‘Then let me speak to him. It will do no harm and go no further than the three of us.’
Reluctantly Meunier opened the door to the workshop. The boy had removed his glasses and apron and, though brushing tears from sensitive eyes, stood proudly waiting to be carted off to prison.
Ah maudit, what have we now? wondered St-Cyr, not liking it at all.
Dumbfounded, the father stood in silence gazing at his son as if for the first time.
The boy whispered, ‘Papa, forgive me.’
‘For what? For talking to that girl?’
St-Cyr nudged the father out of the workshop and closed the door. He thought to say to the boy, You fool, he thought to say so many things but a sad weariness had overcome him and all he said was, ‘I’m Chief Inspector Jean-Louis St-Cyr of the Surete. My partner is from the Gestapo.’
‘The Gestapo …?’
The boy blanched. For perhaps ten seconds the pale grey eyes in that thin, angular face met his as the ghastly reality of those two words sank in.
Paul Meunier was delicate, thin and tall. A boy, a young man-one always spoke of both in the same breath-of about twenty-six years of age.
‘My family,’ he blurted. ‘My father, my mother and my sister …’
‘They will all be shot, as will yourself,’ said St-Cyr, not sparing him but hating himself for having to adopt the guise of the Occupier, ‘unless, of course, we can come to some agreement.’
‘Agreement?’ It was a yelp. The boy wet his pale lips and, at a loss as to what to do with his right hand, pushed back the silky light brown hair that had fallen over his brow.
‘Look, my interest is in the missing girl, Joanne Labelle.’
‘Not in the papers?’
‘Don’t be an idiot! Don’t offer information like that!’ Merde alors, must God do this to him, a simple detective? ‘Listen, mon ami, one can read your mind so clearly! Forging papers. Making a hero out of yourself so that the girls will think more highly of you. Hey, do you know something, my fine martyr? I don’t want to know who you forged them for.’
He doesn’t want to know …? ‘My father, he … he forbade me to go into the army.’
An impatient hand was tossed. ‘Forgive him. That’s the only thing you can do. Now listen, I want you to shut up about these forgeries. Sure I know the Resistance must be using you, but I have to walk the knife edge always, so the less said the better.’
Was the inspector involved in something himself? wondered Meunier. Was it best to let him go on thinking that it was the Resistance he had done the forgeries for and not Mademoiselle Marie-Claire de Brisson, the banker’s daughter? The nights and nights of patient practice and experimentation until she was satisfied and it was done. Three sets of documents with laissez-passers for Provins and Dijon. The travel papers had been the hardest to forge, the others not so bad, and in time, perhaps, the Resistance would be able to use him once a suitable contact was made.
‘Your partner …’ began the boy.
St-Cyr told himself the Resistance should never have used this one, that the boy would drag them all down, himself as well if mentioned. ‘My partner, yes. Hermann Kohler of the Gestapo.’
‘Will you … will you be telling him that I …’
‘That you are a forger for the Resistance? Perhaps I will, perhaps I won’t. I leave you to worry about it, eh? So watch yourself and don’t try to leave the city. Now tell me about Joanne Labelle. Tell me everything. Try to forget about my partner.’
Kohler let a breath escape slowly as he compared the head-and-shoulders photo in one of the card-index drums of missing persons with a photo from the house, then moved on to the dossier Emile Turcotte had pulled for him.
On Thursday, 3 July 1941, a girl named Renee Marteau had answered an advertisement in Paris-Soir. She had been an out-of-work mannequin with nearly two years’ experience and had, apparently, seized on the advertisement as a means of getting herself back onto the circuit.
Long chestnut hair and deep brown eyes all right. A bit small in the bust, but what the hell, that wasn’t everything when you had smashing legs, a nice smile and a gorgeous posterior.
He turned a page and found the first of six grainy black-and-white police prints that made him turn away and nearly lose his lunch, though that had been eaten hours ago.
On 15 August 1941 her nude and badly battered body had been found washed up downriver in St-Cloud just past the Citroen works. It had caught against the mooring cable of a refuse barge that had been machine-gunned during the blitzkrieg and had sat on the bottom ever since. Weeds were in her mouth and nostrils. Mud was smeared in streaks over pale white skin that looked cold.
She hadn’t been in the water long. Perhaps twenty-four hours at the most. A vagrant had found her. Hair all chopped off so that only tufts remained. Throat cut. ‘A slice from the right and savagely,’ hissed Turcotte who had never been at the discovery of this corpse or any other, and not even at the morgue. ‘The breasts removed for good measure but we feel this was done before the killing.’
Verdammt! swore Kohler. What the hell was he to tell Louis?
Records occupied the whole of the sixth and top floor of what had formerly been the Head Offices of the Surete Nationale but was now that of the Gestapo in France. Screams in the cellars, dread on the rue des Saussaies and the rue du Faubourg Saint-Honore right in the very heart of the city, only whispers and dark looks up here where seventy or so French detective-clerks in grey smocks foraged round the clock in shifts for news or filed away another bit.
The Surete had never thrown a thing out. Second only to the records of the Gestapo in Berlin, the whole damned place had been taken over lock, stock and barrel in June 1940. A treasure trove of criminals and their crimes to which, as a measure of Germanic efficiency and consolidation, had been added the files of the Prefecture of Paris. Talbotte had seen fit to keep copies for himself but had been reluctant to object. He had known his place and still did only too well.
In addition to the ten or fifteen million dossiers and cards dealing with outright crime, there were the millions of other bits and pieces that might eventually prove useful. One never knew. Apply for a passport or a visa in pre-war days, or even now, or a new set of papers, and you got a card here. Apply for a hunting licence in days past when such a thing was possible, and you got a special card, complete with registration number. Nice for the Occupier. No problem in finding stray rifles and shotguns that should have been turned in. Apply for a marriage licence, birth certificate or divorce-yes, here divorce had been legal before the war, though now Petain and the government in Vichy frowned on it, the hypocrites. Age, date of birth, sex, race, colour of eyes, nose, height, weight, religion, address and those of the closest relatives, place of residence, job, education … it was all here, locked up in silence until the wheel was spun, a drawer opened or the pen taken up.
The labyrinth of missing persons was discouraging. To all those who had been listed because of suspected or proven crimes, were added those who had simply walked away without telling anyone. Then there were the thousands who had died or become separated from their loved ones during the blitzkrieg, when the roads had had to be ‘cleared’ of refugees for the advancing Panzers and the boys in their Messerschmitts and Stukas had had a field day.
Emile Turcotte was lord and master here, a hawk-eyed, miserly little bastard with no sense of humour, the rake of a guardsman’s moustache and, too often, the defiant gaze of a wounded librarian. They’d got through all the usual refusals far too quickly. The prefet had tipped him off and had told him to co-operate or else, so as to bleed this Gestapo of information.