certainly saved your hide when you put the wrong man on trial in Paris last month.â
âYouâre remarkably well informed, Chief Inspector Scott. Should I be looking for a Scotland Yard spy at Paris HQ?â
âWould we do that to our French colleagues? No mole, I assure you. However, we
do
live in a global village these days and word gets around about such er⦠embarrassments.â
Iâll just bet it does, Philippe Maigret thought wryly. Especially when itâs the French who are on the receiving end of the embarrassment! âThis is all academic anyway, Chief Inspector, because I wonât let Mrs Lisle do it. And thatâs final.â
âAnd exactly
what
wonât you let me do, Philippe?â Megan asked, standing in the doorway.
Chapter Four
âDonât you ever do that to me again, Philippe,â Megan said as they walked towards the lift a few minutes later. Not if you want to have a long happy marriage.â
âWhat, my love?â
âAnd donât try to sweet talk me either. I want to stay cross with you for a long time!â
â
Comment?â
âAnd donât speak French, either.â
âBut I
am
French, darling. Itâs what we do. Itâs my
mother
tongue.â
âNow youâre laughing at me!â And he was.
However, by the time the lift had reached the ground floor, they had kissed and made up. But only after Philippe Maigret had solemnly promised, with his hand on his heart, that he would never again â
in this or any other Universe!
â presume to speak on Meganâs behalf without first knowing her thoughts on the subject under discussion.
The next day Chief Inspector Scottâs hastily arranged information gathering plan was put into action, but not without opposition.
âThis is the most ludicrous surveillance operation in which Iâve ever had the misfortune to be involved,â Philippe Maigret said. It was not the first time heâd voiced his objections but now he was incredulous. âTwo strangers, one dressed like a vicar, walk in off the street to ask for old books? How believable is that? It will never work. Who would do such a thing? Nicole will smell a rat the moment youâre inside the door. Assuming she actually lets you in the door in the first place.â
âOf course it will work. People do it all the time in the summer when the local churches are having their fairs. Iâve done it lots of times myself,â Megan said calmly.
âThey just
give
you their old books? Itâs
incredible!
Are these people mad? Have they no souls?â At that moment the penny dropped for Megan. âSweetie, you
do
realise that weâre not talking about antique
books or
First Editions,
donât you? People give us paperbacks
or old travel guides and childrenâs books. Any books they no longer need but that other people might like. And not just books. Bric-a-bracand old pieces of jewellery too. People donate lots of saleable things, especially when itâs for a church or a charity. Itâs an upmarket form of recycling. Donât people do that in Paris?â
Philippe shrugged. âMaybe, in the
marché aux puces
or places like that, but not where⦠â
âOh, I see! In the flea market, but not in the
16 th arrondissement,
or any other posh parts of Paris, like those where chief inspectors might choose to live.â
âAnd now youâre calling me a snob as well as an ignoramus,â he laughed. âWhich is unfair because you know where I live and itâs not in the16 th !â
An hour later, Megan Lisle together with the chubby Met policeman, Sergeant Andrew Gillespie â looking slightly red-faced and uncomfortable in his vicarâs collar â started their door-knocking assignment in the small development of mews houses where Nicole and the mysterious Serge Vachon lived. To make this seem more real they knocked on the first