‘Why would you do that?’
‘I need to do it for my own purposes. And I can just see a way of doing it, with you. Are you game? I warn you, it’ll be risky and difficult.’
‘I’ll do anything to get out of this.’
‘We’ll talk about it again tonight.’
Daquin got up, went into the bathroom, shaved and dressed.
‘Stay here, in bed, today. You need to. But telephone the Committee, explain what happened and the way you look. A serious protest to the ministers, Interior and Labour, could be very helpful. Also, let the Turks at LVT know you’re alive, that you’ll need them, and that they must manage to stay with LVT until Monday evening. As for me, I’m going to look round the Bouffes du Nord area to see what can be done.’ A kiss on the lips, a smile, another kiss. ‘There’s something to eat in the fridge. I’m entrusting the house to you. Be good.’
10 a.m. Turkish Embassy
The ambassador, a middle-aged man, very much the Quai d’Orsay type, stood up to welcome the two inspectors from the Fraud Squad responsible for the enquiry, accompanied by Romero. But his manner of receiving them at once established a dividing line: they belonged to a lower order. Romero tensed up.
‘An extremely regrettable incident. Our staff will obviously collaborate with the French police. For us, the situation is clear: Monsieur Sener fell beneath the bullets of the same Armenian terrorists who struck down our ambassador to the Vatican in 1977, or our ambassador in Berne on 6 February last.’
He observed a moment’s silence, then turned towards Romero: ‘My staff have told me that you and one of your colleagues were present on the spot at the time of the murder. Might the French police be taking an interest in the activities of one of our diplomats without informing us? I’m not contemplating that hypothesis, which would be laden with future complications. I believe that your presence on the spot was accidental and I’m glad of it, for it will certainly allow the enquiry to lead very quickly to the arrest of the guilty parties.’
Romero acknowledged this with a slight bow from the waist.
*
An office was placed at the disposal of the inspectors for them to interview the two men who had accompanied Sener along the Champs-Elysées, Tahir Bodrum and Dogan Carim. They were both built on the same modeclass="underline" tall, heavy, thickset, moustachioed. They looked like henchman. Grey suits. Very well cut, essential for concealing their revolvers, white shirts, dark ties. Their function at the embassy: cultural attachés. Odd-looking lot, the Turkish intellectuals. They had both arrived at the embassy in 1979. Since then they had become very friendly with Sener. Yesterday they had gone out for a walk with no particular purpose. Taking advantage of the good weather in the most beautiful avenue in the world. Sener was no more preoccupied than usual. They heard a kind of ‘plop’, like the subdued sound of a balloon bursting, and Sener collapsed. They hadn’t understood what was happening, they bent down over him. He was dead. Astonishment. As they stood up they saw Romero and Marinoni running towards them.
‘How was it that the dead man had no diary on him, not even his keys, only his wallet and his identity papers?’
‘We weren’t on our way to a professional appointment. Perhaps he had left everything in his office?’
‘Your addresses, gentlemen?’
‘The embassy, naturally, inspector.’
Noon. Boulevard Haussmann
Systematic search of Sener’s office in the presence of an embassy man. Nothing. Nothing to an astonishing degree. It was an office without files, without correspondence, without a diary, without an address book. The inspectors talked to the secretaries who had worked with Sener, and to the colleagues closest to him: he was irreproachable, meticulous and calm.
‘Did he have a diary, any files?’
‘Yes, certainly.’
‘Where are they?’
Wide-eyed looks of surprise, a pretence at goodwill that remained helpless.
‘Didn’t his secretary keep his appointments book?’
‘No, Monsieur Sener worked in a highly personal way.’
Noon. Passage du Désir
Daquin arrived at his office whistling. A lengthy examination of the building at the Bouffes du Nord: he was full of ideas. Attali was completing a report on the two days he had just spent on the surveillance of Kashguri. He was in a foul mood.
‘Do you want to know what’s happening in the office? The custody of Paulette and her husband is over. They’ve both been charged. Can you imagine what it was like when they met again? Thomas is resigning from the police and Santoni has asked for leave. Lavorel is following up the Paulette Dupin case. So there are only the three of us left to work on a massive case, and we’re swamped. What’s more, here in the office, nobody says good-morning to us any more.’
‘What’s making you so pessimistic today?’
Attali was considering the best reply to this apparently simple question when the telephone rang. At a sign from Daquin he picked it up.
‘Superintendent Daquin’s office, Inspector Attali speaking.’
Gradually his face brightened. He took a sheet of paper and a pencil.
‘Noted. I’m informing the Super at once.’ He hung up and turned to Daquin. ‘The cops at Mantes have fished up a corpse from the river, it could be that of VL. They’re expecting us at the morgue for the identification.’
2p.m. Square Nicolay
After Sener’s office, his apartment. And always the inevitable observer from the embassy. Attractive apartment, on the fifth floor of a nineteenth-century building looking onto a private square, green and quiet. Air, silence, space. A small entrance hall, a large room alongside the outside wall, two bedrooms. Old-style kitchen and bathroom. The furniture was modern, comfortable and unostentatious. The concierge for the building did Sener’s housework. At the inspectors’ request she went up with them. Everything was impeccably tidy.
‘When did you come here last?’
‘Yesterday morning.’
One of the two bedrooms served as an office. Not a single paper on the table, nothing.
‘Was it usually like this?’
‘No. Here, by the telephone, there was a kind of black notebook, with a list of telephone numbers, and a pad of paper for writing down notes.’
The inspectors burrowed everywhere. A large collection of clothes. Few books. No papers.
‘Any files? No, he didn’t have many here. Sometimes he brought one or two back in the evening but he took them away again the next morning.’
*
As soon as the search was over, the seals put in place, and the embassy man gone, the concierge invited the three inspectors to have coffee in her lodge.
‘Tell us something about this Monsieur Sener. How did he live?’
‘He was a good tenant. He’d been here just over a year. Never late with the rent. I collect it. If only all the tenants were like that… He paid me regularly too. There was work to do in his place but it was never totally filthy. If you knew what some places are like …’
‘Women?’
‘One. Much older than him. Not all that beautiful. More the businesswoman type. She spent the night there two or three times a week.’
Paulette. Whenever images of Paulette or Thomas cropped up again Romero felt uneasy.
‘No others?’
‘What can I tell you? No other regulars, that’s all.’
‘And on the other evenings?’
‘Either he came back very late or he entertained friends. Practically all of them men. Turks, no doubt. Many with moustaches. They had dinner, they talked, they drank, they smoked like chimneys. And they gambled heavily.’
‘At what?’
‘I’ve no idea. Dice, cards…’
‘For money?’
‘Yes, I think so, lots of it. But that’s only an impression.’