recognised them from the photo I gave to Ivan. She saw it when she stopped for
her petit café. Shes sure its them.
Did she see their car? Bruno asked.
A silver Renault Laguna, quite new. Jeanne read out the number. Interesting,
thought Bruno. It was a number for the Departement of the Corrčze. They would
have taken the train to Brive and picked up the car there, outside the Dordogne.
They must have realised that the local spy network was watching for them. Bruno
walked out of the pedestrian zone and onto the main square by the old stone
bridge, where the inspectors would have to come past him before they reached the
market. He phoned his fellow municipal police chiefs in the other villages with
markets that week and gave them the car and its number. His duty was done, or
rather half his duty. He had protected his friends from the inspectors; now he
had to protect them from themselves.
So he rang old Joe, who had for forty years been Brunos predecessor as chief of
police of St Denis. Now he spent his time visiting cronies in all the local
markets, using as an excuse the occasional sale from a small stock of oversized
aprons and work coats that he kept in the back of his van. There was less
selling done than meeting for the ritual glass, a petit rouge, but Joe had been
a useful rugby player two generations ago and was still a pillar of the local
club. He wore in his lapel the little red button that labelled him a member of
the Légion dHonneur, a reward for his boyhood service as a messenger in the
real Resistance against the Germans. Bruno felt sure that Joe would know about
the tyre-slashing, and had probably helped organise it. Joe knew everyone in the
district, and was related to half of them, including most of St Deniss current
crop of burly rugby forwards who were the terror of the local rugby league.
Look, Joe, Bruno began when the old man answered with his usual gruff bark,
everything is fine with the inspectors. The market is clean and we know who
they are. We dont want any trouble this time. It could make matters worse, you
understand me?
You mean the car thats parked in front of the bank? The silver Laguna? Joe
said, in a deep and rasping voice that came from decades of Gauloises and the
rough wine he made himself. Well, its being taken care of. Dont you worry
yourself, petit Bruno. The Gestapo can walk home today. Like last time.
Joe, this is going to get people into trouble, Bruno said urgently, although
he knew that he might as well argue with a brick wall. How the devil did Joe
know about this already? He must have been in Ivans café when Jeanne was
showing the photos around. And he had probably heard about the car from
Marie-Hélčne in the bank, since she was married to his nephew.
This could bring real trouble for us if were not careful, Bruno went on. So
dont do anything that would force me to take action.
He closed his phone with a snap. Scanning the people coming across the bridge,
most of whom he knew, he kept watch for the inspectors. Then from the corner of
his eye he saw a familiar car, a battered old Renault Twingo that the local
gendarmes used when out of uniform, being driven by the new Capitaine he had not
yet had time to get to know. From Normandy, they said, a dour and skinny type
called Duroc who did everything by the book. Suddenly an alert went off in
Brunos mind and he called Joe again.
Stop everything now. They must be expecting more trouble after last time. That
new gendarme chief has just gone by in plain clothes, and they may have arranged
for their car to be staked out. Ive got a bad feeling about this.
Merde, said Joe. We should have thought of that but we may be too late. I
told Karim in the bar and he said hed take care of it. Ill try and call him
off.
Bruno rang the Café des Sports, run by Karim and his wife, Rashida, very pretty
though heavily pregnant. Rachida told him Karim had left the café already and
she didnt think he had his mobile with him. Putain, thought Bruno. He started
walking briskly across the narrow bridge, trying to get to the parking lot in
front of the bank before Karim got into trouble.
He had known Karim since he first arrived in the town over a decade ago as a
hulking and sullen Arab teenager, ready to fight any young Frenchman who dared
take him on. Bruno had seen the type before, and had slowly taught Karim that he
was enough of an athlete to take out his resentments on the rugby field. With
rugby lessons twice a week and a match each Saturday, and tennis in the summer,
Bruno had taught the lad to stay out of trouble. He got Karim onto the school
team, then onto the local rugby team, and finally into a league big enough for
him to make the money that enabled the giant young man to marry his Rashida and
buy the café. Bruno had made a speech at their wedding. Putain, putain, putain
If Karim got into trouble over this it could turn very nasty. The inspectors
would get their boss to put pressure on the Prefect, who would then put pressure
on the Police Nationale, or maybe they would even get on to the Ministry of
Defence and bring in the gendarmes who were supposed to deal with rural crime.