Note:
Because this review is taken from an English translation I have used
the British rank of Chief Inspector rather than Commissaire.
'Ernestine
Micou, alias 'Lofty' (now Jussiaume), who, when you arrested her
seventeen years ago in the Rue de la Lune, stripped herself to take
the mike out of you, requests the favour of an interview on a matter
of most urgent and important business.'
This
note, handed in at the Police Headquarters in Paris on a scorchingly
hot summer day, transports Chief-Inspector Maigret back to a time
when he was an inexperienced, young officer on the beat and intended
to arrest Lofty, a young prostitute for theft. 'Calmly she'd taken
off her wrap, her shift, and pants, and gone and lain down on the
unmade bed, lighting a cigarette'... 'The whole thing was ludicrous.
She was cool, quite passive, a little glint of irony showing in her
colourless eyes.'
Lofty
has come to ask Maigret for help. Her husband, Alfred Jussiaume,
known as Sad Freddie, is a safe-breaker who has left Paris without
warning and gone into hiding, but he contacted Lofty to say that on
his last attempted robbery in a private house in Neuilly, he had been
terrified by the sight of a dead body in the room; he said that it
was a middle-aged woman, 'that her chest was all covered in blood,
and that she was holding a telephone receiver in her hand.'
Although
Maigret has doubts about Lofty's story, especially as no murders have
been reported, he investigates to try and discover the house that Sad
Freddie burgled. This leads him to the home of Guillaume Serre, a
middle-aged dental surgeon who lives with his wife, Maria, and his
elderly mother. Maigret discovers that Serre's wife is no longer
there and Serre and his mother claim that Maria has left them to go
back and live, perhaps permanently, in Amsterdam, in her native
Holland. Serre and Madame Serre also claim that there has been no
sign of burglary in their house.
Who
is Maigret to believe? The prostitute and her husband, a habitual
criminal? Or the respectable if obnoxious dentist and his mother? He
follows his instinct, which leads to a long and harrowing
interrogation and a psychologically satisfying conclusion to the
investigation.
Maigret
and the Burglar's wife is a book based on remarkably skilled
characterisation and of exquisitely drawn contrasts. Lofty, whom
Maigret recognises immediately when he sees her after many years:
'her long, pale face, the washed out eyes, the big over-made-up mouth
that looked like a raw wound. He recognised also, in her glance, the
quiet irony of those who've seen so much that nothing's any longer
important in their eyes. She was simply dressed, with a light green
straw hat, and she'd put on gloves.' And old Madame Serre, 'a
little old woman, very dried up, dressed in black, who never passes
the time of day with anybody and doesn't look easy to get on with'
or as Maigret sees her first, 'the old lady who stood back to let
them enter would not have looked out of place dressed as a nun...
She'd an innate elegance and dignity which were remarkable.'
Another
beautiful contrast is when Maigret goes to visit Lofty at home to
question her further about her husband's claim. 'Maigret knocked
at a door, which half-opened; Ernestine appeared in her underclothes
and merely said: “It's you!” Then she went at once to fetch her
dressing gown from the unmade bed, and slipped it on.'
This
contrast is even stronger when describing the two sets of characters'
living places. Lofty and Sad Freddie live in rooms above a café, in
a situation full of noise and colour: 'The wall of the staircase
was whitewashed, as in the country. One could hear the racket made by
a crane unloading gravel from a barge a little further on... The
window was open. There was a blood-red geranium. The bedspread was
red too. The door stood open into a little kitchen, out of which came
a good smell of coffee.'
The
Serre's drawing room is that of wealthy people, but underneath there
is the sense of a smothering stagnation. 'She
opened, on the left, a pair of polished oaken doors, and Maigret was
reminded more than ever of a convent or, better still, a rich
parsonage. Even the soft, insidious smell reminded him of something;
he didn't know what, he tried to remember. The drawing-room that she
showed them into was lit only by daylight seeping through the slots
of the shutters, and to enter it from outside was like stepping into
a cool bath. The noises of the town, one felt, could never penetrate
this far, and it was as if the house and everything in it had
remained unchanged for more than a century.'
Although
it was written over eighty years ago, Maigret and the Burglar's Wife
manages to combine the sense of a time past with a present-day
observation of psychological twists. It is still an excellent read.
Note:
At this time, Maigret and the Burglar's wife is not available as a
new paperback or on Kindle, however there are several second-hand
paperbacks available for sale.
No comments:
Post a Comment