Read The Châtelet Apprentice Online

Authors: Jean-FranCois Parot

The Châtelet Apprentice (20 page)

Notes – CHAPTER IX

1
. During the
ancien régime
, people who committed suicide were sometimes tried and even sentenced to be hanged on the gibbet and their family disgraced. Even if this practice had gradually disappeared, traces of it remained in the popular consciousness.

2
. ‘Since you are a great judge, Monseigneur Saint-Yves de la Vérité, listen to me.'

3
. Violinist and composer (1713–1797). he was Superintendent of the Royal Music in 1764 and a member of the French Royal Academy of Music, of which he was three times director.

Quippe series vinculorum ita adstricta ut

Unde nexus inciperet quoque se conderet

Nec ratione nec uisu perspici posset

For the set of ropes was so well bound that it was impossible to decide either by reasoning or by looking where the intertwining started and where it was hidden.

Q
UINTUS
C
URTIUS

Friday 9 February 1761

Lying on the ground, he felt the sun glow red upon his closed eyelids. After a wild race across the moorland he had tied his horse to the remains of a broken-up boat half buried in the sands. The sound of the surf had made him drowsy. And suddenly the familiar noise had stopped: he had never noticed until then how the ocean's movement could cease. He needed more air, sat up and opened his eyes, but shut them again immediately, dazzled by the light. A whirlwind of sensations came over him and he found himself in bed, chilled to the bone. The previous night, after the ordeals of the day, he had sunk into unconsciousness fully dressed. He had not bothered to close the shutters as he normally did, and a ray of winter sunlight now shone upon his face. He stretched carefully, like an animal, limb by limb. A good night's sleep had rid him of the pain, leaving in its place a numbness and
stiffness reminiscent of the fatigue felt by an out-of-practice rider after a day in the saddle. As he did every morning, he took a deep breath to drive away the fears of the night and felt ready to face a new day.

Nicolas ached and felt dirty. He was in need of a good bath, but this was easier said than done. After some thought he decided to use the resources available. Catherine used a large wooden, hooped tub for soaking the washing, and that would have to do. He would light the kitchen stove and heat some water. Cheered by this prospect, he went over to the window. In the foreground the garden was a blanket of white on which could be seen the criss-crossing traces of birds and cats. The day was magnificent and cold. Further away, on the roofs of the neighbouring houses, the snow sparkled with glints of blue.

He finished his packing by gathering up the modest objects he valued so much: a tiny naïve engraving of Saint Anne; his law books; four volumes of the
Grand Dictionnaire de police
by Delamare; an ancient copy of the
Curiosités de Paris
by Saugrain the elder in a 1716 edition; a customary of Paris; an old missal that used to belong to Canon Le Floch; the
Almanach royal
for 1760; two volumes of the reflections of Father Bourdaloue, of the Society of Jesus, concerning various matters of religion and ethics;
Le Diable boiteux
by his fellow Breton Le Sage, born in Sarzeau, which, like
Don Quixote
, he had read over and over again throughout his childhood; a broken fan, a gift from Isabelle; and lastly a hunting dagger, given to him by his godfather the marquis on the day he had killed his first boar. He still had bitter memories of how disapproving and outraged people had been that this honour was being bestowed on a foundling of low birth. He had bought an old studded leather
trunk second-hand for a modest sum which, together with his portmanteau, was all he would need to move his possessions.

Where would he go? He had to find lodgings that were not too expensive. In the meantime he had thought of asking Bourdeau to take him in, but apart from the fact that the inspector lived with his wife and three children in cramped accommodation it seemed to Nicolas rather undignified to call on the help of his deputy. It risked putting him in an awkward position that might jeopardise their good relations, which he valued above everything. Père Grégoire would certainly be happy to welcome him back to Rue de Vaugirard, but the prior of the monastery might refuse; Nicolas's way of life and the irregular hours his job obliged him to keep did not seem compatible with the routine of a monastery. Of course he could approach Monsieur de Sartine, but his superior preferred to remain aloof from these practical details and Nicolas did not want to risk having to face that ironic look he knew so well. He had to sort things out for himself.

All of a sudden he remembered an offer made some time ago by his mentor, Monsieur de Noblecourt. The former procurator at the Parlement of Paris, a widower with no children, had been quick to notice how cold Lardin was towards his pupil. On several occasions he had suggested to Nicolas that he share his epicurean solitude by occupying a pleasant bedroom that no one used. At the time Nicolas had turned down the offer because, even if the Lieutenant General of Police had never said it in so many words, he considered himself to be on official business in the house on Rue des Blancs-Manteaux. Regular questioning by Monsieur de Sartine had confirmed this impression. But now the more he thought about it, the more the possibility of calling on
Monsieur de Noblecourt's help seemed a godsend. He was, moreover, truly fond of the kindly and witty old magistrate. Feeling reassured, he decided to have his bath.

The house was silent and there was nothing to indicate that Louise Lardin had returned. Nicolas relit a candle before venturing into the darkness of the staircase. With the instincts of a sleuth that were becoming second nature to him, he carefully examined the steps, and then the tiled floor in the corridor. No traces of snow or mud were visible. It was clear that no one had entered the house since the previous evening.

He went into the pantry to prepare for his bath. First he needed to relight the stove. He knew where Catherine kept the kindling and the charcoal needed for this operation. He was immediately overcome by a sweet, cloying smell that pervaded the room. He thought that there must be a dead rat in a corner or under a piece of furniture, poisoned by some of the arsenic bait that the cook regularly put down. His search proved fruitless and he tried to ignore the smell. He blew on the glowing fire, which crackled cheerfully. All that remained was for him to fill the pot from the indoor fountain and wait until the water warmed up.

The wooden tub was kept in the cellar alongside bottles of wine, jars of grease and a supply of fat and hams – the latter being protected by cloth sacks that Catherine guarded jealously. Nicolas opened the Gothic-arched door onto a stone staircase that led down into the cellar. The room had been part of the original foundations of an earlier building, now no longer standing. Once more the same acrid smell took Nicolas by the throat. He went down the steps and held up his candle: on one of the butcher's hooks hung a shapeless bulk wrapped in some
brown jute material. A pool of congealed blood had spread across the floor beneath it.

Holding his breath because of the appalling stench, with his heart racing, and knowing all too well what he was about to discover, Nicolas tugged at the sack. It fell onto the floor to reveal a wild boar, half decomposed and hung by its forelegs. Had the beast been left behind by Catherine, or had it been put there since? He knew game had to be hung until it was tender, and in his early childhood he had been haunted by the vision of the waterfowl that the marquis sent to the canon, who was very fond of this strong-tasting meat; their heads had been riddled with worms and Joséphine would wait until their beaks dropped off before she cooked them. However, he had never known this process taken to the stage of putrefaction. On the floor there were many footprints, some of which came to a stop in front of a large wooden frame with bottles arranged along its shelves. He looked at this long and hard. As soon as he'd found the tub he went back upstairs, anxious to escape the confined atmosphere and the stench, and returned to the pantry where the water was beginning to boil.

Nicolas undressed and glanced towards a large shining copper saucepan, which he had often used as a mirror. He looked a frightening sight with his growth of beard and his body covered with bruises and grazes. He removed his dressings: the wounds to his head and side had healed over well; the apothecary had done a good job. He poured the boiling water into the tub, but the water fountain was now empty. He opened the door leading out into the garden and, shivering with cold, filled a jug with clean snow in order to cool down his bath. He added a little potash,
1
which Catherine used for doing the
washing, squatted down in the tub and poured water over himself with the ladle. The warmth of the water relieved his aches and pains. He slowly drifted off into a pleasurable state of torpor that gave him an enjoyable moment's respite.

As someone who railed so bitterly against the new fashions in cleanliness, his guardian the canon would not have missed the opportunity to criticise this pleasure. The subject, along with the philosophers of the Enlightenment and Diderot's
Encyclopédie
, was a source of heated and unending debate between his guardian and his godfather. The canon maintained that nothing intimate could escape God's notice, and that propriety required that on going to bed you should hide your body from yourself. For him personal care should not involve the use of water and should disregard the body except for the face and hands, the only visible parts. All effort should be concentrated on keeping
undergarments
clean. The marquis, who delighted in these friendly sparring matches, chortled and in Voltairean vein referred to the unholy smell of clerics of every persuasion. He said that as a form of purgatory he would like to see them immersed in a bath of soapy water. His military career had proved to him the usefulness of what was now known as ‘hygiene'. The marquis even claimed that he had escaped epidemics thanks to this habit. This was why he had encouraged Nicolas to adopt his ways. At the Jesuit school in Vannes the young man had suffered from not being able to satisfy what had become for him a daily necessity.

He eventually got out of the tub and dried himself carefully. He had the impression of having shed his former self in the bath water. The scabs of his wounds had been softened by the warm water. He decided to sacrifice an old shirt in order to make some lint, a belt to hold in place the dressing for his side and a bandage
for his head. He remembered that Catherine kept ointments and medicinal vinegar in a drawer in the sideboard, and sure enough he found there a small phial of ‘Roman liqueur', with instructions for its use wrapped round it. He washed his wounds with it, redid his dressings and, after shaving, put on fresh clothes. He decided against having something to eat or drink as the smell was still just as persistent and made him feel queasy. He put everything back in place, went upstairs to get his luggage, and after checking that he had not forgotten anything, he left his apprentice's garret.

 

He now needed to find a carriage to transport his belongings. He could leave his luggage in the doorway and go to look for a coachman touting for custom, but that would incur the serious risk of finding nothing there when he came back. And he could not reopen the door once he had shut it, as he did not have the new keys.

His thoughts then turned to the shadowy figure of the day before. He opened the door and looked out at the portal of the church of Blancs-Manteaux. The man was still there, stamping his feet and clapping his hands. Nicolas motioned to him. He hesitated and looked first one way then the other before crossing the snow-covered street, and Nicolas immediately recognised him as one of the informers used by the police department. He asked him to go to Rue Vieille-du-Temple, near Saint-Anastase hospital, to find him a carriage. Meanwhile he, Nicolas, would keep watch. The man confirmed that Louise Lardin had not returned home.

A cab soon appeared and the informant got out. Nicolas put
his luggage on board and gave the coachman his mentor's address in Rue Montmartre, at a place called ‘Pointe
Saint-Eustache
' opposite the church of the same name. The magistrate owned the five-storey house and rented out the upper floors, retaining only the main living areas on the first and second floor. The ground floor was shared by a bakery and the servants' quarters occupied by Marion, the housekeeper, and a footman called Poitevin, who was almost as elderly as his master. Nicolas thought that he might be able to recover the clothes he'd hidden in the half-light of the side chapel of
Saint-Eustache
, if they had escaped the keen vigilance of the beggars who haunted the building.

The carriage moved in silence, but for the bells on the horse that tinkled merrily. The city was emerging from the heavy pall of cloud and mist that had covered it for days. Once they reached the market of Les Halles, the throng became more and more dense and the vehicles were almost at a standstill. Eventually the carriage passed Pointe Saint-Eustache and entered Rue Montmartre.

Nicolas was pleased to see the tall mansion of the former procurator of the Parlement of Paris once again. Pot-bellied and lopsided, it seemed firmly rooted in the Parisian soil. Over the years its side walls had widened and bulged, like those of a beached galleon. The curved line of its balconies with their wrought-iron ornamentation looked like the lips of a giant statue and seemed to be breaking into an enigmatic yet kindly smile. Nicolas felt cheered by the sight; he liked this house. After paying the fare he set down his luggage in the archway of the carriage entrance, where the smell of bread from the neighbouring bakery wafted through the air. He went up to the
first floor and knocked on the door. Old Marion's wrinkled face creased with pleasure when she recognised him.

‘Oh! Monsieur Nicolas. How lovely to see you. The master was complaining only yesterday that you'd stopped coming to see him. You know how fond he is of you.'

‘Good morning, Marion. I would have come to pay him my respects earlier, if circumstances had not prevented me.'

A small water spaniel, a frizzy grey ball, shot up like a firework and began to jump around Nicolas, yelping happily.

‘Just look how delighted Cyrus is to see you!' said Marion. ‘He knows exactly who his friends are, and the master's. I always say that animals have more common sense than we do …'

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