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Authors: Barbara Cleverly

BOOK: Tug of War
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‘I showed these to the director.’

The first photograph was a formal one taken on the steps of the pre-war school building on a clear, sunny day. The children, in their grey school smocks, were excited and overawed by the camera.
M. Barbier stood on the right, the proud shepherd of his flock. The flock was, with little variation, dark-haired and chubby. Albert, on the left, stood out from the crowd with his light build and
fair hair. His ethereal features, framed by a neat white collar, tugged at Joe’s heart over the gap of a quarter of a century. He wondered if Dorcas, stickily breathing chocolate fumes over
his shoulder, had seen it: the same unfocused expression of dislocation and sadness, of other-worldliness that they had seen in Thibaud’s face.

In the second photograph the Langlois children were lined up in height order in a studio, grinning at the camera over their right shoulders. Four dark girls with square faces and dark eyes.
Adrift by a few inches at the back and gazing at the middle distance Albert hovered, an alien presence.

The third was also a posed photograph, taken in Reims. The grown Albert looked straight at the camera this time, alone, defiant, wearing with some dash the tight tunic, red jodhpurs, knee-high
boots and saucily tilted casquette of an artilleryman.

‘He loved horses, you see. He was very good with them. M. Barbier managed to steer him into the artillery.’

Joe passed the photographs to Dorcas.

‘What a fine man,’ she said quietly. ‘You must be very proud of him, madame.’

‘Always,’ was the whispered reply. ‘Always.’

‘Can you tell us when you last saw your son?’

‘It was in April 1917. We’d returned after the 1914 invasion thinking it couldn’t happen again. Papa Joffre had sent them all packing, hadn’t he? But we were wrong. They
came again and it was worse this time. Hardly a village survived the bombing and the burning. We were caught up in it all. And it was just days before that when Albert turned up suddenly on leave.
He’d walked all the way from somewhere up by Laon . . .’ She hesitated, trying to remember.

‘The Chemin des Dames?’ Joe supplied. ‘Was he involved in that battle?’

‘That’s the one. Chemin des Dames. He was in the Fifth Army under General Nivelle. Albert told us he was on leave,’ she added uncertainly. ‘Langlois said it was all a
lie. They wouldn’t have given leave to anyone at such a bad moment, he said. Albert must have deserted.

‘Albert was wearing his own civilian clothes, helping us to load our things on to the cart, when someone shouted, “The Uhlans are coming!”’ She shivered with remembered
terror at the panic-raising call. ‘And the Boche flooded in. They shot the mayor who’d dared to confront them and rounded up fifty hostages. The usual behaviour. And when they retreated
they set the houses on fire, marched the hostages out with them and fired cannon at the village until it was rubble. One of the hostages was my son. I never saw or heard from him again until I went
to Reims last spring.’

Joe, who had been discreetly jotting down dates, closed his notebook. ‘I wonder . . . is there anything at all, madame, that you could add to the information you have already given to
Inspector Bonnefoye? Any detail of a personal and perhaps physical nature that might distinguish Albert? A scar or a birthmark of some description? A mark of which a
mother
might be
aware?’ He could think of no more discreet way of phrasing his question.

She looked embarrassed and awkward. She opened her mouth to speak and decided not to. Then, shrugging: ‘The usual childhood marks . . . scuffed knees . . . cuts and bruises from falling
off horses and out of trees. That sort of thing. Would you like to see his letters?’

As Joe agreed to this sudden shift of focus Dorcas stood and asked politely if she might be excused. She’d like to go back into the shop to buy some of the delicious dark French chocolate
to take home . . . better than anything they could get in England and made here in the village? They readily agreed to this tactful withdrawal from the next stage of the enquiry which promised to
be rather tedious for a young girl.

Joe was intrigued by the small collection of letters written in a good copperplate hand on torn scraps of writing paper. One or two of the messages were almost obliterated by ominous brown
stains. At the start jaunty and optimistic (and addressed solely to ‘
ma chère maman
’), the letters had become progressively sombre and hopeless. The most recent one was
dated April 1917, just a week or two before his last appearance in the village. He spoke with despair of stalemate, with anger of the deaths of men in his company, the never-ending bombardment, the
foul conditions in the trenches. He ended by saying he was just about to be called up the line to the front ranks again.

Joe looked for signs of censorship but found none. A second reading impressed him with the clever wording. No militarily sensitive information, no names, no positions were given. The
censor’s pencil would have hovered and found no precise target and yet the tone, truculent and mutinous throughout, was deserving of censorship. It occurred to him that perhaps even the
censor by this stage in the war had been of the same mind.

Had Albert, in his despair, nipped out the back way after all, as his stepfather claimed? It was probable, Joe decided. Or had he served his spell in the front line and been rewarded with an
eight-day pass? It was at about that time that the army’s grievances, increasingly loud, had been heard, Joe calculated from the little he knew about the French end-game. Pétain had
replaced the failing General Nivelle in the campaign of the Chemin des Dames and conditions for the men in the field had improved. Home leave had been granted again. It was possible.

He said as much to Madame Langlois who drank in every soothing word. So absorbed had he been by the letters and the eagerness of the mother to share them with him, he had lost track of time and
wondered at last what on earth Dorcas could possibly be doing.

Laughter down the corridor reassured him. She came in, pink and smiling and obviously the best of friends with what Joe took to be the youngest Langlois daughter.

‘This is Julie, Uncle Joe.’

Julie giggled and bobbed. She gave Joe a long and appreciative stare before her bright eyes flashed a message sideways at Dorcas.

‘I’ve cashed up and locked the shop, Maman,’ she said in a voice which had none of the grating hesitations of her mother’s. ‘Dorcas has been telling me all about
London. Did you know she came from London? And we’re the same age! She’s sixteen too! Are all English girls so small?’

‘Oh, I’d say Dorcas was pretty much average size for her age,’ said Joe easily.

‘Uncle Joe, I hope you don’t mind but I’ve offered Julie a lift into Reims. It’s early closing today and she’s visiting her married sister. She was going to catch
the bus but I said we were going straight back and could drop her off.’

‘Well, certainly. If her mother agrees. Delighted,’ said Joe.

Slightly dubiously, her mother gave her consent, commenting that such an offer would at least save the bus fare and she didn’t see how Monsieur Langlois could have any objection, and they
set off with the two girls installed on the back seat whispering and laughing together.

Joe made no attempt to tune in to their conversation, pleased to hear Dorcas chatting with someone more or less her own age and relieved to be free to marshal his thoughts.

On arriving in Reims, Julie asked to be dropped off in the centre in the Place Drouet d’Erlon and, with warm exchanges of addresses and promises, she finally skipped away.

‘Nice chat, Dorcas?’ he asked as she slid over into the front passenger seat.

‘No. Rather terrible in fact, Joe. You weren’t listening, were you? Look, drive over into the Promenade, will you, park under a plane tree and I’ll tell you.’

Disturbed by her serious tone, he did as she asked.

‘I was just trying to help. I thought that woman wasn’t telling you the full truth. I thought I’d find one of the girls – in fact there’s only that Julie, the fifth
and youngest, left at home – all the others got married and went off as soon as they could – and try to find out a bit more about life
chez les Langlois.
She didn’t know
much about Albert. She was an afterthought. Born in 1910. So she was only four when Albert marched off to war. And she only saw him once or twice when he came home on leave after that.’

‘So her opinions may be misleading, you’re warning me?’

‘Yes. I think she echoes her sisters’ views and they may have been influenced by their charming father. She dismissed her half-brother as “that weedy Albert who
disappeared”. But she does seem close to her mother. Julie wants to leave home as well. She’s not really here to see her sister – did you guess? She’s come to meet a young
man she’s walking out with. It’s all right, Joe – her mother knows all about it. Madame Langlois is making her own plans, you see. Julie knows her mother’s up to something.
She thinks that if she’s granted custody of Albert her mother will come into a lot of money from the state as well as his pension and Julie’s certain she’s planning to do a bunk.
She’s going to use Albert to finance her escape from old Langlois. They’re blackmailing each other – you keep quiet about my plans and I won’t split on you . . . that sort
of thing.’

‘So the worm is turning after all these years? She’s going to scoop up her son, run away and live with him on the basis of his pension? Shows a bit of spirit! I thought I’d
glimpsed a certain steely resolve . . . well, tinny resolve, perhaps, in her demeanour.’

‘You didn’t quite understand, Joe.’

‘What can you mean?’

‘When you asked about the distinctive marks on his body I thought she reacted in a strange way and changed the subject. I mean . . . you might have expected: “Oh, gosh, yes –
that day when the nappy pin slipped!” or something like that. I thought she was covering something up. And she was.’

For a moment she sank into dejection and uncertainty.

‘And Julie told you . . . what?’ he prompted.

‘That Albert was beaten quite badly as a child. It’s likely that he will have traces on his buttocks, isn’t it? Would he still have scars after all these years?’

‘It’s possible,’ said Joe. ‘Look, I’m speaking to Varimont this afternoon. That should tell us more. Perhaps in their search for dramatic wounds – sabre cuts
and the like – little domestic marks have gone unregarded. But they would represent incontrovertible evidence all the same.’

Dorcas was hardly listening. ‘”Little domestic marks”? Joe, how can you speak so lightly?’

‘I think you mean “dispassionately”. If I let myself be moved by pain and death I would make mistakes. But this is information we must have, Dorcas. I know it’s really
none of our business – it’s a French affair and let’s hang on to that.’ And, rattled by her petulant silence: ‘What on earth do you expect me to do? Tell tales to
Inspector Bonnefoye? Encourage him to go out, confront Langlois, and belatedly wag a minatory finger at the wicked stepfather? “It’s come to my attention, Langlois, that you were unkind
to your stepson thirty years ago.” He’d laugh at me.’

Dorcas sighed wearily.

‘Old Langlois may have failed to charm us, Joe, but you can’t dismiss him as entirely evil on the sample of behaviour we witnessed. Albert was beaten as a child, I’m certain of
that, but it wasn’t his stepfather who beat him.’

Chapter Eleven


Not
his stepfather? Can you be certain? And, if you are, then who? Who on earth could take a stick to such a little angel?’

‘The one who abused him as a child and is now planning to abuse him as a witless and helpless adult. His mother.’

Joe lapsed into a shocked silence. ‘You’re going to have to explain this surprising accusation, Dorcas.’

‘You could have interviewed Julie yourself but I don’t think you’d have got any more information out of her than you managed to extract from her mother. Madame Langlois may not
have been
born
a wicked person but – goodness, she had a bad enough start in life! Enough to drive anyone to despair and make them unstable, I’d have thought. That’s if
she’s telling us the truth, of course. But Julie, who had no reason to lie to me, told me the family stories. The ones she had from her sisters. They were not mistreated. Only Albert. But,
apparently, the old man, though he used to rage and storm at the boy and made his hatred very apparent, never actually hit him. It was his mother who beat him mercilessly.’

She was speaking quietly and trying, Joe thought, for the dispassionate tone he had advocated. ‘Does Julie have any idea why she would have behaved in this way?’

‘Oh yes. She thinks she did it to divert Langlois’s anger. To turn his rage away from her and the girls on to the boy who counted for so little in that household. A sort of whipping
boy, you might say. First in line for punishment when punishment was necessary.’

‘A demonstration of her loyalty and her acceptance of the situation between them?’ suggested Joe.

‘That’s what the girls think,’ said Dorcas. ‘But
I
don’t think that would be enough. Not enough to make a mother do such a dreadful thing, do you?’

‘You have a different theory?’ he enquired gently. The question of mothers would always be a tricky one with Dorcas, deserted practically at birth by her own.

‘Yes. See what you think. There’s a girl in the village . . . No! Don’t shudder in that showy way!’ she said crossly. ‘All right – I know I exaggerate
sometimes . . . occasionally I lie. But I always know that I’m not deceiving you or I wouldn’t do it. This is a true story, so listen! Have you seen Cora with the red hair who works in
the chemist’s? No? Well she was a very pretty girl but she’s never married. When she was just old enough she went to Godalming to do her bit for the war effort. The gaffer in the
factory she was sent to was a no-good. She came home pregnant and only when the baby was born did she tell her father what had happened. She’d been raped. It’s a good family. The mother
wanted to bring the child up as her own and the father went straight off to Godalming and beat the man nearly to death. They arrested Cora’s dad and he was up on a charge of GBH. They put him
away for five years’ hard labour.’

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