Julian just smiled. He was dressed in a pale linen suit and blue shirt, open at the neck. As every time she'd seen him, he looked comfortable and in control, although he was a little flushed. Meredith found her eyes drawn to his left hand resting on the arm of the chair. It betrayed his age, late fifties rather than the mid-forties she would have given him, but his skin was tanned and his grip looked strong against the red leather. He wore no ring.
His question took her totally by surprise. Taken aback, she stared dumbly at him, wondering how the hell he'd struck upon that subject in particular. Her thoughts flew to the photograph she'd stolen from the wall of the lobby, the deck of cards, the tagged sites on her laptop, the musical notes overlapping. He couldn't know about it, any of it, but she felt herself colouring up with embarrassment at having been caught out, all the same. Worse, she could see he was enjoying her discomfort.
Meredith realised how similar his voice was to Hal's. They had the same habit of rolling their words as if every one was special. But the key difference was that Hal wore his heart on his sleeve, every emotion laid bare. Julian, on the other hand, always sounded faintly mocking. Sarcastic. She glanced at the door, but it remained resolutely shut.
'Really? My nephew gave me the impression that it was an interest of yours. He said Tarot cards had come up when you were walking around Rennes-le-Château this morning.' He shrugged. 'Perhaps I misunderstood.'
Meredith racked her brains. Tarot had never been far from her mind, sure, but she didn't remember actually discussing it with Hal. Julian was still staring right at her, a hint of challenge in his unwavering scrutiny.
In the end, Meredith found herself responding, just to cover the awkward silence. 'I think the idea is that although it seems as if the cards are laid at random, in fact the process of shuffling is merely a way of allowing invisible connections to be made visible.'
At that instant, a hand fell on her shoulder. She jumped, looked round with alarm, this time to see Hal smiling down at her. 'Sorry,' he said. 'I didn't mean to surprise you.' Hal nodded at his uncle, then sat down in the vacant seat opposite Meredith. He took the bottle from the ice bucket and poured himself some wine.
Meredith looked into his eyes, and read the message in them. Her heart sank. She did not want to get caught up in a discussion about Tarot, but she could see Hal saw it as a good way of keeping his uncle off the subject of his visit to the police commissariat.
This wasn't small talk. He was after something specific. She took another mouthful of wine and fixed a bland expression on her face. 'Is that right?' 'The symbolism of numbers, for example,' he continued. 'Like I said, it's not something I know much about.' Julian reached into his pocket. Meredith tensed. It would be too appalling if he produced a deck of Tarot cards, cheap. He held her gaze a moment, as if he knew exactly what was going through her mind, then pulled a packet of Gauloise and a Zippo from his pocket.
Mad that she was making such a fool of herself - worse, that she was letting it show - she shook her head. 'I don't smoke.'
'Very wise.' Julian placed the packet, the lighter on top, on the table between them, then carried on talking. 'The number symbolism in the church at Rennes-le-Château, for example, is quite fascinating.'
Despite the antipathy she felt for Hal's uncle, Meredith found herself being drawn in. She wanted to hear what Julian had to say. She just didn't want to give the impression she was interested.
'Asmodeus was supposed to be one of the guardians of the Temple of Solomon. The Temple was destroyed in 598 BCE. If you add each digit to the next - five plus nine plus eight - you get twenty-two. You know, I presume, Ms Martin, that there are twenty-two cards in the major arcana?' 'I do.'
'The twenty-second of July is the feast day of St Mary Magdalene, to whom the church is dedicated. There is a statue of her between paintings thirteen and fourteen of the Stations of the Cross; she is also depicted in two of the three stained-glass windows behind the altar. Another link is with Jacques de Molay, the last leader of the Templars - there are supposed to be Templar links at Bézu, across the valley. He was the twenty-second Grand Master of the Poor Knights of the Temple, to give the outfit its full name. Then the French transliteration of Christ's cry from the cross: "Elie, Elie, lamah sabactani" - my God, my God, why hast thou forsaken me -has twenty-two letters. It's also the opening verse of Psalm 22.'
This was all interesting, in a kind of abstract way, although Meredith couldn't figure out why he was telling her. Just to see her reaction? To find out how much she did know about Tarot? And, more to the point, why?
'Finally, the priest of Rennes-le-Château, Bérenger Saunière, died on the twenty-second of January 1917. An odd story attached to his death. Allegedly, his body was placed on a throne on the belvedere of his estate, and the villagers filed past and each plucked a tassel from the hem of his robe. Much like the image of the King of Pentacles in the Waite Tarot, in fact.' He shrugged. 'Or, if you add two plus two, plus the year of his death, you end up with-'
'Of course,' Julian said, ignoring her interruption, 'playing devil's advocate, one could just as easily take any number and find a whole string of things that suggested there was some special significance.'
He picked up the wine bottle and leaned forward to top Meredith up. She covered her glass with her hand. Hal shook his head. Julian shrugged, then emptied the remains of the wine into his own glass. 'It's not as if any of us have to drive,' he said casually. Meredith saw Hal clench his fists.
'I don't know if my nephew mentioned it, Ms Martin, but there is a theory that the design of the church at Rennes-le-Château is in fact based on a building that once stood within our grounds here.' Meredith forced her attention back to Julian. 'Is that right?'
'There's a significant amount of Tarot imagery within the church,' he continued. 'The Emperor; the Hermit, the Hierophant - who is, as I'm sure you remember, the symbol of the established church in Tarot iconography.'
He carried on talking. 'Some would say the Magician is suggested, in the form perhaps of Christ, and of course four of the paintings of the Stations of the Cross have towers in them, not to mention the Tour Magdala on the belvedere.'
'But that looks nothing like it,' she said, before she could stop herself. Julian leaned sharply forward in his chair. 'Like what, Ms Martin?' he said. She could hear excitement in his voice, as if he thought he'd caught her out.
A silence fell over the table. Hal was frowning. Meredith couldn't figure out if he was embarrassed or had picked up the tension between her and his uncle and misunderstood it. Julian suddenly drained his wine, placed his glass on the table, pushed back his chair and stood up.
'I'll leave you two to it,' he said, smiling at them as if they'd just passed the most pleasant half-hour in one another's company. 'Ms Martin. I hope you enjoy the rest of your stay with us.' He put his hand on his nephew's shoulder. Meredith could see Hal struggling not to pull away. 'Can you pop your head into my study when you're finished with Ms Martin? There are a couple of things I need to discuss with you,'
Meredith saw the belligerence go out of him as his thoughts switched from loathing his uncle to grieving his father. He stood up, hands buried deep in his pockets, and looked at her through clouded eyes. 'I'll tell you at dinner.'
He'd studied the reproduction Bousquet Tarot deck over many years, always looking for something, a hidden key or a code he might have missed. The search for the original cards had occupied him ever since he had first come to the Aude valley and heard the rumours about the undiscovered caches of treasure buried beneath the mountains, the rocks, even the rivers.
Having acquired the Domaine de la Cade, Julian had quickly come to the conclusion, like many before him, that all the stories surrounding Rennes-le-Château were a hoax and the renegade nineteenth-century priest at the heart of the rumours - Saunière - was prospecting for more material than spiritual treasures.
Then Julian started to pick up stories about how a deck of cards revealed the location not of a single tomb, but allegedly the entire treasury of the Visigoth Empire. Perhaps even the contents of the Temple of Solomon, looted by the Romans in the first century AD, then in turn plundered when Rome itself fell in the fifth century to the Visigoths.
The cards were rumoured to be hidden within the estate itself. Julian had sunk every penny into trying to find them through systematic searching and excavation, starting with the area around the ruins of the Visigoth sepulchre and working out from it. It was difficult terrain and the effort was extremely labour intensive - and therefore expensive.
When he'd exhausted his credit at the bank, he'd begun borrowing from the hotel. It was useful that the hotel was - at least in part - a cash business. But it was also a tough market in which to make money The overheads were high. The place was still finding its feet when the bank called in its loans. But he kept taking money out all the same - gambling that, soon, he'd find what he was looking for and everything would be all right. Julian drained his glass in one. Only a matter of time.
Nodding to himself, Julian flipped the lid of his Zippo with a snap. He took out a cigarette, lit it and inhaled deeply. Julian had spoken with the police commissariat in Couiza just after Hal had left the station, who had suggested that it would be better if the boy stopped asking questions. Julian had promised to have a word and invited the commissaire for a drink the following week.
He reached for the bottle, pouring himself another two fingers. He cast his mind back over the conversation in the bar. He had been deliberately clumsy, hardly subtle in his technique, but it had seemed the easiest way to flush the American out. She had been reluctant to talk about the Tarot. The girl was sharp. Attractive, too. 'What? What does she know?'
He realised the sound he could hear was the sound of his fingers drumming on the desk. Julian looked down at his hand, as if it didn't belong to him, then forced it to be still. In a drawer of his locked desk, the deeds of the transfer of ownership lay ready to sign and return to the notaire in Espéraza. The boy wasn't stupid. He didn't want to stay at the Domaine de la Cade. He and Hal couldn't work together, any more than he and Seymour had been able to. Julian had been leaving a decent interval before talking any further to Hal about his plans.
'It wasn't my fault,' he said. There was a slur in his voice. He should talk to her again, the American girl. She must know something about the original Bousquet deck; why else was she here? Her presence was nothing to do with Seymours accident or his pathetic nephew or the hotel finances, he could see that now. She was here for the same reason he was. He hadn't done all the dirty work to see some American bitch come in and take the cards from him.
He stared, uncomprehending, his eyes darting around the room into the shadows, back to the window, until he realised. It was his own pallid reflection, stark in the darkened glass. It was his eyes, not his brother's.
His brother was dead. He knew. He had spiked his drink with Rufenol. He had driven the car to the bridge outside Rennes-les-Bains; struggled to manoeuvre Seymour into the driver's seat; released the handbrake. He had seen the car fall.
He exhaled, a long, exhausted breath, then bent down and righted the chair. For a moment he stood with his hands gripping the back, knuckles white, his head bowed. He could feel the sweat running down his back between his shoulder blades.
Then he pulled himself together. He reached for his cigarettes, needing the hit of the nicotine to calm his nerves, and looked back out to the black woods beyond.
OK, shoot,' Meredith said. 'Tell me what happened.' Hal put his elbows on the table. 'Bottom line, they don't see any grounds for opening things up. They are satisfied with the verdict.' 'Which is?' she gently pushed him.
'Accidental death. That Dad was drunk,' he said bluntly. 'That he lost control of the car, went over the bridge into the River Salz. Three times over the limit, that's what the tox report claims.'
They were sitting in one of the window alcoves. The restaurant was quiet this early so they could talk without being overheard. Across the white linen tablecloth, in the light of the candle flickering on the table, Meredith reached out and covered his hands with her own.
'That's helpful, isn't it? Did she see the accident?' Hal shook his head. 'That's the problem. According to the file, she heard brakes, the sound of tyres. She didn't actually see anything.' 'Did she report it?'
'Not straight away. According to the commissaire, lots of people take the road too fast on the bend coming into Rennes-les-Bains. It was only the following morning when she saw the ambulance and the police recovering the car from the river that she put two and two together,' He paused. 1 thought I might talk to her. See if there's anything that's come back to her.' 'Wouldn't she have told the police already?' 'I didn't get the impression they thought her a reliable witness.' 'In what way?'
'They didn't say it in so many words, but they implied that she was drunk. Also, there were no tyre marks on the road, so it's unlikely she could have heard anything. According to the police, that is.' He paused. 'They wouldn't give me her address, but I managed to copy down her number from the file. In fact...' He hesitated. 'I invited her up here tomorrow.'
'They're already pissed off with me,' he said fiercely, 'but to tell you the truth, I feel like I'm hitting my head against a brick wall. I don't care any more. For weeks I've been trying to get the police to take me seriously, sitting around here, being patient, but it's got me nowhere.' He stopped, his cheeks flushed. 'Sorry. This can't be much fun for you.'
'It's OK,' she said, thinking how similar Hal and his uncle were in some ways - both quick to flare up - then felt guilty, knowing just how much Hal would hate such a comparison being made.
'I appreciate there's no reason for you to take what I say at face value, but I just don't believe the official version of events. I'm not saying my dad was perfect - to be honest, we didn't have much in common. He was distant and quiet, not the sort of man to make a fuss but there's just no way he would drink and drive. Even in France. No way.'
'I'm telling you, not Dad,' he said. 'He liked his wine, but he was fanatical about not getting behind the wheel if he'd been drinking. Not even one glass.' He dropped his shoulders. 'My mother was killed by a drunk driver,' he continued in a quieter voice. 'On her way to pick me up from school in the village we lived in, half past three in the afternoon. An idiot in a BMW, on his way back from the pub, tanked up on champagne and driving too fast.'
Now Meredith totally understood why Hal couldn't bring himself to accept the verdict. But wishing things were different didn't make them so. She had been there herself. If wishes were promises, her birth mother would have gotten healthy. All the scenes and fights would never have happened.
'The gendarmerie nationale investigate crimes. At the moment, the crash is being treated as a traffic accident. But if I can find some sort of evidence linking it to Julian, then I could make them reconsider.' He looked at her. 'If you would talk to Dr O'Donnell, I'm sure she'd be more likely to open up.'
Meredith sat back in her chair. The whole scenario was crazy. She could see Hal had talked himself into believing it one hundred per cent. She really felt for him, but she was sure he was wrong. He needed someone to blame, needed to do something with his anger and his sense of loss. And she knew from her own experience that however bad the truth turned out to be, not knowing was worse. It made it impossible to put the past behind and move on. 'Meredith?'
She realised Hal was staring at her. 'Sorry,' she said. 'Just thinking.' 'Would you be able to be there when Dr O'Donnell comes tomorrow?' She hesitated. 'I'd really appreciate it.' 'I guess,' she said in the end. 'Sure.'