Murder in the South of France: Book 1 of the Maggie Newberry Mysteries (The Maggie Newberry Mystery Series)
Page 31
“Something like that.”
“And you’re sure you’re okay with this? I know you weren’t too impressed with Connor last time we―”
“It is fine, mon ange,” he said, as the little rented car roared to life. “It will be an interesting night, je suis sûr.”
“Well, it’s better than staying home and wishing we had cable.”
Laurent smiled again. Everything in his world was in the right place, going at the right speed.
“Did the grape picking go okay?” She scanned the darkened scenery outside the car as they drove the two miles to the village.
“It went well. Perhaps, it will take only a few more days.”
“Who was the one weird guy? You know, the one with the ferocious black hair who smoked like a fiend?”
Laurent shrugged. “They called him Gaston. That’s all I know.”
“Will he be back? To pick the field?”
Laurent looked at her. “Why?”
“No reason,” she said. “I just like to know when I’ve got Richard Speck picking grapes in my fields, that’s all.”
“Richard...?”
“Never mind, darling. He was just a little spooky. No big deal. Don’t worry about it.”
Le Café Canard was a brightly-lit terrace full of café tables and chairs roped off by three lines of outdoor lights. Maggie thought for a moment that the restaurant looked like one of the marquees for a big film premiere in West Hollywood. The café was a single oasis of light and laughter in the dark hole that had become the village of St-Buvard after sundown.
As they stood on the terrace of the café, Connor hopped up and gestured to them from a large table in the middle of the patio.
“Great! You’re here.” He swung his attention to the patiently attendant waiter. “Two more bottles of Moët, s’il vous plaît and merci.” He sat down in his seat with a thud. “Welcome to our fold, newcomers.”
Laurent appeared to regard the scene with his usual look of benign amusement. With Connor at the table sat the girl they had met in Aix scowling in front of a full ashtray and a small saucer of olives. To her left was a man and woman. The man made no immediate impression on Maggie, but the woman with him was fair and exquisitely beautiful in any language. She smiled at Maggie as she and Laurent joined the group.
Connor made the introductions while the waiter poured the extra champagne glasses. “You have met my belle Lydie, I believe,” he said cheerfully. “Oh, she of the nose-dive á la Les Deux―”
“Le Mien,” Lydie said crossly. “It was―”
“Oh, whatever. And this bright couple to your right is― yes, you guessed it, more Americans! Gracie and Windsor Van Sant―”
“Only Gracie doesn’t like to be called ‘Gracie,’” the beautiful blonde woman said to Maggie. “Hi, I’m Grace. I can’t believe more Americans have moved to St-Buvard. We’ll outnumber the French soon!”
“Maggie Newberry,” Maggie said, returning her smile.
“My husband, Windsor.”
Windsor Van Sant was a handsome, short man with dark hair and icy, blue eyes.
“Laurent Dernier,” Laurent said as he shook hands with the couple.
“That’s right. You two aren’t married, is that right?” Grace leaned back into her chair with a cracker loaded with the tapenade. “Connor said you were pretty wicked. Moving into a small, old-fashioned village―”
“Roman Catholic village,” interjected Connor giving the cold Lydie a playful squeeze on her bare shoulder.
“Really?” Maggie looked at Laurent. “Is that a problem? If people knew we weren’t married? I didn’t think they’d care.”
Laurent said nothing but helped himself to the tapenade.
“The debauched French, right?” Grace smiled at her. “That may be true in Paris or Nice, but it gets downright hairy in these adorable little backwaters. Isn’t that true, Lydie?”
Lydie ignored the question and took another sip of her champagne.
“Oh, well.” Maggie looked again at Laurent. Visions of what the French did to World War II collaborators came vividly to mind in the form of shorn heads and lots of gooey black tar. “Oh, well,” she repeated.
“Any plans to change your situation for the more socially accepted kind?” Connor said with a smile.
Maggie reached for her own champagne. “At least not until I start to show,” she said impulsively.
Instantly the table became quiet. Even Laurent looked at her with a sideways glance.
“You’re pregnant?” Connor looked surprised. She noticed that all eyes were on her.
“It’s a joke,” she said, feeling her face flush with embarrassment. Obviously, a really, really bad joke.
“You don’t know ostracism until you try being pregnant here without a wedding band, is all,” Grace said, her face momentarily drained of its color.
What is going on? She looked at Laurent who appeared to be trying to memorize the menu.
“Well, being a small town and all...I guess it’s understandable,” Maggie mumbled.
“Do you plan on making St-Buvard your home?” Windsor Van Sant refilled everyone’s champagne glass and smiled at her as if he were being forced to make conversation.
“Well, for a year or so we do,” Maggie said.
“And then?” Grace asked.
“Well, we’ve both got jobs...and lives, back in Atlanta.”
“Really?” Connor scooted his chair closer to the table. “You work for a living?”
“Yes, Connor,” Maggie said, remembering her pleasant bantering with him on the phone. “It’s that dreaded word again. Laurent works as an assistant chef in a very posh country club in Atlanta and I work in an advertising agency.” She was immediately pelted with groans and laughter.
“An advertising agency?” Connor nearly choked on his wine. “You mean, like selling widgets and gee-gaws to the gullible consumer?”
“Yes, that’s right,” Maggie said sweetly. “That’s exactly what I do.”
“And you want to go back to doing it? Like, on purpose?”
“Come on, Connor,” Grace said. “We can’t all have a lovely big trust fund to roll around on and make ourselves comfy, now, can we? Forget him, Maggie,” she said with a wink. “His idea of work involves buttoning up his own shirt fronts.”
Connor plucked at his knit shirt and mouthed to Maggie behind Grace’s back: Pull-overs. No buttons.
Maggie laughed. She liked him. She liked them all, with the possible exception of Mademoiselle Lydie.
Throughout the rest of the evening, Laurent and Maggie learned that the little group had known each other for about six months. Windsor had created and written the software for a popular computer word processing program. He’d promptly sold his product while retaining a percentage of the profits. He and Grace and their four year-old daughter, Taylor, had come to St-Buvard a year ago and now lived in a château on the other side of town. Taylor attended school in Aix and, her parents boasted, was fluent in both French and English.
Maggie had intended to keep her volume of food consumption to smaller portions tonight, but she still found herself wiping up smears of savory sauce with crust after crust of French bread, while her plate was filled and refilled as the hours brought the evening slowly to a close. At one point, she looked around the little bistro and realized that their table was the only one still occupied.
Connor poured himself a large cognac from the bottle on the table and leaned back in his chair. His eyes glittered.
“Speaking of the St-Buvardians...” he said.
“Were we?” Grace addressed Connor but gave Maggie a playful wink.
Connor ignored her.
“They’re worst than hillbillies, you know?” he said to the satisfying giggle of Grace Van Sant. “The in-breeding, I suppose.”
“Oh, Connor, shut up,” Grace said, still laughing. “That’s disgusting.”
“The truth often is,” Windsor offered, hoping for his share of the laughter.
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Connor nodded earnestly. “You see?” he said. “It’s true. Everybody in this town is related to everybody else.”
“Like who and who?” Maggie asked, reaching for another scoop of Daube à l’avignonnaise.
“Well,” Connor leaned back and looked at Lydie―who refused to look back. “Well, like your neighbor, ol’ Jean-Luc?” He smiled when he saw that he’d caught Laurent’s interest. “And old Mademoiselle Renoir?”
“The boulangerie woman?” Maggie looked at Laurent and then again at Connor. “You mean Madame Renoir?”
“Madame, mademoiselle―she’s big and fat and bakes buns, right?”
Maggie nodded
“She’s his niece.”
“Really?”
“And the woman at the pharmacie? “ Connor continued. “Have you met her yet?”
Maggie and Laurent both shook their heads.
“She’s, like, married to her own half-son.”
“Step-son, Connor,” Grace corrected, rolling her eyes, a laugh bubbling to her lips.
“Half-son, step-son―it’s still incest, n’est-ce pas?” Connor tore off a piece of bread and popped it into his mouth.
“What about the beautiful young Babette, eh, Mister Funny?” It was the first sentence Lydie had spoken all evening and Maggie found herself reacting as sharply as if a ventriloquist’s dummy had jumped up and demanded the floor.
“Babette?” Laurent said politely, since no one else seemed willing to take up the issue.
“Oui, the little cochon who is working at the boulangerie?”
Connor waved his hand and swallowed his bread as if it had become extremely dry. “That’s not interesting,” he said, coughing. “She’s somebody’s third-cousin or something. Big deal. We’re talking about people marrying or having babies by people they―”
“I am talking about people screwing people. It is the same thing!” Lydie’s face was flushed from the numerous glasses of champagne she’d consumed without the buffering of food.
“Lydie―” Connor seemed unperturbed in the face of Lydie’s obvious distress, more annoyed, almost, at having the pace of his running gag interrupted.
“She is the niece of Madame and Monsieur Marceau,” Lydie said sternly, looking at Connor.
“Wow, that’s really disgusting,” Connor said flatly, staring at her. “Their niece did you say? Makes my skin crawl to―”
“Always you are trying to be so funny!” Lydie tried to stand up but only succeeded in knocking over her glass. Connor pulled her gently back into her chair. “And you are the one who is screwing her! That is what is disgusting!”
Ah, so that’s what all this is about. Maggie took a slow drink of her wine. The girl with the broom at Madame Renoir’s bakery. Very interesting, dear Connor.
“My Gosh, Lydie, you certainly have a way with a story. Anyone ever told you that before?” Connor smiled thinly as he mopped up his date’s spilled champagne.
Instantly, the girl jumped up, clutching her mouth and, making gagging noises, ran into the recesses of the restaurant. Connor stood up as if to follow her but Grace motioned him to sit back down.
“Leave her alone, Connor. You’ll just make it worse,” she said, pointing at the bottle of Côtes-du-Rhône at his elbow.
He sighed and poured her a glass. It spilled out in a deep, dark red. “You’re undoubtedly right.”
“What’s her problem tonight, anyway?” Grace asked as she glanced in the direction Lydie had run.
“God, who knows,” Connor said.
“What’s her problem any night of the week?” Windsor asked, helping himself to a large chunk of fried bread soaked in hot garlic and olive oil. Maggie watched the greasy concoction as it traveled to his lips.
“Windsor!” Grace said.
“No, no,” Connor said, holding up his hands. “He’s right. She’s a pain all the time, it’s true.”
“I guess she gives good back rubs,” Maggie said, feeling more and more a part of this close group.
Everyone laughed heartily.
“That she does, me girl,” Connor said cheerfully. “That she does. But listen...” He cleared his plate to one side and pulled yet another bottle of wine in front of him. “Enough about our Provençal love problems. I want to know what Maggie and Laurent think about living at Domaine St-Buvard.”
Maggie didn’t answer as she reached for a large wedge of almond and cream gâteau. Doesn’t dessert signify that you’ve come to the end of eating?
“I love it so far,” she said. “It’s beautiful and big and―”
“No, no, no,” Connor said, pouring himself more wine. “I mean as far as ghosts in the old Fitzpatrick farmhouse? Seen any vaporous Englishmen wailing and flailing their breasts in the kitchen after midnight? Heard any children crying and pleading for their lives before dawn?”
Maggie looked at him, the fork of gâteau frozen halfway from plate to mouth. “Huh?” she said.
Connor looked up, his eyes flashing.
“Don’t tell me I’m going to be the first one to tell you about the Fitzpatrick family massacre?” He clapped his hands together with glee.
“The farmhouse used to belong to a family named Fitzpatrick?” Laurent asked. He poured himself a hefty portion of Calvados in a large, balloon wineglass and eyed Connor with interest.
“Before your uncle bought the place,” Grace said.
“I’m telling this,” Connor said, playfully slapping Grace’s hand as it cupped her wine glass.
“They were killed in our house?” Maggie set the untasted forkful of gâteau back onto her plate.
“I am not doing this in true-or-false question style,” Connor wagged a finger at both Maggie and Laurent. “So, you’ll just have to be patient. Man, this is great,” he said happily, sparing a glance over his shoulder in case the unfortunate Lydie might be returning. “Okay, it’s like this. About, what, fifty years ago?” He looked at Grace, who shrugged noncommittally and drank her wine. “Maybe forty-five, fifty years ago, an English family named Fitzpatrick owned your very―”
“Rented, I think, Connor,” Windsor said.
“Fine, Windsor,” Connor said. “Thank you for that real estate update. I’m sure it’ll make for a more complete story.”
“A more accurate one, anyway,” Windsor said under his breath to his wife.
“Okay, so they rented your farmhouse,” Connor continued. “A man, wife and two small sons. I don’t know how old they were, Windsor, and it doesn’t matter. Suffice to say, they were little kids. One night in December―that’s important because it was the middle of hunting season out here―the whole family was murdered―shot to death by a dove hunting rifle―killed in the front walkway of your very house.”
Maggie flashed a look at Laurent to see how this news was affecting him. He looked amused.
“One blast to the head of each member of the―”
“Did they ever find out who did it?” Maggie interrupted.
Connor, happy to be the authority on the village mystery, nodded solemnly.
“They did. Turns out one of the leaders of the village―a Patrick Alexandre―a Resistance fighter if you can stand it, a real out and out hero―was having an affair with Mrs. Fitzpatrick...”
“So he shot her?” Maggie screwed up her face and looked to Grace for confirmation.
“She was rejecting him, I guess,” Connor responded. “She was found, all bloody and untidy, clutching this note that her lover had given to her just before he offed her and it was all about how he was sorry it had to come to this and how he forgave her and stuff―”
“That still doesn’t explain why he―”
“The family was leaving to go back to England.”
“Oh.”
“And he was all cross and bothered that she was, you know, rejecting him by leaving.”
“I see.”
“And so he killed the whole family,” Windsor said. “Even the little boys. They were five and seven years old.”
“How awful,” Maggie said, reaching for her gâteau again.
“Yeah, not everybody believes that the famous and decorated hero―by Charles DeGaulle himself, they’re quick to point out―”
“Believes what?” Laurent asked impatiently, his interest in the story evident for the first time.
“Well, not everybody believes that he did it,” Connor said. “I mean, he confessed and all, and the note was in his handwriting, but he was the village favorite son, you know? St-Buvard didn’t want to believe it.”
“But he confessed?” Maggie asked. She accepted a cup of cappuccino from the waiter although she knew it meant little sleep for her that night.
Connor nodded, his mouth full of cake.
“You didn’t tell the best part, Connor.” Grace said. She took a dainty sip from her own tiny cup of espresso. Her lips left pink tattoos against the white ceramic. “Monsieur Alexandre was sent to prison―”
“Alexandre?” Laurent lit a cigarette. His first of the night, Maggie noticed with amazement. He really was trying to cut down.
“As in Jean-Luc Alexandre?” Laurent asked.
Grace nodded. “He was Jean-Luc’s half-brother.”
“See what we mean about everyone being related?” Connor said.
“But that’s not the best part,” Grace repeated.
“Isn’t Jean-Luc, like, hideously embarrassed to be related to this mass murderer?” Maggie was fascinated with the story. “I mean, this must have been a big deal to this little village, having a family of four―”
“It is, it was,” Grace said. “But Jean-Luc hardly knew his brother. They had different mothers and Jean-Luc was just a boy when Patrick was sent to prison for the murders.”
“Where he died,” Windsor said with some satisfaction.
“Yes,” Grace said, a little vexed. “But that’s still not the best―”
“Oh, out with it, Grace!” Connor clapped her on the back. “What is the best part?”
“The best part is the gypsy, Connor, whom you completely forgot to tell―”
“Oh, yeah! The gypsy―”
“Forget it, buster. I’m telling this part.” Grace smiled at Connor who leaned back in his chair with mock resignation.