Though winds blow stout –
Odile stared at the bags of organic cereal on the shelves, for inspiration. ‘Though winds blow stout,’ she repeated, stuck. She had to find something that rhymed with ‘gale’.
‘Pale? Pail? Shale? Though winds blow stout like a great big whale?’ said Odile, hopefully. But no, it was close, but not quite right.
All day in the store that she and Gilles ran in St-Rémy she’d been inspired to write. It had flooded out of her so that now the counter was awash with her works, scribbled on the backs of receipts and empty brown paper bags. Most, she felt sure, were good enough to be published. She’d type them up and send them off to the Hog Breeder’s Digest. They almost always accepted her poems, often without change. The muse wasn’t always so generous, but today Odile found her heart lighter than it had been in months.
All day people had visited the shop, most wanting a small purchase and a lot of information, which Odile was happy to supply, after being prodded. Wouldn’t do to appear too anxious. Or pleased.
‘You were there, dear?’
‘It must have been horrible.’
‘Poor Monsieur Béliveau. He was quite in love with her. And his wife barely two years gone.’
‘Was she really scared to death?’
That was the one memory Odile didn’t want to revisit. Madeleine frozen in a scream, as though she’d seen something so horrible it had turned her to stone, like the whatever it was from those myths, the head with the snakes. It had never seemed that scary to Odile, whose monsters took human shape.
Yes, Madeleine had been scared to death and it served her right for all the terror she’d visited upon Odile in the last few months. But now the terror was gone, like a storm blown over.
A storm. Odile smiled and thanked her muse for coming through again.
Though winds blow stout, a hurricale, What’s that,
what’s that to you and me.
It was past five and time to lock up. A good day’s work.
Chief Inspector Gamache called Agent Lemieux, still at the B. & B.
‘She’s not back yet, Chief. But Gabri is.’
‘Pass the phone to him, please.’
After a pause the familiar voice came on. ‘Salut, patron.’
‘Salut, Gabri. Did Madame Chauvet arrive by car?’