Stonekiller

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Stonekiller Page 12

by J. Robert Janes


  The Sunday before her mother was killed. The day she herself had returned to the cave to retrieve the lumps of pyrolusite and the mortar before it was too late.

  ‘Oelmann has a pistol, Louis. I left our guns in my other bag, the one that stayed on the train.’

  ‘Idiot! If you don’t have your bags chained to your wrists these days, they are stolen!’

  ‘I checked it through. It went into the luggage lock-up.’

  ‘Destined for the Gare d’Austerlitz? Hah! a perfectionniste!’

  It was Hermann’s responsibility to look after their guns when not in use.

  ‘Befehl ist Befehl, Frau Jouvet,’ seethed St-Cyr. ‘Ist wirklich ganz einfach. An order is an order. It’s really quite simple. I leave you with him and trust that God will not ensure yet another blunder!’

  ‘He speaks deutsch. It helps,’ offered Kohler lamely after Louis had left them. ‘Now why don’t you tell me about the postcards? Oelmann will only find out, then where will you be? He’s SS, madame — he has to be. They teach them how to deal with recalcitrant tongues. Men, women and children, it makes no difference.’

  ‘This is not the zone occupée, monsieur. Here there are still laws against such things.’

  But for how long? he wondered sadly. They’ll strip you naked so as to humiliate you. Then they’ll make you sit before them under the lights or they’ll hang you up from a meat-hook and make what that lousy husband of yours does seem like a picnic. Guys like Oelmann can always get help, madame, even here in the zone libre. All he has to do is make a phone call. If not a Sonderkommando, a special commando, then the Vichy Security Police who work hand in glove with them in spite of your laws. He won’t even lay a finger on you unless he gets a kick out of it, but we’ll find you in some field with the flies buzzing.’

  ‘Stop it! Please stop it!’

  ‘Hey, I’m really sorry I had to do that but you have to have the truth. Louis and I can’t be with you all the time. Not if we’re to deal with this thing.’

  Sweat stung his eyes and St-Cyr cursed it. The geese were worried. Perhaps forty of them disinterestedly pecked at the stubble about the door but on seeing him the whole flock rushed to a tiny shed at the side of the cottage. There they beat their wings and stretched their necks as they complained loudly.

  ‘All right, all right,’ he said. ‘A moment, please. Ah nom de Jésus-Christ!’

  They fretted. They rushed him again. They pecked at his shoes and ankles. One worked on the turn-up of a trouser leg, another at a sock until he slipped and went down hard to scramble up as they fluttered about and he flicked his hands to clean them and roared, ‘Is Auger in there, eh? Bloated, butchered, festering among the wooden rakes? Ah merde, look what I’ve done to my clothes.’

  He was glad Hermann hadn’t seen him fall. He would never have lived it down.

  The shed was primitive, the feed-bin half empty. Seizing the wooden bucket, he dug it fiercely into the cracked corn and tried to repel the invasion. ‘Now, now,’ he said. ‘Don’t be greedy. There’s enough for all.’

  A pump in the yard gave salvation, a towel on the line was used. Wiping his shoes off as best he could, he lifted the latch and went into the cottage. The soot-stained fireplace held cold ashes; the bare, plank table and benches had seen years of use. There was nothing out of the ordinary. The place was clean and simple and elementally perfect once one had got used to the geese. A box bed, with big drawers beneath it, was near a plain armoire. Heavy log beams were above. A small attic was through a trap door to which a ladder of peeled poles rose steeply. Again there was nothing much but again, as in Madame Fillioux’s attic, he had to ask, Has the place been carefully searched?

  Several of last year’s walnuts lay in a bowl in the centre of the table, the large grandjeans still in their shells.…

  Down by the river, the grass and wild flowers were tall. The sun was high overhead.

  Auger’s lacquered, split-bamboo fishing rod protruded from the ample lawn chair he must have purchased at auction or been given years ago. Solid comfort. Cushions even. A pipe and small tin of tobacco were nearby, some matches — the matches destroyed by the rain on that Sunday … that Sunday.

  The fishing line had been cut. No hook, worm, sinker or fly trailed in the water. There was no sign of a body, only the mocking laughter of a river which joyfully tumbled over clean white gravel.

  ‘Merde, where is he?’ It was not nice, this isolation. Though everyone would have missed the sous-facteur, had none bothered to search?

  Looking back towards the cottage, he could just see the crown of its roof above the walnut trees. There was no sign whatsoever of Hermann and Madame Jouvet. It was as if he was all alone.

  There were no stones nearby large enough to crush an unsuspecting skull. No hat had tumbled aside. Then why cut the line?’ he asked.

  There were no worms in the earth of the bait tin beneath its cover of moss. Deliberately they had been freed from their little prison. ‘Hermann,’ he said. ‘Hermann, we have a problem.’

  Kohler didn’t like it. Oelmann could have made a detour down the bluff, but had he seen the two of them step through the shoulder-high bushes into tall grass? Not a lark stirred, not a sparrow. Instinct warned. It was as if a hunter stalked. Everything else had gone to ground. Everything but the bees and butterflies.

  ‘Stay here. I won’t be a moment,’ he breathed.

  ‘Ah no, please don’t leave me.’

  She was terrified, ‘I have to. I can’t have him getting the jump on us, madame. It’ll be all right. I’m used to this.’

  He moved away. The bushes hardly stirred. For a big man, Herr Kohler was quiet but it was not nice, sitting here alone, half hidden by the grass and wild flowers. It made her think of maman in her lovely dress. It made her think of blood rushing up past the blade of a flint knife to wet the fingers and then the chest. The smell of it, the stench, the sound of blowflies.…

  ‘Ah!…’

  Torn from her thoughts, she was grabbed by the hair and mouth and lifted up so suddenly her bladder emptied as she fought to get away… away. Bushes … bushes … she screamed at herself, her face hitting them. My hair … my hair.…

  Oelmann rushed her through the brush. He took her far enough, then slammed her down hard on the ground.

  Winded, in agony for breath, she tried to move, tried to fight him off.

  All but smothering her, he let her pass out. ‘So, gut,’ he caught a breath. ‘Gut. Now we vanish for a while.’

  He waited. He looked slowly around. Kohler must have heard them but there was no sign of him. Verdammt, where was he?

  Dragging the woman behind a nearby copse, he used it as cover as he hoisted her over a shoulder. Thirty metres later, he re-entered the woods and began to climb to the car but at a point half-way up the slope, in a wooded hollow, he again paused.

  Kohler was out there somewhere. The woman lay slackly on the ground. Eyes shut, mouth partly open, she was breathing normally. Could he leave her for a few minutes? Could he circle round and put a stop to Kohler? He had to find out what she was hiding. Nothing must jeopardize the film, not now, not when the Reichsführer-SS Himmler, the Reichsminister Goebbels and the Führer himself were so excited and had placed so much confidence in him.

  With her shoelaces, he tied her wrists behind her back. With the belt from her dress, he tied her ankles. Yanked up, her dress was jammed into her mouth.

  Kohler heard him leave the hollow. The gun in Oelmann’s hand was a Polish Radom 9-millimetre semiautomatic. Mean, dark and lethal, it was one of the most durable pistols known. But what its presence, and the way it was held, said more than anything else was that Franz Oelmann wasn’t just SS. He was a veteran of the Polish Campaign and of the blitzkrieg in the West.

  Ah merde, the Totenkopf, mein herr? The Leibstandart Adolf Hitler, or the Verfügungstruppe, the forerunners of the Waffen-SS?

  Brutal, fanatically ruthless and determined to the point of being suicidal, they had more th
an satisfied the Oberkommando der Wehrmacht that the SS should have their own fighting units in the regular army. Hitler had been pleased. Himmler had said, ‘I told you so, Mein Führer.’ Goebbels, as Minister of Propaganda, had let the world know and must have seen in one or several of the newsreels that had come back from the front, just how useful Herr Oelmann could be. An ObersturmFührer-SS, was that it? A lieutenant, wondered Kohler. A Standartenfuhrer? A colonel.

  Himmler had teams of prehistorians digging at sites all over the occupied territories — in Poland, the former Czechoslovakia, the Lowlands, Norway, Denmark even, and Russia. Anywhere proof could be found to justify the conquest and historic reclamation of ancient lands by their Aryan, Indo-Germanic former and rightful owners.

  It was all bullshit but serious and funded by the Friends of Himmler, the Society for Cultural Exchange — bankers, lawyers, industrialists and businessmen. Never had so many pre-historians from the Reich’s universities had it so good or caved in to warping history so much.

  But the Führer must be complaining that all the Reichsführer-SS ever dug up was a lot of old broken pots and rusty ironwork no one would want to look at.

  Proof was desperately needed and proof they now had in a cave deep in the heart of France and in the simple story of a sixteen-year-old peasant girl, a musty old trunk, and the young pre-historian who had shown her the light. Never mind that the cave was in the zone libre — such minor details were insignificant. But this time round, the Führer had used his head and had entrusted the matter not just to the prehistorians of Heinrich Himmler, but to the arts of Dr Goebbels himself.

  It was all so simple when one was forced to think about it, a real moment of discovery. But Oelmann had vanished. Now only Madame Jouvet lay there with her eyes open at last.

  The hay rick was in the centre of a stone-fenced field. A wooden-tined fork and rake leaned against it and, with the sunlight, the scene was like a painting by Monet. But had Auger run out there? wondered St-Cyr. Had he been chased by a fleet-footed stonekiller?

  Nothing untoward presented itself. Butterflies sought nectar where stubborn chicory and clover bloomed again. A week … at least a week of new growth. The sides of the rick were perfectly round. Thatch covered its roof. The softness of a breeze was at his back as he started out. A few flies buzzed — just a few. But as he drew nearer, the sound of them increased.

  There were hundreds among the hay. They fought with one another, crawling over each other and buzzing … buzzing. Putrid and swollen and crawling with maggots, the corpse became visible. Fluids oozed from the nostrils, mouth and eyes. The top of the sous-facteur’s head had caved in. One blow perhaps. Had he tripped as he had run from his assailant? Had the stonekiller used a boulder?

  Naked … had he or she been stark naked as they had run across this field in pursuit of their quarry?

  Taking a deep breath, St-Cyr removed more of the hay. There were apparently no other wounds, no stab-marks from a handaxe, no slashes with a flint knife, no experiments with such primitive tools.

  Auger’s skull had simply been crushed. ‘But the murder,’ he said, standing back, ‘must have been done on the Sunday, perhaps in the afternoon. If so, the killing was but a prelude to that of Madame Fillioux on the Monday.’

  There was no sign of the boulder that must have been used, and he had the thought then that the stonekiller must have carried it well out into the river when he or she had gone there to wash away the blood.

  ‘Naked still,’ he said. ‘A savage. Ah mon Dieu, mon Dieu, but strong and fleet-footed, capable and able to remain so detached afterwards that the fishing line could be cut, the worms freed and the rick rebuilt.’

  Sickened by what lay before him, Kohler silently cursed their luck. Oelmann had doubled back. The son of a bitch had used the woman to lure him into following only to return.

  Forgotten in haste, her belt lay among dead leaves. There wasn’t a sound. The woods were too quiet. Was she softly weeping? Was she begging for her life?

  The bluff sloped upwards steeply through the trees. Knowing he had no other choice, he started out and when, at last he broke through to the road, the car waited some fifty metres from him. No sign of anyone behind the wheel. No screams of tenor, nothing but the heat of the afternoon and that damned car.

  Cutting across the road, he picked his way through the brambles. Sweat beaded on his forehead. Irritably he wiped it away with the back of a hand. Where … where the hell were they?

  When he found them, the woman, still with her hands bound behind her back, was awkwardly lying on the ground and the point of fifteen centimetres of razor-sharp chrome-nickel steel had dug itself into the nipple of her left breast. Her chin was up and back, her head half hidden by the brambles. Tears poured from her.

  Oelmann had slit open her dress, shift and brassière so swiftly, she had been too startled to even cry out.

  ‘Now talk,’ he said softly. ‘Talk!’

  Stealthily Kohler started forward only to stop himself when he saw the gun.

  ‘The … the …,’ she began. ‘The drawer, it is…’

  Blood trickled down her breast. ‘Please,’ she begged. ‘Please don’t hurt me. I … I will tell you all I know.’

  ‘Good. That’s good. The drawer?’

  ‘It … it is under the armoire. There is a pin you must remove. I … I do not know if the postcards are there.’

  ‘Why does Courtet want them back?’

  The knife was hurting her. ‘I … I really don’t know. Maman, she must have exchanged a few with him. She … she has told me so little, I … I really know nothing, monsieur. Nothing! Ahh, my breast. My breast.’

  Laying the knife on her chest so that it pointed at her throat, Oelmann cocked the pistol and looked around.

  Ah merde, thought Kohler sadly, he intends not only to kill her if necessary but me as well.

  ‘Are there postcards from anyone else?’ demanded Oelmann so suddenly her body arched. His voice was hardly audible.

  ‘The … the parents of my father, since … since maman, she has sent food parcels to them.’ Herr Kohler, she silently begged. Herr Kohler, where are you?

  ‘Was there anyone else who might have sent them to her?’ asked Oelmann with a finality that shattered her completely.

  ‘Maman,’ she blurted through her tears. ‘Maman, he is going to kill me!’

  He gave her a moment to silence such childish pleas.

  ‘Mother said only that … that she would deal with them.’

  ‘When?’

  ‘When she … she came for her little visit.’

  ‘To the cave and then to your house?’

  ‘Yes … Yes! Ahh my ear … my ear …’

  ‘So, she would take care of them, madame. Who did she mean?’

  ‘I do not know! “Them”, that is all she said! My … my husband and … and someone else, someone she was going to meet.’

  ‘At the cave?’

  ‘In … in that little glade where … where she and my father had … had first made love.’

  There it is then, thought Kohler. The mother was definitely going to poison Fillioux and the son-in-law.

  ‘There … there may be postcards from this other person. I … I was so afraid the detectives would find out what mother intended. I knew about André — yes, yes, but I … I did not know about the other one. It… it might have been my father.’

  ‘He’s dead. He died on the Marne.’

  Ah yes, said Kohler to himself, but can the dead not walk again if listed only as missing in action?

  * * *

  Furious with himself at taking so long, St-Cyr glanced at the sun and then at his watch. The rick had been perfectly rebuilt, a puzzle for it suggested strongly that the killer knew something of farming. ‘The summer holidays perhaps,’ he said, for he, himself, had often done such work not only in his student days but as a boy. But to rearrange the hay so carefully also implied an extreme eye for detail, one every bit as good as his own, and a
detachment that was crucial.

  Beyond the stone wall, on the opposite side of the field, bushes hid a clearing no more than two meters in diameter. A sandy floor, some dried leaves and sticks, a few paper-thin snail shells and white pebbles were all that readily came to view but through a gap in the leaves, he could just see Auger’s chair in the distance.

  ‘Ah grâce à Dieu,’ he said, ‘someone stood here as I am now standing.’

  Two thin dogwood branches had been broken to clear the line of sight and now hung dead with their leaves, forgotten in haste. Soft, shallow dents in the sand had not quite been removed. The bare feet, he told himself and nodded grimly.

  Combing the sand with his fingers, he came upon two walnut half-shells. Like ships caught in a storm, they now rode a turbulent sea.

  Five scattered, tiny shards of deep cobalt-blue grass and two grains of the same were nearby. Were they merely the remnants of a laudanum or iodine bottle swept downstream years ago?

  ‘Then why, please, are they not frosted and rounded?’

  It wasn’t much to go on but animals sometimes hunted in packs. Cro-Magnon and Neanderthal would have done so. The latter had often resorted to cannibalism, or so some prehistorians maintained.

  But had the person who had waited here gone out to stand naked behind the rick until Auger had run towards it? Were the arms then thrown about to frighten the quarry and cause it to change direction thus slowing it down for someone else to kill?

  Try as he did, he could find no evidence of this. ‘Has it all been so carefully removed?’ he asked, and stood looking first towards the path, to the bend in the river and the fishing-place, and then back towards the hiding-place. Two assailants, not one. Had the stonekiller, having first gone over the ground, then hidden to remove his clothes and prepare for the hunt?

  When he reached the cottage, there was no sign of Hermann and Madame Jouvet who should have been there long ago. When he looked out over the pasture, he realized right away that the mare was gone and the gate wide open.

  Having been led up through the woods, the mare now thundered down the lane. Branches swatted at her russet flanks and at her rider. Sweat poured from them both as, wild-eyed and in a lather, she finally broke through to the road to Beaulieu-sur-Dordogne.

 

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