Murder on the Eiffel Tower Read online




  Table of Contents

  Title Page

  PROLOGUE - 12 May 1889

  CHAPTER ONE - Wednesday 22 June

  CHAPTER TWO - Thursday 23 June

  ACCIDENTAL DEATH OR MURDER?

  THE DRAMA ON THE TOWER CASE REMAINS A TOTAL MYSTERY

  CHAPTER THREE - Friday 24 June

  CHAPTER FOUR - Saturday 25 June

  CHAPTER FIVE - Morning, Monday 27 June

  CHAPTER SIX - Afternoon, Monday 27 June

  PERSONALITY OF THE DAY: CONSTANTIN OSTROVSKI

  PERSONALITY OF THE DAY: CONSTANTIN OSTROVSKI

  CHAPTER SEVEN - Morning, Tuesday 28 June

  JOURNEY TO SIAM, LAND OF THE WHITE ELEPHANT BY JOHN RUSKIN CAVENDISH

  JOURNEY TO THE ISLAND OF JAVA BY JOHN RUSKIN CAVENDISH, 1858 – 1859

  CHAPTER EIGHT - Evening, Tuesday 28 June

  CHAPTER NINE - Morning, Wednesday 29 June

  JOURNEY TO THE ISLAND OF JAVA BY JOHN RUSKIN CAVENDISH, 1858—1859

  CHAPTER TEN - Afternoon, Wednesday 29 June

  CRIME IN A CARRIAGE ANOTHER VICTIM FOR THE KILLER BEES

  CHAPTER ELEVEN - Morning, Thursday 30 June

  CHAPTER TWELVE - Afternoon, Thursday 30 June

  CHAPTER THIRTEEN - Friday 1 July

  CRO-MAGNON MAN IS DEAD! CRO-MAGNON MAN VICTIM OF THE BEES?

  CHAPTER FOURTEEN - Saturday 2 July

  ‘MURDERER CONFESSES EXCLUSIVELY TO READERS OF LE PASSE-PARTOUT

  MURDERER CONFESSES

  LE FIGARO, 13 MAY 1889 (page 4) - CURIOUS DEATH OF A RAG-AND-BONE MAN

  ALSO BY CLAUDE IZNER

  A FEW HISTORICAL NOTES ON THE UNIVERSAL EXPOSITION OF 1889

  THE DISAPPEARANCE AT PÈRE-LACHAISE

  Copyright Page

  For Étia and Maurice

  Jaime and Bernard

  Jonathan and David

  Rachel

  PROLOGUE

  12 May 1889

  Storm clouds raced over the barren plain between the fortifications and the goods station at Les Batignolles, where the scrubby grass smelled unpleasantly of sewers. Rag-and-bone men, grouped around carts filled with household rubbish, were using their gaffs to level the mounds of detritus, raising eddies of dust. A train approached from far in the distance, gradually getting bigger and bigger.

  A gang of children came running down the hillocks, shrieking: ‘There he is! Buffalo Bill is coming!’

  Jean Méring straightened up and, hands on hips, leant backwards to relieve his aching joints. It had been a good haul: a three-legged chair, a rocking horse that had lost its stuffing, an old umbrella, a soldier’s epaulette and a piece of wash-basin rimmed with gold. He turned towards Henri Capus, a lean old man with a faded beard.

  ‘I’m going to see the Redskins. Are you coming?’ he said, adjusting the wicker basket on his shoulders.

  He picked up his chair, passed the Cook Agency vehicles and joined the crowd of onlookers gathered around the station, a mixture of workmen, petit bourgeois, and high society people who had come in carriages.

  With a great hiss of steam, a locomotive followed by an endless convoy of coaches pulled up beside the platform. A covered wagon stopped in front of Jean Méring. Inside, panic-stricken horses were stamping wildly, and tossing their manes. Sunburned men in cowboy hats and Indians with painted faces and feather headdresses leant out of the doors. Everyone was jostling to catch a glimpse. Jean Méring slapped the nape of his neck: an insect sting. Immediately he faltered, slid sideways, staggered, and then stumbled against a woman, who pushed him away, thinking he was drunk. His legs buckled and, as he lost his grip on the chair, he sank to the ground, dragged down by the weight of his basket. He tried to raise his head but already he was too weak. He could faintly hear Henri Capus’s voice.

  ‘What’s the matter, my friend? Hold on, I’ll help you. Where does it hurt?’

  With a tremendous effort Méring managed to gasp: ‘A … bee …’

  His eyes were watering and his sight was becoming blurred. Amazingly, in the space of just a few minutes, his whole body had become as limp as an old rag. He could no longer feel his limbs, his lungs were straining for air. In his last moments of lucid thought he knew that he was about to die. He made a final effort to cling to life, then let go, slipping into the abyss, down … down … down … The last thing he saw was a dandelion flower, which was blooming between the paving stones, as yellow as the sun.

  CHAPTER ONE

  Wednesday 22 June

  WEARING a tight new corset that creaked with every step, Eugénie Patinot walked down Avenue des Peupliers. She felt weary at the prospect of what already promised to be an exhausting day. Endlessly pestered by the children, she had reluctantly left the cool of the veranda. If outwardly she gave an impression of dignified composure, inside she was in turmoil: tightness in her chest, stomach cramps, a dull pain in her hip and, on top of everything, palpitations.

  ‘Don’t run, Marie-Amélie. Hector, stop whistling, it’s vulgar.’

  ‘We’re going to miss the bus, Aunt! Hector and I are going to sit upstairs. Have you definitely got the tickets?’

  Eugénie stopped and opened her reticule to make sure that she did have the tickets, which her brother-in-law had bought several days earlier.

  ‘Hurry up, Aunt,’ urged Marie-Amélie.

  Eugénie glared. The child really knew how to annoy her. A capricious little boy, Hector was hardly any better. Only Gontran, the eldest, was tolerable, as long as he kept quiet.

  There were about ten passengers waiting at the omnibus station on Rue d’Auteuil. Eugénie recognised Louise Vergne, the housemaid from the Le Massons. She was carrying a large basket of linen to the laundry, probably the one on Rue Mirabeau, and was quite unselfconsciously wiping her pale face with a handkerchief as big as a sheet. There was no way of avoiding her. Eugénie stifled her irritation. The woman was only a servant but always spoke to her as an equal, with overfamiliarity, and yet Eugénie had never dared point out this impropriety.

  ‘Ah, Madame Patinot, how hot it is for June! I feel I might melt away.’

  ‘That would be no bad thing,’ muttered Eugénie.

  ‘Are you going far, Madame Patinot?’

  ‘To the Expo. These three little devils begged my sister to go.’

  ‘Poor dear, the things you have to do. Aren’t you frightened? All those foreigners …’

  ‘I want to see Buffalo Bill’s circus at Neuilly. There are real Redskins who shoot real arrows!’

  ‘That’s enough, Hector! Oh that’s good, he’s wearing odd socks — a white one, and a grey one.’

  ‘It’s coming, Aunt, it’s coming!’

  Omnibus A, drawn by three stolid horses, stopped by the pavement. Marie-Amélie ran upstairs.

  ‘I can see your drawers,’ shrieked Hector, following her up.

  ‘I don’t care! From up here everything’s beautiful,’ retorted the little girl.

  Sitting next to Gontran, who was glued to her side, Eugénie reflected on the fact that the worst moments of one’s life were those spent on public transport. She hated travelling; it made her feel lost and alone, like a dead leaf floating at the mercy of the tiniest breeze.

  ‘Is that a new outfit you’ve bought yourself?’ asked Louise Vergne.

  The treachery of the question was not lost on Eugénie. ‘It’s a present from my sister,’ she replied curtly, smoothing the silk of the flame-coloured dress into which she was tightly packed.

  She omitted to mention that her sister had already worn the dress for two seasons, but added softly: ‘Mind you don’t miss your stop, my dear.’

  Having silenced the tiresome woman, Eugénie opened her purse and counted her money, pleased that t
hey had taken the omnibus rather than a carriage. The saving would give her a little more to put by. It was worth the sacrifice.

  Louise Vergne rose haughtily like an offended duchess. ‘If I were you, I would hide your bag. They say that all of London’s pickpockets have emigrated to the Champ-de-Mars,’ was her parting remark as she got off.

  Immediately Gontran piped up, ‘Did you know that they had to manufacture eighteen thousand pieces in the workshops of Levallois-Perret, and that it took two hundred workmen to assemble them on the site? People predicted that it would collapse after two hundred and eighty metres but it didn’t.’

  Here we go, thought Eugénie. ‘What are you talking about?’

  ‘Why, the Tower, of course!’

  ‘Sit up straight and wipe your nose.’

  ‘If you wanted to transport it somewhere else on wheels you would need ten thousand horses,’ Gontran continued, rubbing his nose.

  Hector and Marie-Amélie came bounding down from the top deck. ‘We’re here, look!’

  Pointing straight up into the sky on the other side of the Seine, Gustave Eiffel’s bronze-coloured tower was reminiscent of a giant streetlamp topped with gold. Panic-stricken, Eugénie searched for a pretext to get out of climbing it. When she couldn’t think of one, she laid a hand on her pounding heart. If I survive this I shall say fifty Paternosters at Notre-Dame d’Auteuil.

  The bus drew up in front of the enormous Trocadero Palace, flanked by minarets. Down below, beyond the grey ribbon of the river filled with boats, the fifty hectares of the Universal Exposition were spread before them.

  Tightly clutching her bag, her eyes fixed on the children, Eugénie began her descent into hell. She charged down Colline de Chaillot, passing the fruits of the world display, the tortured bonsai of the Japanese garden, and the dark entrance of ‘Journey to the Centre of the Earth without a second glance. Though the whalebones of her corset chafed her ribs and her feet begged for mercy, she did not slacken her pace. She just wanted to get this over and done with as soon as possible and get back on terra firma …

  Finally, she held out her tickets and pushed the children under the canopy of the Pont d’Iéna. ‘Listen to me carefully,’ she said slowly and deliberately. ‘If you stray from me by so much as a centimetre — do you hear me? a centimetre — we’re going home.’

  Then she plunged headlong into the fray. A huge crowd was jostling around the multicoloured kiosks, forming a human tide of French people and foreigners of all races. The minstrels of Leicester Square, with their soot-blackened faces, led the way along the left bank, to the rhythm of banjos.

  With pounding heart, and overwhelmed by the noise, Eugénie clung to Gontran, who was unmoved by the hubbub. The Exposition seemed to come at them from all sides. Jostled between the street vendors, the Annamese rickshaw-pullers and Egyptian donkey-drivers, they finally succeeded in joining the queue in front of the southern pillar of the Tower.

  Moving reluctantly along in the queue, Eugénie looked enviously at the elegant young people comfortably installed in special rolling chairs, pushed by employees in peaked caps. That’s what I need …

  ‘Aunt, look!’

  She looked up and saw a forest of crossbars and small beams, in the midst of which a lift slid up and down. At once she was seized with a desire to flee as fast and far as her exhausted legs would carry her.

  She dimly heard Gontran’s monotonous voice: ‘Three hundred and one metres … leading straight up to the second floor … four lifts. Otis, Combaluzier …’

  Otis, Combaluzier. Something about those strange names suddenly reminded her of the projectile vehicle, in that book by Jules Verne whose title escaped her.

  ‘Those preferring to walk up the one thousand seven hundred and ten steps will take an hour to do so …’

  She remembered now: it was From the Earth to the Moon! What if the cables snapped … ?

  ‘Aunt, I want a balloon! A helium balloon! A blue one! Give me a sou, Aunt, a sou!’

  A clout on the ear more like!

  She regained her self-control. A poor relation, given a roof over her head out of pure charity, could not afford to give free rein to her feelings. Regretfully she held out a sou to Hector.

  Gontran was still reciting impassively from the Exhibition Guide. ‘ … on average, eleven thousand visitors a day, and the Tower can accommodate ten thousand people at any one time …’

  He stopped abruptly, sensing the icy glare of the man just ahead of them, an immaculately dressed middle-aged man of Japanese origin. He stared at Gontran unblinkingly until he lowered his eyes, then slowly turned away, satisfied.

  Turning towards the ticket window, Eugénie was so overcome by panic that she was unable to string two words together.

  Marie-Amélie pushed her aside and, standing on tiptoes, bellowed: ‘Four tickets for the second platform, please.’

  ‘Why the second? The first platform is high enough,’ stammered Eugénie.

  ‘We must sign the Golden Book in the Figaro Pavilion, have you forgotten? Papa insisted — he wants to read our names in the newspaper. Pay the lady, Aunt.’

  Propelled to the back of the lift, close behind a Japanese man whose face bore an expression of childish delight, Eugénie collapsed onto a wooden bench and commended her soul to God. She could not stop thinking about an advertisement glimpsed in the Journal des Modes that declared: ‘Do you lack iron? Are you anaemic? Chlorotic? Bravais tincture restores the blood and combats fatigue.’

  ‘Bravais, Bravais, Bravais,’ she chanted to herself.

  There was a sudden jolt. Her heart in her mouth, she saw the red mesh of a birdcage passing by. She had just time to think, Mon Dieu, what am I doing here?, when the lift came to a stop on the second floor, one hundred and sixteen metres above the ground.

  Leaning against the railing on the first floor of the Tower, Victor Legris was keeping an eye on the coming and going of the lifts. His business associate had suggested they meet between the Flemish restaurant and the Anglo-American bar. The gallery was crammed and the atmosphere was electric with the nervous laughter of women, the animated conversation of men. Those returning for a second visit looked blasé. The lifts stopped, discharged their cargo and set off again. A motley throng stretched back along the stairs. Victor loosened his cravat and undid his top shirt button. The sun was beating down and he was thirsty. Hat in hand, he wandered as far as the souvenir shop.

  A blue balloon brushed past his nose and a piercing voice cried out: ‘He was a cowboy, I tell you! He signed the Golden Book behind us. He comes from New York!’

  Victor observed the two boys and the little girl whose face was pressed up against the shop window.

  ‘Everything’s so beautiful! The brooch with the Eiffel Tower on top, and the fans and the embroidered hand-kerchiefs …’

  ‘Why do you never believe me?’ yelled the little boy with the balloon. ‘I’m sure he’s part of Buffalo Bill’s troupe!’

  ‘That’s enough about Buffalo Bill — why don’t you look at the view instead?’ The older boy pointed towards the horizon. ‘Do you realise we can see Chartres from here? It’s a hundred and twenty kilometres away. And there are the towers of Notre-Dame and there, those of Saint-Sulpice. Then there’s the dome of the Panthéon, the Val-de-Grâce. It’s amazing, like being giants in Gulliver’s Travels!’

  ‘What are those things that look like enormous boiled eggs?’

  ‘That’s the Observatory. And further away over there is Montmartre, where they’re building the Basilica.’

  ‘It looks like a piece of pumice stone,’ muttered the younger boy. ‘Gontran, if I let my balloon go will it float all the way to America?’

  I would love to be their age and have their enthusiasm, thought Victor. Even if they live fifty years more, they’ll never know greater excitement than this.

  He caught sight of his reflection in the shop window: a slim man of medium height, thirtyish, with a harassed expression and a thick moustache.

&nb
sp; Is that really me? Why do I look so disillusioned?

  He went up to the railing and glanced down on the hordes of people milling around the Palace of Fine Arts, hurrying up Rue du Caire, storming the little Decauville train and massing in front of the vast Machinery Hall. Suddenly he felt that the atmosphere had become hostile.

  ‘Aunt, look after my balloon.’

  Glued to her seat like a barnacle to a rock, Eugénie Patinot was determined not to move. Without a word of protest she let Hector knot the string of the balloon around her wrist. The garlands and flags of the Flemish restaurant fluttered in a light breeze and made her vertigo worse. She recalled a few lines of a song:

  Le doux vertige de l’amour

  Souffle parfois sur nos vieux jours …

  She felt suddenly sick.

  ‘Marie-Amélie, stay with me.’

  ‘That’s not fair! The boys are —’

  ‘Do as you’re told.’

  She was worn out after that interminable wait on the second platform with all the people wanting to sign the Golden Book, pushing and shoving. Her cheeks were flushed and her hands trembled — where would she find the courage to bear the lift ride for a third time? Clumsily, she tucked a lock of grey hair back under her hat. Someone sat down beside her, rose again, stumbled, and leant heavily on her shoulder without apologising. She let out a little cry — something had stung her on the base of the neck. A bee? Yes, definitely a bee! She waved her arms in fright and jumped to her feet, then lost her balance as her legs refused to hold her. She managed to sit back down on the bench. A feeling of great heaviness began to spread through her limbs and she had difficulty breathing. She leant back against the gallery partition. If only she could go to sleep, and forget her fear and tiredness … Just before she lost consciousness she remembered something the priest had said to her after the death of her child: ‘Life here on earth is only a sort of prelude, it is written in the Bible, and the Bible is the Word of God.’ She saw Marie-Amélie run away, disappearing into the crowd, but she didn’t have the strength to call her back as a weight was pressing down on her chest. Before her watering eyes the crowd drifted heedlessly in a circle that seemed to close in on her, nearer and nearer …