by Judith Rock
“Gilles!”
Isabel rushed to embrace her brother, but Callot remained sitting by the fire, eyeing his great-nephew.
“I’m so glad you’ve come home,” she cried. She looked over her shoulder. “Oh, I beg your pardon,” she said to Charles, and stepped away from her brother. “Maitre du Luc, may I present my brother, Monsieur Gilles Brion?”
The young man turned his wary, slightly open-mouthed stare on Charles, and his sister made an exasperated noise.
“Gilles?”
Her voice prodded him into an awkward bow, and Charles inclined his head in return. Gilles Brion stood barely as tall as his sister, small boned and delicate. He seemed younger than Isabel, though Charles didn’t know his age. His elaborate light brown wig dwarfed his sallow face. Finely embroidered lace frothed at the neck and cuffs of his ash-brown broadcloth coat, and the heels on his water-spotted but well-made shoes were unnecessarily high. Without them, he probably wouldn’t even reach the tip of his sister’s nose.
Poor Martine, Charles thought, before he could stop himself. Or, perhaps, poor Capuchins…
Mlle Brion laid a hand on Gilles’s arm. “We have been talking about Martine.” Her eyes searched his face. “You may not know, Gilles, but she-she is dead. Someone killed her.”
“Dead?” Young Brion-it was hard not to think of him as a boy, though he must be in his twenties-was suddenly radiant. His eyes shone and he clasped his hands to his breast. Seeing the look on his sister’s face, he let his hands fall and tried for a suitably shocked countenance.
“That is terrible, Isabel. But how can she be-” He shook his head in seeming confusion. “Who would kill Martine?” His eyes went from face to face. Everyone was watching him intently, and no one answered him. The blood drained from his cheeks, leaving his eyes dark as caves. “Who, Isabel?” He clutched her hand. “Have they found him? If they have not found him, the commissaire will say it was me!”
“Was it?” Charles said pleasantly.
Gilles caught his breath, suddenly as red as he’d been pale, and his jaw set with anger. “How dare you say that!”
So, Charles thought, not quite as limp as he seems. “I was only startled by your own words, monsieur. Why would anyone think you killed her? Where were you early this morning?”
“That is none of your concern, maitre,” Gilles said through stiff lips.
Charles rose from the chair and advanced on him. “I met Mademoiselle Mynette just yesterday, Monsieur Brion. This morning I saw her lying in her blood. Finding a murderer is every man’s concern. So I repeat, where were you early this morning?”
Brion flinched. “Here, of course. Before dawn, I mean. Asleep. Like everyone else. Then I went to the Capuchins for Prime.”
“I understood that you were paying court to Mademoiselle Martine Mynette?”
“No! I mean-yes. But only because-” Brion stared at Charles like a hunted animal. “My father forced me,” he said defiantly. “She was a good girl. She-but I didn’t want her! I don’t want any girl; I want to be a monk.” His shoulders slumped and he sighed hopelessly. “Everyone knew it, and now the commissaire will think I killed her. Blessed saints, alive she was a stone around my neck, and dead she will pull me down to hell! God knows, I am sorry she is dead, but I had nothing to do with it!”
Callot finally spoke. “So go and tell your monks they can have you now. Quickly, before your father finds you another heiress. And before the police commissaire comes for you.”
Brion looked in panic at the windows. “Is he coming?”
Callot rolled his eyes. “Can I see through walls? How do I know? He was here earlier and I told him you were off praying.”
Isabel Brion looked at Callot suspiciously. “Was he really here, uncle? Why did you not tell us?”
Callot smiled blandly. “Our good commissaire was not worried. He knows he will not need to hunt your brother through the taverns.” He looked the boy up and down. “And certainly not through the usual brothels, more’s the pity.”
“God forgive you.” Brion’s eyes filled with tears and his voice quivered. “If I were as old as you, I would have more care for my immortal soul.”
“You will not need to, when you are as old as I, Gilles. Your frightened little soul will long since have left your unused body and be flapping around God’s ears like a mosquito, whining its little prayers.”
The old man’s attack was so full of acid that it took Charles’s breath away. For the first time, Charles felt some sympathy for Gilles Brion. But if the young man thought that the Capuchins were going to coddle his overweening self-love, he was, from what Charles knew of Capuchins, in for an unpleasantly surprising novitiate. If he ever got even that far.
Both the young Brions were staring furiously at Callot. The boy’s mouth was still trembling but the girl looked as though, had Charles not been there, the commissaire might have had two murders on his hands. Gilles Brion finally blundered out of the salon, and his sister followed him. Charles and Callot listened to their footsteps on the stairs. The murmur of their voices rose and fell in the foyer until, upon a dismayed cry from Mlle Brion, the house door opened and closed. Then they heard her on the stairs again and saw her hurry past the salon door and climb to the floor above. She was crying as though her heart would break.
Callot sighed heavily. “I apologize for Gilles. As they say, dress a spindly bush in lace and fine cloth, it looks like a man. Undress it, it is nothing but a bush.”
“Still, you love him, don’t you?” Charles said, standing by the fire. “Even though you nearly flayed him alive just now.”
“You have a very hearing ear. God help me, of course I love him, I have to love him, he’s my niece’s son, though she was worth a dozen of him. And a dozen of his father, too. But Gilles made me ill just now, the way he talked about Martine. That precious girl is dead, and he thinks only of himself.”
“Do you think he killed her?”
Callot spat into the fire. “Of course not. No matter how much he whined about her-can you imagine complaining about marrying that delectable girl? — he is not stupid enough to have killed her. But I tell you, if he says one more selfish word about her, I may kill him!”
Chapter 8
Outside, the cold was deepening and it was full dark. The street lanterns were lit, but the little rue Perdue had few of them, and Charles had to pick his way carefully over patches of ice. As he went, he admonished himself for his contempt toward Gilles Brion’s claim to a religious vocation. Any Jesuit should know better. “There are very few people,” St. Ignatius had written, “who realize what God would make of them if they abandoned themselves into His hands, and let themselves be formed by His grace.”
But, Charles told himself, even if he had no right to judge Gilles Brion’s vocation, he had every right to find out if the young man had committed murder. And if he had, to bring justice on him. On the whole, though, Charles doubted that he had, simply because he couldn’t imagine Gilles taking such decisive action. He wondered, though, why Mlle Brion had been crying after talking to her brother alone. She was worried, exhausted, grieving, all of that. But she’d left the salon dry-eyed and angry. What had her brother said to reduce her to such despairing tears?
Ahead of Charles, shouts and singing spilled from a tavern. La Queue du Cheval’s sign showed plump brown equine hindquarters, with a long yellow tail sporting a bow of blue ribbon. The Horse’s Tail was doing a good Friday night business, crowded with Parisians celebrating the holidays. In spite of the cold, the door was open, and as Charles got nearer, he caught the words of the song the patrons were bellowing.
“Elle etait riche, elle est morte Les Jesuites dansent sur son corps. Elle est perdue, pour ainsi dire, Les Jesuites pour enrichir!”
His first furious reaction was to start for the tavern door, but his second was less stupid and he kept walking, repeating the gist of the song under his breath. “She was rich, she is dead,” the drinkers were bawling, “the Jesuits are da
ncing on her corpse. She is lost-so to speak-to make the Jesuits richer!” Though cautiously not saying it outright, the song was claiming that Jesuits had killed Martine or connived at her death. And with a clever little slam at the Society’s commitment to dance-something enemies frequently criticized-thrown in for good measure.
Behind him, men were coming out of the tavern, and Charles moved close to a house wall, as far into shadow as he could, and stood listening and watching.
“So let’s take pots and bells and sing it under their windows, the greedy bastards!” someone said, to a chorus of enthusiastic agreement. “Treacherous to France, that’s what they are,” someone else said drunkenly. “Always after power and gold for the pope.” That got angry muttering, which swelled into shouts of, “Let’s serenade them, then, let’s go!”
But they only reeled around the corner of the tavern, fumbling with their breeches so they could water the tavern wall.
Charles walked on and got back to the college and the fathers’ refectory with time enough before supper to wait for Pere Le Picart in the passage outside the door. Tonight it was someone else’s turn to supervise the students’ supper, so Charles ate with the other Jesuits. When Le Picart arrived, Charles told him about the elder Brion’s continued elusiveness and the younger Brion’s connection to Martine. Then, reluctantly, he recounted the song being sung in The Horse’s Tail. Grim-faced, Le Picart nodded and dismissed him to sit with the other scholastics. Grace was said and Charles greeted the others at his table. Then, avoiding as much conversation as he politely could, he ate his way steadily through a stew of salted fish followed by dried apples. He was more grateful for the crackling fire in the great hooded fireplace than for what was on his plate, but too worried about Martine Mynette’s murder and the poisonous tavern song to pay much attention to either. When the final grace was said, he escaped and went to his chamber-cold, but blessedly quiet and even more blessedly private.
In spite of the chill, he opened a shutter and looked out at the street. The night was windless and the street lanterns hung motionless from their long iron hooks on the sides of buildings. When he’d arrived last summer, the lanterns had hung from chains stretched across the street, but during the autumn the chains had been taken down and the hooks put in place, making it easier to lower and raise the lanterns to replace the two-pound candles they burned. The candles would burn till after midnight, casting gold-tinged shadows on the ground and picking out the ruffles of snow lying along window ledges and the tops of walls. Across the rue St. Jacques, the windows of most of the University houses were dark, but that would change soon, as scholars and professors returned for the start of new classes. On Sunday, Pere Jouvancy would return, and he and Charles would begin working in earnest on the theatre performance scheduled for mid-February. And then it will be Lent, Charles thought, with an inward sigh. A holy season with much to offer mind and spirit, but one the body perpetually dreaded. Fasting was no longer as strict as in times past, but it was strict enough. And would likely be even more so in the refectory this year. Especially if the Mynette fortune went elsewhere.
Charles closed the shutter and went to his prie-dieu. In truth, he didn’t care where the money went. Or most of him didn’t care. Or at least not very much… Though, besides better fare in the refectories, a half dozen new costumes were needed for February’s performance. And Pere Jouvancy had already been talking about new scenery before he left for the holidays. Charles set his candle in the wall holder above the prie-dieu and knelt, pulling his cloak tighter around him. He clasped his hands and gazed at the little painting of the Virgin and Child on the wall in front of him.
“Forgive me for coveting the money,” he said softly. “In my heart, I try not to want it. But in my mind, I covet it for what needs doing.” He forbore mentioning what his body wanted to see on the dinner plate.
Mary, smiling gravely, cuddled the dimpled baby on her lap and gazed back at Charles. Her gown was a rich blue and she wore a thin gold necklace. The polished wooden bench she sat on was cushioned in red and there were rose-red curtains at her open, leaded window. A silver vase of lilies stood on the mantel, and a silver pitcher and basin and linen towel waited on a small table, ready for the baby’s bath.
“Not a poor room,” Charles said to her, and flinched at his accusing tone. Though what he said was true; his own room was far poorer. But God’s mother didn’t need the discipline and sacrifice of poverty, he chided himself. Bitter sacrifice awaited her when the fat laughing baby she held grew up. The painter had surrounded Mary with beauty and luxury to honor her. Honor mattered, of course, but money bought far more basic gifts. Like safety, especially for women like poor little Martine Mynette, who had been rightly terrified should her lost donation not be found.
“If the Garden of Eden were now,” Charles told Mary, “the serpent wouldn’t bother with an apple; he’d offer Eve a handful of gold. And who, in these days, would blame her for taking it?”
Beyond the shuttered window, the bells began to ring for Compline, their untuned clanging growing across the city. Something about their clashing notes comforted Charles, reminding him that he didn’t have to fit things perfectly together. He only had to pray.
Though as a scholastic he wasn’t required to say the offices, he began a psalm. He was praying, “I will bless the Lord who gives me counsel; my heart teaches me night after night…” when something smashed against his window, a shutter banged open, and glass shattered musically on the floor. Charles jumped to his feet, shivering in the flood of freezing air. Keeping as much as he could to the side of the window, he looked down into the street. A half dozen men, maybe more-they were moving so fast he couldn’t tell exactly how many there were-launched another hail of stones at the building. Across the street, a group of shadowy singing figures cheered them on from the open door of a University house. “… elle est perdue, pour ainsi dire, les Jesuites pour enricher!”
Charles ran from the room and took the stairs down three at a time, ignoring opening doors and questions behind him. Then someone else was running and overtook him.
“What is it?” Pere Damiot said as they reached the bottom of the stairs. “I heard glass breaking.”
“Some men throwing stones. Come on.”
In the street passage, Charles grabbed a key from the porter’s room, opened the postern a little, and stood still and hidden, watching. Damiot was at his shoulder. There were only five attackers. The bystanders across the street were cheering loudly as two men did something in front of the big double doors. Two more were farther down the facade, prying up loose cobbles to throw at windows. The fifth was standing a dozen feet from the postern, his back to Charles, glancing up and down the street, looking out for the watch, most likely.
Charles slid into the street, Damiot silent behind him. Praying they wouldn’t slip in the rutted snow, Charles closed on the man whose back was turned. Before he was aware, Charles and Damiot had him by the arms and were walking him swiftly to the postern. The man started to yell, but his captors jerked his arms up behind his back and he grunted and shut his mouth. But the men across the street saw what was happening and cried a warning to the other attackers, who fled toward the river. As the bystanders surged across the rue St. Jacques, shouting threats, Charles and Damiot pulled their captive through the postern door. Charles slammed it and turned the key. Fists pounded on the door’s planking and voices demanded the man’s release. These were definitely students, Charles thought, hearing their swearing-too inventive and polished for anyone else.
“Stretch your arms straight out against the wall and keep them there,” Charles told the captive as he and Damiot shoved the man against the stones.
“Going to crucify me?”
“Don’t blaspheme,” Damiot snapped. “Who set you to this?”
The man licked his lips. “No one,” he said sullenly, breathing a miasma of eau de vie into the air. “I think for myself. I know who murdered that girl.” He was short and thickset, dre
ssed in a workman’s rough brown coat and breeches, with unkempt black hair and a battered felt hat.
“Excellent,” Charles said briskly. “We’ll take you to our police commissaire, and you can tell him who the killer is. And then we’ll explain to him how you and your confreres have been ‘thinking for yourselves’ this evening.”
The flickering night lantern suspended halfway along the passage roof showed the hot anger in the man’s eyes. What bothered Charles, though, was that the eyes held no fear. And they should have. Did the peuple menu, the ordinary people, dislike the Society of Jesus so much? Did they truly think it had so little power and influence these days? Where was the respect it usually commanded?
The flurry of fists on the postern grew louder. As it began to bounce in its frame, the door from the main building burst open and Pere Montville, the new principal, stormed into the passage.
“Bring the rector, Maitre du Luc,” Montville ordered. “His windows face the courtyard and I doubt he has heard this rough music.”
Running feet sent echoes along the passage’s vaulted roof, and a young and very large lay brother skidded to a stop beside Charles.
“Don’t move,” Charles told his captive. “Not a muscle.” He stepped cautiously back from the man and glanced from the enormous brother, whose eyes were shining with illicit battle lust, to Damiot.
“Our friend here surely has a knife somewhere. Which, just as surely, he knows better than to use on clerics. But if he moves even the slightest fraction of the length of your thumb, grab his arms, both of you, shove him down, and sit on him.”
Charles turned and ran for the passage door. When he reached Le Picart’s rooms, he knocked softly. The fewer people who got up and followed them, the better, at least for now.
“Mon pere,” he said, with his mouth against the space between the side of the door and the frame, “come, you are needed.”