“Dog, tell you what, we’re going to like it here.”
Guérin hadn’t gone home. He had stayed up all night at Lambert’s. The first time in two years that he hadn’t slept in his flat on boulevard Voltaire. Churchill would no doubt be screaming insults down into the courtyard, unless he was sulking in silence.
Lambert had driven the American back to the Luxembourg Gardens, and returned at five in the morning to lie down on the divan. Guérin, sitting at the window, had watched the grey dawn come up, shedding light on the City of Clouds, gradually revealing its faded colours. A pale sun pierced the urban mist, and the radio-alarm started up at 7.30 a.m., with the headlines from Radio Luxembourg. Aggressive news bulletins which had rudely awakened trainee officer Lambert from his sleep. Lambert started to move about, embarrassed by his boss’s presence in his flat. He hadn’t changed out of the Arsenal tracksuit in which he had gone to sleep. The cafetiere began to spit. Guérin looked up gently at Lambert and accepted the steaming cup he offered.
The photographs were still lying on the coffee table, dimly illuminated by the morning light, relics of a hideous orgy, rediscovered on waking, and enough to bring a retch to the throat. The two men’s eyes were red-rimmed with fatigue, as their bodies and clothes embarked on a new day without having shed the weariness of the previous twenty-four hours.
Once he had drunk his coffee, Guérin switched on his
mobile. A few bleeps indicated messages he had failed to pick up.
The little lieutenant rubbed the top of his bald head, letting his fingers run over the pink scars where he had picked off the scabs. Stripes of new skin, soft and tender to the touch. Another line of reconstituted flesh, with its stitches still in place ran across his cheek in a long black stripe.
“Now then, young Lambert, this is when you have to make up your mind.”
Lambert had rubbed his face and pinched his big nose, standing in front of a bookcase and the shooting trophy. The objects in the room were still only vaguely outlined, drowned by grey light in a mass without contrasts. The decision was fraught, but in the end inevitable.
“Boss, I already said, I’m not going to walk away from you.”
“What about your career?”
Lambert zipped up his jacket.
“… Well, I wouldn’t carry on without you anyway.”
Guérin seemed to want to say something, but Lambert had stopped listening, and was looking at the photographs. The young policeman’s features had sharpened. Lambert had grown up overnight.
“Guérin, what the fuck is going on? Roman called me in the night, he says you’ve wrecked his house! Even his kids’ bedroom! What the devil’s the matter with you? Isn’t there enough of a mess already?”
Barnier had evidently not slept either, his voice was sharp.
“I’ve got to see you, commissaire. I’ll explain.”
“I should bloody well think so! In my office in an hour, and it had better be good.”
“I’d prefer to meet you somewhere else.”
“You’re finished, Guérin, don’t try and impose conditions on me.”
“I could call someone else.”
“You’re crazy … Where do you want to meet?”
“Doesn’t matter. Let’s say …”
10.00 a.m.: Montparnasse Cemetery, a whole neighbourhood in itself between the boulevard Raspail, the rue Froidevaux and the Gaïté quarter. Above its walls loomed the huge Montparnasse Tower and other tall office blocks, vertical projects looking down on this immense horizontal expanse in the middle of the city, safe from real-estate developers. On the Paris map, it looked like a green space, but in reality it was uniformly grey. An underground city, a reverse reflection of the 1970s Maine–Montparnasse development. Most of the names on the graves were unknowns, a few celebrities from between the wars; it was less of a showbiz graveyard than the one at Père-Lachaise. Among the non-famous, one could easily slip in a few obscure policemen. Thousands of tombs, but no indications of the cause of death. Old age, accident, illness, passion, crime. How many suicides? Better not to know, perhaps: the number might interfere with the beauty of the place.
Guérin walked to the middle of the central alleyway, turned left and counted the rows. Eleven. It had the grid-plan simplicity of an American town, he said to himself, as he came to a stop in front of the grave. All you need is the intersection of two numbers.
A name and two dates, some plastic flowers decorating a rarely visited tomb.
Guérin pulled out his mobile.
“Commissaire, a slight change of plan. I’m not at the bottom of the tower, I’m in the cemetery. I dare say you remember the way … That’s right.”
Barnier arrived in front of the grave ten minutes later. Guérin wasn’t there. The divisionnaire turned on his heel, scouring the
horizon bristling with tombstones. A few elderly visitors were bending down to pick up faded bunches of flowers, carrying shopping bags, their wrinkled faces reflected in the polished granite. Barnier was holding his hat in his hand and leaned down to look at the grave. His bulky silhouette, well wrapped up in a three-quarter-length grey overcoat, suddenly convulsed.
Christophe Kowalski 1966–2006
On the flat slab were the usual trite messages: “To our valued colleague”; “To our friend”; “Everlasting regrets”; not much real affection, but plenty of respect, and four plastic flowers, rather discoloured, in a little tin vase. But behind the flowers, was an enlarged photograph of Kowalski, naked under strip-lighting, in the act of taking a woman’s corpse from behind.
Barnier stood up abruptly, bending his spine as if under an invisible whip. He looked round the horizontal expanse of the cemetery again, and saw young Lambert, hands in pockets, a few rows away from him. Lambert was leaning up against a Gothic vault, and watching him. Barnier wheeled round as he heard steps on the gravel.
“Morning, commissaire.”
Barnier put his hand to his chest to press his madly beating heart. Lambert made a move towards his armpit, thinking he was reaching for a gun. But the boss’s boss was simply panic-stricken.
“What’s all this about, Guérin? Where did you get this … this photograph?”
“Does the place suit you, sir? A bit dramatic, I grant you. Do you know what the connection is between this grave and yourself?”
“This is no time for riddles, Guérin. Did you find this at Roman’s house?”
“Between necrophilia and the Homicide squad?”
Barnier’s voice quavered, high up above the tombs. “Stop this nonsense now!”
“Between a pervert and the people watching him?”
“Guérin, you’re in no fit state. You’re out of control. Maybe you were right about Kowalski, but it doesn’t change anything. You’re barking up the wrong tree. Kowalski committed suicide, and nothing can alter that.”
“Between suicide and murder?”
“What is it you want? Do you want someone to apologise to you? Don’t expect anyone to give you a medal. Nobody wants all this shit to come to the surface again.”
“Between a photographer and a parrot?”
Barnier put one foot on the gravestone, leaned over and picked up the photograph, tearing it to pieces without looking at it.
“Roman will be sacked, if that’s what you want. But there’s no question of taking this any further to the Disciplinary Division or anywhere else. Is that what you’re after?”
“Between a divisionnaire’s head and an ordinary policeman’s skin?”
Barnier threw the fragments of the photograph at his feet.
“What do you think you’re going to do? Think you can come out of this smelling of roses? Reckon you can destroy our entire squad, with the blessing of the Ministry of the Interior?”
“Commissaire, somebody has to have taken these photos. Somebody must have been protecting Kowalski and his pals. Even if they were well out of order,
someone
had to be in charge, someone had to cover for them when they had gone too far, so that they’d go on doing the job expected of them. Don’t you agree? You haven’t found the answer yet, but it’ll come to you. Let’s say we’re an oddly civilised organisation, that can’t yet manage without certain necessities. It needs people like you. Excuse me. Like us. It’s a heavy weight to carry. For some people more than others.”
Guérin was staring beyond his commanding officer, his head on one side, calculating future trajectories between the tombs.
“Being out of control, as you nicely put it, is inevitable. It isn’t a paradox that anarchy, or at any rate anarchy of the mind, is found among people whose job is to keep order. Kowalski must have been just one link in a chain of command. To think someone like him can exist and do all that in a vacuum would be ridiculous.
You
had to be there, to protect them, to turn a blind eye to a few little peccadilloes. Do you think your rank protects you from the rest of the world? Giving orders, commissaire, means you’re the last person who can disobey them. It isn’t the great man’s burden, it’s just a pathetic illusion of power. You need obedience like you need a mirror, with devoted servants to maintain the illusion. It’s asking a lot of a man to place him at the crossroads of duty and disgust. Perhaps there were tastes and distastes that you shared with Kowalski? Am I wrong? But after all, Kowalski didn’t kill anyone, did he? No, of course not. Other people did that for him. Once things had got that far, all that was needed to guarantee the stability of the whole structure was a fuse that could be allowed to blow if the unexpected happened. In other words, a scapegoat. Remember what you said, commissaire? “
Guérin, Suicides is you now
.” You made me your excuse, locked inside a room that was full of them. But with one difference: I’m still alive. It’s easier to get the dead to talk than to make the living shut up. You were right. Suicides
is
me. But murders, in this cemetery, that’s you.”
Guérin smiled, Barnier took a step backwards, hitting an invisible barrier.
“I’ve got about fifteen of these photos. I needn’t describe them to you. You know what they’re like. Whether Berlion, or Roman, or you, took them doesn’t matter. It doesn’t matter either, which one of you turned on the gas taps at Kowalski’s house. All I want is for you, and the others like you, to draw the right conclusions from all
this. Make your choice freely, on your own. No more chain of command. You just have to account to yourself, nobody else. Other people will take your place, but it’s a good thing sometimes for the cogs in the machine to think about what they’ve been used for. If the idea of killing yourself crosses your mind – and it will, believe me – think carefully before you act. Do it for the right reasons, commissaire. The shit, as you so aptly put it, doesn’t need to come to the surface. It’s smeared all over everything already. Take a breath of air, taste the lonely joys of anarchy: all you have to do is search your own conscience.”
Guérin, stooping now, stepped over the shredded photograph. He went past his deputy, nodding to him. Lambert watched the divisionnaire leaning over Kowalski’s tomb for a few minutes. The chief was mumbling something, alone amongst the alleys. The young policeman looked up at the sky, searching for an unlikely break in the clouds, detached his shoulder from the vault, stretched, and walked off after his boss. He turned round as they left the cemetery. Barnier had fallen to his knees in front of the grave. Lambert felt no particular emotion.
Bunker found everything he was after among the American’s things. Matches, newspaper, kindling, logs, an Italian coffee pot and some coffee. It took him some time to get a fire going all the same, on all fours in the grass, blowing on the flames until he felt light-headed. He had exchanged his spiv’s costume for a more rustic pair of trousers, a T-shirt and one of John’s check shirts with its sleeves rolled up. He had fixed up the electricity again, following the directions he had been given. John obviously organised his camp according to the same logic as the old man. It was a little world of manic simplicity, slightly paranoid even, built on the freedom of having nothing but the bare essentials.
Mesrine was running round the camp in ever widening circles, exploring his new territory and marking it by lifting his leg every few metres. Holding his mug of coffee, Bunker whistled to the dog when he disappeared for longer than a minute.
He looked into the dregs of the coffee, then stared ahead of him, every time letting his eyes wander a little further afield. Bunker was sending his intimidated gaze into the far distance, as his lungs filled with fresh air, making him feel dizzy. No more park railings, no more swept paths, no more tourists. Silence, a little breeze coming up from the valley, fluttering the leaves. The coffee tasted awful, the American had no sugar in the tepee. Bunker still made it last as long as possible. The fatigue from his almost sleepless
night made his legs feel heavy, but he didn’t care. Mesrine made a rapid reappearance, then dashed off again chasing some wild creature such as he had never seen before. Bunker leaned over the bound pages.
The Saint Sebastian Syndrome
The victim and the punished
By John P. Nichols
U.C.L.A. 2006
Under the title, someone had written a few sentences in English which he couldn’t read. The rest of it was in English too. He flipped through the pages with his big fingers, impressed by the quantity of words, astonished that someone could write all this, just to say in the end that man was a bag of shit and not to be trusted. Behavioural psychology, he couldn’t care less, but he knew that in this pile of paper there were the names of some men who meant business. They had to be taken seriously, and one had better be afraid of them. He put the thesis down and refreshed his eyes by looking down at the stream running below. The leaf-mould and sediments made the water look a golden brown. Bunker’s nostrils dilated as he tried, like Mesrine, to rediscover the smell of bathing in the wild. The sun was strong, but felt good. Bunker thought of himself taking all his clothes off and plunging his backside into the cold water. The old man hesitated, out of both embarrassment and fear of the cold.
He checked the time on his watch, swallowed the last of the coffee and whistled to the dog. Mesrine trotted beside him as he went along the narrow path with his carrier bag. The sun warmed the broom flowering at the edge of the track; foxgloves waved in the breeze and Bunker remembered his grandmother telling him when he was a kid that these elegant flowers were poisonous. He
stepped cautiously to the side so as not to touch them, holding his breath, despite the uphill slope. A big grasshopper shot past his head with a whirr and he gave a start. He stopped walking, to listen for mocking laughter. But he was all alone, and smiled. Fifteen years in jail, no knife had ever frightened him and here he was, terrorised by an insect.