TWENTY-ONE
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WHEN Gideon hung up Mathilde was still watching him intently. This time he returned her gaze, mulling over what he'd heard. There could be no question about her being involved in Alain's deception; very probably she had authored it. How much else was she involved in?
'And what did Dr. Loti want with you?” she demanded before he had removed his hand from the telephone.
He hadn't meant to engage her. Better to let Joly handle it. But when he floundered, searching for a reply, she prodded him.
'It was about Guillaume, wasn't it?” Her fluty voice sliced through the chitchat. Conversations were suspended; heads turned in their direction.
'Yes, it was.” Obviously, there wasn't much point in denying it.
'What did he tell you?'
'I think it'd be better if we talked somewhere more private, Mathilde.'
Gideon heard Rene's imploring whisper behind him. “What is it? What the devil is he talking about? What's the—?'
'Sh!” someone said imperiously, and the
'I am not afraid to talk in my own house, in front of my own family,” Mathilde said firmly. She stood with her stocky legs planted, her deep, square prow of a bosom thrust aggressively forward. “I believe I have every right to know what you discussed.'
Well, Joly wasn't going to like it, but Mathilde was clearly determined to have it out right then, and Gideon wasn't in the mood to play games putting her off. It had been a long day.
'Mathilde,” he said, “I know Guillaume du Rocher was killed in 1942. And I know Alain
There was a collective gasp and a few exclamations of consternation. Rene laughed disbelievingly. Then, abruptly, utter quiet, thick with expectancy and confusion. Stunned faces stared at Gideon. A lazy, disinterested tick of the golden clock on the mantel looped through the silence.
'And I know you know it too,” he concluded flatly.
Under a layer of powder Mathilde's face reddened momentarily. Then, like someone putting down at last a burden she'd carried too long, she exhaled a long breath. “Yes,” she said, her voice perfectly steady. “You're quite right.'
Now there was an explosion of questions and ejaculations. People shouted at each other, at Mathilde, at Gideon. Mathilde waited for the noise to die down. “I think I should like to sit,” she announced, and set herself bolt-upright on one of the crushed velvet chairs, hands clasped one on the other in her lap.
'And a glass of vermouth, I think.” She drank briefly from the fluted tumbler that Marcel brought to her and opened her mouth to speak.
'Mother,” Jules said, “you really don't have to—'
'Oh, be quiet, Jules. What's the difference now? It's out. I knew he'd find out.” Jules shrugged and withdrew, and Mathilde continued, not speaking to anyone in particular. “What Dr. Oliver says is true. Guillaume has been dead for forty-five years. The man who died last week was Alain du Rocher.'
'Impossible!” Sophie said. “You think I wouldn't know Alain? My own brother?'
'Well, you didn't,” Mathilde said proudly. “It was Alain here in the manoir all these years, and none of you guessed.” She looked disdainfully from face to face, challenging them, then took a measured sip of vermouth. “Alain was not executed by the Nazis. They let him go.'
'But—but—” Ray stammered.
Ben was more terse. “Why?'
Mathilde's hand went to the strand of pearls that lay against her black sweater. “Well, I'm not really—'
'They let him go for informing on the others, didn't they?” Gideon asked.
There was a shocked hubbub of denial, but Mathilde closed her eyes for a moment, then opened them and nodded. “Yes,” she said, looking straight ahead. “They tortured him with electrical prods.” She looked sharply up at him. “How could you possibly know that?'
He hadn't known; he'd guessed. Joly had told him that Alain had been picked up at dawn, the others five or six hours later. He'd wondered about it at the time, and now he'd simply put two and two together. He didn't answer Mathilde's question. The more she thought he already knew, the more she'd tell.
'We all thought they'd killed him,” she went on without emotion, “but he came here to the manoir the next night, a little before eleven. I'd been here for two days. We were all trying to comfort each other the best we could, waiting to hear something definite. Guillaume, Rene, me.You too, Sophie.'
'Yes, I remember,” Sophie said softly.
'Guillaume and I were the only ones still awake. When he opened the door and saw Alain standing there he was furious.'
'Furious?” Ray asked. “Why should he be furious?'
'He grasped what had happened right away. He made Alain admit it. To him, Alain was a traitor, a coward.