanced briefly at the light of day and waited. âI'm ready, Inspector.'
She looked so fragile. A classic Midi beauty. âLet's begin with Xavier,' he said, coming to stand next to those same windows and to gaze out of them as she had.
âXavier?' she asked.
âHe was in Avignon well before dawn on Monday.'
Her voice must sound innocent of all wrongdoing and with just a touch of apprehension. âThe
monseigneur
sent the car for him, as ⦠as he does every year at the close of each harvest. The oil, the wine and olives â garlic, too, and honey. Many things are loaded into the car. Perhaps ⦠perhaps there wasn't room for Xavier and that ⦠that's why he came back early.'
Thérèse Godard had said as much, but would this one now begin to tell him the truth? wondered St-Cyr.
The Inspector had taken out his pipe and tobacco â he sensed that she was really apprehensive at this activity, for it signified hours of questions and that he had all the necessary time to spare.
âYou don't mind, do you?' he asked.
âNo. César doesn't wish us to smoke â the voice, you understand â but he doesn't prevent us from allowing others to do so in ⦠in our presence.'
âWhat time was her audition set for?'
âTen o'clock, I think.'
âWhy so late?'
âOther commitments, perhaps. Really, Inspector, I couldn't possibly know â none of us could. Bishop Rivaille dined with César and the Kommandant, and that one's wife. I ⦠Ah! Forgive me. That sounds as if we
did
know.'
She forced a faint smile he ignored. Damn him â¦
âWho, then, was the third judge? The Kommandant has told us he had refused.'
So
don't
try to suggest him â was that it? âWhy not ask César?'
âI'm asking you.'
âI really couldn't say.'
Her tone of voice had been desperate. âTry,' he breathed.
âMonsieur le Préfet or ⦠or Madame Simondi. Others, too. I ⦠I wouldn't know, Inspector.'
âWho let the victim into the Palais?'
Merde
, why must he be so difficult? âShe had a key. Didn't your partner find it when he discovered her things in the Latrines Pit?'
âWho told you he'd discovered anything there?'
âI â¦' She felt herself blanching, and swallowed hard. âI can't remember. Monsieur Biron, perhaps. Yes. Yes, it must have been him.'
The concierge. âWho gave her that key?'
âBrother Matthieu, I think. Yes ⦠Yes, I'm sure it was him.'
âTell me what you know of the boy Mademoiselle de Sinéty was in love with.'
Like the absinthe, he had abruptly left the matter of the key so as to unsettle her. âDédou? I hardly knew him. He ⦠he was of the age of the troubadors, I think. A throwback, you understand, and fiercely so. He was her mother's shepherd among ⦠among other things but ⦠but had joined the â¦'
Again her head was bowed, this time as if she'd known she had said too much and was truly shaken. âThe â¦?' he asked gently.
âThe
maquis
. Mireille always said he was very possessive of her and insanely jealous.'
A killer, then, was that it, eh? He scoffed inwardly but asked, âWould she have planned to meet him in the Palais after her audition?'
Now she must look up at him and her answer must come softly. âYes. Yes, she could well have planned this. Dédou, he ⦠he didn't want her to join our little group, nor did he like Bishop Rivaille's having arranged for her to live in this house with the rest of us. Marius is very handsome and ⦠and so is Guy.'
Two of the male singers.
The detective turned abruptly away from the windows and, walking over to her dressing table, sat down before its mirror to look at her reflection in it.
She met his gaze. He didn't ask more of Dédou. Instead he asked, âHave there been others who aspired to join your little group?'
âOthers since when?' she heard herself bleating.
âWithin the past year, perhaps.'
Ah no, how had he learned of it? âOne,' she said faintly.
âOnly one?'
âYes! She ⦠she didn't work out either.'
He removed his pipe and, searching for an ashtray, found none. âWhat happened to her, Mademoiselle Bissert?'
His tone of voice had been
très insistant
and he'd come to stand in front of her, looking down at the crown of her head. âI ⦠I don't know, Inspector.'
âLook at me when you say that.'
Ah
Jésus, sweet Jésus â¦
âShe died. She was â¦'
âMurdered?' he asked, dropping his voice.
Vehemently she shook her head. âShe drowned in the river. She couldn't swim.'
He waited. He forced her to gaze up at him through her tears and when he asked, âWhat colour was her hair?', she blanched and said, âHer hair? Why, please, do you ask?'
âJust tell me.'
âRed ⦠it was distinctly reddish. A ⦠a strawberry blonde.'
The men, the boys, were in the wardrobe room, unseen as yet among the maze of hanging cloaks and capes and headless mannequins that wore the brightly coloured costumes of six hundred years ago. Kohler could hear them softly calling out to him, presumably as they put away the clothes they had worn to change into others. Everything in the room Mireille de Sinéty had made and he couldn't help but note the sacrifice, her utter dedication to reawakening the past.
âYou took a
clochette
from Xavier,' said one.
âThat boy sleeps with the dogs,' said another.
âIs of the dogs.'
âHis voice departs.'
âOh futile love!'
âHe dreads its absence.'
âLongs for its return.'
âKisses the bishop's ring.'
âPrays for his life here with us.'
âWith us.'
âWith us.'
There was silence. And when Kohler found the shepherd boy's costume for that day, he knew Xavier wasn't present. Letting his fingers trail down over the shimmering sky blue of a satin cape that was edged with gold embroidery, he saw that there were six coal black cassocks nestled beside it. Any of them could have been worn to the Palais on the night of the murder, and so much for the clot of black wool Peretti had found in the victim's hair.
âA bird's nest was found,' sang out one of the three.
âHer locks were cut,' sang out another.
âHer boots cast down.'
âHer overcoat.'
âHer purse.'
âA key ⦠had she a key?'
âWho let her in?'
âA key.'
âA key.'
More silence followed, while softly now, the scent of musk, of clary sage and verbena came to him. Other things too ⦠Scents Louis could easily have identified, but Louis wasn't here. He was still upstairs with Christiane Bissert.
âExtreme Unction was called for,' sang out one â the bass.
âTwo sisters accompanied the corpse,' sang out another â the tenor.
âTo the morgue,' gave the baritone.
âShe was undressed.'
âHas no modesty now.'
âIs of the thorn.'
âA thorn was found.'
âThe thorn of Christ.'
âBut not the hair.'
âThe Virgin's hair.'
âThe hair.'
âThe hair â¦'
An unlaced bodice revealed an underdress whose rose-coloured silk was as of lingerie.
It was being fondled by fingers as calloused and sure as those of a fourteenth-century stonemason who had made mischief with the count's wife. The jet black hair was thick and wavy and fell to broad shoulders. The eyes were a dark olive brown, the gaze level.
âInspector, I'm Marius Spaggiari.'
âAnd I'm Norman Galiteau,' sang out another well to Kohler's left.
âI, Guy Rochon,' came from far to the right and still unseen.