Tangled Web (37 page)

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Authors: Ken McClure

Tags: #False Arrest, #Fiction, #Human, #Fertilization in Vitro, #Infanticide, #Physicians

BOOK: Tangled Web
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‘This is where we have to decide whether we should have a drink or keep our reflexes perfectly honed,’ said Gordon, tongue in cheek.

Mary gave him a look that sufficed as a reply.

‘Two gin and tonics please.’

Mary let out a long sigh of appreciation. ‘I don’t think I’ve ever needed a drink so much in all my life,’ she said, putting her head back on the rest.

‘I’ll drink to that,’ agreed Gordon.

They both sat with their eyes closed for a few minutes, relaxing and savouring the calming effect of the alcohol before Gordon took out the French clinic’s blurb and started to read it. The St Pierre boasted the finest facilities currently available for the discerning client and was equipped for procedures varying from minor to major surgery, it claimed. Prospective patients could avail themselves of the in-house medical teams or appoint their own physicians and surgeons as they saw fit.

‘Do you know Paris?’ asked Mary.

‘Not well. You?’

‘Hardly at all.’

‘There’s a little map on the back,’ said Gordon. ‘This place is in the Rue de Bagneux in Montrouge, just outside the Périphérique ring road on the south side.’

Mary took a look at the map and added, ‘It says that you take the exit at Porte de Orléans. ‘But how do we get there?’

‘Do you have your driving license with you?’

Mary shook her head.

‘Me neither,’ said Gordon. ‘So renting a car is out. Let’s get whatever seems fastest into Paris – bus, train, taxi, you name it - and then play it by ear.’

‘Assuming we get into the country in the first place,’ Mary reminded him. ‘There’s the time factor to consider too,’ she said, looking at her watch. ‘It’s going to be the evening rush hour if and when we do get there.’

‘All we need,’ Gordon sighed.

The flight landed at Charles De Gaulle airport with a large bump due to a crosswind catching the aircraft at the last moment in its approach. Many of the passengers started to talk about it but Mary and Gordon didn’t say a word: they were too focused on other things.

‘I wonder what French jails are like,’ whispered Mary.

Gordon squeezed her hand and tried to assure her that it wouldn’t come to that. He said that they should attempt to go through passport control with the biggest group of people they could find. This meant being neither the first to get off the plane nor the last. Fortunately, they had very little in the way of hand baggage to deal with and no luggage to collect from the carousel at all, so they could afford to be flexible in their timing.

As soon as he saw the Passport Control booths, Gordon knew that everything was going to be all right. The bored-looking officials were just waving people on through with a lazy wave of the hand as passengers held up their passports to them. Gordon held up the two covers, pretending to struggle to open them up as they passed, and suddenly they were into France.

There was a tourist information desk directly opposite as they emerged through customs, again unchallenged. As there was no queue at it, Gordon took the opportunity to ask the quickest way into Paris. The man pointed through the glass doors to the side of his desk and said, ‘There’s an express bus leaving in three minutes,’ he said. ‘It will save you waiting for anything else.’

Gordon took Mary’s hand and they rushed over to the Bureau de Change to change a handful of money before running out through the doors and reaching the steps of the bus just as the doors closed with a hydraulic hiss. To their relief, the driver saw then and opened them up again. They climbed aboard, thanking him, and sat down one row behind him on the other side as the bus moved off.

‘That was a bit of luck,’ said Mary.

‘Something tells me we’re going to need a whole lot more,’ said Gordon, but she was right. Presumably a taxi or train might have been faster had all things been equal but they hadn’t, and there was no telling how long they would have had to wait for either of these other options.

‘How’s your French?’ Gordon asked.

‘Quite good,’ replied Mary.

‘Good enough to ask the driver the quickest way to Montrouge at this time of day?’ he asked.

‘Piece of
găteau,
‘ Mary joked and, still sitting in her seat, she leaned forward and said across the aisle, ‘Monsieur?’

Gordon was impressed as Mary held a fluent conversation with the man, ending in smiles and thanks. ‘Thank God you came,’ he whispered.

Mary said, ‘He reckons the Metro would be quickest at this time of day without a doubt. He told me which line we want and the nearest station to where the bus stops. More than that, he used to be a cab driver; he told me how we get to Rue De Bagneux from our station.’

‘What a star,’ said Gordon.

As they left the bus at Gare de L’Est and stepped out on to the pavement into the darkness of early evening in Paris, Gordon looked about him and found what he was looking for. ‘There!’ he said, pointing to the steps with the Paris Metro sign above them. They hurried down them with Gordon saying, ‘It’s a smell you don’t forget.’

‘Like no other,’ agreed Mary.

They had to queue at the ticket booth but not for long. Most passengers seemed to have season tickets. ‘Where do we want to go?’ asked Gordon.

‘Porte D’Orléans.’

The train was crowded so they had to stand. By the time the train had cleared Montparnasse Bievenue, there were seats to be had. After Denfert Rochereau, it was more than half-empty. ‘Two more stations and then it’s ours,’ said Mary. ‘Port D’Orléans - the end of the line.’

The train emptied and Gordon and Mary made their way to the station exit, pausing there, as fellow passengers dispersed, to look for street signs in order to get their bearings. Gordon examined his small map. Mary said, ‘This should be Boulevard Brun, according to the bus driver.’

‘It is and we should cross it.’

They took the pedestrian underpass and surfaced on the other side of the Boulevard Brun, happy to be going under the heavy rush-hour traffic instead of having to dodge through it.

Mary pointed to a sign on the wall of a building to their right. It said,
Rue De Bagneaux.

The clinic itself was three blocks down the Rue De Bagneaux, standing on the corner at a road junction and overlooking a cemetery. Neither of them commented on the fact; both were too nervous.

The door to the clinic was locked. In fact, the only outward sign that the building might be either a hospital or clinic was an ambulance standing outside. There was an entryphone mounted on the wall. Gordon pressed the button and waited.


Oui?’

Gordon looked at Mary, took a deep breath then said firmly who they were, adding, ‘We’ve just arrived from the UK and we need to speak to someone urgently about one of your patients, a child named Trool.’


Un moment.’

‘Gordon made a face as they waited for a reply.

‘You were fine,’ said Mary encouragingly. ‘The police will have been here by now, so the clinic staff will know that something is amiss with the Trool child.’

The door lock clicked open and they were admitted to a short, brightly lit hall leading to a flight of marble stairs. The air inside was warm and there was a smell of antiseptic. A woman dressed in a smart lilac suit and white blouse met them at the head of the stairs; she introduced herself as Antoinette Bressard, Administrative Assistant at the clinic. ‘I will take you to see Dr Balard,’ she said.

Mary asked her if Balard was the director.

‘Deputy Director,’ the woman replied. ‘The director has gone home for the evening.’

They were shown into an elegant office where a well-dressed man in his mid-thirties rose to meet them and invited them to sit.

‘I believe the French police have already been here to ask about the patient we are interested in,’ said Gordon.

Balard nodded. ‘They were here about three hours ago, looking for the Trool baby’s parents. I understand the couple are wanted by the British police for questioning.’

‘The Trools’ daughter is here?’ asked Gordon.

‘Yes indeed. She is due to be operated on the day after tomorrow.’

Gordon exchanged a relieved look with Mary then said to Balard, ‘A transplant operation?’

‘Eye tissue - a delicate procedure.’

‘How much do you know about the donor, Doctor?’ asked Gordon.

Balard shrugged. ‘Nothing at all - the operation has been arranged privately. Our clients have contracted for our theatre facilities and nursing services but they have made their own arrangements for surgical and medical staff.’

‘So the eye donor is not here?’ said Mary.

‘Balard said not, ‘I don’t even know if the donor is here in Paris, or whether they are flying in the tissue from abroad.’

‘Were you able to help the police with the Trools’ whereabouts at all?’ asked Gordon.

‘I know where they are staying if that’s what you mean. They’re at a hotel in the Marais, the Pavillon de la Reine in Place Des Vosges. But I’m afraid that’s as much as I could tell the police or you for that matter. Might I ask what these people are wanted for?’

Gordon ignored the question and said, ‘Presumably the police have already been to the hotel by now.’

‘I would suppose so,’ replied Balard.

‘Would it be a terrible imposition to ask you to telephone them on our behalf?’ asked Gordon.

‘Not at all.’ Balard looked in his desk diary for some notes he had made earlier and called the number he found there. After a conversation lasting some minutes he put the receiver down and said, ‘They are coming over. The inspector would like to speak to you personally.’

‘Did they say whether they have the Trools in custody and whether they had a child with them?’

Balard seemed puzzled. ‘The inspector said that they had interviewed the couple, but said nothing about holding them. He didn’t mention anything about a child, but when he heard that you were here, he seemed interested. I think he want to ask you some questions.

Gordon shrugged and said, ‘Maybe it’s for the best. We might as well all put our cards on the table.’

The police arrived within ten minutes, during which Gordon and Mary were served with coffee and plied with subtle questions. Balard, sensing that something was seriously amiss, was becoming increasingly anxious about the apparent involvement of his clinic but Gordon did not see this as a reason for telling him anything. Instead he tried to assure him that there was no question of the clinic being under any suspicion if what he had told them was accurate.

‘You have come from England today?’ asked the tall, rangy man introduced to them as Inspector Le Clerc. ‘Wales, actually,’ said Mary.

‘Ah yes, Wales,’ agreed Le Clerc. We had a call from Inspector Davies in Wales, asking for our assistance in a case of child abduction but I think there must be some misunderstanding. We found the couple easily enough but they did not have any child with them. Apparently they came with a child but she is their daughter; she is a patient here in the clinic, awaiting an operation.’

Gordon felt vindicated over his decision to come to France. This was just the kind of misunderstanding that he feared might happen. He said, ‘They arrived with their child two nights ago?’


Oui
,’ replied the inspector.

Gordon turned to Balard and asked, ‘When was the Trool child admitted to the clinic?’

Balard checked his patient records and said, ‘Six days ago.’

The inspector looked bemused. Gordon told him about the earlier trip and said, ‘It wasn’t really their daughter they arrived with two nights ago - it was the baby they’d abducted.’

The Inspector, who was now fully in the picture, remarked gravely, ‘I’m sure there was no sign of a child being with them when we interviewed them at the hotel. But, in the light of what you’ve just told me, we’ll go back there now and question them further.’

‘Maybe that’s not such a good idea,’ said Gordon thoughtfully. ‘If Anne-Marie is being held somewhere else, we could be in trouble.’

‘But surely if the police turn up on their doorstep with you in tow, they’ll see that the game’s up and they’ll confess?’ said Mary.

‘It’s what will happen to Anne-Marie if they don’t that concerns me,’ said Gordon.

‘What do you mean?’

‘Anne-Marie is the key to the whole case against the Trools. That fact alone puts her in danger. Without her, there is very little in the way of evidence against them. In fact, about the only thing we’re left with is the money that Sonia paid into Ranulph Dawes’ account and he’s now dead so they’ll probably be able to concoct some story to explain it. Thinking we know why he was paid the money is a long way from
proving
it.’

‘So you think they might try to get rid of Anne-Marie if they can’t go ahead with the operation?’ asked Mary.

‘Yes … I really do.’

THIRTY

 

 

‘What do you suggest?’ asked Le Clerc.

‘I’m trying to imagine what the Trools must be thinking right now,’ said Gordon. ‘They’ve had a visit from the French police, which must have shaken them, but from what you’ve said, you just asked a few routine questions and then went away again, apparently satisfied with what they’d told you. They don’t know anything about us being here or of the conversation we’ve just had.’

‘So?’

‘I’m hoping there’s a real chance they will have seen no reason to change their plans and the operation will stay scheduled to go ahead in two days time. That being the case, I think if your men were to keep watch on the hotel and follow the Trools whenever they go out, it’s my guess they’ll lead you to where Anne-Marie is being held.’

‘That makes sense,’ agreed Le Clerc.

‘What sort of place do you think they’ll be holding her in?’ asked Mary.

‘It really has to be a hospital or possibly another clinic,’ said Gordon. ‘Under deep sedation probably - to simulate coma conditions. Then when they’re ready, they’ll bring the coma to a fatal conclusion and bingo! They’ll have their donor.’

‘But that is outrageous!’ said Balard. ‘There is no question of my permitting such an operation to be carried out in this clinic. I will telephone these people and make it clear that there is absolutely no point in going ahead.’

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