“YOU KILLED MINETTE!”
They were the first words he said to Juliette when they found her waiting at Henri’s studio.
“Who?” she said.
“Minette Pissarro. A little girl. I loved her and you killed her.”
“It was you or her, Lucien. One of you had to pay. I chose her.”
“You said that the Colorman chose.”
“Yes, and he wanted you. I talked him out of it.”
“You’re a monster.”
“Well, your mother is a whore.”
“Only because you possessed her, too.”
“Oh, you know about that?”
“I saw the painting.”
“So the Colorman is dead? Really dead? I thought I felt him let go.”
“Yes,” said Henri. “I shot him. And the paintings are burned. You are free.”
“That little bastard, he told me he used the nude of your mother years ago.”
“So you killed my father, too?”
“What? Pfft. No. Silly. No, of course not. You know, Lucien, your father was a truly lovely man. He loved painting. Truly lovely.”
Henri said, “Since you have been Lucien, and you have been Lucien’s mother, then technically, he has slept—”
“My father died in his studio,” Lucien said. “And none of his paintings were ever found. Explain that.”
“Hey, look at these!”
“That is not going to work,” said Lucien.
“What were we talking about?” asked Henri.
“I didn’t kill your father, Lucien. It was his heart. He just died. But he died doing something he loved.”
“Painting?”
“Sure, let’s say painting.”
“My sister Régine has gone through life thinking that my father was cheating on my mother.”
“When, in fact, he was cheating with your mother,” said Henri.
“And she thinks she caused the death of my sister Marie. That was you then, wasn’t it?”
“Remember how much you like these? Mmmmmm, touch them.”
“Button your blouse, Juliette, that is not working.”