Leaving out some of the more interesting details, Argyll explained. He had acquired a picture which, judging by a label on the back, had probably passed through the gallery’s hands. Unfortunately it was many years ago. But he wanted to find out as much as possible.
‘How long ago?’
He said that it was probably sixty or seventy years. Certainly pre-war.
‘Oh, dear. I don’t know if I’ll be of much help, then. The Rosier family threw most of the records away when they sold up, and that was thirty years ago.’
He’d half expected that. Some dealers, the very old, very established ones, keep records of every work of art that passes through. Most run out of space to store the mountains of paper and sooner or later throw them out. At the very best they donate their records to archives or something; few keep such things hanging around the gallery to gather dust.
Gentilly was politely interested, at least, but Argyll had little else to tell him. He described the
‘Hartung?’ Gentilly said, perking up. ‘Why didn’t you say so?’
‘You’ve heard of him?’
‘Good lord, of course. Before he fell from grace he was quite a big Paris collector. An industrialist, I think.’
‘This gallery may well have sold stuff to him, then?’
‘More than likely. From what I’ve heard — and it was well before my time, remember — he bought widely, and judiciously. What’s more, I may well be able to tell you. Like most dealers we’re extraordinarily snobbish in this firm. Ordinary clients — pouf. We throw away the records. Important ones, rich ones — ah, now that’s another matter. We like to remember them. You never know when we might be able to drop their names into the conversation. Hartung, you might know, is not the sort of person one likes to remember as a client, because of his subsequent career... None the less, he’ll be in our old Golden Book of the distinguished. Just one moment.’
And he disappeared to emerge a few moments later with a ledger-book. He thumped it down on the desk in a cloud of dust and opened it up with both hands, then sneezed loudly.
‘Not opened this for some time. Now then. H for Hartung. Let me see. Um.’
And with much frowning and grunting, little reading-glasses perched on the end of his nose, he laboriously turned the pages.
‘There we are,’ he said. ‘Jules Hartung, 18 Avenue Montaigne. First became a customer in 1921, last purchase in 1939. In all bought eleven pictures from us. Not one of our most lavish clients, but a nice selection. Very nice, I may say. Except for some mediocre wallpaper pictures.’
‘May I see?’ Argyll said, coming round to the other side of the desk in his impatience and peering at the ledger eagerly.
Gentilly pointed at a scrawled entry half-way down. ‘This is the one you want, I imagine. June 1939. One painting by Jean Floret of a classical scene, delivered to his house. And another, same painter, of a religious scene, delivered to a different address. The Boulevard St-Germain. The unfashionable end.’
‘Good. Must have been another in the same series.’
‘What series?’
‘There were four,’ he said briskly, displaying his knowledge. ‘All of legal scenes. This other one must be another one of the series.’
‘I see.’
‘Anyway, that’s one little problem cleared up. Now, how can I find out who lived at this other address?’
‘You are keen, aren’t you? Why does it matter?’
‘It probably doesn’t. Just being thorough.’
Gentilly shook his head doubtfully. ‘I don’t see how it can be done. With a lot of work you could find out who owned the apartment, if that’s what it was. But the chances are that it was rented. I don’t imagine there’s the slightest chance of finding out who lived there.’
‘Oh,’ he said, disappointed. ‘That’s a nuisance. What about Hartung himself? How would I get hold of people who knew him?’
‘It was a long time ago, and he’s not the sort of person people like to remember. People did bad things in the war; but he... Do you know the story?’
‘Bits. I know he hanged himself.’
‘Yes. Good thing too. I believe he was quite popular in the social whirl before the war. Very beautiful wife. But you won’t get many people admitting to having been his friend now. Not that there can be many left alive. It’s a very long time ago. All forgotten.’
‘Perhaps not.’
‘As you say; perhaps not. But it should be. The war’s over. Just history. What people did in the past.’
Despite his enhanced confidence in his ability to wheedle information out of fellow art dealers, Argyll’s subsequent assault on Jean-Luc Besson was not a great success.