by Black, Cara
The doctor looked up. “Better get the rabbi. Somebody go look. Any family here?”
Aimee ignored her pounding heart and stepped forward. “I’m his niece. My uncle is on twenty-four-hour protection but someone got to him. Injected him with drugs.”
The doctor looked up and gave her a quizzical look. “You mean this on his arm…?” He grabbed Soli’s chart, hooked to the bed. Scanning it, he shook his head. “He’s not responding. Check the IV solution.”
“Can’t you do something?” Aimee moved towards the head of the bed, feeling guilty for lying. Soli’s eyes fixed on her and she returned his gaze.
“Vital responses are minimal,” the doctor said.
Aimee bent over, gently touching Soli’s arm, which was clammy and moist to the touch. Her conscience bothered her but she didn’t know how else to find out. She whispered in his ear, “Soli, what does that photo mean?”
His arms broke loose from the tubes and flailed wildly. He reached out to her.
“You know, Soli, don’t you?” She searched his eyes. “Why Lili was killed.”
His sharp nails dug like needles into her skin. Aimee winced, drawing back, but he pulled her close. He rasped in her ear, “Don’t…let…him…”
“Who?” Aimee said as his arid breath hit her cheek.
Someone touched her shoulder. “The rabbi is here. Let your uncle pray with him.”
Soli’s eyes rolled up in his head.
“Tell me, Soli, tell me…” But the nurses started pulling her away.
His head shook and he pulled Aimee tighter, his nails raking into her skin.
“Say it! Say his name,” Aimee begged.
Soli’s other arm flailed, scrabbling at the sheets. “Lo…”
“L’eau, Soli? Water?” she said. “What do you mean?”
He blinked several times, then his eyes went vacant. The heart monitor registered flat lines. Blood trickled from Soli’s nose. Gently, the doctor pried Soli’s fingers loose from Aimee’s neck.
“Yit-ga-dal v-yit-ka-dash shemei.” The rabbi entered, intoning the Hebrew prayer for the dead.
The nurse led Aimee to the hall, where she leaned against the scuffed walls, shaking. She’d seen her father die in front of her eyes. Now Soli Hecht.
Her neck felt scraped raw. Raw like her heart. Another dead end. He’d only been asking for water.
The rabbi tucked his prayer book under his arm and joined her in the hallway. He gave her a long look. “You’re not Soli’s niece. His whole family was gassed at Treblinka.”
Aimee’s shoulders tightened. She looked down the hallway, wondering why the police backup hadn’t arrived. “Rabbi, Soli Hecht has been murdered.”
“You better have a lot more than chutzpah to lie at a dying man’s bedside and then say he’s been murdered. Explain.”
Either the police response time had dwindled or that hadn’t been a real police radio she’d talked into. Her uneasiness grew.
“I’m willing to explain, but not here,” she said. “Let’s walk down the hall slowly, go past the lobby towards the elevator.”
They walked by the mobile shock unit, now abandoned in the hallway.
“Temple E’manuel has hired me to investigate.”
His eyes opened wide. “You mean this has to do with Lili Stein’s murder?”
She nodded. “Didn’t you see the policeman who’d guarded the room lying unconscious on the floor? And the injection spot on Soli’s arm, a bad job that swelled like a golf ball?”
The rabbi nodded slowly.
“Someone pushed Soli in front of a bus,” she said. “That didn’t work so when he came out of the coma, they finished him off with a lethal injection. Unfortunately, they got here before I did. I don’t know how, but it involves Lili Stein. Was he able to talk at all?”
The rabbi shook his head. “He drifted in and out, never regaining consciousness.
Loud voices came from the corridor. Several plainclothes policemen strode down the hall. Why hadn’t a uniformed unit arrived? Her suspicions increased. Aimee turned away from them, bowed her head, and hooked her arm in the rabbi’s. She whispered in his ear, “Let’s walk slowly towards the stair exit. I don’t want them to see me. Please help me!”
The rabbi sighed. “It’s hard to believe anyone would make this up.”
He nudged her forward. They walked arm in arm towards the stairs while she buried her face in his scratchy gray beard. As she heard the static and crackle of police radios from down the hall, she burrowed her head further in his shoulder.
Around the corner, the rabbi hissed in her ear, “I’m only helping you because Soli was a good man.” He sidled close to the stairs, blocking the view, while Aimee crept through and down the stairway. She moved as quietly and quickly as the old stairs would allow.
“Excuse me, rabbi. Where is the woman you were in conversation with?” a clear voice asked the rabbi.
“Gone to wash her face in the ladies’ room,” she heard him reply.
Down the stairs, Aimee quickly followed a glassed-in walking bridge to the older part of the hospital. Outside, she unlocked her moped and scanned the area.
A few unmarked police cars were parked at the hospital entrance, but she didn’t see anyone. The pungent smell of bleach drifted from the old hospital laundry. She hit the kick start, then pedaled down tree-lined rue Elzevir, quiet at this time of evening.
Le Commissariat de Police didn’t carry Berettas. Professional hit men did, she knew that much. Behind her, a motorcycle engine whined loudly. Few cars used narrow rue Elzevir. The engine slowed down, then roared to life. She looked back to see a black leather–clad figure on a sleek MotoGuzi motorcycle. She veered towards the sidewalk as it came closer. Suddenly, a car darted out from an alley across from her. All she saw was the darkened car window before the front wheel of her bike hit a loose cobblestone and threw her up in the air. Airborne for three seconds, she saw everything happen in slow motion as she registered the motorcycle speeding away.
She ducked her head and rolled into a somersault. Her shoulders smacked against a parked car’s windshield. She inhaled the stench of burning rubber before her head cracked the side-view mirror like a hammer. Pain shot across her skull. She rolled off the hood.
Stunned, she sprawled on the sidewalk, partly wedged between a muddy tire and the stone gutter. The car stopped, then backed up, its engine whining loudly. Dizzy, she crawled over grease slicks and rolled under the parked car. She barely fit. She slid her Glock 9-mm from her jean jacket, uncocking the safety. The car door opened, then footsteps sounded on the pavement near her head.
Afraid to breathe, she saw black boot heels. She’d be lucky if she could shoot him in the foot. Loud police sirens hee-hawed down the street. A cigarette, orange-tipped, was flicked onto the pavement near her and fizzled in a puddle. The door clicked open, then the car sped away.
She flipped the gun’s safety back on, then slowly rolled out from under the car, her head aching. Her knees shook so badly she staggered in the gutter and fell. She just lay there, hoping her heart would stop pounding. Grease and oil stains coated her black pants and her hands were streaked with a brown smudge that smelled suspiciously of dog shit. She picked up the soggy cigarette stub. Only a well-paid hit man could afford to smoke fancy imported orange-tipped Rothmans.
AIMÉE KNOCKED at the frosted-glass door. She kept her eyes on the blurry outline visible in the hallway.
“I need to speak with you, Monsieur Rambuteau,” she shouted. “I’m not leaving until I do.”
Finally the door opened and she stared into portly Monsieur Rambuteau’s face.
“Nom de Dieu! What’s happened…?”
“Do you want to discuss your wife’s will in the street?”
Pain and fear shot across his face. He opened the door wider, then shuffled towards the breakfast room.
Her head throbbed with dull regularity. “Do you have any aspirin?”
He pointed to a bottle on the table. Ai
mee shook out two, gulped them down with water, and helped herself to ice from the freezer.
“Merci,” she said. She stuck the ice in a clear plastic bag, twisted it, and applied it to the lump on her head, wincing.
“Who are Thierry Rambuteau’s real parents?”
He sat down heavily. “Did my son do this to you?”
“That wasn’t my question but he’s certainly on my list.”
“Leave the past alone,” he said.
“That phrase is getting monotonous,” she said. “I don’t like people trying to kill me because I’m curious.”
She pulled out the folder and slapped it on the white melamine-topped table. “If you won’t tell me, this lawyer, Monsieur Barrault, will.”
“You stole that!” Monsieur Rambuteau accused.
“You offered to let me use this, if you want to get technical.” She slowly set her Glock on a sunflowered plate, her eyes never leaving his face. Half of her skull had frozen from the ice and the other half ached dully. “I’m not threatening you, Monsieur Rambuteau, but I thought you’d like to see what the big boys use when they need information. But I went to polite detective school. We ask first,” she said.
His hand shook as he reached for a bottle of yellow pills. “I’m preventing the reading of my wife’s will with a court order. So whatever you do won’t matter.”
“I’ll contest that as public domain information,” she said. “Within three days, Monsieur, it can be published as a legal document. What exactly are you hiding?”
“Nathalie was naive, too trusting.” He shook his head. “Look, I’ll hire you. Pay you to stop further damage. The war’s been over fifty years, people have made new lives. Some secrets are better left that way. My son’s certainly is.”
“Two Jews have been murdered so far, and I’m next,” she said. What would it take to reach him? “You better start talking because everything points to Thierry Rambuteau. Who is he?”
He glanced around furtively, as if someone would overhear.
“I had no idea Nathalie changed her will,” he said. “We never agreed over him. Maybe she’d been drinking. Why should the mistakes we make when young stay with us all our life?”
She wasn’t sure what he meant but he appeared fatigued and wiped his brow.
“Cut to the chase, Monsieur.” Her head pounded and her patience was exhausted. “Who is he?”
“During the war, Nathalie was an actress, I did lighting and camera work for Coliseum. We worked with Allegret, the director, in the same acting troupe with Simone Signoret.” A melancholy smile crossed his face. “Nathalie never tired of telling everyone that. Anyway, Coliseum was accused of being a collaborationist film company and later grew to become Paricor. But then we just made movies and Goebbels made the propaganda. And like everyone in France, we had to get Gestapo permission for anything we did. At that time, cutting your toenails required approval from the Gestapo Kommandantur, so I’ve never understood the uproar about collaborators. We all were, if you look at it like that.”
Maybe that was true, but it reminded her of the joke about the Resistance. Fewer than five in a hundred of the French had ever joined, but if you talked to anyone today over sixty, they’d all been card-carrying members.
He paused, sadness washing over his face. “Anyway, at Liberation we had a stillborn child. My wife couldn’t get over it, but then, you see, so many babies came out stillborn during the war. Maybe it was the lack of food. But Nathalie felt so guilty. Everyone went crazy happy at Liberation. Our saviors, the Allies, were rolling in and here she was about to commit suicide.”
His breath came in labored spurts now and his face was flushed. “On the street we’d see parades of women with their heads shaved. They’d slept with Nazis.”
“Monsieur, some water?” she interrupted. She passed the bottle of yellow pills across the table towards him.
“Merci,” he said, gulping the water with more pills.
“What does this have to do with Thierry?” she said.
“There was a knock on our door one night. Little Sarah, a girl really, held a baby in her arms. I knew her father, Ruben.”
“Sarah?” she said. Where had she seen that name? Then her brain clicked—she’d seen it on Lili’s yarn list next to Hecht’s! “What was her last name?”
Claude Rambuteau shook his head. “I don’t remember. Her father worked on the camera crew before the war, a Jew, but…” His eyes glazed, then he continued. “Anyway, it was such a shock, I hadn’t seen her for several years. Sarah’s head had been shaved and an ugly tar swastika branded on her forehead. She cried and moaned at our door. ‘My baby is hungry, my milk has dried up, and he’s going to die.’ The baby cried piteously. I noticed on her torn dress a dark outline of material where a star had been sewn. ‘Where is your family?’ I asked. She just shook her head. Then she said, ‘No one will give me milk for my Nazi bastard.’
“I told her that I couldn’t help her. People might suspect me of collaborating. Especially since I’d worked at Coliseum all during the war. She looked at my wife and said that the baby would die if he went with her and she didn’t know anyone else to ask. She said she knew we’d had a baby, couldn’t my wife nurse hers, too? I told her our baby had died.”
Rambuteau closed his eyes. “She begged me, got on her hands and knees in the doorway. She said she knew he’d be safe with us because we had connections. Bands of Resistance vigilantes roamed Paris, out for revenge. I tell you, it was more dangerous to be on the streets after the Germans left than before, if they thought you’d collaborated.”
He took a few deep breaths, then kept talking determinedly. “All of a sudden, my wife took the crying baby in her arms. She opened her blouse and instinctively the infant sucked greedily. Nathalie still had milk and her face filled with happiness. I knew then we’d keep the baby. So you see, Nathalie is his real mother. She gave him milk and life, I’ve always told her that. I never saw Sarah again. She brought us the baby because we were rightists and no one would ever suspect.”
Incredulous, Aimee asked, “How could you accept the baby with the way you feel about Jews?”
“I’ve always regarded him as Aryan, because half of him is.”
“Half-Aryan?” Aimee sat up.
“The product of a union between a Jew and a German soldier. Evidently, my wife had made some foolish promise to reveal the past to Thierry. Sometimes her drinking got her into trouble.” Wearily, he raised his hand and brushed his thinning gray hair behind his ears. The man had no tears left. Aimee recalled the cobbler Javel mentioning a blue-eyed Jewess with a baby.
“Did this Sarah have bright blue eyes?” she said.
Monsieur Rambuteau looked surprised, then wrinkled his brow. “Yes, like Thierry.” He shrugged. “He’s as much my son as if he came from my loins. And he’s all I have left.”
“Tell him the truth. Be honest,” she said.
Monsieur Rambuteau looked horror-stricken. “I don’t know if I could. You see, he would have such a reaction.”
“You mean a violent reaction?” She thought he seemed afraid of his own son.
He shook his head sadly. “His real parentage is against everything I’ve raised him to believe. And now it’s come back to haunt my life. I never meant to be so anti-Semitic when he was growing up. I just felt the races should live separately. And I spoiled him, I could never say no to him. He’s very strong-minded, I just don’t know what to do.”
Aimee was struck by this irony in Monsieur Rambuteau. But his obvious love for his son, even though he was half-Jewish, touched her.
After a minute of quiet, his labored breathing had eased and he smiled faintly. “I’m sorry. I’m a sick old man. And I’m desperate. The truth would destroy him.” He sighed. “My son is not the easiest person to deal with. If he asks you lots of questions, tell him that all records of births were destroyed by the Nazis when they abandoned Drancy prison. That’s the truth.”
“You love him,” she said. �
�But I can’t help you.”
“The records were destroyed, there’s nothing left,” he said.
Aimee pulled out a Polaroid of the black swastika painted on her office wall. “This is your son’s handiwork.”
He shook his head. “Wrong, Detective.”
“How do you know, Monsieur Rambuteau?” She searched his face.
“Because that’s how Nazis painted them in my day.”
Taken aback, she paused and studied it again.
“He could have copied the style,” she said.
But even though Aimee pressed him, he just shook his head. “As far as I’m concerned, young lady, we never had this conversation. I’ll deny it. Take my advice, no one wants the past dug up.”
Wednesday Afternoon
THIERRY RAMBUTEAU, LEADER OF Les Blancs Nationaux, paced impatiently in front of a sagging stone mausoleum. Where was his father? They’d arranged to meet before his mother’s funeral.
This was ridiculous. He wasn’t waiting any longer. Striding between the narrow lanes of crooked headstones in Père Lachaise cemetery, he realized he was lost. Every turn he took seemed to take him further away from where he wanted to go. A trio of seniors involved in a heated discussion stood on the gravel path, their breath puffy clouds in the crisp air.
“Alors, is this the western section?” Thierry asked of the one with a shovel. “I’m looking for Row E.”
The old man looked up and nodded knowingly. “A new burial, eh? You’re in the east corridor, young man, made a wrong turn a few turns back.”
The old man pulled his heavy work gloves off, reached into his vest pocket, and pulled out a fluorescent orange map. On it were the faces of celebrities buried in Père Lachaise. Like a Hollywood map to stars’ homes Thierry had seen sold in Beverly Hills. Only these stars were in homes of the dead. Just then, a group of tourists wandered past them, rattling away in Dutch and consulting their own maps.