care of the evidence.
Evidence will not be easy to come by, not in a small town like this where most
of the people think these European laws are quite mad, Bruno said reasonably,
shrugging off the insults. In time Duroc would discover how much he needed
Brunos local knowledge and, for his own good, he would have to cultivate the
patience to teach his superior. The people round here tend to be very loyal to
one another, at least in the face of outsiders, he continued. They wont talk
to you at least, not if you go round hauling them in for tough questioning.
Duroc made to interrupt, but Bruno rose, raised his hand to demand silence, and
strolled across to the window.
Look out there, my dear Capitaine, and let us think this through like
reasonable men. Look at that scene: the river, those cliffs tumbling down to the
willows where fishermen sit for hours. Look at the old stone bridge built by
Napoleon himself, and the square with the tables under the old church tower.
Its a scene made for the TV cameras. They come and film here quite often, you
know. From Paris. Foreign TV as well, sometimes. Its the image of France that
we like to show off, the France were proud of, and Id hate to be the man who
got blamed for spoiling it. If we do as you suggest, if we go in all
heavy-handed and round up kids on suspicion, well have the whole town round our
ears.
What do you mean, kids? said Duroc, his brows knitted. Its the market types
doing this stuff, grown-ups.
I dont think so, Bruno said slowly. You ask for my local knowledge, and Im
pretty sure that a few kids are doing this. And if you start hauling in kids,
you know what the outcome will be. Angry parents, protest marches,
demonstrations outside the Gendarmerie. The teachers will probably go on strike
in sympathy and the Mayor will have to take their side and back the parents. The
press will descend, looking to embarrass the government, and the TV cameras will
film newsworthy scenes of the heartland of France in revolt. Its a natural
story for them brutal police bullying children and oppressing good French
citizens who are trying to protect their way of life against those heartless
bureaucrats in Brussels. You know what the media are like. And then all of a
sudden the Prefect would forget that he ever gave you any orders and your chief
back in Paris would be unavailable and your career would be over.
He turned back to Duroc, who was suddenly looking rather thoughtful, and said,
And you want to risk all that mess just to arrest a couple of kids that you
cant even take to court because theyd be too young?
Kids, you say?
Kids, repeated Bruno. He hoped this wouldnt take too much longer. He had to
do those amendments to the contract for the public fireworks for the Fourteenth
of July, and he was due at the tennis club at six p.m.
I know the kids in this town very well, he went on. I teach them rugby and
tennis and watch them grow up to play in the town teams. Im pretty sure its
kids behind this, probably egged on by their parents, but still just kids.
Therell be no arrests out of this, no examples of French justice to parade
before Brussels. Just a very angry town and a lot of embarrassment for you.
He walked across to the cupboard and took out two glasses and an ancient bottle.
May I offer you a glass of my vin de noix, Capitaine? One of the many pleasures
of this little corner of France. I make it myself. I hope youll share a small
aperitif in the name of our cooperation. He poured two healthy tots and handed
one to Duroc. Now, he went on, I have a small idea that might help us avoid
this unpleasantness.
The Captain looked dubious, but his face had returned to a normal colour.
Grudgingly he took the glass.
Unless, of course, you want me to bring in the Mayor, and you can make your
case to him, Bruno said. And I suppose he could order me to bring in these
children, but what with the parents being voters, and the elections on the
horizon He shrugged eloquently.
You said you had an idea. Duroc sniffed at his glass and took a small but
evidently appreciative sip.
Well, if Im right and its just some kids playing pranks, I could talk to them
myself and have a quiet word with the parents and we can probably nip this
thing in the bud. You can report back that it was a couple of underage kids and
the matter has been dealt with. No fuss, no press, no TV. No nasty questions to
your minister back in Paris.
There was a long pause as the Captain stared hard at Bruno, then looked out of
the window and took another thoughtful sip of his drink.
Good stuff this. You make it yourself, you say? He sipped again. I must
introduce you to some of the Calvados I brought down with me from Normandy.
Maybe youre right. No point stirring everything up if its just some kids, just
so long as no more tyres get slashed. Still, Id better report something back to
the Prefect tomorrow.
Bruno said nothing, but smiled politely and raised his glass, hoping the
inspectors had not yet found the potato.