know anything. . . .”
“We should check with Albert’s doctor,” Gassot interrupted.
“The coroner’s report declares ‘Death by unusual circumstances,’ ” Picq said. “Lucie’s convinced Albert was murdered.”
Nemours turned to Gassot. “You have to see Tran.”
“Tran?’
“If anyone knows what’s happening, Tran will.”
GASSOT HURRIED through Parc Monceau under chestnut trees that shuddered in the wind. A turtledove swooped down near the pond. He passed the mansions overlooking the green lawns. The gilt trimmed fence gave it the look of a private park. Marie-Therese had walked Napoleon’s heir here; Proust had loved this little lake. Hadn’t he—or someone— waxed poetic about the perfume of a childhood spent in the Parc Monceau?
Gassot resented the butter and shallot smells emanating from the kitchens of these mansions, the scurrying hired help, and the smooth hum of the limousines: the sounds and smells of the homes of the rich.
Thirty minutes later, beyond Porte de Clichy at the
That’s when it had started, Gassot remembered. The whole sad mess. The meetings, the whispered asides during humid Haiphong nights where the corpses of fluorescent jellyfish glittered on the surface of black harbor water. Rumors of jade treasures amidst the rolling rhythmic slap of the waves. The air heavy with the scent of rotting mangoes in the compound guarded by the Montagnard hill tribesmen, with their green metal bracelets, multicolored loincloths, and carbine clips slung over their shoulders.
“
“A wonderful treat to see you,” Tran said, one hand holding a weed-filled bucket, the other motioning to a marble bench. “Sit down.”
A formality. They met here on the first Wednesday of every month on a stone bench overlooking the dog cemetery. But Gassot was three weeks early and he knew Tran must be curious.
Gassot hesitated. He wanted to explain the fear and doubt, the smell of vengeance surrounding Albert’s death—explain it in a way so Tran would help, rather than dismiss them as scared old men.
Rows of small blackened stone crosses and suitcase-sized marble slabs stretched before them. Withered white chrysanthemums left from Toussaint, All Saints Day remembrances, defied the wind whipping over the small tombstones. Funny, Gassot thought, dog owners tended their pets’ graves better than the families of the military tended theirs.
“Makes you wonder about the world, eh, Tran,” he said. “Humans are less remembered than dogs.”
Tran smiled and shrugged. “Maybe because dogs are more faithful. Truer,” Tran said, offering him a cigarette, a Vinataba brand. “Remember the La Bai we smoked,
“
He remembered the woody tobacco taste of the unfiltered cigarettes and the picture of playing cards on the package. He’d never smoked so much as in Indochina where it was a national pastime. That, and sabotaging the French. Of course, that came later. Much later, it was the Americans’ turn.
“Has something happened,
And then the Paris sky opened, rain spattering down in furious fits and starts. Unlike the warm Indochina monsoons that descended steadily onto corrugated tin-roofed huts, Gassot remembered, leaving fat beads of water on the curled palm leaves.
Tran tugged his arm and they ran for cover.
Gassot could still hear the rustle of the silk worn by the half-Asian mademoiselles, denigrated as
“What’s the matter,
In the shed where tools were kept, Gassot straightened his shoulders, realizing Tran was studying him. He forced himself back to the present and took a deep breath.
“Do you ever hear from Bao?” She had been Tran’s cousin, Bao of the pale oval face and laughing eyes. He knew that after forced marches and prison camp, the light would have gone out of them.
“Not for several years,” said Tran.
“Still in Indochina, is she?”
“Seems we’re talking about the old times instead of why you came here,
But he liked to keep busy, so he worked part-time now, here, as groundskeeper.
“You’re worried. It’s Albert . . . his heart?” Tran said.
Gassot gathered his courage. “Albert died in the hospital. But he was murdered there.”
“What makes you think he was murdered?”
“Who else knows, Tran?” Gassot asked.
“
“Who else knows about the massacre at Lai Chau?”
“The dead know,” Tran replied. “And your comrades.”
And it had been their regiment’s fault. Their bombing coordinates had been off. Off by half a kilometer, sending them into the no-fly zone.
A plain of burning flames, so intense the heat had melted the straps of Gassot’s helmet on his neck. The hidden mines planted by the Vietminh in the plain had exploded under the hail of the French bombing attack—an attack that had been meant to destroy the Vietminh forces, not ignite a incendiary vortex claiming thousands of both Indochinese and French lives. The deafening explosions cratered the red earth. Rice paddies were clogged with body parts kilometers away, destroying the ancient drainage system. The peasants starved the next season, refusing to eat a crop nourished by the blood of their ancestors.
No one talked of their mistake; the reports were destroyed, the incident hushed up.
“Only three of us left now,” Gassot said. “But someone could have escaped.”
“No one escaped from that hell,” Tran said.
“A victim in a field hospital? Or an eyewitness?” he said. “Someone who heard the stories and has come for revenge?”
“Go ahead and torment yourself,
“Albert opened his big mouth; he talked about the jade. And then the man he spoke to was shot. Killed.”
Tran’s hand shook as he lit another cigarette. “
Tran, reestablish your connections,” Gassot said. “Go back
Tran bowed his head. “That’s so long ago,” he said.
“The jade is here. In Paris. We know it. We’re not the only ones looking for it, Tran,” Gassot said. “Remember that.”
“But we’re the only true believers.”