Death on the Pont Noir

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Death on the Pont Noir Page 10

by Adrian Magson


  Then it came to him.

  Calloway. When he’d grabbed the man during the interrogation, he’d picked up the smell of aftershave. He’d likened it to the aroma of leather at the time. Whatever it was, it had been distinctive and heavy. The kind of smell to hang in the air for a long time afterwards. Then he thought about Calloway the man: thirty-ish, tanned, dark hair, slim build. English. And as a former racing driver, he’d probably spent time on the French circuits. Most likely picked up a working knowledge of French, too – certainly enough to convey a message to someone like Olivier Bellin.

  He got out of the car. ‘Did you find anything in here?’

  ‘I’ve only made a cursory check so far. But we’ve already found something interesting.’ Rizzotti indicated to his assistant to pop the boot and they gathered around. Nestling inside was a large cine-camera with a matt-black case. Folded around it were three lengths of metal joined by a small platform with a complicated screw assembly and rubber-lined handle grip.

  ‘I don’t know about you,’ said Rizzotti, ‘but I didn’t expect this. A body, maybe, or some weapons … but not a camera.’

  ‘It’s the car we’re looking for,’ Rocco confirmed. He was studying the ends of the camera tripod legs, which were coated in dried soil, and a scattering of pine needles littering the floor of the boot. ‘But why dump an expensive piece of equipment like this?’

  Rizzotti lifted one side of the casing. It moved with ease. ‘Because it’s not real,’ he explained. ‘At least, the casing is, but there’s nothing inside. It’s a dummy.’

  Rocco tested the weight, then tapped the casing. Rizzotti was right: it was empty.

  ‘Damn. But why?’

  Rizzotti shrugged. ‘Give me an hour or so and we’ll turn the car inside out. I’d rather do it alone with young Romeo here, to prevent any further contamination. I’ll call you if we find anything.’ He looked at the young officer, who was shivering. ‘Better put down your clipboard, young man, and be prepared to get dirty as well as cold.’

  ‘What about the truck and the body?’ Rocco asked him.

  ‘Ah, that. I’ve been on to the forensic laboratory in Lille. They’re sending a team to collect the remains and do an analysis. It could take some time, though. There’s not much to go on and they’ve got a backlog.’

  ‘Don’t worry. Any help they can give is better than none.’ There were half a dozen police scientific laboratories throughout the country, the nearest being Lille, but the advance in forensic skills being shared from Britain, the United States and other countries was making their workload increasingly tough; the more they became capable of doing, the more was asked of them.

  Rocco left Rizzotti and his helper to their task and went in search of Saint-Cloud.

  He found the colonel in one of the upstairs offices in conversation with one of the suited individuals who had been with him and Massin two days before. This man nodded without introduction and walked away.

  ‘Inspector. Did you receive the files?’ Saint-Cloud asked.

  ‘What files?’ So far Rocco had seen nothing of the information promised by the security chief. Without it he was virtually powerless to even begin investigating any anti-Gaullist groups. It would be like throwing stones into a lake and hoping to hit a fish.

  Saint-Cloud, however, seemed surprisingly sanguine. ‘They’re on their way, I assure you. I just wanted to see where we stood.’ He went round behind the desk and picked up a sheet of paper. ‘This news has just reached me. Three men were picked up last night in Créteil, in south-east Paris, and a cache of armaments discovered in a garage lock-up they were using. One of the guns shows evidence of recent firing and is thought to have been used in the N19 attack near Guignes.’

  Rocco knew the area, but not well. Créteil and Guignes were hardly close neighbours, but near enough. ‘Who are they?’

  ‘One is a French national, the other two are one Spanish, one Corsican. What makes this interesting is that all three are former members of the Foreign Legion. So far they are not talking, but one has turned up on our files before. He’s affiliated to a pro-OAS group.’ He sniffed with distaste. ‘None of this is surprising, I suppose, but it’s a clear indication that there is more than one group wishing ill of the president.’

  ‘And more than one nationality.’

  ‘Quite. What we have to find out is whether there are any such groups with resources active in the Picardie region or,’ he dropped the paper on the desk, ‘whether we’re in danger of overreacting. May I ask what you are doing at present?’

  He seemed to have slipped very easily into using the ‘we’ all of a sudden, thought Rocco. But he gave him a summary of the ramming incident and the Englishmen destroying the café in Amiens. ‘The ramming looks like an illicit film project which may have gone badly wrong. The Englishmen, I’m not sure what that’s about. They could be what they claim: a group of men looking for some fun and it got out of hand. It wouldn’t be the first time. The English don’t react well to drink.’

  Saint-Cloud nodded. ‘Neither of which seems to border on my concerns, I have to say, although …’ He paused and stared at the wall.

  ‘Yes?’

  ‘The use of a black DS seems a little … odd, though, don’t you think? The president uses such a vehicle. It could be what it seems – a film project. I wouldn’t like you to go wasting your time chasing shadows, Inspector.’

  ‘It’s hardly a shadow,’ Rocco pointed out mildly. ‘There’s a death involved.’

  ‘A tramp? Tramps die all the time. Considering their way of life, I imagine it’s an occupational hazard, isn’t it?’ Saint-Cloud’s face was bare of all emotion, but his voice betrayed indifference, and Rocco wondered whether anything beyond the president’s safety ever touched him. ‘Why is this one so special?’

  ‘He’s not. But investigating an unexplained death is what I do. If I find there’s been a crime, I go after the perpetrators.’

  Saint-Cloud said nothing. After a moment, he nodded, his eyes clouding over.

  CHAPTER NINETEEN

  Back downstairs, Rocco rang Michel Santer, his former boss in Clichy. Although a long way from where the attack on the official car had taken place, he was aware of how tight the police community was. Details of the incident would have spread very quickly throughout the force, gathering speed because of the unusual nature of the offence. Among all gossips, cops were high on the list of overachievers, and Santer, like many long-time cops, seemed to act as a filter for much of it.

  ‘Who?’ Santer’s voice echoed down the line as Rocco’s call was transferred. ‘Did you say Rocco? Never heard of him. Is he the new community dog catcher?’

  ‘Very droll,’ said Rocco. ‘You were a sad loss to the music hall.’

  ‘Oh, that Rocco! The one who only ever calls me when he’s in trouble and owes me at least several long lunches.’ A dry chuckle followed. ‘How are you, you bloody paysan?’

  Rocco ignored the friendly insult. ‘Not in any trouble. At least, I don’t think so.’

  ‘Really? That doesn’t sound right. What’s up?’

  ‘The attack on the N19 a few days ago.’

  ‘What about it?’ Santer sounded immediately cautious, and Rocco heard a grunt as the captain stood up and closed his office door with a bang. The signal would be clear to everyone outside: don’t disturb.

  ‘That’s what I’d like to know. I’ve had the official line but that’s all. Anything you can tell me?’

  ‘Like what? You think I have the security departments in my back pocket? They don’t tell us anything, you know that. Anyone would think we were the enemy, the way they behave.’

  ‘But you hear stuff.’ The attack had taken place on the opposite side of the city, well beyond the Clichy boundaries. Due to the target, it would have received an immediate security clampdown to avoid any details getting out other than those officially sanctioned for broadcast via news channels. But for the police fraternity, Paris was a small world and Rocco knew how
bad news travelled faster than good. It was the unofficial grapevine of which even official orders couldn’t dam the flow completely.

  ‘You haven’t got one of those recorder things going, have you?’

  ‘Spare me. What do you know?’

  ‘A little. We had a security guy through here a few days ago, dropping the odd bit of news. His cousin works here in the back office, so he was strutting his stuff and trying to impress the new kids. I was surprised he didn’t insist on taking out his gun and letting off a few rounds. Anyway, beyond juicing it up slightly, he pretty much stuck to the official bulletin.’

  ‘That’s it?’ Rocco felt a sense of disappointment. He had hoped for something more, although he wasn’t sure what.

  ‘That’s it.’ Santer’s voice dropped suddenly. ‘Unless you count a second gunman being spirited away.’

  ‘Say again?’ The report had mentioned one body, a former NCO who must have joined the OAS for reasons best known to himself, no doubt hatred of de Gaulle being one of them.

  ‘There were two left behind, not one. The security guy reckons the other was taken away on orders from on high before the press got to him.’

  Something Saint-Cloud hadn’t known or had kept to himself? ‘Did he say why?’

  ‘No. Possibly because the second man had a face they didn’t want identified.’

  He was probably right, Rocco thought. After the Bastien-Thiry incident, there was a genuine fear among the authorities of another highly placed or high-born individual being revealed to be a member of a terrorist organisation. Too many examples like that and people might begin to wonder about their own stance. Even in a republic, where the old ways of deference were supposed to be long gone, it was a subtle method of influencing popular thought in favour of the Government line.

  ‘Any idea what happened to him?’

  ‘None. A quiet family funeral in the country, I imagine. Why?’

  ‘No reason. Just curious.’

  ‘Yeah, right. Now that makes me curious, too. What’s going on, Lucas? You got your nose into something you shouldn’t?’

  Rocco debated how far to go with Santer. They were friends and former colleagues, and for that reason he didn’t want to involve him in any way that would compromise him. But neither did he want to insult Santer by being coy. And he trusted the captain more than anyone he could think of, with the exception, perhaps, of Claude Lamotte.

  ‘Saint-Cloud. You know him?’

  ‘Saint-Cloud?’ Santer’s voice went even lower. ‘Would that be the Colonel Saint-Cloud who runs the—’

  ‘That’s him.’

  ‘Christ. Of course, I know of him. How the hell do you?’

  Rocco explained in brief what Saint-Cloud had asked him to do. ‘He has others doing the same thing – a sort of territorial eyes and ears on the lookout for groups likely to consider an attack.’

  ‘You mean other investigators?’

  ‘That’s what he said.’

  ‘Pfff.’ A noise indicating disbelief came down the line. ‘Why would he need to do that? They’ve got the entire security directorate to do that stuff – why get ordinary cops involved? No offence, mind.’

  Santer had a point, but it wouldn’t be the first time a security agency had stepped outside its normal parameters of operation to get what it wanted. In any case, the Directorate of Territorial Surveillance (DST) was part of the National Police, and responsible for domestic intelligence. As such, it could demand whatever assistance it liked. Quite where Saint-Cloud came in the scheme of things Rocco wasn’t sure, but as he had demonstrated in Amiens, he clearly had the power to walk in anywhere he pleased.

  ‘Oh – hang on.’ Santer wasn’t finished. ‘There was something else. I made a note. Yes, they found the car, as the briefing said.’

  ‘A Simca Ariane. I know.’

  ‘What they didn’t say was that it wasn’t as clean as the bad guys thought it was. They found a packet of cigarettes beneath one of the seats. An English make, with filters. Could be nothing, of course, but pretty unusual all the same.’

  Rocco knew what he was getting at. People were moving around much more than they ever did, in the search for jobs, a better life, more opportunity. And criminals were no different. The world was smaller than it used to be, and those with money had access to things such as cigarettes that wouldn’t have been quite so easy just a few years ago. But still. English cigarettes in a car used for an attack on the Establishment? It was a little odd. French criminals, if anything, were inclined towards the more popular American brands, especially those seen in the latest Hollywood films. It carried a special cachet, being seen to smoke an imported brand; made the user somehow more appealing, even if only in his own imagination.

  ‘Do they know who might have been using them?’ Find the smoker and check his movements; it was the logical step towards tracing the person’s history and contacts.

  ‘He didn’t say. If they know, they’re not including us in the briefing notes. Maybe one of them had been hiding out in England. It happens.’ He hesitated, then added carefully, ‘You know you should watch your back, Lucas. These people … they’re not to be trusted, you know what I’m saying?’

  ‘I know.’ Santer was warning him about Saint-Cloud. The security establishment as a group had their own agendas, and Saint-Cloud was no different. He had enormous responsibilities for the French head of state’s safety, and that meant that he would use any means he could to do his job. And if that included using a cop like Rocco in the line of duty, and not looking back if things went sour, he wouldn’t hesitate. ‘Did you hear anything over the wires from last night, about the South East?’ It might be too early for word of the police raid on the garage to have reached Santer’s ears, but it was worth a try.

  ‘Like what? This is a big city, you know, with lights and the Métro and everything.’ His voice was a sarcastic drawl. ‘We even have cars and trucks and trains and buildings which almost reach the sky.’

  ‘Créteil, you cretin. A raid on a garage. Three men taken in.’

  ‘No. I haven’t heard that. But I’ll ask around.’

  ‘Thanks. There’s one more thing. Is Caspar still around?’

  A heavy silence. For a brief moment Rocco thought Santer had gone. Then the captain said, ‘He’s around. Why?’ He sounded cagey, and Rocco knew why.

  ‘I might have some light work for him, if he’s up to it.’ Marc Casparon, better known as Caspar, was a burnt-out cop who’d worked too long undercover and had had to be quietly retired. Rocco had recently used him to penetrate an Algerian gang, and it had nearly got him killed. But he knew Caspar was desperate to get back into the job; it was all he knew how to do. Rocco’s problem might be getting past Santer, who was fiercely protective of the man.

  ‘What sort of work?’

  ‘Some legwork among the OAS groups and their affiliates. Who their contacts might be out this way. Is he well?’

  ‘Actually, he’s fine.’ Santer surprised him. ‘He’s been doing jobs for a security company in St Denis. It seems to be working for him. You know he has limits, though, right? He pushes himself too far.’

  In other words, don’t put Caspar in direct danger.

  ‘I understand.’

  ‘Fine. You got his number?’

  ‘Yes.’

  ‘Right.’ An urgent voice sounded in the background and Santer said, ‘Listen I’ve got to go. I’ll call if I hear anything else about … you know. Remember what I said, Lucas: watch yourself. And start saving for that big lunch you owe me.’

  The phone went dead.

  Rocco dialled Caspar’s number. It rang six times before the familiar voice answered. Caspar sounded alert, much more so than when Rocco had last seen him a few weeks ago. Then, he had been through a grinder and very nearly lost his life. Fortunately, he was made of tough stuff and had escaped with a slight flesh wound and a beating from a group of Algerian gangsters.

  ‘It’s Rocco,’ he said. ‘I need some help. It’s p
olice work but private billing. Are you available?’

  He could almost hear the smile as Caspar’s voice came down the line. ‘You bet. Where and when?’

  CHAPTER TWENTY

  Rocco drove back out to the scrapyard. Caspar was on his way and would be here in the morning. He’d offered to go to Paris to brief him on his own ground, but Caspar had suggested the trip out and the change of scenery would help get the kinks of the city out of his system.

  For now Rocco needed to lean on Bellin. It was too bad if the fat man was scared of being seen talking to the police; he should learn to mix with a nicer brand of people.

  But he was out of luck. The yard was locked tight, two heavy chains holding the gates together. He banged on the corrugated sheets and immediately heard a dog barking followed by the skitter of paws as the animal raced up and down along the inside of the fence. It sounded big and mean and desperate to bite someone. Had Bellin panicked and decided to go home and keep his head down, or was his departure more long-term? He’d have to try again later.

  He drove back to the station and sought out Dr Rizzotti in his office across the yard. He had completed his inspection of the car and was writing a full report with the help of the notes dictated to the young officer.

  ‘Interesting vehicle,’ said Rizzotti, putting down his pen and stretching. ‘If you like puzzles. Long or short version?’

  ‘Short. I can read your report later.’

  ‘All right. Very short, then. A Citroën DS, less than one year old, done a high number of kilometres for its age but with a registration not its own. The plates are home-made. Ten to one there’s another car driving around somewhere with the same plates, only genuine. God knows where this one came from.’

  Rocco nodded. ‘So, a criminal enterprise. Anything else?’

  ‘Not really. The addition of the framework inside is unusual, as are the seat harnesses. I’ve only ever seen those on rally cars before … oh, and a stunt team who did a display here in Amiens last year. They wore them. Other than that, the car was clean save for the camera in the back, which I still can’t explain. It’s an old model, twenty years at least, as far as I can determine, probably lifted from an old studio junk heap. But who would drive around with an empty camera casing in the boot of their car?’

 

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