The French House Helen Fripp (the two towers ebook txt) đ
- Author: Helen Fripp
Book online «The French House Helen Fripp (the two towers ebook txt) đ». Author Helen Fripp
âIâm a habitual provider of entertainment for this town, why stop now? I have enough planned to get the gossips through the whole winter.â
He let go of the handshake. âThatâs where you and I part company. I hate to add to your worries, but a personâs reputation is all, and yours is seriously in question. Iâm telling you as a friend.â
âEveryone has had their ups and downs these past difficult years, itâs part of the business. Why is my reputation particularly at stake? I hope youâre not going to bore me with your âmanâs worldâ argument again?â
âThereâs a delicate matter that perhaps isnât right for a busy square, so I encourage you to step into my office.â
âNot now, Jean-RĂ©my, Iâm meeting Xavier at the press in half an hour.â
âYouâll understand the urgency if I mention a certain Doctor Moreau?â
Her legs buckled and her heart slammed in her ears. Monsieur Moët ushered her into his office in a blur.
âSit there, my dear. I hate to bring up difficult memories, but you must face up to it.â
âWhat do you want from me?â Nicole asked quietly.
âUnwanted pregnancies, sexual diseases⊠suicide, nothing is beneath our learned Doctor Moreau. If thereâs enough money involved, heâll cover anything up, isnât that so?â
âAll doctors work for money,â she stalled, afraid of where this was going.
âBut this one has a reputation he canât shake off, a bit like you.â
âJust come out and say what you want from me.â
âNothing at all. Itâs more about what I can do for you. Iâm sorry to tell you that Doctor Moreau is in jail for falsifying death certificates. The investigative bodies are doing a very good job of uncovering his misdemeanours â so many defenceless families have been exposed. The list is endless⊠unfortunate young ladies who thought theyâd got away with concealing bastard children; whole families whose reputations have been ruined by the selfish actions of a loved one who saw fit to illegally take his own life. The truth will always out. The investigators are asking for all the death certificates he signed in Reims in 1805. My apologies for any distress this may cause you.â
âApart from that being the year that François died, I have nothing whatsoever to be distressed about.â She thought about the rat poison. Sheâd take that secret with her to the grave. Even she could never know the real truth of how he died.
âThink about poor little ClĂ©mentine. No one would ever marry her. Bad blood. This town talks more than you think. We both know Doctor Moreau covered up Françoisâ suicide.â
He couldnât possibly know, she told herself. Itâs just the rumour mill that heâs exploiting.
âIt was typhoid, everyone knows that. The rest is just malicious gossip.â
âDoes truth matter? Gossip is truth in small towns and it will only be fuelled by Doctor Moreauâs arrest â and his name is on that death certificate. I can protect you. All you have to do is give up your foolish vineyard venture and then you can live a life of luxury. You canât see it, but I really am acting in your own interests, if a little forcefully.â
âBy blackening the Clicquot name? Donât dress this up as help.â
âYou will be ruined without me.â
âIâm ruined anyway.â
âConsider it. I know you donât want to sell, but let me step in where Monsieur Clicquot has failed as a business partner. I will run the business and grow it. You could retain some part in it, add the Clicquot name to mine, and your dear husbandâs name will live on. As part of the deal, I will protect you, including using my position within the mairie to access and destroy Doctor Moreauâs death certificate and finally put the rumours to rest.â
âInstead of fanning the flames if I refuse?â
âThey say his body should have been staked at a crossroads to release his ghost, not buried in consecrated ground. They say his ghost haunts you and ruins all your associations with men. That is why your deal with Philippe Clicquot has expired and Louis has disappeared. Is your failing hobby worth it? You should do it for François and his poor father.â
She put her head in her hands. No wonder he owned this town.
âWhen are the investigators arriving?â she asked.
Monsieur MoĂ«t checked his pocket watch and tapped it. âIâm afraid I canât give you much time. The notary came today to inform me that theyâre arriving tomorrow at two p.m. sharp.â
âThen you will have my answer tomorrow morning.â
âThe papers will be ready.â
âI donât doubt you already have them prepared. Good afternoon.â
As soon as she was safely inside the press at Bouzy with Xavier, Nicole collapsed.
âWhat the fuck happened to you? I havenât seen you like this since FrançoisâŠâ
âItâs like heâs died all over again. Xavier, can I be frank with you? You found us the day François died and youâre the only one I can tell.â
She told him everything, about the typhoid and the rat poison, about MoĂ«tâs threats. It was such a relief. He let her speak, didnât say a word, or show any emotion, and she was grateful for that, too. She needed a cool head when hers was exploding.
âThe worst thing is that MoĂ«t knows heâs right,â she continued. âDoctor Moreauâs name on Françoisâ death certificate will ruin the Ponsardin-Clicquot family name. Mentineâs school friends will shun her, and everyone in Champagne who ever wanted to stop me has been handed the perfect gift.â
âYouâre running this place, I just follow orders. But if you want my advice, take your lead from the vines. Buy yourself some time and pray for a miracle.â
âIf only it was that simple.â
âYouâve got it all wrong with a sore like MoĂ«t. He likes to swagger about like heâs in charge. Underneath all that smarm, heâs no different from a prize bull. All this
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