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AL06 - Murder in Montmartre al-6

Page 20

by Cara Black


  Did Viard tend his orchids to find a beauty absent in his work? She noticed the lines around his mouth were deeper, his brow’s crease more pronounced. Did staying in the closet wear on him?

  Above his desk hung gun-show posters and a colored spectrum showing the trail of magnified bullets, arced like rainbows.

  She took the Baggie out of her pocket and dangled it in front of him. “I’m not a betting person, but a franc says the GSR in this report came from this.

  “A franc?”

  “I’ll throw in a bottle of Château Margaux.”

  He whistled, incredulous. “Do you know how much these tests cost to run, Aimée?”

  She shook her head. “As a taxpayer, I pay for it.”

  “You and a few others. Listen, my department’s budget couldn’t absorb this. Or even Internal Affairs’.”

  Was that why Delambre had rejected her idea? He knew they didn’t budget for special tests? And procedure didn’t call for it?

  “So Internal Affairs covers the costs?”

  “Most of it, but only the basic test. Standard procedure, end of story.” He shook his head as he kept on misting the orchids. “You know I’d help if I could. It’s impossible. I’m sorry.”

  She had an idea. It might work.

  “But, Viard, the Ministry’s involved. In tandem with Internal Affairs. Didn’t I mention that?” She knew there was a link there somehow. Right now she didn’t know where. That could wait. “I just assumed you knew.”

  “Ministry of the Interior?” He shrugged, set down the spray bottle, and checked his desk. “I haven’t received any requisition or paperwork.”

  “Let’s see, what was the name . . . the man responsible?” She ran her fingers through her spiky hair, glanced at the piled-up SIG Sauer pistol manuals. “Starts with a J. Jubert, that’s it. Ludovic Jubert.”

  He nodded. “In that case. Well . . .”

  She tried not to show surprise, eager to find out which office Jubert worked in.

  “I forget which division he’s in.”

  Viard stared at the lab report. “There’s an incompatibility between a Manhurin bullet’s residue and the GSR on the officer’s hands?”

  “Incompatibility, yes. Also, please test to see if this bullet’s tin content is compatible with the GSR on the officer’s hands.”

  She hoped she’d left enough residue traces on the wall from which she’d pried the bullet for the flics to find later.

  “Well, if the Ministry’s paying . . .” His eyes lit up and he pulled out a requisition form. “I suppose, in lieu of the requisition, I could note approval en route.”

  “Wonderful idea,” she said.

  Despite her eagerness to pinpoint Jubert’s location, right now she mustn’t deflect Viard from running the test, or raise his suspicions by asking how to reach Jubert.

  Viard slipped latex gloves on and took the Baggie from her. She’d hooked him.

  “What’s the white stuff?”

  “A gift from the pigeon gods.”

  “Aaah merci . . . fascinating,” he said, pulling goggles from his desk drawer. His voice had changed, it was higher. Excitement vibrated in it. “High tin content is a signature of the Eastern European models hitting the marketplace these days.”

  Something resonated in the back of her mind. Bordereau’s words. Think. “You mean the Eastern European arms used by the Armata Corsa?”

  She could swear he almost rubbed his gloved hands in glee. “After the Bucharest conference last year, I’ve been dying to try this.” He stared at the dull copper-nub-nosed bullet. “I’d say it’s a Bulgarian make but let me run a test I saw performed on a Sellier-Bellot.”

  AT LEAST Jubert’s department would foot the bill for tests run on a Sellier-Bellot, whatever that was. She liked that it was expensive and that Viard had fairly salivated to carry it out. She felt it in her bones—she’d exonerate Laure. And find the culprit.

  Time weighed heavily. It would be hours, maybe a day, before Viard got back to her with the results. In the meantime she had to deal with questions she’d put aside.

  She exited the Les Halles station and found an Internet café with cane-bottomed stools and posters advertising the Chatelet ethnic music festival papering the walls. The steady beat of trance music competed with the whoosh of the milk steamer. She slid ten francs to a doe-eyed waitress in flared paisley pants, found a vacant terminal, and logged online. First, she trawled the net for Ludovic Jubert’s name in the Ministry system. Once again, she found nothing.

  It was time to address the feeling she’d sensed behind Zoe Tardou’s hesitant answers, her frightened manner. She’d meant to revisit her earlier—this reclusive medieval scholar who lived in an elegant Deco apartment across from where Jacques was murdered.

  The geranium stem. Had Madame Tardou witnessed the murder when she was watering the flowers in her window box and kept silent out of fear? She had mentioned overhearing the names of planets, spoken in another language from the roof. Corsican? And she had let slip that she had spent time in an orphanage. An anomaly struck Aimée. If Zoe was the stepdaughter of the well-known Surrealist Max Tardou, why would she have lived in an orphanage? How did that fit?

  If something itched, scratch it, her father had said. She had to probe deeper. What better place to start than online.

  She searched under Surrealism and Max Tardou, finding an array of Web sites. She plowed through them. Tardou, a well-known painter, had fled the Occupation to Portugal at the onset of World War II. So much for his later claims of fighting in the Résistance. According to a Surrealist Web site, Zoe’s mother, Elise, had met him after the war.

  She searched further. She found photos of Elise; one in profile, taken at a Montmartre Dadaist ball. It showed a crowd in turbans and bowler hats with the Greek letter š painted on their faces. Another showed Elise backlit, her blonde hair pulled high on her head in a halo effect, her mandarin eyes slanted with kohl, draped in a cloak of her own design. A striking woman, renowned for her Dadaist poetry.

  Unable to find more current information, Aimée was about to exit, when she noticed a cross-reference. This one listed the name Elise Tardou in a 1980s documentary film about Lebensborn. Strange. Was it the same Elise Tardou? Lebensborn referred to the Nazi stud-farm program to propagate Aryans. It had been established in Norway, Germany, and occupied Europe. Even a member of the seventies group ABBA was listed in the documentary as a child of the Lebensborn. What was the connection here? Was there one?

  She downed her espresso and read further. Château Menier, outside Paris in Lamorlaye, bordered the only Lebensborn site in France. Aimée hadn’t known one existed. She was shocked. She read further. The article quoted an excerpt from the account of Elise Tardou, identified as a Dadaist poet, about her captivity there in 1944. What Aimée read astounded her.

  “There were French women in the château, though not many,” Elise was quoted as saying. “Few admit it. The shame. It wasn’t our choice, we were captives. Most of the women were prisoners from Poland, and blue-eyed Hungarians. They had a nursery, ran it like a birthing factory.”

  Nineteen forty-four. Zoe looked to be in her fifties. A terrible idea entered Aimée’s mind. She printed out the page. And then located an article on a summer art colony, the haunt of the old Surrealist icons in the sixties. It had been located in Corsica.

  Corsica! According to an article she’d read previously, the Tardous had spent their holidays in Corsica every August. For years.

  She’d caught Zoe Tardou in a lie. Now she thought she knew why. She had to test her theory.

  * * *

  “MADAME TARDOU! ” she said, knocking on Zoe Tardou’s door.

  No answer.

  After five minutes of knocking, when her knuckles were sore, the door opened a crack.

  “I spoke with you the other day, remember? You had a miserable cold,” Aimée said. “I hope you’re feeling better. I brought you some Ricola cough drops.”

  “That’s very
kind.”

  Aimée put the cough-drop box into Zoe’s hands, noticed the blond-gray hair pulled into a bun, her slim figure under the wool sweater. The striking aqua blue eyes.

  “May I come in?”

  “I answered your questions,” Madame Tardou said. “I won’t go to the police station.”

  Again, that fear of the outside. Agoraphobia?

  Aimée put her boot into the doorway. “I just need to clarify a detail, to remove it from the inquiry. That’s all.”

  Hesitantly, Zoe opened the door wider. “You’re persistent, Mademoiselle,” she said, “but I have nothing more to say.”

  “Please, this won’t take any time at all. You’ll see.” Aimée edged past her and kept walking toward the large room filled with Deco furniture. The room with black blankets hanging over the windows. She felt in her bag for her hairbrush.

  Zoe Tardou, reading glasses perched on her chapped nose, stood with a red pencil in her hand. “I’m copyediting proofs on my treatise, you see. I can spare you only a moment.”

  Aimée paused to look at the photos on the grand piano. Studied them.

  “You spent summers in Corsica, Madame Tardou, didn’t you?”

  “Is that a crime?”

  “Corsica, L’Ile de Beauté. Yet you told me you summered in Italy.”

  “We went to Italy, too.”

  Aimée nodded. “Your stepfather, Max Tardou, established an art colony in Bonifacio where he tried to resurrect Surrealism. You went there for years while you were growing up.”

  Aimée ran her palm over the smooth blond wood case of the piano. She pointed to a photo. A black-and-white scene of sunbathers with an awninged café in the background.

  “Café Bonifacio. It’s still there.”

  “What does this have to do with anything?”

  “You understand Corsican. And you speak it, don’t you?”

  Zoe Tardou’s fingers twisted the red pencil back and forth.

  “I was only a child.”

  “Even as a teenager you must have summered in Corsica,” Aimée said. “You may even have attended a Corsican school.”

  “Yes, I did. How does that matter?”

  She’d admitted it!

  Aimée moved closer to the woman.

  The pencil snapped between Zoe’s fingers.

  “The voices you heard from the roof spoke Corsican, didn’t they? You understood them, recognized the names of the planets and constellations.”

  Fear shone in those compelling blue eyes. She pushed the glasses up on her nose with trembling fingers.

  “Maybe . . . yes . . . I’m not sure.”

  “Think. They spoke Corsican. Exactly what did they say?”

  Zoe covered her glasses with her hands, then looked up and nodded. “Yes. But it had been so long ago since I heard that language. From another lifetime.”

  “Why couldn’t you tell me?” Aimée said, controlling her excitement.

  “It was so strange to hear Corsican, I thought I was dreaming, I was unsure—”

  “You looked out, pretending to be watering your geraniums,” Aimée interrupted. “That’s natural. You understood what they said. It was quiet, as the storm hadn’t erupted yet.”

  Aimée paused. Waited. “It’s all right, we’re telling the truth now,” Aimée said, her tone soothing, urging. “Accounting for all the details, clearing this up, eh? Most investigative work depends on the tedious details, checking and rechecking.”

  Zoe watched her. Unmoving. An aroma of herbes de Provence and something roasting, Mediterranean style, wafted from the kitchen. Wonderful. Aimée’s stomach growled.

  Aimée sighed. “Nothing glamorous in this, believe me.” She tried for a matter-of-fact voice. “Did you hear the glass break in the skylight?”

  Zoe shook her head.

  “Yet you recognized the men on the roof.”

  “But I—” She covered her mouth with her hands, again that little-girl manner, as if she had been caught in a fault.

  “—got scared?” Aimée finished for her.

  Zoe Tardou nodded.

  “Who did you recognize?”

  “No trouble, I can’t have trouble,” Zoe said, putting her hands up like a shield and stepping back. “I can’t get involved. Now, I’ve got something cooking on the stove. . . .”

  The smell of thyme was stronger now.

  “All I need is a name.” Aimée smiled and reached for a notepad in her leather backpack.

  “I don’t know his name. The one I recognized—anyway, it doesn’t mean he shot anyone.”

  “Of course not, you’re right. But he can help us find the one who did, don’t you see? We need your help.”

  Zoe Tardou hesitated.

  “Does he live here?”

  “I’ve seen him on the stairs, but I don’t know him.”

  “What does he look like?”

  “He had bleached hair the last I saw him. He changes it. I don’t really know, I don’t think he lives here.”

  Aimée wrote in her notepad.

  “But he could work in the building? Or for someone who does live here?”

  Zoe shrugged. “He’s too coarse.”

  Was this the mec Cloclo had referred to? Or just a workman, like Theo, who had offended her delicate sensibility?

  “Coarse? You mean he was a construction worker? One of the men doing the remodeling?”

  “He was not a workman. He made rude comments. But he was dressed in designer black. Trendy.”

  “A young man?”

  “I didn’t pay attention.”

  “What about the other man?”

  “Just his back, that’s all I saw.”

  “Did you hear the gunshot or see the flash?”

  Madame Tardou shook her head. “When I heard voices talking about constellations . . . what they said was mixed up with words that didn’t fit.”

  “What did you hear?”

  “I didn’t tell you before because it doesn’t make sense.” Zoe paused, rubbed her cheek.

  “Go on, it’s all right,” Aimée said, trying to control her impatience.

  “They said ‘turrente,’ a stream; ‘parolle,’ which means ‘words,’ but it didn’t make sense or seem to mean anything. They spoke about planets and streams. No, there was more . . . that’s right . . . cincá, searching for, searching, they said ‘searching.’”

  Planets and streams and searching, talking about Corsica, and then murder? “You’re sure?”

  “Corsicans don’t articulate, they swallow the consonants at the ends of words.” Zoe’s gaze settled on her piled desk. “They did repeat the old saying, that I recognized.”

  “Which is?”

  “Corsica audra di male in peglyu.” She shook her head.

  “‘Corsica will always go wrong,’ typical of their pessimism tinged with pride.” Zoe shrugged, spent. As if she’d run out of things to say. “My head ached, I felt miserable. I lay down and must have fallen asleep watching the télé. That’s all.”

  Aimée believed her, but she had to check.

  “What show did you watch?”

  “Show? An old Sherlock Holmes film. Too bad I missed the ending. Now I must work,” she said, eager for Aimée to leave. “I don’t know any more.”

  “There’s something else,” Aimée said. How could she phrase this? “I admire your mother. It takes a courageous woman to speak of Lamorlaye, and the Lebensborn. Why did she finally . . . ?”

  “Talk about her captivity? The way they used the women?” Zoe asked, all in one breath. And for a moment, Aimée saw the same wistful gaze she’d noted in the photo of Elise.

  Aimée nodded.

  “The past was too heavy to bear any longer, Maman said. When the filmmaker approached her, she felt it was time. Nothing that horrible was worth all that effort of concealment, my mother said.”

  “That took such courage.”

  “And the odd thing was: after that, she wrote poetry again. It was as if the weight of her hi
story had lifted.”

  “I respect her for speaking out,” Aimée said.

  Zoe’s brows knitted in anger. “My stepfather didn’t,” she said. “He threw her out and tried to disinherit me, but he died before he could.”

  “To disinherit you because you were fathered by a German?” Aimée asked.

  “Those twenty-fifth-hour Résistants who watched the Occupation from afar turn out the most heroic of all!”

  “I’m sorry.” Aimée didn’t know what else to say.

  “Sorry?” She gave a short laugh. “So were the women, so are we, the children. Children of the enemy. Raised in guilt for who we were. Our very existence was the cause of shame. Whether I was too young, or just misplaced in the chaos of the German retreat in 1944 I’ll never know, but I wasn’t transported to Germany like the others,” she continued. “My mother found me in the room with telescopes, an observatory adjacent to the château that had been turned into an orphanage. I was lucky. Others displaced at the war’s end were reared in group homes with hardly any food or nurturing, ostracized for their background, and became misfits. Bereft of parents who never searched for them, either dead or lost or wanting to forget, many ended up in mental institutions. At least, I found my biological father, alive after all this time.”

  Aimée stared, incredulous. “Did you meet him?”

  “A sad old gentleman living in Osnabrück. He remembered my mother. After the war, he’d owned a pharmacy,” she said, with a small smile. “He’d studied medieval history at university.”

  Thursday Evening

  ONCE OUTSIDE , AIMÉE BELTED her leather coat. Zoe’s words haunted her. No wonder she avoided the authorities. Her story didn’t seem to help but at least she’d admitted hearing words spoken in Corsican. Aimée scanned the alleylike street. No Cloclo. No mec with a down jacket.

  How could she warn Cloclo her “station” was being watched?

  Aimée climbed the stairs to Place des Abbesses. There, CRS teams in blue jumpsuits cradling Uzis strolled the streets. This signaled a definite terrorist alert. She felt a tightening in her chest. What was going on?

  She entered a warm café and picked up a paper to see if she could find out. She sat at the window overlooking the steps leading to the alley, a perfect vantage point from which to watch for Cloclo.

 

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