Read Murder in Belleville Online
Authors: Cara Black
“The same.”
“Perhaps you remember a woman who bought this—long dark hair?”
“People buy these all the time,” he said. “Every other shop on the boulevard carries them as well.”
Her hopes of finding out more about Sylvie had been dashed.
Aimee thanked him and went out into the rain.
She crossed Place Sainte Marthe, the small, sloped square with dingy eighteenth-century buildings. Wind rustled through the budding trees. A knot of men clustered near the shuttered cafe, smoking and joking in Arabic.
Blue-and-goldenrod posters plastered over abandoned storefronts proclaimed: FREE THE
SANS-PAPIERS
—JOIN HAMID’S HUNGER STRIKE PROTESTING FASCIST IMMIGRATION POLICIES
. Behind Place Sainte Marthe seventies-era housing projects loomed, jagged and towering.
She walked over the same route she’d driven with Anais. The April wind, raw and biting, pierced her jacket. Her ears felt numb. As she entered rue Jean Moinon, she curled her hands inside her pockets, wishing she’d worn gloves.
Pieces of blackened metal bumper and a charred leather armrest remained from the explosion. Almost everything else had been cleaned up from where Sylvie Coudray had gone up in a shooting ball of white fire and flames. The only other evidence was the oily, blackened residue filming the cobblestones. But after a wet spring that too would be washed away.
A dark curly-haired custodian swept the Hopital St. Louis side entrance near the apartment. His plastic broom, like those used by street cleaners, had known better days. Wet leaves clumped together, refusing to budge over the cobble cracks. He wore a woolen turtleneck and headphones, the wires trailing to his blue work coat pocket. He seemed oblivious as she approached. Something familiar—what was it?—stuck in the back of her mind; then it disappeared.
“Pardon, Monsieur,” she said, raising her voice, stepping into his line of vision.
He looked up, his prominent jaw working in time to what she imagined was the music beat. She saw the name, “Hassan Ely-mani,” embroidered in red on his upper pocket.
“Monsieur Elymani, may I have a moment of your time?”
He pulled out his headphones, set the broom against the crook of his arm, and lifted a bracelet of worry beads from his pocket. Brown and worn, they slid through his fingers.
“You a
flic?”
he asked.
“My name’s Leduc; I’m an investigator.”
“Tiens, they don’t do business there anymore,” he interrupted. “Scattered. I told the police,” he shrugged. “Like the clouds on a windy day.”
“I’m not sure what you mean, Monsieur Elymani.”
“Over there,” he said, pointing beyond the day-care center to the narrow passage jutting into rue du Buisson St. Louis, with buildings slated for demolition.
“Voila.
The slime hung out near rue Civiale,” he said, as if that explained everything.
“Catch me up, Monsieur,” she said, scanning the street. The view from Sylvie Coudray’s window, she imagined, looked over those rooftops dotted with pepper-pot chimneys. She wanted to know what he saw.
“Who exactly are you referring to?”
“Les droguees,”
he said, his cork-colored fingers coaxing the worry beads through his hands.
Junkies? Parts of the area, she knew, held pockets of them. Morbier, a commissaire, had told her
flics
often let junkies carve out a corner for themselves. “For efficiency,” he’d said. “We keep tabs on them, and they don’t venture further for clientele. Designer drugs come and go, but there’re always addicts with habits who work, pay bills, and stay afloat.” His tolerant attitude surprised her. “Fact of life,” he continued. “When they wash up on my turf, I put them back out to sea.”
Elymani ran his eye over her clothing. “You undercover?”
“You might say that,” she said, realizing her appearance could give rise to that conjecture. “I’m interested in Sylvie Coudray,” Aimee said pointing to the first-floor windows.
“I’m not a betting man,” he said, his eyes narrowing. “But does this have to do with the explosion?”
The rain had ceased, and weak sunlight filtered through the seventeenth-century hospital arches.
“Sylvie Coudray’s murder—” she began.
His eyes had narrowed to slits. “Who do you mean? They said Eugenie was killed.”
“Eugenie?” Aimee paused. Had Elymani gotten her confused with someone else? “Monsieur, can you describe her?”
Ahead, opposite them, a car pulled up.
“My hours change a lot,” Elymani said. “I’m not sure who you mean.”
A stocky man in a tight double-breasted suit alighted from the car and waved at Elymani.
Elymani slipped the worry beads back in his pocket and began sweeping. “Excuse me, but the patron’s here, and I haven’t hosed down the lockers.”
“Monsieur Elymani, does she live at number 20?” Aimee asked. “That’s all I want to know.”
“Look, I’m working,” he said bending down, scooping a clump of leaves into a plastic bag. “I need this job.”
“Monsieur Elymani, who’s Eugenie?” Aimee said. “Please, I’m confused.”
Elymani shook his head. “Lots of people come and go,” he said, motioning her toward the gate. “I get mixed up.”
Fine, she thought. Clam up when it suits you. She’d follow up later. She’d often found that witnesses who grew uncommunicative turned helpful later.
“May I talk with you after work?” she said, handing him her card.
“Don’t count on it,” he said.
“Please, only five minutes of your time.”
“Look, I work two jobs,” he muttered, glancing at the man who’d motioned to him a second time. “I’m lucky to do that.”
Aimee decided to cut her losses. She turned and walked over to the entrance of 20
bis
and studied the nameplate. Out of the corner of her eye, she saw Elymani in conversation with the man. He tossed her card into his garbage bag.
She ran her fingers over the name E. Grandet. Her mind teemed with questions. Why would Sylvie Coudray insist on meeting Anais here? Had Elymani mistaken Sylvie for Eugenie? Too bad the building had no concierge whom she could question. Concierges were a vanishing breed in Paris these days, especially in Belleville.
She had ventured one door down when a young woman with a stroller burst from the doorway. Empty string shopping bags twined around the handles.
“Excuse me,” Aimee said. “I’m investigating the death of a woman next door. Did you know her?”
The baby’s coo escalated to a higher pitch, and the woman’s mouth formed a
moue
of distaste. “I work the night shift,” she said glancing at her watch. “My husband too. We don’t know anyone. Or see anyone.”
The sky darkened, and a light patter of rain danced on their umbrellas.
“I’m sorry, I must bring the baby to the
creche,
give my mother-in-law some peace. Talk with her; she’s home all the time. Belle
mtre,
some
flic
wants to talk with you.”
She punched in the four-digit code, the door clicked, and she motioned Aimee inside.
“First floor on the right.” And the woman was gone.
The foyer, similar to next door’s, held piles of bundled circulars and newspapers in the corner. Aimee stuck her umbrella in a can with the others and tramped upstairs. A stout woman, her grizzled gray hair in a hairnet, beat a small carpet on the landing. The dull, rhythmic
thwack-thwackl
raised billows of dust. From the apartment interior, Aimee heard the
Dallas
theme song blaring from the television.
“Bonjour,
Madame,” Aimee smiled, pulling out her ID. She felt the chill from her damp boots rise up her legs.
“You don’t look like a
flic,”
the old woman said, scanning Aimee up and down.
“You’re perceptive, Madame, I can tell,” Aimee said, edging up the stairs toward the door, trying to ascertain the view from inside her apartment. “I’m a private detective, Madame …?”
“Madame Visse,” she said, drawing out the s, her tone rising. “God’s got chosen helpers. Those he uses in emergencies.”
Aimee nodded. The old woman seemed a slice short of a baguette.
“May I come in?” she asked.
“Edouard—that’s my son—says people will think I’m
folk,
they’ll put me away,” she said, showing Aimee the way inside. “But that’s their problem, eh. I know what I know.”
Aimee looked around, noticing the boxlike front hall with rain boots, a crowded coatrack, and a crushed box of Pampers.
She moved into the kitchen. On the left a row of spice jars ringed the galley-style kitchen. Pots bubbled on the cooktop, curling steam fogged the only window. Rosemary and garlic aromas filled the air. Aimee’s stomach growled in appreciation—all she’d eaten today was a croissant. A patched lace panel hung over the open window, fluttering in the wind. To the left, inside a dark room lined with bookshelves, toys littered the floor. Cardboard boxes were piled everywhere.
“My son and daughter-in-law’s name are near the top of the housing list,” she said, her thin mouth curling as she frowned. “When they get the call, they’re packed.” The woman returned to her cooking and stirred the pot.
“Madame Visse, did you know the woman killed in the car bombing?” she asked, hovering in the doorway to the kitchen. She wanted to see if Madame Visse’s window looked into her neighbor’s courtyard. The window was to the left of the cooktop. It overlooked number 20’s back courtyard.
“Edouard’s eyes will open up,” the old woman said, lifting the lid on a pot. She smiled knowingly. “Yolande can’t cook to save her life.”
Why did Madame Visse ignore her question? The woman’s left hand shook with a slight, constant tremor Aimee hadn’t noticed before.
“That smells wonderful,” Aimee said, sidling toward Madame in the narrow kitchen. “Were you home when the car exploded last night?” She asked in what she hoped was a casual tone.
“Monday-evening rosary, dear,” Madame Visse sighed.
“Did you see anything happen in the courtyard last night?”
“All I saw was that idiot man across the courtyard exercising his cockatiel
comme d’habitude,
like he does every night.” She lifted a lid and stirred a simmering cassoulet. She controlled her tremor well.
“Did you notice anything unusual on the street?” Aimee asked. “Any strangers?”
“You look hungry,” Madame said, filling a bowl and thrusting it at her. “Sit down. Tell me if it needs more
herbes de Provence.
I have recipes I can share with you.”
“Nan merci,
Madame,” Aimee declined, perching on a stool at the narrow table. Exasperation was creeping up on her. It had been a long day. She was in no mood for this woman.
She was sure the steaming cassoulet would melt in her mouth. A crusty baguette poked out of a bread basket.
“Try this,” the old woman said, proffering a bit of stew.
Aimee shook her head. “I’ll just take a bit of baguette.”
“Ah, you’re just like Eugenie. Too polite,” she said.
Aimee sat up, alert. First Hassan Elymani and now this old woman had mentioned Eugenie.
“We look alike too, eh?” Aimee said, in what she hoped was a tone inviting conversation.
Madame Visse crinkled her eyes, surveying Aimee from the stove. “That wouldn’t have been my first comment.” She set the lid down with a clang on the pot. “Your face and big eyes are similar, but Eugenie’s hair was…” she stopped and reached for a spice jar.
Aimee remembered Sylvie’s hair as long and dark, when she stood by the Mercedes.
Madame unscrewed the lid, sniffed, and slowly put the cap back on. “Stale.”
“You were describing Eugenie’s hair?” Aimee let the question dangle.
“Red,
bien
sur,” she said. “And short like yours.”
Aimee gripped the tabletop. Red. Had Sylvie worn a wig? Or was this another person?
“Now I’m confused,” Aimee said, “Did Eugenie live in number 20?”
“Everyone had moved,” Madame said. “Eugenie was the only one left.”
If Sylvie lived a double life, it could have been a rendezvous spot with Philippe. However, she doubted that this part of Belleville was to his taste.
“Why would someone get murdered here?”
“Good question,” Madame said, slamming the baguette on the table, attacking it with a steak knife, and carving uneven slices. “Never seen her before. No one had.”
“Who?”
“The dead woman, God rest her soul.”
“Madame, you said you never saw the murdered woman!”
“Why should I?” she said. “But people who live here don’t drive Mercedes!”
The woman had a good point, Aimee thought.
Madame opened the silverware drawer, pulling out a long-handled serving spoon. Amid the cutlery Aimee saw a distinctive silver box with “Mikimoto”—the famous pearl store on Place Vendome—embossed across the top. She doubted Madame Visse would own expensive pearls.
Then she remembered the odd-shaped pearl she’d found in the mucky passage. When Anais had denied it belonged to her, Aimee had slipped it in her pocket and forgotten about it.
“I love pearls,” Aimee said, inclining her head toward the drawer. “I see you do too.”
Madame glanced at the box.
“Just the boxes,” she said, wiping her hands on her apron. She picked up the distinctive rectangular box, surveyed it. “Eugenie was throwing some away. I kept this one.”
Owning Mikimoto pearls and living in Belleville didn’t add up, Aimee thought, unless one was a wealthy mistress.
Mikimoto was in Place Vendome near the bronze-spiraled column melted from cannons Napoleon captured at Austerlitz. Again the carnage of her father’s explosion revisited her. She pushed those thoughts away. Reliving the past would get her nowhere.
“Pearls aren’t cheap, Madame,” she said. “Eugenie has expensive taste, wouldn’t you say?”
“She kept to herself,” Madame Visse said.
Madame motioned her to the door. “My boy will be home soon. He doesn’t like me to have guests. It’s up to God, my dear,” she said. “Good day.”
At least she’d found out Madame Visse knew Eugenie, corroborating Elymani’s comment. And she liked pearls. But was Eugenie \ Sylvie? Eugenie lived in a building ready for the wrecking ball and had expensive tastes. That’s if Elymani and Madame Visse were telling the truth.