‘Poland 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 ‘42, 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
‘Inspector …’
‘No, 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 – yes, that’s the SS-Obersturmfuhrer himself – 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.
‘I was merely suggesting that Herr Gessler could well offer much-needed assistance, Inspector. After all, should anything happen to the Marechal, the Fuhrer would be most displeased.’
‘And Louis and I’d be held responsible? Good
‘Up?’
‘
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.
‘
‘I …’
‘Jean-Guy, why must you be such a fool?’ swore the father sadly. ‘Inspector, 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, ‘I’m listening.’ Ines 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.
‘Three years’ forced labour in the Reich,’ he went on, letting them have it. ‘Gessler 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
This little
‘And 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.
‘Louis? 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. ‘What is it you’d like to know?’
‘First, how many trips a month to and from Paris with the vans?’
‘One 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. Menetrel 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!
‘Four a month, then – I’d better jot that down,’ said Kohler.
‘Perhaps fewer, Inspector. Once or twice a month,’ acknowledged Ferbrave.