“The commissaire told us very little,” Yann said. “We’re in the dark as to what happened.”
Intelligence radiated from these men. They were not the type she could fob off with dumbed-down information.
“That’s standard procedure, Monsieur. In investigations like this, the officers must gather all the facts before any hypothesis can be made. That’s why I’m here, disturbing you,” she said and smiled. “Monsieur Marant, try to think back to last night, just before eleven o’clock. Did you hear a loud noise or notice anything happening outside the window?”
He shrugged. “I worked in Félix’s study. There are no windows. Then, Félix, your guest arrived, the musician? I lost track of time—”
“I take it the police questioned him,” Aimée said. “His name?”
Félix Conari’s hand clutched the slanted table’s edge. “He’s shy, that one, Lucien. A unique musician.”
Aimée scanned the names. “There’s no Lucien listed here. His last name?”
“Sarti. A Corsican DJ and musician. He mixes traditional polyphony and hip-hop.”
No Lucien Sarti. Aimée thought of the timing and the man watching at the gate. “Does he have black hair and was he wearing a black leather jacket and carrying a backpack?”
Félix grinned. “That describes many of my guests. But, yes, he is tall, rail thin, and has black curly hair.”
“How can I reach him?”
“Look, Mademoiselle, I don’t want to get him involved in this.”
“Of course not, but I need help, all the help I can get. I must speak with everyone. Can you give me his phone number?”
“Lucien’s a musician, a free spirit,” Conari said. “No phone. I contact him through a resto, Strago, and leave messages for him.”
She wrote that down. “You mentioned your guests were clients,” she said. “I’m curious as to how you know this musician, Lucien Sarti.”
“Call it a middle-aged man’s dream, but I’m planning to promote him,” he said, with a small smile. “I have some connections in the recording industry. Music’s close to my heart. But he disappeared before we actually signed the contract. Artists, you know!”
She wondered why this Lucien Sarti had disappeared before speaking to the police.
“Should Félix be concerned, Mademoiselle Leduc?” Yann asked. His ponytail poked out above his jacket collar. “I mean, has the quartier changed so much? Can I ask what happened?”
Marant asked a lot of questions. But then she would, too.
Félix nodded. “I’ve never seen such a police presence. This is Paris, not New York, where shootings are commonplace.”
Read the papers, she wanted to say. But they might prove more helpful if she told them something. Word traveled in the quartier so even these busy urban professionals would hear, sooner or later.
“We’re investigating a policeman’s murder on the roof of the building adjoining yours. The storm hasn’t helped,” she said. Two pairs of eyes watched her. “So anything that might come to your mind, a small detail—”
“You’re a private detective, you said. Aren’t the police in charge?”
Sharp. Didn’t miss a thing. “I’m investigating on behalf of a client,” she said. “Beyond that I can’t say.”
“Look, I want to be more helpful,” Yann said. “How can I reach you if I remember anything?”
Aimée hid her disappointment at their lack of information. “I appreciate your time, merci,” she said, handing them each her card.
STRAGO, ON the less fashionable and more working-class slope of Montmartre, was a storefront restaurant with a hammer and sickle on the old curling menu posted behind smudged glass. A handwritten sign in violet ink read FERMÉ. This side of the quartier hadn’t changed much since Doisneau’s black-and-white fifties photographs, she thought. Narrow cobbled streets wound up to the butte. The corner cafés and low buildings fronting rue Labat reminded Aimée of Edith Piaf’s sad song of the rue Labat streetwalker who had lost her man. But, then, weren’t they all sad?
Thoughts of Guy intruded. His scent, the way he ran his fingers through his hair. She pushed the sadness down; she had to find this musician.
At the vegetable shop under a green awning next door, Aimée asked the owner about Strago’s hours.
“They open when they feel like it,” he told her. “If you smell garlic, Anna’s cooking.”
She put a franc down and reached into the counter’s glass canister for several Carambars. She unwrapped the yellow waxed paper, glanced at the joke printed inside, and popped the caramel into her mouth. “Ever seen Lucien Sarti, black hair, black leather jacket, who gets messages there?” she went on.
He shrugged. “When the weather’s like this, I stay in the shop.”
She handed him her card. “If you do, call me. I’d like to speak with him, Monsieur.”
She wrote down Strago’s phone number and belted her leather coat against the cold. Snow clumps in the plane tree branches melted into dripping lines that ran down the bare trunks. Snow, the rare times it occurred in Paris, never lasted long. The rising heat from the buildings took care of that. Like it had taken care of any evidence that the snow on the roof might have held.
She rooted in her worn Vuitton wallet. Found it. The card with Jubert’s name that Pleyet from Interpol had given her when she’d dealt with him in the Clichy district. Her thoughts jumped to Laure’s ramblings. For two months she’d searched for Jubert, the one link she’d found to her father’s death in the Place Vendôme bombing. But he hadn’t been at the address listed, or in the Ministry. It was as if the man had never existed.
Was Jubert the “Ludovic” Laure had mentioned? Was there another Ludovic in her father’s past, a past of whispers, secrets, and shadows she’d only caught hints of. Morbier would know. She pulled out her cell phone.
“Oui,” Morbier answered.
“May I buy you a late lunch?”
“You want to thank me?”
For what? she almost said, before she remembered he’d gotten her released from the Commissariat. She paused, looking down at the oily rainbow-slicked swirls reflecting the sky in a pewter puddle. A January sky.
“Or make it up to me for your atrocious manners, ruining Ouvrier’s party and landing me in hot water with La Proc,” he was saying.
“She’s got it in for you, anyway,” Aimée said. “But how—?
A diesel bus rumbled past her, drowning Morbier’s response. Aimée felt for her gloves in her pocket.
“Le Rendez-vous des Chauffeurs in half an hour?” Morbier asked.
A taxi-driver haunt, with good food. That should sweeten the questions she had to ask.
MIRRORS LINED the walls, yellow-and-white-checked cloths covered the twelve tables in the resto, an aluminum meat slicer rested on the counter. The last diners finished a late lunch with a cheese course. Morbier sat on the camel-colored leather banquette, split and taped in places, worn by the repose of generations of taxi drivers. He was reading a newspaper.
“Nice choice, Morbier,” she said, sitting down and hanging her bag on the back of her wooden chair. The hot, close air felt welcome after the brisk chill outside. Framed posters of the Montmartre vineyard vendanges hung above the mirrors. Background jazz played low on a radio as the owner wiped down the aging red formica counter through which patches of the original zinc were visible.
“Combines all facets of the Montmartre spirit: rustic, bohemian, and bon vivant,” he said, setting down his paper. “But you’re buying me lunch. What’s your real reason?”