The Nature of the Beast (Chief Inspector Armand Gamache #11)
Page 99“Oui,” said Gamache. “That would’ve been helpful, and might even have saved a life.”
“What’d you mean?” Professor Rosenblatt opened his eyes wide, then screwed them shut, in an attempt to focus.
It wasn’t, Gamache thought, simply the alcohol. The man looked exhausted.
“A woman named Antoinette Lemaitre was killed last night,” said Beauvoir.
“Yes, I heard. Terrible,” said Rosenblatt. “The people here seem to think it had something to do with a play. Must have been a very bad play.”
“She was Guillaume Couture’s niece,” said Gamache.
Michael Rosenblatt stared at them as though they’d gone fuzzy.
“Guillaume Couture,” he repeated. “I haven’t heard that name in a long time.”
“How did you know him?” Beauvoir asked.
Rosenblatt looked surprised by the question. He glanced at the photograph, then from one to the other of his companions.
They waited for more. The young couple left, arm in arm, and Olivier began cleaning up.
And still they waited.
It seemed Rosenblatt had fallen into a stupor.
“Where did you get that?” He finally spoke, gesturing toward the picture.
“The McGill alumni magazine. It’s from Dr. Couture’s obituary,” said Beauvoir.
Michael Rosenblatt nodded. “I remember seeing the notice and the photo and wondering if anyone would put it together. But they didn’t.”
“Put what together?” Gamache asked.
“Or maybe they did,” said Rosenblatt, either ignoring the question or lost in his own thoughts.
He seemed to be rallying, rousing. His voice was less dreamy. His eyes sharper.
“He was very clever, you know. Switched on.”
“Dr. Couture?” asked Gamache.
Rosenblatt laughed. “No. Not him. Gerald Bull. Most scientists are sort of idiot savants. They know one thing very well, but fail in most other aspects of their lives. But not Dr. Bull. He could be off-putting. Abrupt, impatient. But he could also be charming and clever. He was shrewd, you know. Picked up on things that others missed. It’s a useful tool. He made connections. I don’t mean social, though he did that too. He made intellectual connections. He could see how things fit together.”
“As a scientist?” asked Gamache.
Now Rosenblatt chuckled. “As a scientist he was crap.” He reflected a bit on that, then amended what he’d said. “Not crap really. He’d earned his Ph.D. He was workmanlike. No, you were right yesterday when you suggested his real genius was public relations. Getting people to agree to the disagreeable. But he was also ruthless.”
“Who designed Project Babylon?” asked Gamache.
Rosenblatt nodded toward the photograph. “You already know.”
“I need you to confirm it.”
Even now, even when worn down and cornered, Gamache could see the elderly scientist twisting, so deep was the instinct and perhaps the training to evade.
“Ahh,” said Rosenblatt. The sound slipped out of him, like a long tail on a sigh.
He nodded a few times, carrying on some internal conversation. A debate. An argument. And then he spoke.
“Guillaume Couture designed Project Babylon. I suspect Gerald Bull conceived of the idea, but he needed someone smarter than himself to actually figure out how to do it. So he found Dr. Couture ferreting away in the engineering department of McGill. Couture became Bull’s chief designer and silent partner.”
Now that he’d started, Professor Rosenblatt couldn’t seem to stop talking. It was such a stream of information and confidences that Gamache found himself wary. Not sure if this was the truth, half-truths, or a blockade of lies.
Though it fit with their own conclusions. Perhaps a bit too well.
“Gerald Bull essentially committed suicide when he put himself forward as the sole designer of Project Babylon,” said Rosenblatt. “He was killed to stop him. No one knew about Guillaume Couture.”
“Except you,” said Beauvoir.
“Oh, I didn’t know. Not until much later. All that research on Gerald Bull, it didn’t fit, until I factored in someone else. Someone smarter.”
“Do you think Dr. Couture would have kept the plans?” Beauvoir asked. “After all, they’re what got his boss killed.”