“Actually, it was a bee,” said Gamache. “A honey bee.”
“But that’s ridiculous. Why would a honey bee be there? Their hive’s all the way across the property. Besides, all the flowers around there were sick. A bee wouldn’t be attracted to them.”
“One last question. Agent Lacoste says you kept saying it wasn’t your fault.” He quickly held up a steady hand to reassure her. “We know it wasn’t. But I need to know why you said it.”
“Elliot and Mrs. Martin were talking on the other side of the statue. Laughing and kinda flirting. I was so angry. It was horrible to have to see them every day. I was working there and they obviously hadn’t seen me, or didn’t notice. Anyway, I stood up and put my hand on the statue. It moved.”
She lowered her eyes and waited for the inevitable laughter. He’d never believe her. Who would? What she’d said was laughable, which was why she hadn’t said anything about it before. How could a statue move? Yet it had. She could feel it grinding forward even now. She waited for him to laugh, to dismiss what she’d just said as ridiculous. She raised her eyes and saw him nodding.
“Thank you,” he said softly, though she wasn’t convinced he was talking to her. “It’s too late to join the others on the search. Perhaps you could help me.”
She smiled, relieved.
While Gamache took a couple of calls Madame Dubois put through he asked Colleen to call the Correctional Centre in Nanaimo, B.C. “Tell them Chief Inspector Gamache needs to speak to David Martin, urgently.”
Gamache spoke to the Musée Rodin in Paris, the Royal Academy in London and the Côte des Neiges cemetery in Montreal. He’d just hung up when Colleen handed him her phone.
“Mr. Martin’s on the line.”
“David Martin?” Gamache asked.
“It is. Is this Chief Inspector Gamache?”
“Oui, c’est moi-même.” He continued in rapid French, and received answers in equally rapid French. Very quickly Gamache found out about Martin’s early life and career, his early bankruptcies, his investors.
“I need the names of all your early investors.”
“That’s easy. There weren’t that many.”
Gamache scribbled the names as Martin dictated them.
“And they lost everything they’d invested with you?”