Authors: J. Robert Janes
Dear Jesus, save him. The needle was gripped like a stiletto of the streets and all around them the tiles were popping and sloughing, but he could not hear them sliding down the roof and wondered at this. The noise was too great. It was far too hot ⦠too hot. Light danced over her face, sharpening the hatred in her eyes. Shadows ⦠there were shadows.
He wet his lips in fear. He really did not know what to do.
â
Louis ⦠Louis, catch hold of the ladder
.'
âHermann ⦠Hermann â¦
Sister, please, if you love God, drop that thing and come with me!
'
She lunged. He leapt back, slipped, went down hard on to his knees, looked up in pain and defeat, tried to see her through his tears. Smoke was billowing. Glowing bits of ash were funnelling between them. He ducked. He tried to shield himself, but the wind was blowing too hard, the snow was blinding. Meltwater and sweat stung his eyes and clung to his face.
Out of the blizzard she came at him. He grabbed the hand that held the knitting needle. He tried to stop it but seemed to have no strength. Ah,
nom de Jésus-Christ!
her wrist ⦠he
must
grab her by the wrist and bend it back ⦠back.
There was a snap, a shriek as the needle fell. Then he heard her voice, heard the strangeness of it as she cried out in anguish, â
Please, God, forgive my Violette!
'
Kohler caught her by an ankle. For a moment he had a glimpse of her hatred, haunted by tragedy, gaunt and raw, streetwise and ever-watchful. Then she bent down, took him by the hair and put her lips close to his ear. âViolette is innocent. Please allow her to go to Provence, to her little farm, but not with her priest. Never with that one.'
Ah
merde
⦠âLouis â¦' he managed. â
L ⦠o ⦠u ⦠i ⦠s!
â
Don't let go of her!
'
The wind came. It blew the flames up over the roof in bil lowing smoke and sparks. Tiles fell. Tiles slipped and popped and cracked. A hand gripped him by the wrist. An arm was swiftly wrapped around his own. A last glimpse revealed her perched up there, making her way steadfastly towards the conflagration at one end of the roof. For a moment she was engulfed, a dervish. Her screams, her cries were lost.
Somehow they made it to the ground, somehow they got clear before the roof finally collapsed in a rush of fire. Bathed in that terrible light, they searched but saw only the flames.
âLouis â¦'
âYes, what is it?'
âThe child. She's been takenâdragged away. Look, I'm sorry. I ⦠I had no choice but to go after you.'
The birds were everywhere in the aviary and the smells of their feathers and their dung were heavy in the warm air. Madly the things flew about in the darkness, shrieking, chirping, giving their raucous jungle-cries or singing.
Softly Kohler eased the door shut behind him. Violette Belanger had been sitting on the floor near one of the stoves. There were aisles and aisles of cages, and she must have opened every one of them.
Taking out his torch, he shook it and tried to bring it to life. âLouis, where's yours?' he breathed, a whisper.
âIncapacitated.'
â
Verdammt!
'
âNo guns, Hermann. He'll have the child. Nénette will be his ticket to freedom.'
âOr the end of him.'
They began to feel their way forward. Cages to the left and to the right. Birds perched up there or swooping down. Birds screaming in fright, colliding in bursts of feathers and broken wings.
One flopped desperately on the floor. St-Cyr felt for it. Poor thing, he said silently. A finch, he thought.
Knowing he could not let it suffer, he twisted its neck, then gently tucked it away in a pocket. Are we to find that the child has also been killed? he asked himself. Is it to be from a cage of doves to this?
Aisles branched. Touching him on a shoulder, Kohler indicated Louis should take the left one, himself the right, and when he neared the stove, the smell of burning human hair came through the bird-stench and he said, Not her ⦠not her. Please don't let it be her.
The child â¦
The parrot was dead and, in the soft light seeping from around the firebox door, he could see it lying between Violette's breasts, the soft mounds on either side of it, her hand still clutching it.
Blood trickled from the right corner of her lips. Scratches marred her breasts.
The hole in the middle of her forehead was clean and round, a nine millimetre, he thought. She had been crying, had killed the little parrot, and had looked up into the eyes of her priest a last time.
Vomit rose into his throat. He couldn't stand the sight of her. He â¦
Gently Louis took hold of him. âTurn away. Leave this to me.' And opening the firebox door for a little light, he cast his eyes swiftly over her, the cinematographer within him willing himself to record what he could before he closed her eyes and pulled her away from the stove.
He covered her bare knees by tidying her pleated skirt. He laid her other hand over the parrot. It would have to do for now. Raw ⦠the skin had been pulled from the palm of that hand. Was it years since the death of Madame Morelle and this one's flight across the roofs?
âOpen the firebox door a little more,' breathed Kohler.
âFire,' came the whispered warning.
â
Do it!
Stay here. Let me find him.'
âNo guns.'
âHe's got one, idiot!'
âThen I will close the door.'
They moved away. They knew Debauve must be in the aviary with the child. Had he killed her, too?
Did he now realize it was too late for him?
The SS of the avenue Foch had allowed Debauve a pistol. Were they hoping he'd put an end to this partnership and wipe the slate clean? wondered St-Cyr.
Kohler went down another aisle. The place was like a maze. Cages upon cages. Birds everywhere â¦
One flew into his face. He pulled it away, cried out, â
Louis! Verdammt!
Ah
merde
, the thing has claws.'
He wiped his face, felt blood and torn skin. He tried to calm the creature but it was frantic.
âThat's far enough.'
Ah
Gott im Himmel
, the bastard had the muzzle of a Lugerâwas it a Luger?âjammed against the right side of his head.
âDon't move,' said Debauve.
âOf course not.'
âTell the other one to call out to you.'
âWhere's the child?'
â
Do it!
'
The bird didn't like being held. âLouis ⦠Louis, if you're still here, he's got me.'
â
Louder!
'
âLOUIS, THE SON OF A BITCH HAS ME!'
Swiftly Kohler pivoted, ducked and thrust the thing into the bastard's face. There was a flash of fire, a bang so loud his ears rang. Debauve fell back. He fired again and again, screamed once, twice, and fired once more. Ah no â¦
The birds flew madly about. Their sounds filled the air. On the rush of their wings there was a sigh, a â
Pater noster qui es in caelis
â¦'
â
Sanctificetur nomen tuum, adveniat regnum tuum: fiat voluntas tua, sicut in caelo, et in terra
,' breathed Louis, releasing Debauve's gun hand, the priest's accidental
coup de grâce
. âAre you all right,
mon vieux?
'
â
Ja
â¦
Ja
, I'm okay. Ah
nom de Jésus-Christ
, Louis, tell me the kid is alive.'
They opened every firebox door, and in the soft, soft light, the birds of colour flew about, casting their shadows and emitting their noises.
She was lying between cages, lying just as her little friend had. The padded overcoat had been torn open. Her arms had been flung back. One white woollen kneesock had lost its elastic and was badly in need of mending and a wash. Her seal skin boots were turned in a little at the toes. Her legs were slackly spread.
Debauve had made the killing look as if Céline had done it.
âLouis â¦'
âLeave this. Go outside if you have to.'
â
No!
'
It was a cry. Hermann tried to get past him.
She stirred. Her eyelids fluttered.
âAlive, I think,' said Louis. And then â¦
âIs it over? He ⦠he smothered me. I.⦠I couldn't breath.'
âIt is not quite over. There are still one or two small details best kept for another time.'
âThe lion, Louis.'
âYes, yes, the lion.'
The Tarot cards were down, the Ace of Swords was last. The hand that laid it on the gilded Louis XIV table paused to smooth it out and touch the upraised sword whose point was encircled by a golden crown.
âA tragedy,' sighed St-Cyr. âA toy giraffe â¦'
He put it on the table in front of the Ace of Swords. âA murder so different from the others.'
âI didn't tell Julien to do it.
I didn't!
' swore Madame Vernet, colouring quickly and clenching her fists only to release them when others noticed.
They were gathered in the
grand salon
of the villa. The afternoon's rare sunshine melted yesterday's rare snow. Soon there would be freezing rain. âYou did, madame. You saw in your niece's search for the Sandman a way of getting rid of her. But the girls used those same bits and pieces to trap you.'
âBernadette, admit you're guilty. Be brave. Distinguish yourself.'
âAntoine, don't be a fool. I'm pregnant, yes? There isn't a court in the country that will send me to the guillotine until the child cries and the cord is cut. You have months of me yet. Please think of the scandal.'
Vernet was not happy. General von Schaumburg sat bolt upright on the edge of his chair, a monocle clamped fiercely to his right eye.
Kohler pitied them. For all his visits of inspection to the Wehrmacht's brothels, Old Shatter Hand was a prude. Infidelity ranked very high among his most despised sins.
âYou said to Monsieur Julien that he must kill me, madame. I heard you,' said the child earnestly. âYou were in the folly together. I ⦠I was up on the balcony making plans to escape and live the life of a brigand. You ⦠you were standing right below me in the dark. Pompom was peeing against a table leg.'
â
When?
'
Startled, the child flinched. âIn the third week of December. On a Sunday night. Uncle ⦠Uncle, he was away on business in Clermont-Ferrand, I think.' She pointed at Vernet. âYour ⦠your lover Julien didn't want to kill me, but you ⦠you made him say he would. You slapped his face. You saidâ'
âI did no such thing! This isâ'
â
Bernadette
, let the child finish. Is it not enough to have killed her little friend and Liline? What more do you want?'
âTears â¦? You who are so cruel, are shedding tears, Antoine? Hah! Drink them, then. You will get nothing from me.'
The child could not look up. âYou ⦠you said his name would appear on the lists of those to be sent to Germany to work, madame,' she whispered. âYou said he probably wouldn't come back and that ⦠that only you could see that this did not happen.'
At a nod from Louis, Rébé was brought in to stand in leg irons and handcuffs, ashamed, afraid and in tears himself. âA former bicycle thief, a gigolo, General,' said Kohler softly.
âBoy, state the truth, then take your choice of the bullet or the rope.'
Rébé's knees buckled under him. Dragged up, held up, he wept and managed to blurt, â
She made me do it. She made sure the other one got it, too!
'
âTake him out. Let him make his choice. He may have a priest if he wishes,' grunted von Schaumburg. âJust don't waste time with him. The Santé will do.'
Old Shatter Hand was grim. St-Cyr studied the quartz crystal the child had had in her coat pockets. It was one of those âdiamonds' of the curious stone and mineral trade, a dipyramidal crystal perhaps two centimetres by one and a half, six-sided and pointed at both ends but grown awkwardly and full of internal fractures that caught the light and sparkled. âGeneral, what madame says of our courts is only too true. There is always a penchant to excuse a betrayed wife or husband on the grounds of insanity due to jealousy. In such casesâ'
âThere is only one solution. She waits her time. One cannot blame the child within her.'
âThen let it be born in the Reich, General,' urged Vernet. âAttend to her there after its birth.'
The bastard â¦
âAh no ⦠NO!' shouted the woman. âYou cannot do that to me. You can't! This house is rightfully mine, do you hear?
Mine!
'
Again the crystal was searched. âMadame,' said Louis sadly, âyou knew your niece had discovered who the Sandman was, yet you did not speak out. Instead, you plotted her death and used that information to blackmail Violette Belanger and her pimp into helping you with Liline. The sum of two hundred and seventy-five thousand francs changed hands. I have it here.'
One by one the bundles of notes were arranged on the table. Then he took out the envelope that had been left at the solicitor's for Vernet. âMademoiselle Chambert's underpants, General. A last touch Madame Vernet could not resist presenting to her husband.'
When she spat in Vernet's face and stamped a foot, she was led away. âShe'll be on the evening train to Berlin. That is all I can promise,' said von Schaumburg gruffly. âThese things are never easy, and once out of my jurisdiction, her fate falls into the hands of others.'
She could well become the toast of Berlin, thought Kohler ruefully, and, taking the little roulette wheel, pushed in the plunger and let the ball bounce and land where it would.
At another nod from Louis, the General found a letter and, handing it to Vernet, said simply, âSign it. Refuse to do so and you will join your wife on that train.'
All it said was that should any harm come to Nénette Micheline Vernet, her uncle and guardian would forfeit all interest in the family holdings.