Madrigal

Home > Other > Madrigal > Page 27
Madrigal Page 27

by J. Robert Janes

‘Emerald,’ said the former nun, ignoring Louis’s question about lies. ‘This stone was worn because possessing it allowed one to foresee the future. Its mounting has no backing, and the stone was held up to the light. If clear, as this one is, the seeker immediately saw the truth.’

  ‘The signs of the zodiac, then,’ said Louis gently.

  The girl looked at him for a moment before taking up the order book to show him the glyphs that were used to denote each house. ‘The House of the Fishes is represented by the alchemist’s sign for projection, a capital H, but with out-bowed sides,’ she said. And then, still holding his gaze with her own, ‘Pisces, the twelfth house, is sometimes thought of as the house of one’s own undoing. Though Mireille disputed this, she did agree scandal and imprisonment could sometimes dodge those who were born under its sign.’

  ‘Is Genèvieve Ravier the Pisces?’ asked Louis.

  She gave a slight nod and said quietly, ‘Christiane Bissert is the Gemini. The two are often linked because … because in life, their lives are almost as one.’

  ‘You spoke with Mireille de Sinéty on the night before the murder.’

  ‘Inspector, Mireille was very afraid. She knew that Bishop Rivaille and Maître Simondi suspected she was about to confront them but swore they couldn’t possibly know how damning that confrontation would be.’

  ‘Then Dédou was arrested and they soon learned everything, through no fault of the boy’s,’ said Louis. ‘Most break under torture, mademoiselle. Dedou was not alone in this and shouldn’t be condemned.’

  ‘Merci,’ she said softly, but was so pale and afraid herself. ‘You see, Dedou was my brother and though I know it was God’s will, I’ll miss him terribly. And, yes, in their eyes, especially in those of the bishop, I stand condemned for leaving the Order and for speaking out, but I’ll go with you and will confront them as Mireille must have done.’

  Very quickly she showed him the rest of the signs. ‘The House of the Goat rightly claims the bishop, that of the Scorpion, César Simondi.’

  ‘And Albert Renaud?’ he asked.

  ‘The Ram – a bloodstone with blood-red flecks among the dark green. His family outwardly loved and secretly hated the de Sinétys six hundred years ago and Mireille was well aware of this but took it in her stride as she took everything else.’

  ‘And Madame Simondi?’

  ‘A Cancer. For her, Mireille used the cat’s-eye which was said to be without equal in bringing success in gambling and in all other games of chance.’

  ‘Could Xavier have killed your friend on orders from her?’

  ‘Xavier …’

  ‘Mademoiselle, I regret having to ask, but time is of the essence and we still have much to do.’

  ‘I … I really don’t know. I wish I did, but …’

  ‘What about Christiane Bissert?’ asked Louis anxiously.

  ‘Genèvieve was to have been replaced, Inspector. Christiane felt this deeply. “Those two,” Mireille said, “are the ones I fear the most among the singers because they see me taking away everything they have.”’

  Then it was true what Simondi had said of Genèvieve. ‘Was she also afraid of Xavier? Mademoiselle, again I must ask you to set aside feelings I know must be of despair.’

  Faintly she smiled through her tears, then said bitterly, ‘You’re wondering why, if she was so worried about him, did she ask Xavier to contact my brother. It’s really quite simple, Inspector, and has as much to do with six hundred years ago as it has to today. Only Xavier can avoid the controls like no one else. Only he could have gone to warn Dédou that morning and not be seen by the préfet’s men. I knew it; Mireille knew it, and so did he. When Xavier arrived well before dawn we both saw it as a sign, a supreme test, if you like, of the triumph of good over evil. God wouldn’t let Xavier betray my brother. Dédou had to be contacted. What else could she have done?’

  So silent had the room become, thought Kohler, not even Nino stirred.

  ‘Xavier is a Leo, and you can see that Mireille has used a sardonyx cameo to represent him. The deep flesh red of its stone is seen through the falsity of the white surplice – the coating that covers its surface. The sins of the flesh, are you wondering? The father of Adrienne’s unborn child? Then, yes, Dédou told Mireille what happened last June, and yes she was very upset about it, but couldn’t let on.’

  ‘Could she have changed the position of any of these things when told that Dedou wouldn’t be coming?’ asked St-Cyr.

  ‘It’s … it’s possible but … Oh, I can’t remember the arrangement. I can’t! Madame, I can’t!’

  Distraught, she turned to Frau von Mahler who still refused to look up or to acknowledge anything.

  ‘Mademoiselle, please try,’ urged Louis.

  ‘I am!’

  ‘Then tell me why there is nothing here to indicate either Frau von Mahler or the Colonel.’

  But was there? wondered Kohler, not liking the thought and bending over to take Nino into his lap.

  ‘Gentlemen,’ said von Mahler, ‘Mireille was neither afraid of myself nor of my wife. She had no reason to be.’

  ‘Kurt, tell them about the picnic at the mill last October – the “party”. Tell them that you were there with Mireille and that, when she asked to leave, you thought it best to … to escort her home.’

  ‘I went to the office afterwards, Ingrid. I swear it.’

  ‘You stayed with her. You talked – I know you did because she told me of this. You were “very kind and understanding”, she said. Understanding, Kurt.’

  Nom de Jésus-Christ! swore Kohler silently. Now all the dirty linen comes out.

  ‘The girl was definitely a virgin, madame,’ said the Sûreté brusquely. ‘Colonel, a little about this “party”, please. We gather things got out of hand.’

  They’d find out everything. ‘Only later, after Mireille and I had left. She saw it coming, as I did, and didn’t want to hang around. She tried repeatedly to convince Adrienne to leave with us but the girl refused.’

  ‘Adrienne was a Virgo, Inspector,’ said Marie-Madeleine softly. ‘She had, unfortunately, both a willingness to admire and to submit to those in power. Bishop Rivaille worshipped the girl and thought her hair matched exactly that of Mary’s in his ring. He had great plans for her, but as you can see by this enseigne next to his, the devil is allergic to Holy Water. The aspergillum in the friar’s hand sprinkles its water over the lead button of the Goat upon which a martinet also falls as the Archer aims his arrow.’

  ‘Ah bon,’ said Louis. ‘One thing remains and then we must hurry. Madame?’

  Composed at last, Frau von Mahler faced them. They would expect nothing less and suddenly she had to let Kurt know that she would no longer hide this matter or any other.

  ‘I saw someone, and heard things. I was terrified I would be too late. I left the dinner table well before the others but even so was some distance from the Palais. The streets were unfamiliar. I …’

  ‘At about what time would you have reached the Palais?’ asked Louis gently.

  ‘Nine forty-five, I think. Their car had just arrived. Bishop Rivaille was asking Simondi if the door to the Palais was locked and did he have his key. “It’s unlocked,” he said. “She must be here already and has left it open for us.”’

  Madame Simondi would have been able to get into the Palais with no problem, thought Kohler.

  Von Mahler took his wife’s hand in his and asked, ‘What then?’

  She gazed steadily at him, no longer afraid of what he’d see and, still doing so, said, ‘I waited. I didn’t really know the layout of that place. It’s so huge and frighteningly empty, Kurt. So cold and cruel, but I thought I must surely hear the judges’ steps and I did.’

  ‘They crossed the main courtyard?’ asked Louis.

  ‘No. They stayed indoors and went into the Great Audience Chamber and up the main staircase. They had blinkered torches but when they reached the Grand Tinel, César quickly drew the black-out curtains, then helped th
e bishop find the candles. Suddenly there was light, a beautiful light. Albert Renaud, he … he went to get the chairs.’

  ‘They had passed through the Chambre du cerf’and the Pontiffs bedchamber,’ said Louis;

  ‘And the Robing Room, which is just before the Grand Tinel. Monsieur Renaud set up the chairs and they each sat down but … but still there was no sign of Mireille. I wondered if she’d come at all, or simply was late, but knew she wouldn’t have avoided things or hesitated.’

  ‘And where were you?’ asked von Mahler.

  Again she would look steadily at Kurt, she told herself, and then she would tell him. ‘I wanted to see her and yet not be seen. I … I knew there was another tower I could use.’

  ‘The Saint John’s Tower,’ interjected Marie-Madeleine.

  ‘Yes. It opens off the lower Consistory and the Grand Tinel above. I retraced my steps and … and that’s when I saw someone. This person was as startled as I. We had almost collided. She gasped, “Ah non!” and retreated swiftly.’

  ‘Was it Genèvieve Ravier or her lover, Christiane Bissert?’ asked Louis firmly.

  ‘The latter, I think, because she was not so tall, but I really don’t know either of them well, only that this one was stooped in haste and wore the heavy black habit and cowl of a monk.’

  And there it is, thought Kohler wryly, that clot of black wool Peretti found in the victim’s hair, only to hear Louis asking what she, herself, had worn.

  ‘Why, my overcoat, of course,’ she hazarded.

  ‘Inspector …’

  ‘Colonel, please be patient. Hermann, perhaps Mademoiselle Marie-Madeleine would show it to you.’

  They waited in silence, the three of them. Frau von Mahler took to staring at her hands only to suddenly reach for the bowl of fabric remnants and to …

  She’s lost and desperately afraid, said St-Cyr to himself, silently asking, What did you do, madame, when you found that girl alone and on her knees in the Chambre du cerf? Did you …

  ‘Louis, the overcoat’s dark blue and trimmed with lambskin.’

  ‘Ah bon!’ he said and sighed but didn’t look up. Briefly the Colonel’s wife glanced at him, then darted her gaze back to the remnants. ‘I … I didn’t go into the Saint John’s Tower,’ she confessed. ‘I went on through the Consistory and up the far staircase – the one that also leads down into Benedict the Twelfth’s Cloisters. Because I had seen someone else in the Palais, I felt it best to … to warn Mireille if possible and to … to be as close to her as possible.’

  ‘Then you were near the Latrines Tower and in the upper kitchen,’ said Louis warily.

  ‘Yes. Her … her overcoat and things were lying neatly on one of the stone ledges. Her torch was there on top of everything but … but when I switched it on, it … it didn’t work. The … the bulb had been removed. I thought of the girl I’d met – had she done this? I wondered. I searched a little. I did what I could, you understand, but by then Mireille was being told what to sing. Each of the judges was to set her a task. Simondi was the first. “Orazio Vecchi’s L’Amfiparnaso,” he said. “The first seven lines from the fourth, eleventh and thirteenth of the madrigals in this comedia harmonica.”’

  ‘But he told us she was only required to sing the simplest of passages!’ blurted Louis.

  ‘Ah non, they were very difficult but she sang them beautifully. Right from the heart and in defiance of the three of them and what they stood for. Her voice had such clarity and joy. It filled the hall, and I knew then that she sang not only for herself but for that first Mireille and for Dédou too.’

  Kohler glanced at his wrist-watch and silently cursed the time. ‘The audition, Louis …’

  ‘A moment, mon vieux. We’re almost there.’

  ‘She didn’t break down, if that’s what you’re thinking, Inspector,’ said Frau von Mahler. ‘She was told what to sing by Renaud and then by Bishop Rivaille and she did so with that same defiant clarity. But … but then they gave her their decision. Struck silent by this, she faced them and … and cried out, “I know what really happened to Adrienne and I can prove it.” ‘

  Ah merde, thought Kohler.

  ‘And they said nothing further?’ demanded Louis.

  ‘They waited for her to continue and she … she told them that if they didn’t agree to the demands of the maquis for sanctuary and food and warm clothing, she … she would go to my husband and … and tell him they had drowned the girl.’

  The little fool, thought Kohler sadly. Brave but naive and willing to set everything else aside in order to help the cause. Dédou and his friends must’ve been in really bad shape.

  ‘And then?’ asked Louis, using his Sûreté voice.

  ‘Then?’ she shot back at him. ‘They turned their backs on her as one and left the hall, left her all alone – I couldn’t go to her after hearing that, could I? I … I was paralysed with shock and fear. She … she put out the candles one by one with the snuffer the bishop had placed on the floor beside his chair. And only when it was dark did I hear her weeping. It … it was then that I called out to her – I had to, don’t you understand? “Madame,” she cried. “Madame, you must leave here at once! There are others in the hall.” Others I couldn’t see at first. My torch was blinkered.’

  ‘How many?’ asked Louis sadly.

  ‘Three, maybe four. I couldn’t be sure because all of them wore those same black cassocks with their hoods pulled up and my light touched only bits of them until … until knocked from my hand.’

  Verdammt! The singers. Spaggiari, Rochon and Genèvieve, Norman Galiteau as well. ‘Louis … Louis, we have to leave.’

  ‘I’ll come with you, Inspectors. I must. For her sake as well as for my own.’

  ‘As will I,’ said Marie-Madeleine.

  It was von Mahler who swore under his breath and said, ‘Ingrid, you mustn’t. If Berlin were to find out, Gestapo Mueller would see that I was shot for insubordination or sent to the Russian Front.’

  No truer statement had been made, thought Kohler ruefully. Mueller would have the Führer screaming with outrage and von Mahler had known this only too well. ‘He’s right. Why chance it?’

  She would face right up to Herr Kohler, would tell him how it was. ‘Because I must. Because even though, at the end, she had turned against the Reich, that girl meant a lot to me.’

  ‘Liebchen, I’m asking,’ entreated von Mahler only to hear her say, ‘And I’m telling you, Kurt.’

  He gave a sigh. ‘Then you leave me no other choice but to join you and defy Berlin.’ He unbuttoned his tunic and removed it. ‘A sweater …’ he said. ‘Give me a moment.’

  ‘Colonel, might I suggest you ask your wife to take along her pistol?’ said Louis. ‘Just in case. And you your own. Hermann, can we all fit into the Renault? They’ll have men watching for it. If you pull right up to the entrance staircase, and we stay close together, they may think there are fewer of us.’

  ‘And Nino, Louis. I’m not leaving her behind. Not tonight.’

  Alone, the blue-blinkered beam of von Mahler’s torch sought out the floor plans of the Palais that hung in the former guardroom, now the ticket office. It came to rest on each of the ten, massive stone towers that formed the square corners between which had been built the long and vaulted reception halls and chapels, with subordinate rooms.

  ‘Each tower has four or five levels,’ he said, not liking the look of things. ‘Access within each is by narrow staircases that were built into the walls. Since it was a fortress first, a treasury second and a palace and administrative centre lastly, all of the upper levels of the towers were and still remain sealed off for defensive purposes, except for those same narrow staircases.’

  ‘And below the Papal Bedchamber?’ hazarded Louis.

  ‘The Chamberlain’s room, the lower treasury and, below that, the wine cellar.’

  Only in those lower levels, from the Papal Bedchamber down, was there access to the rest of the Palais.

  The Chambre du ce
rf was in the Wardrobe Tower which abutted the Angels Tower and had, again, free access only on its lower levels, most particularly through the Papal Bedchamber which adjoined it.

  Mireille de Sinéty had thus been able to move from the Kitchens Tower, which was near the northernmost corner of the Palais, far to the south through the length of the Grand Tinel, passing by, on her left and midway, the Saint John’s Tower before entering first the dressing room, then the bedchamber and finally the Chambre du cerf. She had, no doubt, been heading for the Clementine Chapel and the main staircase which would have taken her down into the Great Audience Chamber. Somehow she had realized the way to freedom had been blocked and that she could no longer flee.

  On her knees, she had begun to pray and had been killed while doing so, but by whom? Had it really been the singers? Xavier, eh? demanded Kohler of himself, wishing it was so but finding he had also to ask, Rivaille, Simondi or Renaud? Any or all of whom could so easily have turned back to ruthlessly hunt her down and silence her.

  Nino fidgeted. Tied to a long leash, she began to bark. Unfortunately it was a sound that was bound to carry. ‘Come on, then,’ he said. ‘Find it for me. There’s a good girl.’

  Marie-Madeleine stayed close to Frau von Mahler, but neither of them had said a thing since leaving the house, and Kohler really didn’t know why the former nun was crowding the woman. Comfort maybe, or something else, something she knew that she hadn’t let on. Louis and the Colonel brought up the rear. Their torches winking, all hurried because Nino hurried. All passed quickly under the high and vaulted ceiling of the Great Audience Chamber and went up the main staircase, the sound of their steps harsh in the cold darkness. Another and far narrower staircase soon followed. This the dog raced up, Kohler following as best he could.

  Nino didn’t hesitate in the Chambre du cerf. With her muzzle close to the floor, she went on into the Papal Bedchamber and from there up yet another of the steep and narrow flights of stairs. She was panting, was anxious.

  They were now in what had once been the upper treasury and directly above the bedchamber. Polychrome timber beams in the ceiling were all that remained of the original decoration but even here, bits of wood and plaster had been plundered and sold off when the Palais had been a barracks.

 

‹ Prev