Authors: J. Robert Janes
Now the secret was in jeopardy and Péguy waited.
He was a mean-eyed, hard little bastard of forty-four with one prominent gold tooth, the upper right lateral incisor. Hence the nickname of âFortune'.
Kohler found him at last, three tables back of the postage stamp dance floor, holding court with four others amid a clutter of wine bottles and cigarette butts. âNow, look, all I want is a little information,' he said quietly.
There were five empty bottles and spills of red wine on the linoleum table-top.
âEat dung. Kiss your mother's ass.'
âDon't be tiresome.'
A flick-knife came out; the blade leapt! Fifteen centimetres of highly polished, hardened steel straight from the Reich and bearing the much-coveted logo of the SS, the death's-head.
A man of few words, then, but with them, the sickening realization that, though it was forbidden to kill any member of the Occupying Forces, there was one exception. Hermann Andreas Kohler. Fair game and no one's loss.
âPut the knife away. Please. Let's not get heavy, eh? Just a few small questions,' breathed Kohler.
A bottle fell, the table quivered, neckties and faces were blurred. Kohler grabbed another bottle and smashed it. The sound of breaking glass shattered the silence. A girl screamed but was slapped into silence.
Péguy got slowly to his feet to face the spines of glass.
âGive me room,
' he hissed, tossing the words out of the side of his mouth.
The others backed away. Soon there would only be the two of them on the dance floor, ringed by spectators all thirsting for blood.
Mine!
thought Kohler. Ah
merde.
The table was flipped out of the way, the knife flashed. Kohler lost the broken neck of the bottle. Blood ran from his right forearm, flooding over the back of his hand. âYou cut my overcoat?' he said, feeling no pain. A puzzle.
âNow the liver!
' spat Péguy. âYou have no friends.'
To one side, revolvers had come out but were not yet pointed at him. Was it but a taste of things to come when this lousy war should end and everyone else had gone home?
âLook, I'll walk out of here. Okay? No problem. No questions. Nothing said.'
The knife didn't move. Balanced lightly, it was held close in, with the elbow braced against the base of the ribcage and the muscles knotted.
Slowly Kohler pulled off his scarf and gathered it as best he could around his bloodied hand. If he drew his pistol, the bastards with the guns would even the score. Ah Christ, there was nothing for it.
âDon't say I didn't warn you,' he said. âI'm bigger. I don't like to pick on little guys.'
The knife flashed, the wrist was grabbed, Péguy taking to the air to land on his back with a crash that broke the floor and sent the bottles spinning.
Kohler swept up one and smashed it.
The Frenchman began to back away on his ass, to throw his pals looks of desperation. So, a court of last appeal and everything not exactly going one way, snorted Kohler inwardly. The rest of them had figured it out by themselves.
The bastard scrambled up and made a run for it through the parting crowd. Kohler got to him in the toilers. Throttling him from behindâseizing him by the belt and liftingâhe crammed the pomaded, black-haired, jerking head into the stained trough of the urinal and shrieked,
âKiss it, you son of a bitch! Kiss it and puke!
'
Blood ran from battered lips to mingle with the piss and other things. âNow talk,' he whispered, letting up a little and catching a breath. â
Talk!
' he shrieked in good Gestapo form.
Down on his knees, with his face still squished to one side and his eyes fighting for a way out, Péguy spat blood and his gold nugget and winced. âAir,' he managed, vowing to rip open Kohler's other cheek and cut off his balls. âAir.'
âOkay. Don't choke on your puke.'
Straddling him, Kohler eased up a little. âSo, what did you find out for our friend?'
He waited. He shook the bastard. âThe robbery, eh?' he hissed. âEighteen million straight in from Lyon that very same day, am I right?'
Vomit joined the blood. There was a ragged gasp up the nose. A breath was caught and swallowed. âMy knees â¦'
âFuck your knees. You're one of the préfet's
mouchards,
piss-head. Where did the money come from, when did it arrive and who the fuck knew about it?'
That was too much to ask. The préfet would kill him.
âSilence. I keep the silence!
' came the watery hiss.
âJesus, a hero!' shouted Kohler, slamming him back into the trough. âI'll piss on your head, you little fart!'
âLyon that ⦠that same morning by banker's dispatch. Eighteen millions, in 1000- and 500-franc notes. New francs.'
âJa, ja.
Now who told who about it?'
âWe ⦠we do not know that yet!
' shrieked Péguy, struggling to escape.
He was throttled like a dog and forced to kiss the urinal but there was nothing more to come on that aspect. âSo, now tell me about the suitcases. Start with those and see if you can remember everything.'
Kohler let go of him suddenly. He would give him time to think that maybe ⦠just maybe it would be possible to get up.
Then he cocked his pistol and pressed its muzzle to the back of the bastard's neck. âA girl is missing, you greasy son of a bitch. A friend. The robbery may have nothing to do with it. We'll have to see. Just start talking or we'll have an accident.'
Kohler ⦠Kohler had a pretty little pigeon named Giselle le Roy â¦âTwo suitcases. Leather. Alligator. Louis Vuitton 1934 to '36. Two men, one woman.' Péguy angrily spat blood and other things. âThe men to take the money, the woman to watch the street. One motorcycle for the getaway.'
âCome on. Two big, heavy suitcases and two guys on one motor cycle? Hey, you can do better than that. Why not throw in a
vélo-taxi
just to speed things up?'
A bicycle-taxi.
A nostril was cleared. âThey ⦠they stole a car.'
âTalk louder.'
âA
car
!'
âGood. Let the others in there know you're telling me everything, eh? Then it won't be Talbotte who cuts your throat but your friends.'
âMy usefulnessâ¦. Please, the préfet is counting on me to â¦'
âAw, stop whining and get on with it. A car in Paris? A German car?'
The bastard nodded but banged his forehead and cursed Kohler's ancestors until the gun was pressed a little closer and he was told that, since Talbotte had not wished to co-operate on such a delicate matter, there had been nothing for it but to ask his sources. âIt's simply your tough luck,
mon fin,
so spit it out.'
âThen yes.
Yes!
The car of one whose mistress was in a shop across the street. They forced her driver to take them to Pigalle and they ditched him here.'
âNow wait a minute. Whose car was it?'
âAh nom de Jésus-Christ, foutez-moi la paix!
' Bugger off!
Kohler waited.
âThe ⦠the Sonderführer Franz Ewald Kempf.'
A special officer, Section II of the Propaganda Staffel, in charge of news releases for the Luftwaffe. An arrogant smart-ass, a real ladies' man. âPigalle in broad daylight?' scoffed the Gestapo's strong-arm.
âMaudit salaud,
don't be such an utter idiot!'
âMontmartre, up on the hill ⦠a farm lorry, a
gazogène â¦
'
That was better but still not good enough. Kohler leaned down to whisper in his ear. âIs your ass as tight as your lips, or do I have to bring one of your friends in here to find out for myself?'
Both nostrils were cleared. There was some choking. âA courtyard off the rue des Amiraux. Number 9. The driver was knocked out and left in the car. They ⦠they walked away.'
âWith two big suitcases like that? Near the goods yards? Hey, you must think I don't know my way around.'
Péguy swallowed. Two rucksacks. They ⦠they left the suitcases but these were then taken by someone else and we have not yet been able to find them.'
âDid they leave a little of the cash as hush-up money? Well â¦?'
âYes, yes, most probably. Maybe a bundle of 500s. We do not know as yet!'
âDidn't the chauffeur get a look at them?'
âOne wrenched the rear-view mirror aside, the other put the gun to the back of his head. Things moved too fast. He was hit pretty hard and has suffered a concussion.'
âSo, tell me about the two men.'
âThey ⦠they were dressed as mackerels but â¦'
âDressed like pimps so as to point the finger elsewhere? Good
Gott im Himmel,
how dumb do you think I am?'
âAs
maquereaux!
' spat Péguy desperately.
âHey,
mon fin,
pimps don't have the guts to rob banks, nor would they smash a teller's face with lead. Come to think of it, why that teller?'
âHe ⦠he reached for the â¦'
âJa, ja,
the alarm bell. Hey, look behind the shit to find the ass that left it. Why that teller?'
His nose was broken, raged Péguy silently. His teeth were smashed. âHe ⦠he may have recognized one of them.'
â
Or
?'
There was a sigh, that of a departing soul perhaps.
âOr known of the shipment and ⦠and foolishly passed the word so as to obtain the pay-off.' Marseille ⦠could he manage to go into hiding there?
Again Kohler leaned down. âDon't even think of Marseille,
mein Schatz,
my treasure. You'd stand out like rotten fish. Hey, you're really very good. If you had udders, you'd make a farmer happy. But let's hope your milk hasn't turned, eh? Because if it has, I'll be back. Oh by the way, those two guys. How old were they?'
He'd kill Kohler if he could!
âThirty ⦠thirty-two to thirty-six, no more, not much younger.'
Things must have happened pretty fast. âAnd they didn't talk or act like pimps, did they? Well, come on. Empty the udders so that I can put you out to pasture.'
The head was shaken. A hair was savagely spat. âWell-educated, eh?' asked the Gestapo.
The head gave a nod. âSo, good. Yes, that's very good,' said Kohler, straightening to stand over him. There was only one language a bastard like this would understand. âDon't move. I've got to put the pistol away and take out the other one.'
Giving it a moment in which Péguy cringed and waited himself, he said, âThe woman. The one who watched the street. Let's not forget her.'
âShe ⦠she lost herself quickly.'
âJust walked away? No bicycle? No motor cycle or
vélo-taxi?
'
âNone.'
âHow old?'
âThirty to thirty-five, maybe a little older.'
âOkay. Was it a Resistance job?'
âWe ⦠we don't know. Perhaps not. It ⦠it's too early to say.'
âSo you told Talbotte no.'
The head leapt, the bastard tried to face him.
âYes, yes,
I told him no! Do you think I want trouble with those people? If they find out I've squealed on them, they will slice me up.'
It had best come softly. âMaybe that's what you deserve.'
Péguy raked his mind for details. Giselle le Roy liked to dance in the Bal Saint-Séverin and to while away her time watching old movies in any of three most favoured cinemas. Sometimes she would go around the corner to pay Madame Chabot a little visit and to talk over old times. Since she could no longer offer the use of her body to anyone but Kohler, the girl was bored.
In boredom would there be vengeance. The sword with the serpent entwined.
âThinking about tattoos and vowing you're going to kill someone close to me, eh?' snorted Kohler. âHey, I'd watch it if I were you. Ah
merde,
the battery's dry. You're in luck!'
No piss.
For good measure, he leaned on Péguy's head and ground it into the trough a last time. âDon't even think of touching Giselle or Oona. I'll kill you if you come within a block of either of them.
If
your friends out there allow you to leave. If.
Bonne chance,
you're going to need it!'
The battered lips quivered with rage, the bloodshot eyes were smarting. âI ⦠I will have the protection of the préfet and they will know it.'
âThen I pity you for its worthlessness.
Au revoir, mon fin.
Sleep lightly.'
The Cluny was at 71 boulevard Saint-Germain, not all that easy to find in the darkness. Kohler stood in the middle of the street. Hell, there was so little traffic, a drunk could have slept out here.
From time to time the squeaking wheels of a frost-pinched
vélo-taxi
would struggle by, but for the most part the night left him alone. His right arm was stiffânothing more than a flesh wound, but close. They had patched him up at the Hôpital Laennec and had asked why he hadn't gone to one of his own clinics.
He had simply said the hospital was nearer and had warned them to say nothing. But the confrontation in the Bar of the Broken Cat was troubling him and not just because one of his confrères had given him a bad tip and some in Gestapo Paris would like to be rid of him, but because this war had to end and when it did, those who were left behind were going to have to pay for it, rightly or wrongly.
Only too well he knew the French passion for âjustice'. âGiselle,' he said, searching the dark outline of the cinema's billboards where once, in good times, the lights would have been lit up until three or four in the morning. âI'm going to have to do something. Oona's in it too.'
Sentiment rushed in on him. He liked and admired them both, often for quite different reasons. They made him feel at ease with himself when all around him he could see so clearly what was going on. They never once openly questioned their relationship though deep within themselves they must be asking what was going to happen to them when the Germans went home.