Authors: J. Robert Janes
Handed over, the papers were scrutinized. St-Cyr was obviously unhappy with himself for having demanded them as so many did these days. Her place of work and residence were there â he'd see those quickly enough. Her age, physical features, all such things, but would he ask what he would need?
âYou had a good look at the corpse of Céline Dupuis, mademoiselle. Why such interest?'
âThe artist in me. Death has always interested that part of me. Must I apologize for something I, myself, don't fully understand? The compulsion, the drive ⦠Yes, that curiosity!'
And no mention of the tears Hermann had noticed. Tears she had since said she hadn't been able to shed in years. âYou attended the Sorbonne?' he asked.
âThe Ãcole des Beaux Arts. Painting, life-drawing and sculpture.'
âAnd the uncle and aunt who raised you didn't mind?'
âI've already stated they encouraged me. Why shouldn't they have?'
âThe expense.'
âPapa had left everything to Maman, and through her, since there was no male heir, it passed to me, as did the small estate my uncle and aunt left.'
âYour father was killed at Verdun?'
âBuried near there, yes. I've already told you this earlier.'
âKilled when, mademoiselle?'
âIn May 1917. The ⦠the exact date I ⦠I was never told.'
âBut tried to find out?'
âI was a child! I needed to know.'
âWas it during the mutinies, mademoiselle?'
âThe shelling. You and Herr Kohler must surely have experienced this in that war? Men dying like flies. He ⦠he was ordered over the top as were the 137,000 others of his
compagnons d'armes
who manned the trenches along the Chemin des Dames and would die in that battle. He
obeyed
, Inspector. He did not run.'
âForgive me. One always hates to force those under questioning, mademoiselle. Even a Chief Inspector of the Sûreté â this one at least â is not without compassion. Albert, would you get her another marc, please? A cigarette, mademoiselle?'
âI don't smoke.'
Damn you, was implied. And yes, said St-Cyr sadly to himself, as the horror of that ten-day battle swept back in on him, one could never forget the screams of the dying. But the battle had begun at dawn on 16 April and had lasted for ten days. In May the
médecin de l'Armée
, as the
poilus
had started calling Pétain, had been sent in to deal with the mutineers. Men who, for good reason, and with no shame attached to their terror, had thrown down their arms and refused to take the madness any more.
âLet me just see if my partner needs anything,' he said. With a sinking feeling in the pit of her stomach, Inès told herself he had realized Pétain had given the order to the firing squad's captain and that Papa had been buried in an unmarked grave with the other fifty-six the army had admitted to having executed. He couldn't know the love Papa had had for Maman, that at the last he would have cried out her name, that all he had wanted was to see her and hold them both.
The Jockey Club's boardroom was not nearly so wide as it was long. Always mystified by these ritual dens of the corporate elite, Kohler took a quick look around. Magnificent horseflesh here, there, and wouldn't Cro-Magnon man have been thunderstruck? Another Lascaux, as in the Dordogne on that stonekiller investigation Louis and he had had to settle, but a modern one.
Ferbrave sat midway to the side of the Luan mahogany landing field. The father was at its head, the son begrudgingly at his right; wasn't it marvellous how readily such rooms sorted people out, and didn't these three need sorting? There was even a portrait of Marcel Boussac, the textile manufacturer and racehorse owner who, after the Defeat, had got racing started again by hiring a Prussian baron to manage his stables.
Good thinking that. No better horsemen than those boys, but to be fair, had Boussac not done this he'd have lost his stables and France its leading bloodlines.
âInvincible,' he said, not turning to look at them.
âGladiateur's line, Inspector,' offered the son, and by way of further explanation: âThe Avenger of Waterloo was winner of the Derby, the Grand Prix de Paris and the St Leger in 1865. Proof undeniable that France could at last not only produce champions but would take the lead.'
He'd mutter, âHistory,' and still not turn from the photos and paintings. âNormandy Dancer ⦠I gather Hyperion, 1933's fabulous British stallion, was felt necessary as that one's sire?'
âInspector â¦'
â
Oui
?' He would let the Chairman of the Board stew a little more.
âInspector, shouldn't you clear things first with Herr Gessler?'
It was time to face them. âOur Ernst? An unemployed shoemaker from Schrobenhausen?'
âI was merely suggesting â¦'
âOne of the beefsteak boys of the Sturmabteilung, the Assault Section of 1933?'
âInspector, please â¦'
âRed meat inside those brown shirts, eh? Must have kept a low profile or been whispering into Herr Goering's ear about his pals in the SA before and during the purge of 30 June to 2 July 1934 â the Night of the Long Knives, that â because,
voilÃ
, he surfaces in the Berlin Kripo as a detective no less, and not a bruise on him. Even when I was assigned to the Lichtenberg district in '37 and then the Prenzlauerberg in '38, the boys in the cop shop used to whisper about him. I never met him, so can't really say, but it's a big city, or was.'
Merde
, what were they to do? wondered Gaëtan-Baptiste. Gessler had warned that Kohler would be trouble but had also hinted he would let the two from Paris sort things out and trust the French would then take care of their own problems! âHe's a most proficient policeman, Inspector, and already has a firm grasp of things.'
âPoland in 1939, of course, and that ghetto in Warsaw in late '40 when almost a half-million of what Herr Himmler and others call the racially undesirable were bottled up until October â42, when they'd finally got the numbers down to a manageable seventy thousand and could spare him. Good at sniffing out trouble and valuables, the weak and deceitful. Came to the attention of several higher-ups. Sent to Rotterdam to deal with Dutch terrorists, then to Antwerp where he excelled in ferreting out housewives who were illegally hiding the enemy and still others of those R-people, the
Rasenverfolgte
, their children especially. And now â¦'
âInspector â¦'
âNo, you let me finish so that we all understand exactly who it is you want me to clear things with. Now considered so reliable that Klaus Barbie, over at the Hotel Terminus in Lyons â yes, that's the SS-Obersturmführer himself â recommended his transfer to Vichy. Barbie's an old acquaintance, by the way. A case of arson in Lyons, a salamander. Now give. Cut the horseshit and don't ever try to threaten me.'
Just like the corporate elite, they would pull together, thought Kohler, but he'd had to tell them and somehow would now have to break them.
âI was merely suggesting that Herr Gessler could well offer much-needed assistance, Inspector. After all, should anything happen to the Maréchal, the Führer would be most displeased.'
âAnd Louis and I'd be held responsible? Good
Gott im Himmel
, you don't listen, do you? Monsieur Jean-Guy Deschambeault, please stand up!'
âUp?'
â
Verdammt
, you heard what I said!'
Blanching, the son looked to Ferbrave for support but that one was busy gently teasing the bloodied scarf from his hand and sucking on a dead fag end.
â
Gut
,' snapped Kohler in
Deutsch
, just to remind them that he was Gestapo, before switching back to the lingua franca. âThat wireless set in your office had its dial glued to the forty-metre band. “
Ici Londres
,”
eh
,
mon fin
? “
Des Français parlent aux Français
.” You've been listening to. Général de Gaulle.'
âI â¦'
âJean-Guy, why must you be such a fool?' swore the father sadly. âInspector, I'm sure we can come to an understanding.'
Best to glance at the open door and the corridor beyond it, thought Kohler. Best to hesitantly wet the upper lip and softly say, âI'm listening.' Inès Charpentier had also noted the position of that dial but had lowered her eyes when she'd realized that this Kripo had been looking at her.
âThree years' forced labour in the Reich,' he went on, letting them have it. âGessler will, of course, have to respond in the appropriate manner since I'll have to put it into my report to Gestapo Boemelburg and never mind what you've been told about how well we're regarded by the rue des Saussaies in Paris. My partner and I produce, and that's all Boemelburg really wants because, by doing so, we give some semblance of law and order to a nation that's sadly lacking in it.'
Gessler, if he wanted, could then easily take the heat off himself by claiming Jean-Guy was a suspected
résistant
, thought Ferbrave, impressed with what Kohler had just implied. Old money â and there was plenty of it with what had been added â would vanish into Gessler's pockets and the son would be shot, the father, mother and sisters deported to camps. âYou said you were listening, Inspector?'
This little
dur
obviously fancied himself as a ânumber' â damned dangerous in the lexicon of such â and maybe he even had dreams of becoming an âindividual', but one must play it out. âI am. Cut me in and I'll turn a blind eye to what's been going on.'
âAnd if your partner should notice those same things?' asked Ferbrave. A cigarette and a light were offered by the Kripo. The other two were seemingly forgotten for the moment, Jean-Guy still stupidly standing.
âLouis? He does what he's told. Don't get the wrong idea. He may be a chief inspector but I still pull the strings.'
The rope! snorted Ferbrave silently. âWhat is it you'd like to know?'
âFirst, how many trips a month to and from Paris with the vans?'
âOne a week.'
He would have to kill Kohler. St-Cyr's name was already on the FTP's latest list. No one, not even Gestapo Boemelburg, would question the loss. Ménétrel would be convinced the Garde Mobile was more necessary than ever and there would be no more threats of dismissal, no more shrieking about assassins lying in wait or about finding who had betrayed the Government, his precious Government!
âFour a month, then â I'd better jot that down,' said Kohler.
âPerhaps fewer, Inspector. Once or twice a month,' acknowledged Ferbrave.
â
Bon.
And for how long has it been going on?'
âInspector, we've a crisis on our hands,' interjected the elder Deschambeault.
âAnd had best get this out of the way so that we can deal with it. How long?'
Kohler was just ragging them. âA few months,' said Ferbrave cautiously.
âSometimes a month would go by and there'd be no requests on the list, Inspector, no deliveries,' offered Jean-Guy.
âList? What list?' demanded Kohler.
âThere was no list!' swore the father.
â
Requests
?' snapped the Kripo, not turning to look at him and still sitting across the table from Henri-Claude.
âInspector, my son was merely trying to say that the whole matter didn't amount to anything. Enough flour for a child's birthday cake, a little powdered sugar for the icing. Alain Andre would â¦'
âMarie-Jacqueline's lover? Richard, the Minister of Supplies and Rationing?'
âWould kindly offer to assist and the child would have its cake.'
âAnd get to eat it from Government warehouses that are under lock and key?'
To smile ingratiatingly would be wrong. âLook, I know such luxuries are forbidden,' acknowledge Gaëtan-Baptiste, âbut everyone bends the rules a little.
Mon Dieu
, these days one has to do many things one never would have done in the past. It was nothing.'
And like ripe fish, nauseating. âWhen, exactly, did it all begin?'
âA year ago. One van. Only one. Two drivers and the security guard who always rides in the back,' said the sous-directeur.
âArmed?'
âOf course. Even with the policing our German friends provide and the tightening up of our own police, there are still those who will try their luck.'
Didn't he know detectives were only too aware of this! âBegan two years ago,' muttered Kohler, scribbling down the truth. âThe late autumn of 1940, Sous-directeur, when things came into such short supply it looked to you and the others as though what little remained would be hard to obtain through the regular channels. Who buys it- what you don't consume or give to those you need to pay off?'
Jean-Guy was still standing. Shattered, broken â terrified and now utterly useless. âEveryone who is anyone.'
âBut you're so distant from it that you and Richard and the other lovers of those four girls are in the clear?'
âI was and, yes, I still am, as are they.'
Was that a hint, eh? wondered Kohler. Ferbrave and a little
accident
, the FTP getting the blame and everyone lamenting the loss of two detectives from Paris who were only doing their duty but couldn't have understood the difficulties of the terrain and the urgency of their being ever-vigilant? âThis Flykiller or killers of Monsieur Laval's, Sous-directeur. Who could have such an inside track?'
âI only wish I knew, but it can't have anything to do with the vans.
Merde alors
, why should it?'
âThe perfume, the cognac and champagne from 1925. Who requested those?'
âI really wouldn't know, nor would my son or that one.'
Ferbrave.
âInspector, you are only too aware of the scandal that will erupt if word of this gets out,' said the sous-directeur. âSurely you must realize we could soon be on the verge of a civil war and that the Reich, for obvious reasons, doesn't want this to happen and wishes the Maréchal to remain in office and in Vichy. Ambassador Abetz is a personal friend and part-owner of the stables my son manages. If you were to speak to him, the Ambassador would' satisfy you that what was done with the vans was necessary.
Pour l'amour de Dieu
, we had to keep up appearances. Thirty-two embassies, the papal nuncio among them. Constant delegations from the Reich, visiting dignitaries from all over the new Europe, submissions from our citizenry in the
zone libre
and even from the
zone occupée.
One couldn't have undertaken such receptions in an aura of defeat, could one? The nation had to maintain an image, and in a small and humble way what I and my associates did, helped.'