Yet only he and his partner could save Joanne.
‘Dede, what is it?’
A hand was extended formally. ‘Nothing, Monsieur the Chief Inspector. Only that I am with you.’
‘Good! Now go home and tell that grandmother of yours that if she opens her mouth again, I’m going to have her arrested for selling thread on the black market-ah, don’t deny it. We’re friends and these days one does what one has to. Just tell her I want no more of her visions in the night. They make me uneasy and that’s not good when I might be up against a man who can shoot a pea off a post at thirty paces!’
6
All over Paris, the snow was softly falling to deepen the hush of darkness but lift the city from its misery.
At 2.00 a.m., Gabrielle Arcuri pushed open the iron gate at 3 Laurence-Savart and made her way up to the front door but turned to look back. The houses were cheek to jowl beyond the low wrought-iron fence with its cement posts and fake Louis XIV urns. The staff car of a German general waited and would do so patiently. A little bite to eat, a glass of champagne with that one, nothing else because … ah because there never could be anything else with them or anyone but …
Belleville, she said to herself. Jean-Louis will never leave it and only a fool would ask him to.
Inserting the key Hermann had given her as a Christmas present, she unlocked the door and pushed it open. Jean-Louis wasn’t asleep. From the tiny vestibule, she could see that he was in the kitchen at the back, the only light. There were shadows on the walls … a roaring fire in the stove behind him … a scandalously wasteful fire.
In his suspenders, trousers and brogues, and wearing a faded blue plaid work-shirt, brown tie and revolver in its leather holster, he remained unaware of her, so deeply was he lost in thought.
Row after row of photographs were spread across a table whose rustic look and size suggested a farm somewhere. There was so much she didn’t yet know about him.
He was searching the faces of the victims, was ‘talking’ to each of them. A cup of acorn-and-barley ‘coffee’ had long been forgotten.
‘Jean-Louis …?’
‘Ah! Gabrielle, it’s you. How did you get in? The club, has it closed early? What time is it? Hermann, he … he’s picking me up at 3 a.m.’
She told him of the key and that she had developed a small catch in her throat. ‘It’s nothing serious. The voice simply needs a little rest’
Maybe it dawned on him that, had he been asleep, she might have come up to him. Maybe he regretted this was not so, but all he said was, ‘Joanne tried to tell us of the shop. A bracelet, Gabrielle. This one.’
He waited for her to join him but they didn’t hold each other or even touch in greeting. Instead, still lost in thought he continued, ‘She was followed by a woman whose reported age was between thirty and thirty-six but …’
‘But bundled against the cold and wearing a hat, lipstick and rouge,’ she said decisively, ‘that woman could have been much older.’
‘Madame Berenice de Brisson, but does it fit?’
‘She would have caused little notice if she had entered the bank of her husband, Jean-Louis.’
‘Yes, the perfect look-out if … if the husband is the one who set the robbery up.’
‘Was he broke?’
‘Or being blackmailed?’
Quickly he told her what Madame Lemaire’s maid had seen late last spring. ‘Did he know of what was going on in that house? Were the kidnappers aware of this, so much so they would tempt him with a little gap in the black-out curtains?’
‘A blue lamp … the shadows of that poor girl on the ceiling above her … how could he not have said something?’
‘Perhaps it is that he participated?’
Startled, she asked uncomfortably, ‘And Madame de Brisson learned of it?’
‘Perhaps, but then … ah, it’s all speculation, the racing of a mind tormented by doubt.’
He flung photograph after photograph before her. ‘Joanne is still missing,’ he said. ‘We’ve been on this case constantly since Monday afternoon. It’s now just the start of Wednesday. If I fail, I fail not only her but Dede, Gabrielle. Dede. At my worst moments, the boys seemed always to be there up the street, watching me trudge home. They would call out, “Hey, oo-oo Monsieur the Chief Inspector,” and kick the soccer ball to me and I would work it up the road and try to get through them. Those boys … they respect the law because of me. Me! I simply can’t fail them. I mustn’t!’
She touched his hand. ‘You will find her. I know you will,’ she said, but one couldn’t comfort him. What he needed was answers. ‘The Resistance say they have no news of the robbery and think it wasn’t the work of known criminals or the Gestapo and the SS.’
‘Amateurs?’
‘Perhaps, but good ones except for the killing of the teller which they feel may have been a mistake.’
She would know only so very few of the Resistance and couldn’t possibly have questioned many. ‘Be careful,’ he said. ‘Don’t take chances. I may not be able to help you and neither might Hermann.’
He told her of Marie-Claire de Brisson’s ‘Letters to Myself’ and said he hoped the girl wouldn’t destroy her diary, that they might soon need it.
Saddened, she said, ‘The father takes what he wants and has total disregard for her as a person.’
‘She was adopted at birth and is the loyal servant of her employer and friend, so much so, Gabrielle, she asked Paul Meunier to forge travel papers and documents for two of Mademoiselle St. Onge’s friends.’
Gabrielle drew in a breath, her lovely eyes alive with interest.
Jean-Louis told her of Kempf and le Blanc. She said, ‘Let me see what I can dig up on the one from Paris-Soir. Maybe he’s the one who fielded the placing of the advertisements and thought of using the Theatre du Palais Royal as a letter drop and blind.’
St-Cyr ducked his head in appreciation but also to indicate the photos. ‘Are all of the clothes and accessories from that shop?’
Sadly she had to tell him, ‘I never go there but can begin to check.’
‘Mademoiselle de Brisson also had a set of papers made for herself,’ he said, ‘but for Dijon on the 1st of the New Year.’
‘Dijon?’
‘The home of Angelique Desthieux, and a permanent residence under her own name, not a nom de guerre as with the other two.’
Gabrielle gave a little toss of her head. ‘Muriel and Chantal spoke of her. Was it her fiance who threw the acid into her face?’
‘And poured it over this one?’ he asked, finding the photograph for her. ‘Or was it someone who wishes us to blame the drooler?’
Sickened by the sight of the corpse, Gabrielle turned away and felt him reach out to her in comfort. ‘Forgive me,’ he said. ‘I’m used to such things.’
He waited and at last she said, ‘Apparently Angelique never named the person who ruined her career. She refused absolutely to blame anyone but herself for having rejected her fiance so shamefully.’
They were both silent. She touched a suspender strap and, leaning down, for she was a good head taller than him, lightly kissed his cheek. ‘You really will find Joanne and bring her safely home. Like Dede and his friends, I have confidence.’
There were tears in his eyes as there were in her own. ‘Five-and-a-half days, Gabrielle. For five-and-a-half days now she has had to live in hell, never knowing if she will be killed.’
‘Is she with the things from that house?’
‘I’m certain of it! But not with the paintings, if they were taken and placed at auction.’
‘The paintings …?’
He told her of the outlines on the walls of that house. She reached out to him again. ‘Then we’ll visit the Jeu de Paume together and by then, perhaps Monsieur Verges or his son will have described them to you.’
‘If they’re alive.’
She kissed him again and held him tightly. She knew he couldn’t telephone Verges or attempt in any way to find out if indeed the father and son were still alive for fear of jeopardizing Joanne’s life. ‘Take care, mon cher detective.’