The Disappearance of Adèle Bedeau

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The Disappearance of Adèle Bedeau Page 11

by Graeme Macrae Burnet


  ‘No,’ said Manfred, ‘I went walking along the river that day.’

  The lie took him by surprise. Up until that moment, he had imagined confessing everything at the first opportunity. But this lie had come from nowhere and at once he saw that it was a good one. Nobody knew where he had been that day, so one quiet place was as good as another.

  ‘Oh,’ said the detective as if a little disappointed that his lead had evaporated so quickly. ‘And you’ve never seen anyone suspicious around the woods?’

  Again the question phrased in the negative. Perhaps, Manfred thought, the detective had asked these questions so often that he had no expectation of a positive response. There was no significance in him asking Manfred. He was just crossing another potential witness from the list.

  ‘No,’ said Manfred. That much was true.

  The detective nodded, as if Manfred had confirmed what he had expected him to say. He clasped his hands together to indicate that the interview was over and took his leave, apologising somewhat obsequiously for disturbing his grandparents. Manfred went back to his room and lay on his bed staring at the ceiling. He felt no relief, merely the feeling that the inevitable had been postponed. In a way, he was disappointed. It would have been better to get the thing over and done with.

  When Manfred returned to school at the end of the holidays, he withdrew completely from his peers. He had always been on the periphery. His status as an orphan made his classmates wary of him, but it also provided a shield behind which he could hide. However oddly he behaved, people put it down to ‘what he had been through’. He had always heard whispers to this effect. Now, however, Manfred’s retreat was complete. While his classmates flirted and arranged dates, he was nothing more than an observer. Nobody seemed to notice. He had always struggled to fit in and if he had now given up trying, it was no real loss to anyone. And while part of Manfred longed to participate, to be part of the crowd, the greater part of him was relieved. He developed a sense of superiority. His peers were mere children. The girls with their giggling and obsession with clothes seemed silly creatures, an entirely different species from Juliette. And the boys, posing with their leather bomber jackets, cigarettes held in the cup of their hand, were despicable. Little did they know that he, Manfred Baumann, had experienced love of the most intense and profound nature and had committed an act that placed him outside the normal boundaries of society.

  Manfred followed the trial of the tramp Malou with dispassion. It did not occur to him to come forward and exonerate him, nor did he take any pleasure in his conviction. It had been clear to Manfred since the visit of the detective that he was going to ‘get away with it’.

  It was around this time that Manfred experienced his first migraine. It came upon him at his school desk without warning, or at least he did not recognise the signs. All he knew was that he found himself clutching at a severe pain in his temples. He was helped to the school sickbay where the nurse insisted that an ambulance be called. Perhaps he was suffering an aneurysm. The medics gave him a cursory examination and, to his relief, refused to take him to hospital.

  Manfred did not tell his grandparents about the incident and no questions were asked when he failed to appear for the evening meal. The headaches began to occur every few weeks. Each one lasted a day or two and left him drained of energy for days afterwards. Manfred spent these days in his room with the curtains drawn and the sheet pulled over his head. The slightest noise sent fresh shards shooting through his skull. During the episodes he lost all sense of time. Minutes dragged by as if mired in mud and whole days vanished as if struck from the calendar. Manfred could recall little of what occurred.

  Even to the staunchly godless Manfred, it was impossible not to see these attacks as a punishment. But in the absence of a vengeful God, what force governed such things? Even in his pained state such thoughts irritated Manfred; the universe was chaotic and meaningless. Still, it was difficult not to see the killing of Juliette and the onset of the headaches as connected.

  It became impossible to conceal what was occurring from his grandparents. Despite his protestations, Manfred’s grandmother insisted on making an appointment with the family doctor. Doctor Faubel was a middle-aged man with greasy thinning hair and a shiny complexion. He smiled pleasantly as Manfred sat down. The surgery smelled strongly of dark tobacco.

  ‘So,’ he began, ‘headaches, I hear.’

  ‘Yes,’ said Manfred. He was simultaneously relieved that he did not have to explain why he was here and embarrassed that his grandmother must have already briefed the doctor, as if he was still a child. ‘Headaches’ did not seem like a legitimate reason to take up a doctor’s time, especially headaches that Manfred, despite himself, believed to be a kind of just punishment.

  Faubel asked a series of questions about the nature, frequency and duration of the ‘painful episodes’, as he called them. He appeared to take Manfred’s complaint quite seriously.

  ‘On a scale of one to ten, how would you rate the level of pain?’ he asked.

  Manfred was about to respond, ‘Ten,’ but that would be ridiculous. He had read of certain techniques of torture that would undoubtedly be more painful. Besides, he did not wish to appear lily-livered or melodramatic.

  ‘Seven,’ he said.

  ‘Seven?’ the doctor repeated. He emitted a breathy whistle.

  ‘Eight, maybe,’ Manfred said.

  Faubel asked Manfred to describe what he did during the painful episodes.

  ‘I just lie there with my eyes closed. It’s as if I become the pain. There’s nothing else to think about.’

  ‘And prior to the onset of these attacks, do you experience any unusual sensations?’

  Manfred looked blankly at the doctor.

  ‘Unusual effects of light, perhaps, a kind of flaring? Like an aura?’

  Manfred nodded. This was precisely what he experienced. He would not have described it as an aura, as he disliked the word’s mystical connotations, but it was as if he was looking at the world through the glass of a rainy window. Colours appeared to slide into one other. Faubel smiled to himself, clearly pleased with the accuracy of his diagnosis. He explained that Manfred was suffering from migraines. It was the first time Manfred had heard this word. The causes of migraines, Faubel went on, were unknown and there was no cure. The only option was to try to manage the condition.

  Manfred felt a pang of disappointment. His hopes had been raised by Faubel’s insight into his symptoms.

  ‘It’s quite common for migraine to rear its head in someone your age. Often the frequency of attack decreases and, in time, it can even disappear completely.’

  Faubel instructed Manfred to keep a diary of everything he ate and drank, what exercise he took, his sleep patterns and whether he was feeling anxious or depressed. He was to make another appointment when he had experienced another two painful episodes, at which point they would review his journal and see if they could identify any triggers for the attacks. The most important thing in combating migraine, he said, was to establish a routine and stick to it.

  Manfred left the doctor feeling downhearted. As instructed, he kept a journal for the next two weeks, but as he did not experience an attack in this period, he let it lapse and never made the return visit to Doctor Faubel.

  As the school year wore on, Manfred’s aloofness and indifference to his peers seemed to exert a certain fascination upon some of his female classmates. He had matured into a good-looking young man and his lack of attention to his appearance perhaps struck these girls as possessing a certain charm. One girl, Sonia Givskov, took to hanging around Manfred during lunch hour, sitting in his vicinity and passing remarks about whatever book he was reading. She had a large nose, matronly breasts and thick lips, and wore unfashionable clothes, which Manfred suspected her mother made for her. Before the events of the summer Manfred would have felt her a kindred spirit, but now he felt nothing but contempt for her. She was not Juliette. Yet the more dismissively Manfred behaved towar
ds her, the more she appeared to be in his thrall. He did not have the heart to shoo her away and out of some vague principle he refused to actually avoid her, so they took to sitting together, mostly in silence. Occasionally, Manfred heard mocking remarks about Sonia Givskov now being his girlfriend. But such tittle-tattle meant nothing to him. The idiots around him had no idea who they were dealing with. Nor would he betray Sonia Givskov by contradicting them.

  In another way this arrangement with Sonia suited Manfred. Despite the fact that he had no desire to ever be with anyone other than Juliette, the school environment conspired against him. He could not fail to notice the down-covered napes, tanned calves and saucily revealed bra-straps of the girls around him. He initiated a rigorous regime of masturbation, performing the act first thing in the morning and as soon as he returned home from school, whether he felt the urge or not. It had been a lack of control over his sexual desire that had led to the death of Juliette and he made a pact with himself to curb this malevolent force at all times. The perception that he and Sonia Givskov were an item meant that other girls kept their distance. She acted as a buffer.

  Manfred let his schoolwork slide. In his state of numbness, he no longer cared what happened, neither in the here and now of school, nor in the future. He did not deliberately flunk tests. He simply no longer knew or could be bothered recalling the answers. He had never been popular with his teachers. Despite his good marks, he lacked charm. He sat at the back of class, never put his hand up and when called upon answered in monosyllables. He was surly. The only person who appeared to notice Manfred’s drive to failure was his French master. M. Becault was in his twenties. He wore an unconvincing ginger beard and dressed in corduroy trousers, cheesecloth shirts and tweed jackets, as if these middle-aged clothes would somehow bestow authority on him. His beard, Manfred observed, disguised a weak chin and slack mouth, but he was otherwise a pleasant-looking man. In the corridor he would form his lips into a thin smile and nod almost deferentially when passing one of his students. Becault committed the cardinal sin of the novice teacher: he wanted to be liked. Consequently, he suffered continual discipline problems. He regularly blushed when texts alluded to the sexual act. Becault had always been Manfred’s favourite teacher.

  Once or twice in previous years the pair had chatted uneasily for a few minutes after class. Shortly after the death of his mother Manfred had written an essay on The Outsider. ‘The real shock of The Outsider,’ he wrote, ‘is not Mersault’s indifference to his mother’s death. Rather it is the animosity of others towards this indifference.’ Becault had read these lines back to Manfred and asked him what he meant. Manfred shrugged. He was both flattered by Becault’s attention and embarrassed. In truth, he was not sure what he meant and he suspected that Becault was using this as an attempt to get him to ‘open up’ about his own bereavement. When Manfred failed to articulate anything, the conversation fizzled out. ‘Well, it’s an excellent essay,’ Becault had said, handing it back.

  Despite the abortive nature of this conversation, Manfred felt some sort of kinship with Becault. He pictured his teacher as an awkward, disillusioned teenager, always on the outside looking in. For a while he entertained fantasies about meeting Becault in a café to discuss books or other worldly matters. They would smoke and drink coffee together. Sometimes Becault would pause and chat for a few moments in the canteen about whatever Manfred was reading. On account of his weak manner and eccentric appearance, there were rumours that Becault was a homosexual. When he stopped to talk, Manfred was conscious of other students’ eyes upon them. Nothing would have pleased Manfred more than to engage in discussion, but it was not politic to do so. Invariably the situation became awkward and Becault would take his leave with a limp comment such as ‘Best be getting on,’ or ‘Mustn’t keep you from your lunch.’

  A few months into the school year Becault asked Manfred to stay behind at the end of class. Manfred slouched in his seat at the back of the room. Becault perched on an adjacent desk. He had shaved off his beard during the summer. The flesh around his mouth was pink and flabby.

  ‘You don’t seem yourself,’ he said.

  ‘I wish I wasn’t myself,’ said Manfred.

  Becault smiled, as if to himself, and exhaled a little laugh through his nose.

  ‘I’m concerned,’ he said. He proffered an essay Manfred had written on Gide. ‘This is…’ He let his sentence trail off with a shake of his head. Manfred shrugged.

  ‘You used to be my star pupil.’

  ‘I don’t like Gide.’

  The teacher seemed encouraged. ‘It’s not a question of liking Gide,’ he said. ‘This is nothing more than a rant. You used to write so well. You had insight.’

  Manfred stared at the front of the room.

  ‘I just want to help you,’ he said.

  Manfred said nothing.

  Becault pursed his lips. ‘How are things at your grandparents? You’re living with your grandparents, aren’t you?’

  Manfred turned and looked at him. He imagined the little daydream he must nurture of fostering his students, of providing them with pastoral care. Probably he went home at night and struggled over a novel about a homosexual provincial schoolteacher in love with one of his pupils. But he had no idea that he was dealing with the Beast of Saint-Louis. Manfred scraped his chair back across the linoleum floor and got up.

  ‘I don’t need the help of some sad faggot,’ he said. He gathered up his bag and jacket and left the room. Becault remained on the desk at the back of the room for some time. He left the teaching profession the following term.

  Twelve

  BY WEDNESDAY MORNING, Manfred’s excitement at the prospect of meeting Alice Tarrou had given way to a kind of dread. It was inconceivable that he could pass an evening in the company a woman like Alice without embarrassing himself in some way. He spent the day concocting reasons to break the appointment, but could think of nothing credible. In any case, Alice had not given him her telephone number, so, short of loitering in the foyer, he had no means of contacting her. His only option was simply not to turn up at the appointed hour. But even setting aside the discourtesy of such an act, he was bound to run into Alice again at some point and he imagined that she would not be the type to take such a snub lightly. He had no choice but to go through with it.

  Manfred spent his lunch wondering whether he should mention to Pasteur that he would not be in that evening. His absence would be noted and likely become the subject of speculation. He imagined Lemerre holding forth about how he was probably off stalking the waitresses of another bar or how, on account of being mixed up in the disappearance of Adèle, he was now ashamed to show his face. And then the following evening, he would have to endure his jibes about how he was now too good for the Restaurant de la Cloche: ‘Got better things to do with yourself, have you, Swiss?’ It was better to lay the groundwork beforehand. When he was paying his bill at the counter, Pasteur muttered, ‘See you later.’

  Manfred grasped the opportunity. ‘Actually,’ he said, ‘I don’t think I’ll be in tonight.’

  He lingered at the counter for a moment, waiting for the proprietor to react. Pasteur counted the coins from the silver salver into the till and then looked up as if to enquire why he was still there. Manfred wondered if he had heard him.

  ‘See you tomorrow, then,’ Pasteur said eventually.

  Manfred nodded and left. The afternoon passed slowly. He left the bank at five and hurried home. He took a shower and shaved for the second time that day, a white towel wrapped around his waist. Then he examined his face in the bathroom mirror for any stray whiskers and clipped his nasal hair with a pair of scissors he kept in the bathroom cabinet for this purpose. He splashed his face with cold water and patted it dry before applying cologne. Manfred prided himself on his fastidious personal hygiene. On more than one occasion, a girl at Simone’s had remarked that he smelled nice. He was not such a bad-looking chap. Was it so implausible that Alice Tarrou would find him attractive?
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  Manfred returned to his bedroom and dressed. Once a year Manfred bought himself a new suit from the same tailor’s in Mulhouse that he had visited with his grandmother as a teenager. M. Boulot invariably greeted him with great warmth and enquired after the wellbeing of his grandparents. In earlier years, he would inform Manfred of the latest trends, but Manfred was not interested and insisted on the same cut and colour as he always had. As a result the rail of suits in Manfred’s wardrobe were all but identical, distinguishable only through subtle variations in the fabric. There was no need for Manfred to go on acquiring new suits – he had more than enough to last him a lifetime – but he continued to make his annual pilgrimage to M. Boulot’s out of loyalty. In a similar way, the rack on the back of the wardrobe door consisted almost entirely of black ties of a narrow girth, enlivened by a few of bolder colours. These were gifts from his grandmother, which Manfred would occasionally wear to Sunday lunch in order to please her, but remove immediately after he left the house. Such gaudy accessories made him feel like a ridiculous dandy. He had no wish to attract comments on his dress. Nor did he wish to have to think about what he would wear on such-and-such a day. His only concession to casual dress was to loosen his tie a little and undo the top button of his shirt at the end of the working day.

  He sat at the kitchen table. Now, in fresh clothes, he felt a little more relaxed about the impending encounter. What, after all, could really go wrong? It was not yet six o’clock. He planned to arrive early to accustom himself to his surroundings before Alice arrived, but he still had the best part of an hour to kill. He found a notebook and began to write a list of possible topics of conversation. Manfred was not in the habit of asking personal questions, but he was aware that on occasions such as these it was regarded as normal practice. Indeed, were he not to ask Alice some questions about herself, she might think that he was the sort of egoist who only wished to talk about himself, something which could not be further from the truth. He tapped his pencil on the piece of paper and wrote the word Work. It was dull, but work was a perfectly acceptable topic. Alice had already asked him what he did for a living. He would merely be reciprocating. Indeed, if he did not ask, Alice might think that he was a chauvinist who thought women were only fit to be housewives. Or whores. He tried to think of ways in which he might phrase a question: So, Alice, what do you do for a living? What line of work are you in? As he rehearsed the words in his head, they sounded quite absurd, as if he were interviewing a prospective employee. He crumpled up the paper and threw it on the floor. What was he going to do, take it out of his pocket and consult it at the dinner table? He was sure to make a fool of himself. He should never have agreed to this stupid date in the first place. The more he thought about it, the more he was not even sure if he liked Alice Tarrou. She was offhand and supercilious. And clearly she was someone who was used to getting her own way. He had foolishly allowed himself to be flattered by her attention, but he had no wish to be drawn into any entanglements. He was quite content with his life the way it was. If he lived the way he did, it was because that was how he wanted to live. He had no desire to change anything. The date had been a mistake. There was no question of cancelling, but he could easily and quite politely make it quite clear that he had no interest in becoming more deeply involved.

 

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