Flykiller (65 page)

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Authors: J. Robert Janes

BOOK: Flykiller
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Had he seen right through her? wondered Marni, disappointed by the thought but glad he had finally asked. ‘Hated, more likely. Nothing was ever right. The food, the lack of it, the room, the heat, the cold, the smell, the constant comings and goings in the corridor.’

‘Yes, but was the curtain drawn in front of those two beds?’

‘Every night.’

‘Then she might or might not have been in bed—that it, eh?’

The others were all holding their breath and intently watching him. ‘Yes. I. . . I guess so.’

There was even a collective sigh. ‘OK, for now, enjoy your supper. I’d better find my partner.’

‘Is he
un lèche-cul
?’ asked Jill.

An arse-licker, a toady. ‘Hardly, but I’ll be sure to tell him to interview each of you, then you’ll know for sure.’

As with the Chalet des Ânes, the padlock was distinctive and similar: a Harvard long-shackled six-lever, with a twenty-three-centimetre nickel-plated chain that had somehow absented itself by having fallen to the bottom of the elevator shaft.

‘Nervous was she, our lock opener?’ asked Kohler. No third-storey eyes were watching, but nearby ears behind closed doors would be straining.

‘And opened with its key, Hermann?’ whispered Louis. ‘We would have had no problem picking this, but others might, given the closeness of the nearby rooms and the threat of traffic.’

‘We’ll have to ask them but is it yet another example of French frugality? Luxury hotels. . . ’


Ah, mon Dieu,
why must I continually have to defend the
Troisième République
? This lock and the other one are American.’

And left over from the Great War. ‘But if opened with its key, who the hell is supposed to be keeping an eye on those, and where are they being kept?’

‘Perhaps the new Kommandant will be good enough to tell us.’

‘Jundt won’t want to ask, since the answer might reflect on Wehrmacht Command stupidity.’

That, too, was a problem, but Louis wasn’t yet prepared to leave, even though suppertime had run out. Pacing off the distance to Room 3–38, he turned and followed Caroline Lacy’s and Becky Torrence’s steps, pausing as if for the one to catch up with the other, the forty-watt overhead blinking on and off, the hotel’s wiring still heavily overloaded. ‘Is it that Room 3–54’s door was left open for Mary-Lynn Allan’s return?’ he asked.

Kohler shrugged. Louis tossed a disparaging hand at a question that should have been asked of the inmates had opportunity allowed, which it hadn’t.


Ach,
you don’t yet know what they’re like,’ confided Kohler. ‘Just wait until they get
you
between them!’

From the top of the far stairs to the elevator’s gate and shaft was but a step or two, but where had her killer been waiting?

The staircase to the attic?
indicated Louis. It was just along the corridor and right at the far end of the wing. Step by step they went up it, silently cursing the single overhead light yet searching, too, for some sign. Anything.


Ah, bon,
’ sighed the
sûreté,
having run a hand under the railing.

Chewing gum. ‘Dried?’ whispered Kohler. ‘Don’t forget the cold and the dampness.’

Which would have slowed the drying. ‘Spearmint, and fresh enough, though a week old if left by the killer.’

With his pocketknife Hermann gently pried it off. ‘Our killer was nervous,’ he said. ‘The gum was to calm herself. Becky Torrence was the most nervous. Really keyed up. Terrified I’d find out something.’

‘Even though she stated she was out in the corridor with Caroline Lacy?’

‘At first she denied it but then Nora said she’d seen the two of them together.’

‘But only after that one had reached their floor.’

Time. . . Had there been time for Becky to have done something else? ‘Becky did say she and Caroline heard the scream and then the bump.’

‘But Caroline Lacy, our second victim, can’t confirm this, can she?’

‘And Madame de Vernon, her guardian, could well have left her bed earlier and none of them in that room would have known.’

They went on up the stairs to the attic only to find its door solidly locked and its rooms closed off for the duration. ‘But here we would have had a problem, Hermann, for it’s a pin tumbler that would, in a hurry, definitely need a key.’

‘But did our murderess have one?’

‘For the moment we’ll disregard your concluding the sex, but was the killer waiting on this attic staircase for Nora Arnarson and Mary-Lynn Allan to return from that séance in the Hôtel Grand?’

And after the killing had the killer then departed in the confusion? Kohler knew this was what Louis was asking.

‘And was Mary-Lynn really the intended victim, Hermann? That, too, must be asked.’

‘Or Nora?’

‘Or Caroline Lacy, who claimed she was and has since been taken care of?’

They went down the staircase to the ground floor and the cellars. Step-by-step, they patiently searched, but even the leavings of spent chewing gum were absent.

‘Everyone must need it, Louis, to seal up holes in their shoes and boots. It works, but only for so long.’

And said like a former prisoner of war.

The barracks, the luxury thirty-suite Hôtel Continental that had been built in 1899, was just to the other side of the casino, with an entrance on the avenue Bouloumié and not hard to find, given the gates to the camp and the barbed wire.

Irritably having an after-dinner cigarette and fussing by the moment, Jundt sat stiffly alone at the head of an otherwise abandoned dining room. Towering pseudo–Gallo Roman columns, after the Emperor Caracalla, were behind him. The modernized update of Art Deco urns was incongruous, their two-metre Kentias looking downright thirsty.

‘Kohler, did I not tell you eighteen thirty hours?’

Must everything be
auf nazitisch
with this one? ‘Colonel, investigating murder doesn’t run on meal times.’

‘Cooks do, and from now on you will damn well obey me.’

Had he dreams of becoming another Caracalla? The roast pork was cold, the sauerkraut, too, and the boiled potatoes. The soup, though tepid, was thin until the rest of the meal had been hastily added to that
sûreté
bowl by Louis, along with the one allowed slice of bread.

‘There is no wine?’ he asked facetiously.

‘Kohler, who the hell is that?’

It would be best not to say, The one who caused the delay. . . ‘My partner. He’s senior to me.’

‘A Frenchman? Get him out of here. He can eat in the cellars with the blacks.’

‘Colonel. . . ’

‘Hermann,
einen Moment, bitte
? It’s a good idea, isn’t it?’ said St-Cyr.

‘Two of them may still be in the kitchens, Kohler, where they’re supposed to be doing up the pots and pans and cleaning the ovens. Those
verdammten
layabouts are probably smoking tobacco they’ve stolen. They’ll be using that gibberish of theirs no one can understand.’

Discreetly gathering up his soup plate and spoon, Louis tucked the half-round remains of the bread under an arm and departed.


Ach,
’ continued Jundt, flattening his big hands on the table, ‘I can’t stand the French. Little better than the eastern labourers, Kohler. The horsewhip and a damned good thrashing are what they need. Ten of the best and the boot! Now, what have you for me?’

Thank God, Louis hadn’t heard him. ‘Two possible murders, a terminated pregnancy, a kleptomaniac, a medium who overcharges, and one datura capsule that contains from two to four hundred seeds and has gone missing.’

‘Datura. . . ?’

Instant suspicion had registered, but perhaps it would be wise not to tell him the whole truth. ‘Some kind of herb, Colonel.’

‘You’d better ask the monk. A kleptomaniac?’

Berlin was going to hear of this last—Jundt had that look about him. ‘A compulsive thief, Colonel. Little things of no use or consequence.’

‘Or reason for murder?
Das Motiv,
Kohler? Isn’t that one of the first things an experienced detective looks for? You
are
experienced, aren’t you?’

‘We’re working on it.’

‘Are you indeed? I give you two days. If you don’t come up with something solid, Untersturmführer Weber will be given the order he wants: others, Kohler; others from Berlin who will soon sort this matter out. Colonel Kessler was wrong to have asked the Kommandant von Gross-Paris for help. Paris-Central should have known better than to have sent you and that other one.’

‘Afraid of what Weber and the boys from Berlin might do, was he, this Colonel Kessler?’

Kohler had earned that gash down his face from the SS during a murder investigation near Vouvray in December, and understood the whip better than most yet had still chosen to remain defiant of authority. ‘The Untersturmführer is in charge of security. Colonel Kessler should by rights have left the entire matter in his capable hands.’

A second lieutenant in the SS and wouldn’t you know it! ‘Your predecessor, Colonel. . . We understand that he availed himself of Madame Chevreul’s séances.’

‘You want them stopped?’

Must this one be suspicious of everything? ‘Not yet. Better to let them continue.’

Jundt tapped that Wehrmacht nose of his with a cautioning forefinger. ‘But you think they’re involved. I can tell.’

‘We just need a little time to sort things out, that’s all.’

Perhaps some reason for Kessler’s having attended the séances should be given. ‘Colonel Kessler’s wife of thirty-seven years was killed during the bombing of last September. The house was unfortunately flattened.’

And houses these days were important, considering what the RAF were doing at night and the USAF during the day, but best not to mention that, either. ‘Anything else?’

‘The Kesslers’ little maid, Kohler. A girl the couple had taken an interest in was also killed. I gather he was very close to both of them.’

And if that wasn’t a hint, what was? ‘Did the medium get through to them?’

Did they talk to each other from beyond the clouds? Such persistence could only mean Kohler thought he was on to something juicy. ‘
Ach,
I know nothing of such things. Colonel Kessler must have held this Chevreul woman of yours in high regard, for he specifically asked that if you thought it best, she be allowed to continue her valuable work. “It keeps them happy,” he said.’

And so much for who was going to be held responsible for letting the séances and all the rest of it continue but. . . ‘Untersturmführer Weber told you this, did he?’

‘That is correct, since the outgoing Kommandant was no longer present to do so himself.’

‘Séances night after night?’

‘Sometimes two sessions if the sign of the Zodiac is in conjunction with atmospheric conditions, but no more than ten to fifteen in attendance at any one time. Otherwise, the spirits might become distracted.’

‘And ten times fifty American dollars. . . ’

‘Profitable perhaps, but
ach,
there are others of them who do it. The circle, the holding of hands with the eyes closed and thoughts concentrated, the table that tilts when the fingertips are pressed to it as the questions are asked by the medium who strives to make contact with the deceased. The crystal ball, as well, and the Ouija board, the palm readings too, and tea leaves—they get tea in those parcels of theirs, Kohler.
Tea
when we have none!’

And so much for Jundt’s not knowing a damn thing about the spiritualistic goings-on around the camp. ‘But these other mediums aren’t as good as Madame Chevreul?’

‘I believe his very words were, “She is the only one who can do it.”’

According to Untersturmführer Weber. ‘Had the Colonel tried others?’

‘Several, I gather. Weber will know.’

‘And the name of the Colonel’s interpreter? Just for the record.’

Did Kohler already suspect there was a killer amongst those at that last Saturday evening’s séance? ‘Colonel Kessler spoke English, which he was perfecting, and perfect French. That was why he was chosen for this position.’

‘Then tell me, why was he recalled?’

Certainly Weber had let Berlin know how things were, Jundt felt, but the recall had come with such short notice that one had to wonder. Perhaps it would be best, though, to offer some other reason so as to distance oneself further. ‘The languages,
mein Lieber
. With so many Allied prisoners of war to be interrogated, the High Command have had to make choices. Now, is there anything else?’

The pork was even colder. ‘Just one thing, Colonel. Why on earth was that poor unfortunate girl’s body left at the bottom of that elevator shaft? Surely someone should have—’

‘Removed her? Is this what you mean?’

‘You know it is.’

‘Kohler, Kohler,’ he muttered, shaking his head in dismay at such insubordination. ‘Colonel Kessler had ordered that she not be touched until the two detectives from Paris had examined her. Need I remind you that you were to have been here late last Sunday or on Monday? An eight-hour trip becomes a delay of six days? The Untersturmführer had to have guards posted on every floor of that
verdammt
hotel to keep those bitches from trying to see her and destroying what might well have been valuable evidence. One can’t see her, by the way. Not from above. I made certain of that. The elevator shaft is far too dark.’

‘Did any of the doctors get to her?’

‘The Scotsman was awakened by one of those women who wore dark horn-rimmed glasses. A Sister Jane then asked that a priest be summoned and the last rites given.’

‘And were they?’

Another cigarette would be best, the offer of one expected but withheld. ‘The Untersturmführer, as was correct, told her that, like everyone else, God would have to wait for you. That third-storey gate should simply not have been open. When I first arrived here four days ago, the Untersturmführer and I made a thorough examination of every facet of the camp. I tell you Kohler, that padlock was on and secure last Saturday at seventeen hundred hours, as was its chain.’

Yet he’d not been here to see it himself. ‘And its key, Colonel, where might that have been kept?’

‘You think it was stolen, do you?’

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