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Authors: Katherine Hall Page

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BOOK: The Body In the Vestibule
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It was the d'Ambert
clochard
.
She'd never have been able to get away from anyone else so easily, she reflected. The
clochard
. She had drawn blood when she bit him and was aware that she had been spitting out the bitter, filthy taste as she ran. She took a tissue from her pocket and wiped her mouth.
And what about the message from Tom? She felt in a muddle. It was obviously a fake. The receptionist wouldn't have known his voice. But how had they known where Faith was? Unless they'd been watching her. Watching her for days, just waiting for the chance to grab her. She felt cramped and queasy. It was all too obvious what the main use of her hiding place was and she cautiously crept out.
She went up the staircase, which led to another
traboule
. It was silent. The only sound was her own footsteps. She could see the daylight ahead and moved toward it slowly. She looked out. No cars in sight. No people, either. This was the wholesale garment district, bustling with activity during the week and deserted on the weekend. Weak with relief, she saw there was a phone booth at the corner. Seventeen, the police emergency number. That was all she had to do. One seven. Push the buttons and the nightmare would be over. She began to walk quickly down the uneven cobblestones, afraid she might trip if she ran. She put one hand on her rounded belly. It would be all right. It
had
to be all right.
A few yards away, a man stepped from the alley. Before she could make a sound, the blow came and she was in darkness again.
 
“But I don't understand. There must be some mistake,” Tom Fairchild said in bewilderment to the young woman whose bizarre orange hair seemed only too appropriate to the strangeness of the situation.
“I'm sorry, monsieur. I can just tell you what madame said. That she preferred the train to a long drive and would
meet you in Avignon for aperitifs opposite the Palais des Papes.”
“But we hadn't even planned to stop at Avignon.” The young woman shrugged. “Sometimes when like this, women can get sudden impulses. She called for a cab and left for Perrache.”
“Where's Mommy? I want Mommy!” Ben began to cry.
Tom picked him up. “Hush, sweetheart. Don't worry. Let's go to the train station and see if we can find her.” He thanked the woman and left. As he strapped Ben into his car seat, he thought, “This just isn't like Faith. Or is it?”
The young woman watched the proceedings from the shop window. Tom had been able to park right in front. Giovanni would be coming back soon from the café down the street, where he'd gone for the first of his morning
mâchons
and the accompanying glass or two. She waited. She wasn't about to leave the store wide open. That would be a crime.
He arrived a few minutes later. “Ciao, I have to leave now,” she told him, and did.
 
The Reverend Fairchild stood overlooking the platform at the station in despair. He had just missed the train for Avignon, which had pulled out only a few minutes before. He returned to the main part of the station and asked at the appropriate
guichet
if the ticket agent remembered a young woman with blond hair—newly cut—blue eyes, of average height, who had purchased a ticket for Avignon about thirty minutes ago.
“Maybe ten looked like that, monsieur. Now where is it you want to go?”
“I don't want to buy a ticket. I'm looking for my wife.”
“Well, I cannot help you there. I am selling tickets. If there is some problem, you must go to the office.”
“Are you sure you did not see her? She's an American. Her French is not very good.”
“This is not unusual. If monsieur will please move—there are others here to buy tickets.”
Ben tugged at Tom's hand. “Mommy, where's Mommy?”
“I don't know, but don't worry. We'll find her.” And Tom strode across the station to get help.
 
Faith opened her eyes. Where was she? She tried to sit up and discovered that she was tied at the ankles and wrists like a fatted calf. She was in the back seat of a rapidly moving car, completely covered by a blanket. Tipping her head back and away from the rough wool, she could see nothing out the window but blue sky. The movement made her dizzy. Her head felt like it was splitting open. The blanket felt very warm—safe almost. She closed her eyes again and drifted back into unconsciousness.
 
Tom had no luck with the stationmaster, who suggested he call the police. Stopping only to buy the increasingly frightened Ben a package of Gummi Bears, Tom called the Leblancs instead. They arrived in what seemed like minutes.
Ghislaine took charge. “I will take Ben home with me while Paul goes to the police. They can arrange for the police in Avignon to meet the train. Obviously, Faith has become upset at this whole
clochard
business and has had some sort
of fugue.
She was talking about it on Sunday and I should have paid more attention to how upset she was.”
“No, I should have. It's been going on all week. She even had some idea that the
clochard
outside the church was an imposter. My God, what if she was right! We have to tell the police everything. Can you get a hold of your friend Ravier?”
“Tom,
mon ami,
you must be calm. The best thing is for you to go to Avignon to be there after she arrives. You
must take our car. It is faster. Go straight to the police and I know she will be waiting there for you.” Paul tried to reassure him. “Meanwhile, I will call Michel and, yes, tell him everything. Now, Benjamin, would you like to play with Pierre? He has some new cars to show you.”
Ben had been clutching Tom with hands sticky from the rapid consumption of the whole package of candies. He looked up at his father, unsure what to do. The cars would be nice to see, but one parent had vanished today and he wasn't about to let go of the one remaining.
“Sweetie, you go with Paul and Ghislaine and have fun this afternoon. I'm going to go bring Mommy back. We'll all have supper together. How would that be?”
Ben was reluctant, but he did not protest at being swung up onto Paul's shoulders, and they all left the station for their various destinations.
 
The car door opened with a jerk. An arm reached in and roughly shook Faith on the shoulder, yanking the blanket off, which she realized had not been draped over her out of kindness, but for concealment. She raised her heavy eyelids, aware that she had been on the edge of consciousness for some time, loath to leave her unknowing state. Her bonds were being cut and she rubbed her painful wrists. She sat up slowly.
Her captor was wearing a black ski mask. She could tell nothing about him. In the dim light, she could see the car had been driven into some kind of shed. It looked like an old farm building.
“Venez!”
the figure demanded, pulling her from the seat. Faith thought she would pass out again when she stood up and fell heavily upon the figure next to her, who immediately shoved her against the car. After a few minutes, she found she could stand. No sooner had she done so than she was pushed forward and made her way, staggering in pain, out into—what?
Where was she? And what time was it? It was dark, but
Faith had no idea how many hours or days had passed since she had been abducted. Had she been drugged? The cool air hit her and she shivered. She wished she had thought to wrap the blanket around her shoulders. She was wearing a thin T-shirt and short skirt, donned in the expectation of southern sunshine.
Across the yard, she could make out a small stone house surrounded by trees. The night air was still and it was quiet except for some faint stirrings—the flight of birds, a nocturnal creature, a slight breeze, soft sounds accompanied by two others—the rapid breathing and insistent footsteps a few inches behind her. The idea of escape was impossible without some knowledge of the terrain. Besides, there was a gun to her back.
After the door was unlocked, they entered the house. A gloved hand closed hard upon her wrist and he pushed her into a chair while he quickly lit an oil lamp on the mantel, producing a dim light. It was very cold inside and the room had a musty smell, as if it had been closed up for a long time. The shutters of the windows had not been opened and a thick layer of dust covered a long table in front of the fireplace.
If he was going to kill her, why was he waiting? Was she being held for ransom? She doubted it. If she'd been kidnapped because of what she knew about Marie and the
clochard
, it was her silence, not money, they wanted. These thoughts were rapidly supplanted by one other and she turned and spoke. “Please. I must go to the bathroom.” She tried to convey her urgency, aware from her slightly damp pants that in her previous state she'd already had one accident. It was horrible enough to be in the position she was without adding total loss of dignity.
He motioned her out the door again to an outhouse at the edge of the yard, beyond some large evergreens. The moon had risen and she could see mountains not too far away. The house seemed to be at the bottom of a gorge.
When she got closer to the trees, she could hear a stream.
The privy was very clean and there were cartoons by Sempé clipped from magazines taped to the walls. Hard to imagine gangsters with such a well-developed sense of humor and housekeeping. What they didn't have was toilet paper, and as Faith searched through her pocketbook for tissues, she found the letter she'd written to Michel Ravier. She could use it now, for all the good it would do her, she thought, before finding a packet of paper
mouchoirs
at the bottom. Holding the letter in her hand, she finally broke down and began to cry. She was all alone in a French outhouse, about to die.
 
Chief Inspector Michel Ravier had returned from Marseille at nine o'clock on Saturday night, looking forward to nothing more—or less—than a very good meal and a good night's sleep. But he'd dutifully called headquarters to report his return and that was why he was in his office drinking abominable coffee from a paper cup, reading with mounting exasperation the brief reports Louis Martin and Didier Pollet had filed on Faith, instead of consuming warm
saucisson
with plenty of mustard at La Mere Vittet. He grabbed the phone and demanded the two men's presence immediately. He also told the sergeant on duty to get him some food, preferably edible, but even a burger from FreeTime—though it pained him to think of comforting his hunger pangs so inadequately.
Michel had spoken to Paul, and he and Tom were on their way in. Ravier closed his eyes and thought back to the week before when he'd met Faith at Valentina Joliet's gallery. Madame Fairsheeld had seemed delightfully unserious, bright, and very pretty—all the things he liked in a woman. There had been no suggestion of instability, apart from the
clochard
story, which was a bit odd but could no doubt have been explained if they'd questioned the man the next day. Or it may have been true. In any case, Martin and
Pollet's conclusions that her pregnant state was causing her to fantasize were absurd. Although this represented sophisticated thinking for the team. He would have thought the two, with a combined chronological age near Michel's own and combined mental age near Stephanie Leblanc's, still believed in the
“bébé
under the
chou
leaf” theory.
There was a knock on the door and it opened almost simultaneously. Tom Fairchild walked over to the desk, grabbed a chair, sat down, and started talking. Paul was not far behind.
“You've heard, of course, the whole story from Paul. What can possibly be going on, damn it! Where can she be!”
Tom was angry and frightened. He'd driven to Avignon and gone straight to police headquarters. There they'd told him that they'd met the train from Lyon and Faith hadn't been on it. They'd questioned the servers at the buffet and the conductor and shown them Faith's picture, which had been faxed from Lyon. The Leblancs had given it to the police. It had been taken the Sunday before—a laughing, smiling Faith sitting in a lawn chair next to Paul's father. No one remembered seeing anyone resembling her. Avignon was the first stop after Lyon, so there was no way she could have gotten off the train. They were continuing to meet the trains coming from Lyon, but Tom had left quickly after reporting back to Paul.
When he'd arrived at the Leblanc's house, Ben had greeted him tearfully. Tom had told him Mommy was visiting some friends and would be back soon, yet Ben knew something was wrong. Soon after, Pierre had tucked him into his own bed and stayed with him until he fell asleep. The call from the police telling them Inspector Ravier had returned came soon after.
Ravier was as puzzled as Tom. He'd gotten the name of the owner of the hair salon where Faith had been seen last, but it was Saturday night and Giovanni Cavelli was out on the town. Michel had sent a team to search the
various bars and bistros in Giovanni's neighborhood. Until they found him, they couldn't get in touch with the receptionist, who might be able to add something. Tom had called Solange d'Ambert; however, she did not recall the young woman. “Of course I might know her. They change their hair so often, but the last time I was there, the girl helping was short and a bit heavy.” She had not heard Faith say anything about going to Avignon at tea on Friday and could add nothing to what they already knew.
BOOK: The Body In the Vestibule
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