Maigret’s Pickpocket by George’s Simenon, bk66 in the Inspector Maigret series -now read. I started reading Simenon just two years ago, late to the party-I thank thee Scott Bradfield 🛁! Having now read the last 7 in the series, and 3 earlier Maigret [ also 2 Simenon roman durs novels] I must move forwards. Having taken a couple months hiatus, binging on the Parker series and other stuff, this one really took hold…currently a favorite, alongside Maigret’s Wine Merchant.
I am always quite struck by, in addition to his considerable talent at plotting and setting the scene, time, place and events - Simenon shares with the reader seemingly mundane parts of French life in a transformative and revealing manner - it’s personal. Also I particularly like these ones, where he digs deep into the psycho pathology of an obsessive type of personality. Maigret’s Pickpocket is that… [And a note from Simenon - “My motto, to the extent that I have one, has been noted often enough, and I’ve always conformed to it. It’s the one I’ve given to old Maigret, who resembles me in certain points … ‘understand and judge not’.]
Spring time. “The same buses with platforms had been in circulation when he had first arrived in Paris, almost forty years earlier, and in those days he had never tired of taking one along the large shop-lined boulevards on the Madeleine–Bastille line. That had been one of his first discoveries.” -
“He had never tired of the terraces either, where you could sit in front of a glass of beer and watch the ever-changing sights of the street. … this was another year when spring was early, and that morning he had left home without his overcoat. He felt as light as the sparkling air. The colours of the shops, the food stalls, the women’s dresses, were all bright and cheerful. He was not thinking of anything in particular.”
Event on the Tram. “Stepping back, he bumped unavoidably into someone behind him. ‘Sorry.’ He too murmured an apology, tried to crane round, and glimpsed the face of a young man, a face marked by an emotion that was hard to read. — the same young man jumped from the bus as it was still moving.” … “no precise reason, Maigret clapped his hand to his hip pocket where he usually kept his wallet. He almost jumped off the bus in turn, because the wallet had gone.”
Quai des Orfèvres. “ ‘Everything all right, chief? Nothing to report?’ ‘No. Or rather yes. I’ve just been robbed.’ ‘Your watch?’ ‘My wallet.’ ‘In the street?’ ‘On the platform of the bus.’ ‘Only about fifty francs. I don’t carry more than that as a rule.’ ‘Not just my papers, but my badge!’ — “ Maigret’s badge had the number 0004, since number 1 was for the prefect of police, number 2 for the director of the Police Judiciaire, and number 3, for some reason, that of the head of Special Branch.” And yet. “The light-heartedness of the morning was still influencing his mood was more vexed than really angry.” … “ He spent almost an hour examining the photographs -None of them looked anything like the young man on the bus, and Maigret knew in advance that his search would be in vain.” — “Maigret was thinking about it more and more, without wanting to. Instead of becoming vaguer in his mind’s eye, the thief’s face was getting clearer. In the whole incident, the face, the flight, there was something unnatural, but he couldn’t work out what it was.” Later in his office. “top of the pile lay a thick brown envelope on which his name, title and the address at Quai des Orfèvres were printed in large capital letters. He realized what it was before opening it. His wallet was being returned. — nothing was missing, not the badge, nor his papers, nor the fifty francs. There was nothing else. No message. No explanation. He felt thoroughly vexed at this.”
The pickpocket calls. “ ‘So why are you telephoning?’ ‘Because I need to see you.’ ‘It’s personal.’ ‘What’s personal?’ — “There was something unreal about this conversation and yet Maigret was taking it seriously. ‘Where are you?’ ‘Will you come here?’ ‘Yes.’ ‘Our conversation has to remain private. Will you promise that?’ ‘It depends.’ ‘What on?’ ‘On what you’re going to say.’ ‘Yes, I’m prepared to meet you.’ ‘And you accept my conditions?’ ‘I’ll be alone.’ ‘But you won’t make any promises?’ ‘No.’ “It’s what the newspapers say about you that makes me inclined to trust you. ‘That you understand certain things that the police and the law courts don’t usually understand, and that in some cases, you’ve even …’ ‘I’ve even what?’ - ‘Have you sometimes closed your eyes to something?’ Maigret preferred not to answer this. ‘Where are you?’
The Meeting. “ -finally. ‘What did you think?’ ‘That you’d guess, you’d be more or less right, and once I was hooked …’ ‘Go on.’ He suddenly became angry and raised his voice, forgetting he was in a public place.” ‘And once I was hooked, I’d be done for, wouldn’t I!’ ‘ Listen, inspector …’ He was paler and more nervous than ever. ‘Have you ever trusted somebody, even when all the evidence was against him?’ ‘It has happened.’ ‘What do you think of me?’ ‘That you’re rather complicated, and that I don’t have enough elements to make a judgement.’
Ricain’s Apartment. “Alongside a sofa-bed, a young woman was lying on the multicoloured Moroccan carpet: over her body buzzed a cloud of bluebottle flies” … ‘She’s your wife, isn’t she?’ His eyes said yes. And you were there when it happened?’ ‘No.’ ‘When did you last see her?’ ‘Day before yesterday … Wednesday …’ ‘Morning? Evening?’ ‘Late that night.’ ‘And do you know how she died?’ The young man nodded, without speaking, since he was once more unable to breathe. ‘When I came back …’ ‘ About what time?’ ‘Eleven.’ ‘No, I was going out to look for some money. We were desperate.’ ‘What’s your name?’ ‘Ricain, François Ricain. Some people call me Francis.’
Hideaway Plan. “In Belgium or somewhere, I could have waited a bit. Read the newspapers about the investigation. I’d have learned details I didn’t know, so it would have made it easier to defend myself.’ Maigret could not help smiling at such a mixture of cunning and naivety.” — ‘But look, I can’t face going back there, seeing, smelling …’ ‘Well, I have to.’ ‘It’s your job. And she wasn’t your wife.’ He veered from incoherent muttering to perfectly good common sense, from blind panic to lucid reasoning. ‘You’re a strange young man.’ ‘Because I’m sincere?’ … “Maigret able to register the strange décor of the little apartment. The floor had been varnished black, the walls and ceiling painted bright scarlet. The furniture by contrast was chalky white, which made the whole interior rather unreal. It was almost like a stage set. Nothing seemed solid.” — “François Ricain, who changed his mood every few seconds. Maigret would have found it difficult to formulate an opinion of him. Intelligent, yes, certainly, and highly so, as far as one could tell from what lay beneath some of his utterances. Yet alongside that, there was a naive, rather childish side to him.”
The murder investigation ensues… my further highlights are visible on Goodreads. But I suggest it’s better to read the book.