Read A Crime in Holland Online
Authors: Georges Simenon
He went in as if to his own office, took off his light spring overcoat and placed his hat on a chair.
The inspector who had been sent from Groningen spoke French slowly and rather pedantically. A tall, blond, clean-cut young man, of remarkably affable manner, he underlined every sentence with a little nod, which seemed to indicate: âYou get my meaning? We are agreed on this?'
Although in truth Maigret hardly gave him time to start speaking.
âSince you've been on this case for six days,' he said, âyou must have checked the times.'
âWhat times?'
âIt would be interesting for instance to know exactly how many minutes the victim took to escort Mademoiselle Beetje home, and then return. Wait! I'd also like to know what time Mademoiselle Beetje actually set foot back in the farm, where her father was waiting up for her, and he ought to be able to tell you that. And lastly, the time that young Cor arrived back at the college boat, where there is no doubt a night watchman.'
The Dutch inspector looked annoyed, stood up suddenly as if struck by inspiration, went towards the back of the room, and returned carrying a very shabby seaman's cap. Then, enunciating his words with exaggerated slowness, he said:
âWe have found the owner of this item which was discovered in the bath â¦Â He is â¦Â He is a man we call “the Baes”. In French you'd say “
le patron
”, the boss.'
Was Maigret even listening?
âWe have not arrested him, because we wish to keep him under observation, and he is popular in the district. You know the mouth of the Ems? When you reach the North Sea, about ten sea miles from here, you come to some sandy islands, which can be more or less completely submerged in the high equinoctial tides. One of these islands is called Workum. This man has settled there with his family and some farmhands, and taken it into his head to raise
livestock. That's “the Baes” for you. He's been granted a state subsidy, because he has established squatter's rights. And he has even been appointed mayor of Workum, of which he is the only Dutch citizen. He has a motor launch, and comes and goes between his island and Delfzijl.'
Maigret still did not budge. The Dutchman winked.
âAn odd fellow! Sixty years old, and as solid as a rock. He has three sons, all pirates like himself. Because â¦Â Listen! This is not the sort of thing to shout out loud. You know that Delfzijl is a port for handling timber from Finland and Riga â¦Â The steamboats that bring the logs here have part of the cargo on deck, held down with chains. But in emergencies, the captains have orders to cut the chains and jettison the deck cargo into the sea, to save the boat. You still don't see what I am driving at?'
And certainly Maigret gave no sign of being at all interested in this story.
âThe Baes is a cunning man. He knows all the sea captains who come in here. He has his little arrangements with them. So when they are in sight of the islands, there's always a reason to be found for cutting at least one chain. Then several tons of timber go into the sea and the tide throws them up on Workum sands. Wreckers' rights. Now do you understand? And the Baes shares the proceeds with the captains. And it was
his
cap that they found in the bath. Just one problem. He only smokes a pipe. But he may not have been alone.'
âAnd that's it?'
âNo. Ah no! Monsieur Popinga, who has contacts everywhere, or rather who
had
, was appointed Finnish vice-consul in Delfzijl a couple of weeks ago.'
The skinny young man was triumphant now, puffing with satisfaction.
âAnd where was the Baes's boat on the night of the crime?'
This time it was almost a shout.
âIn Delfzijl. Moored at the quayside. Near the lock! In other words, fifty metres from the Popinga house.'
Maigret tamped more tobacco into his pipe, and paced up and down in the office, looking with a jaundiced eye at the reports, of which he could understand not a damned word.
âAnd you haven't anything else to go on,' he said suddenly, thrusting both hands into his pockets.
He was hardly surprised to see the other policeman blush.
âYou know already?'
He checked himself.
âOf course, you have spent all afternoon in Delfzijl â¦Â French tactics.'
He seemed hesitant.
âI don't know yet what this statement means. It was on the fourth day. Madame Popinga turned up. She told me that she had consulted the minister, to see whether she ought to say anything. You know the layout of the house? Not yet? I can show you a diagram?'
âThanks! But I've got one,' said Maigret, taking it from his pocket.
The other man, looking startled, went on:
âYou see the Popingas' bedroom? From the window, you can glimpse only a little section of the road leading to the
farm. Just the stretch that is lit up by the lighthouse every fifteen seconds.'
âAnd Madame Popinga was jealous, so she was spying on her husband?'
âShe was looking out. She saw the two bikes on the way to the farm. Then her husband cycling back. Then about a hundred metres behind him, Beetje Liewens's bicycle.'
âIn other words, after Conrad Popinga saw her home, Beetje returned on her own towards the Popinga house. So what does she say about this?'
âWho?'
âThe girl.'
âNothing so far. I didn't want to question her right away. It's very serious, and you may have chosen the right word. Jealousy. You understand? Monsieur Liewens is a member of the Council.'
âWhat time did Cor get back to the Naval College?'
âThat we do know, five minutes past midnight.'
âAnd the shot was fired â¦?'
âFive minutes before midnight â¦Â But there's the cap and the cigar â¦'
âAnd he has a bike?'
âYes. Everybody cycles everywhere here. It's practical. I do it myself â¦Â But that night, he didn't have his bike with him.'
âThe revolver has been examined?'
â
Ja!
It's Conrad Popinga's own gun. His service revolver. It was always loaded with six bullets, and inside a drawer of his bedside table.'
âAnd the shot was fired from how many metres away?'
âAbout six. The distance from the bathroom window. And also the distance from Monsieur Duclos's bedroom. And perhaps the shot wasn't fired from up above. We don't know, because Popinga, who was putting his bike away, could have been bending down. But there's the cap. And the cigar. Don't forget.'
âCigar, phooey,' muttered Maigret to himself.
And out loud:
âIs Mademoiselle Any aware of her sister's statement?'
âYes.'
âAnd what does she say about it?'
âShe hasn't said anything. She's highly educated. She doesn't talk much. She's not like other girls.'
âIs she ugly?'
Every one of Maigret's interruptions had the knack of disconcerting the Dutch policeman.
âWell â¦Â not pretty.'
âVery well, she's ugly. And you were saying that â¦'
âShe wants to find the murderer. She's working on it. She has asked to see the reports.'
Chance took a hand. A young woman came in, with a leather briefcase under her arm: she was dressed austerely, almost to the point of eccentricity.
She marched straight up to the Groningen police officer. She began speaking volubly in her own language, either not seeing the stranger, or taking no notice of him.
The Dutchman reddened, shifted from one foot to the other, shuffling his papers to give himself an air of authority and indicating Maigret with his eyes. But she did not deign to pay any attention to the Frenchman.
In despair, the Dutch inspector spoke in French, as if with regret.
âShe says the law forbids you to question anyone on Dutch territory.'
âThis is Mademoiselle Any?'
Irregular features. If not for the large mouth and uneven teeth, she wouldn't have been worse-looking than average. Flat-chested. Large feet. But above all, the forbidding self-confidence of the suffragette.
âYes. According to the statutes, she's right. But I've told her that in practice â¦'
âMademoiselle Any understands French, I believe?'
âI think so.'
The young woman didn't react, but waited, chin held high, for the end of this consultation between the two men, which did not appear to concern her.
âMademoiselle,' said Maigret, with exaggerated gallantry, âplease accept my respects. Detective Chief Inspector Maigret, from Police Headquarters in Paris. All I wanted to know is what you thought about Mademoiselle Beetje and her relationship with Cornelius.'
She tried to smile. A shy, forced smile. She looked from Maigret to her compatriot and stammered in poor French:
âI not â¦Â I not understand very well.'
And the effort was enough to make her blush scarlet to the tips of her ears, while everything in her expression pleaded for release.
There were about a dozen of them, all men, wearing heavy blue woollen jackets, seaman's caps and varnished clogs, some lounging against the town gates, others leaning their elbows on bollards, others again just standing around, their wide trousers making their legs look monumental.
They were smoking, chewing tobacco, spitting a lot, and now and then something made them all burst out laughing, slapping their thighs.
Four metres away from them floated the boats. Beyond lay the smug little town, surrounded by its dykes. Further along, a crane was unloading a collier.
At first the men did not notice Maigret strolling along the wharf. So he had plenty of time to observe them.
He had learned that in Delfzijl this group was known ironically as âthe Quayside Rats Club'. Without even being told, he could have guessed that most of these sailors spent the greater part of their days on the same spot, rain or shine, chatting lazily and sending jets of saliva to the ground.
One of them was the owner of three clippers, handsome vessels of four hundred tons equipped with sails and engines, one of which was just moving up the Ems and would soon be in port.
Other men seemed less distinguished; a ship's caulker
who probably didn't do much caulking and the keeper of a disused lock, still wearing his government service cap.
But in the middle of the group, one figure eclipsed all the rest, not only because he was the most massively built and the reddest of face, but because one sensed in him a man of stronger character.
Clogs, a jacket. And on his head a brand-new cap, which had not yet had time to mould itself to the shape of his skull, and consequently looked faintly ridiculous.
This was Oosting, commonly known as the Baes, smoking a short clay pipe as he listened to his neighbours talking.
A vague smile played on his face. From time to time, he removed the pipe from his mouth to allow the smoke to flow gently from his lips.
He reminded Maigret of a small-scale rhinoceros. A heavily built brute, but with mild eyes and something at the same time tough and gentle about his whole person.
His eyes were fixed on a boat about fifteen metres long, moored to the quayside. A swift boat with clean lines, probably a former yacht, though now dirty and cluttered.
This belonged to him, and from here it was possible to see the Ems estuary, twenty kilometres wide, and the distant glimmer of the North Sea: out there somewhere lay a golden brown sandbank known as the island of Workum, Oosting's domain.
Night was falling: the crimson rays of the setting sun painted the brick-built town even redder and glinted in fiery flashes on the scarlet lead paint of a cargo vessel undergoing repairs, reflected in the water of the harbour.
The Baes's gaze, as it wandered calmly across the scene,
contrived to take in Maigret as part of the landscape. His blue-green eyes were very small. They remained focused on the French inspector for a short while, after which the man tapped out his pipe against his wooden clog, spat, felt in his pockets for the pig's bladder he used to hold his tobacco, and settled himself more comfortably up against the wall.
From that point on, Maigret felt that gaze resting continuously on him, conveying neither bravado nor distrust: a cool and yet concerned gaze, one that was weighing up, appreciating and calculating.
Maigret had been the first to leave the police station, having arranged a later meeting with the Dutch inspector, whose name was Pijpekamp.
Any had remained inside, and presently went past, clutching her briefcase under her arm, leaning forward slightly, like a woman with no interest in anything happening in the street.
It wasn't Any that Maigret was watching, but the Baes, who followed her for a while with his eyes, then, with a more puckered brow, turned towards Maigret.
So, without really knowing why, Maigret moved towards the group, which fell silent. Ten faces turned in his direction, expressing a degree of surprise.