Fourteen
‘More help?’ Commissaire Massin looked surprised, and shook his head. It was a sure sign
that this wasn’t going to be an easy discussion. ‘But you’ve only just begun this assignment for the Ministry. Isn’t it rather early to judge?’
Rocco kept his expression blank and counted to five. He was accustomed to Massin’s instinctive reaction against using extra resources, but this was urgent and he
wasn’t going to take a refusal at the first request. He related the news from
Dreycourt about the latest two blackmail victims. ‘Their names haven’t been released yet. I need to investigate their backgrounds to find out as much
as I can about them.’
Massin blinked hard. ‘Two more? What is this – an epidemic?’
Rocco breathed easier. ‘I hope not.’ Evidently Massin hadn’t yet heard about Petissier and Gambon. The authorities had indeed kept a tight
lid on it. Maybe that was why the two men in the Peugeot had followed him from
Douligny-la-Rose and his meeting with Dreycourt.
Massin shrugged. ‘You know how busy we are already, now that you’ve been assigned to this investigation. I don’t think it calls for more assistance just yet, though.’
‘It will do.’
‘What do you mean?’
‘Because of the people involved. Like Bourdelet, they’re high-level. I was wondering if you knew either of them. The first is
Jean-Marie Gambon, former Director–’
‘Yes, I know who that is.’ Massin frowned. ‘Gambon? Are you sure?’
‘Dreycourt is. Now I’ve got to fill in some blanks.’
‘I can’t believe it. The short answer to your question is I knew of Gambon by
reputation only. He would have been present at some of the conferences I
attended, but so were many other top police officers and directors. But I don’t recall ever having spoken to him.’ He shook his head. ‘It’s appalling that such an eminent figure should be caught up in this. But you
said two more. Who is the other?’
‘Jules Petissier, a senior judge in the Assize Court.’
This time Massin looked stunned, and turned pale. He shifted in his seat and
said nothing. The silence went on for a long time, broken only by a clock
ticking on the shelf behind him.
‘Sir?’ Rocco gave him a gentle nudge.
‘I knew him. Petissier.’ The answer came almost reluctantly, as if an admission he really didn’t want to make, and the name rolled off his tongue with something akin to
distaste. ‘It was some time ago, however, near the end of the war in Indochina. I doubt I
could tell you anything that would help. I wasn’t privy to his private life and I haven’t seen him since then, although I’ve been aware of his rise through the ranks of the judicial system. He’s had a charmed professional life.’
At the final sentence, Rocco felt a hum in the atmosphere between them. The set
of Massin’s face told him that the commissaire was not telling him everything. He was about to speak when Massin pushed his
chair back and jumped to his feet. ‘Come with me,’ he said. ‘And don’t ask questions.’ He led the way out of his office, down the stairs and out through the front
entrance, stiff-arming the door open and catching the guard on the steps by
surprise. The man snapped off a belated salute but Massin barely lifted his
chin in response. The two men were a hundred metres along the street and
passing a small memorial garden with a commemorative stone to the fallen of
both wars, when Massin indicated a bench set back against a screen of heavy
bushes. There was nobody else around. He took a seat and motioned for Rocco to
join him.
‘If I’m correct,’ he said stiffly, ‘your investigation into Petissier’s background will be thorough.’ It wasn’t a question.
‘If I’m allowed the freedom to do it, yes.’
Massin grunted. ‘I wouldn’t expect anything less – of you, at least. Because of that I need to tell you something that might come
out during your investigation. Petissier being the kind of man he is, I’m certain he will have kept records of everything that might have proven useful
to him during his professional life.’
Rocco waited. Silence was the best response, and the obvious one: what the hell
was Massin about to tell him?
‘Following my … breakdown in Indochina,’ he began, ‘I was repatriated to France within a few days. I’m sure I don’t need to explain why. It would be evident to you, more than most, that a senior
officer in such circumstance is a curse on morale. I was hospitalised for many
weeks, undergoing treatment and tests. In effect I was kept isolated from any
connection with the military establishment. When I was released from there, I
underwent several interviews about what had occurred. They were described as
fact-finding interviews and conducted by a man who said he was an acting deputy
advocate general on attachment, assigned to me by the military as a courtesy to
my rank. A final appearance was before a military tribunal. It was the tribunal
which decided my fate based on those interviews.’
‘Do you have to tell me this?’ said Rocco. He could see the pain etched on Massin’s face as he relived the events following his return from Indochina. Even
shell-shocked as he must have been, he could not have been unaware of the
reactions of the people around him. For a senior officer to be brought back
from a conflict under the shadow of what would have been viewed by many as
cowardice, it would not have been pleasant, and some would have made their
feelings only too clear.
‘If I don’t tell you,’ Massin replied, ‘I will have missed the only opportunity to do so. I can’t do that.’
Rocco nodded. ‘I understand.’
‘I won’t go into all the details, but the report placed before the tribunal was lacking
in accuracy and, frankly, with the benefit of hindsight, a travesty of any kind
of justice. But it was under the auspices of the military establishment and
their main responsibility was to safeguard the integrity and honour of the
army. However, as I discovered later, the man responsible for interviewing me
had never conducted a military interview before. He was not even of the army,
but brought in from outside.’ He grunted. ‘I think it was a question of the military wanting to keep their distance in case
of infection. I can only imagine more junior ranks must have suffered greater
indignities with even less compassion. The result for me could not have been
worse. I came to the conclusion that the acting DAG was concerned solely with
using the situation as a stepping-stone on a career path to the top. And having
a senior officer – especially a former Brigade C.O. like me to work on – must have been a godsend to him. I was a casualty of another man’s ambition. He treated my inability to explain my actions with such casual
indifference, even disdain, that by the time I came before the tribunal I had
no defence to offer. Mentally I was in no fit state to answer his questions or
the charges I faced, a fact which came out subsequently, although by then it
was too late. His report consisted of two pages and a summary, which I confess
I didn’t fully understand at the time. But his verbal report was a lot longer, very
damning and brutal in the extreme. I wasn’t cashiered, but my military career was effectively over the moment he began
speaking.’ He stared down at the ground. ‘It was pure theatre, much like many of his cases since then. He tore me, my
service and any future hopes to shreds and I was in no condition to resist.’
‘You couldn’t appeal?’
‘No. There was no process for doing so at that time. I was charged with two
counts: offences against my honour and duty as an officer, and a dereliction of
military discipline. It was explained to me that it would be preferable for the
honour of the army if I were to take my leave and apply for alternative
employment elsewhere.’ He looked away, his face ashen. ‘Due to the intervention of a friend from my days in the officer academy of
St-Cyr, I was offered a middle-ranking post in the police. I was lucky to have
even that, so I took it. As for the DAG, he had made an impression, gaining
friends in high places in the process, and was marked for higher office in the
judicial system. The rest is history.’ He looked at Rocco. ‘You may be wondering why I’m telling you all this.’
‘I think I can guess,’ Rocco said.
‘I’m sure you can. It’s not a confession intended as some kind of salve to my conscience, I assure
you. The deputy advocate general who interviewed me and tore my career to
shreds was Jules Petissier.’ He got to his feet and walked away a few paces, then came back. ‘What do you need from me, Rocco?’
‘One man, that’s all,’ said Rocco.
‘Desmoulins?’
‘Yes.’
Massin stood very still, his eyes on the floor. Then he said, ‘I have a proposal. These three men are all at a high level in the establishment.
Getting to details of their connections and history won’t be easy. In fact, I suspect it will prove impossible unless one can get at the
others on the same level.’
Rocco was forced to agree. Desmoulins wouldn’t be able to do that. Nor would he, without finding a mountain of hurdles
against him all the way. He wasn’t going to give up simply because it looked difficult, but wondered what Massin
was thinking.
‘What do you suggest?’
‘I’ll do it.’
Rocco nearly did a double take, but tried to keep his expression blank. Even so,
Massin must have seen something in his eyes.
‘I know what you’re thinking: what can an officer like me possibly know of investigation
techniques? I have to agree with you … but for one major difference. I know these people and their kind – especially Petissier. I know the way they think and the circles in which they
move. None of that will be open to you by going through official records
because you’ll be denied access. I’ll be able to get to people that you won’t.’
Rocco said nothing. He was trying to find an argument to counter Massin’s proposal, but couldn’t fault it. The commissaire was absolutely right; if you wanted information about a criminal gang, you didn’t look through official records, you went to their friends, neighbours and
colleagues and you did so covertly, using contacts who were above suspicion.
‘You can still have Desmoulins,’ Massin continued, ‘but I suggest for leg-work only. You might not accept it but I think your
investigation will be shorter than you expect. I never said this, but make no
mistake, they will try to close you down as soon as they can. These three
individuals are all too high profile to allow their misdeeds to come out into
the public arena. Any one of them, if they became known, would provide a
scandal the current administration doesn’t need. Governments have crumbled at far less, and this one is currently very
fragile.’
‘Fine.’
‘One other thing, Rocco. My involvement stays absolutely between us – understand?’ He gave the ghost of a smile. ‘I wouldn’t want anyone around here thinking I wanted a change of profession.’