The Consequences of Fear Jacqueline Winspear (i can read book club .txt) đ
- Author: Jacqueline Winspear
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âSo, Miss Dobbs, now you know how I am armed, where shall we begin, you and I? We find ourselves in an unfortunate situation,because you know so much about me, yet I know almost nothing about youâexcept that for some reason you knew exactly who Iwas the moment we met, didnât you?â
âA lucky guess,â said Maisie, then corrected herself. âNo, it was more than that. I know a killer when I see one. Iâve hada lot of practice.â
Chaput folded his arms, his head inclined, giving the impression of a relaxed man.
âYouâve taken the lives of two men on British soil, Major Chaput,â said Maisie. âYouâve used the cover of war to claim âan eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth.â There was no needâand without doubt no need to involve Hackett.â
âOh, but there was, Miss Dobbs, there was every need, as you put it. But tell me what you knowâit cannot do any harm now, and Iâm curious anyway. It will help me become a littlemore vigilant next timeâthough I confess you are very well connected, which I think helped you in your little investigation.â
Maisie felt her jaw tense.
âAll right, Major. Here we go.â She drew a deep breath, and began. âIn the last war you were a captainâsoon to be promotedto majorâand you were encamped close to a local village with a British battalion not terribly far away. However . . . however,for several days there had been an increasing level of disruption among your men. Am I right so far?â
âIâll complain when youâre wrong,â said Chaput.
âThis part is fairly straightforward. In a local estaminet, a fight broke out between some of your men, and when one of themwent for you, a British soldier stepped in. He wasnât actually trying to help you; more likely he just wanted to have a goat someone because it was in his nature. But he saved you, didnât he, and managed to get a swipe across his cheek with a knifein the process?â
âIt was toward the end of the war, and my men were becoming disillusioned. As were the British and the Germans. But that cutgave my savior the permanent ticket home he wanted, so it wasnât all that bad for him.â Chaput glanced at his watch. âMy timeis precious, so please hurry, Miss Dobbs.â
âMilitary police broke up the fight, Hackett was removed to a dressing station and you shook his hand as he was stretcheredaway. You thought you would never see him again.â
âHoped Iâd never see him againâdissent is a danger to everyone on the battlefield, and Iâd heard one of the British military police telling him to get out, and he refused, so I know he was no better than the worst of my men.â
âWhich brings us to Claude Payot and his cousin, Thierry Richard, who were with you again in Damascus. What a terrible jobthat must have been, given the way you were ordered to fight, to protect the French mandate against uprisings from a peoplewho were quite able to rule themselves.â
âWe were not the only small group with orders that were just a little different from the army.â
âBe that as it may, but Payot goaded youâI know what he did, what his constant provocation led to, and how your men were killedwhen your full attention was compromised by a lesser man who pushed you on when everything told you to pull back, becausedanger lay ahead. You allowed your better judgment to be undermined.â
âThe actions of Payot and Richard rendered us vulnerable.â
âThey rendered you vulnerable, Major Chaput. The fact that they lived, that subversive actions initiated by Payot led to the death of all butthe three of you, was a thorn in your sideâand not only did you blame them, you had to live with yourself, because there wasan element of truth, wasnât there, in the fact that you had a certain sympathy for the local people?â
âI am a soldier of FranceâI followed my orders to the letter.â
âLetâs not split hairs.â Maisie cleared her throat. âBy chance Hackett ran into you in Londonâor was he lurking around just in case he saw you in places where the French spent their time, various clubs and so on? He was always in need of money, so instead of just giving him a handoutâand therefore admitting to a debtâyou had him run the odd errand for you, usually gathering information on where your agents went when they were on their own time in London. Now, my details are a little woolly here, but I would say he kept an eye on Payot for you and marked him as an alcoholicâafter all, it takes one to know one. On the night of Payotâs death, Hackett followed him to get him drunk and part him from his money. I think the plan unfolded over several weeks, so during that time Payot believed he had made a friend.â
Maisie shook her head and glanced out of the window before she brought her attention back to Chaput, who was silent, watching her. âIt couldnât go on for too long, this playing out of the line, could it? Hackett was a drunk himself, and time became of the essence. So on the night of the murder, Hackett led Payot to you, to the place where you were waiting. You wanted to make sure Payot paid for what happened in Syria. You wanted him to suffer for making you bear indignities in front of your menâindignities that distracted you. You were the sole keeper of this particular account, and you had the unpaid note. Oh, and you also wanted him out of the way, just in case that history was brought up before your superiors. I know an official report on the Syria debacle had once been tucked away in an old records office in Damascus, before it was lost.â Maisie shook her head. âBut where did Hackett go? Did he watch you settle the account? Did he have any
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