Louis Shalako
There was a long, low black car waiting at the curb in
front of the Crédit
Lyonnais when their little cavalcade arrived. There were three or four people
waiting at the door, bundled in thick long coats and huddled against the strong
northeast wind.
A young man leapt out of the driver’s side of the
Mercedes, hastening around to let his passenger out. It was Antoine Noel,
looking like he’d spent a sleepless night as well. He probably had, in fact.
“Ah, Monsieur Noel. Another rotten morning, and why
not say so?’
The banker looked a little shocked at this and Gilles
wished he hadn’t said it. They both had enough problems.
“Hmn. Inspector Gilles Maintenon, I would like you to
meet my son, Maurice…” The gentleman trailed off as if searching for some
proper label or description for his son.
“Maurice. Maurice Noel.”
Maurice, dropping his chin and regarding the police
with humourous eyes, extended a hand and shook with Maintenon and Levain. He
was a tall, well-built young man of about twenty-five.
“I’m a driver.”
Levain nodded thoughtfully, he knew the type.
“Hmn. Pleased to meet you, Monsieur Noel.” Maintenon
was less judgemental than Levain, perhaps.
“Shall we go up, then?” The elder Noel had a heaviness
in his tread as he climbed the stairs, his son at his side, steadying him with
one hand on the upper arm.
The young man found Maintenon’s eyes upon him. If
anything he was, if possible, even better-dressed than his father and a lot
less conservative. Where the old man wore brown with pinstripes and a plain
white shirt, the usual clunky black oxfords, the younger man tended to the
sharp American zoot-suit look. He wore a soft, hand-knitted charcoal black
jacket, and lighter grey trousers, big at the top and tapering down quickly to
the cuffs. The gentleman wore saddle shoes. The heavy weight of a silver flask
dragged the one side of his coat down.
His shirt, with the knock-off collar,
must have cost fifty or a hundred francs, having the look of real silk and in
that canary yellow to boot. The only thing that could possibly go with that
would be grey or black, and in fact he wore a grey and black silk tie.
“Papa hasn’t been feeling very well this morning.” He
seemed embarrassed by the disclosure.
“Shut up, Maurice.”
“I’m sorry, Papa, but it’s true.” Maurice, who had a
scar running up from the left corner of his lip and displaying an otherwise
wizened countenance, had genuine concerns about his father.
“I want you to
promise me, you’ll take it easy, okay?”
“Yes, yes, of course, Maurice—”
Maurice eyed the detectives.
“Father has an ulcer.’
“Ah.”
They nodded in professional empathy.
Most of them had ulcers too.
They were at the top of the stairs and the senior
gendarme in charge was holding the door open.
“Er. Have a good day, father.”
“Yes, you too, Maurice—”
Father and son exchanged a quick and awkward hug, which
was touching, and then the young fellow gave the rest of them an unreadable
look. Whatever he was, he was a cool young professional about it.
He could see the impact on his father better than they
ever could. Maurice held his old man by the shoulders for a moment of unspoken
communication, and then he scuttled down the stairs to where the gleaming black
car idled at the curb.
Gilles filed it away.
Maintenon ushered them all in and they could finally
get out of the cold wind. Turning for one last glance through the suddenly
rain-specked window, he watched the Mercedes’ flashing signal and then it
pulled out into traffic.
***
It was as silent as the tomb except for the footsteps
of the few employees they were admitting.
“All right, Monsieur Noel. I have to get my men up on
the roof before those blasted thunderstorms return. I will come back down
shortly and we can speak more then, n’est
pas?”
“Er, yes. Of course.” A defeated-looking Antoine Noel
shuffled vaguely in the direction of the offices and his kettle.
A fresh face, wearing the red of a sergeant in their
private security garb, gave him a pleasant nod.
For Antoine Noel, the morning ritual would never be
quite the same again.
“All right. There is a hatch onto the roof.”
The most senior gendarme held up a jangling ring of
keys.
“It’s at the top of the stairs, sir.”
“All right. Grab that ladder and follow me.” Two men
ran off to get the ladder.
Their footsteps and voices loud in Maintenon’s ears,
they followed him up the stairs two steps at a time. For one thing, Maintenon
wasn’t a big fan of elevators, for another, there were just too many of them.
It was at the end of a hall, right at the back of the
building on the upper floor. Some buildings had steps going up to a landing and
a vertical door to the exterior. The central block was much taller than the two
wings, which indeed had such doors. A quick sweep revealed nothing of interest,
and the air vent stacks clearly went up to the full height of the building.
With no iron-runged ladder in this application, it would be a good four-metre
drop to the floor from the lip. Assaulting a bank from the roof wasn’t
unheard-of. This worked best in a single-story branch of a bank. People had
literally cut a hole in the roof. It was noisy, attracted attention whether it
was done in the middle of the night or the broad light of day, and, generally
speaking, had to be carried out in minutes. In short, it was an impossible job
in a major city like Paris. Whoever had pulled this particular crime had at
least had the luxury of time.
“Careful now.”
Two uniformed officers opened up the big step ladder
and braced it. Their sergeant climbed it carefully, keys in hand.
With a few keys to choose from, it seemed to take
forever. It took a dozen tries. It was a simple padlock, and he was working
with his gloves on in case of fingerprints.
Something was very remiss and they were taking all
precautions.
Finally he had it. He came down and they put the lock
aside for the moment on a window ledge...
“Marc.”
Gilles had seen one or two of them around before but
didn’t know any of the men by name.
Maintenon raised his eyebrows but said nothing. One of
the junior men went up the ladder and braced himself, and then gave a careful
heave. The hatch was solid steel, but necessary for roofing inspections and
cleaning drains, as well as washing windows, which happened once a year for
most major buildings.
The man climbed up and out.
Maintenon turned to Monsieur Tremblay, who was
assisting them.
“I need a phone.”
Tremblay led him down one level. The stairwell was
amazingly clean. It smelled like lemons, and carbolic soap.
“There will be one in this office here.”
He used his own master key to open up what looking
like a low-level executive’s office.
“Gilles!”
“Argh.”
He made the journey back up the steps again, voices
from above echoing off hard stone walls.
There was not one soft or friendly
surface in the entire place.
It was Levain, at the base of the ladder.
“What, Andre?”
“They say they’ve got something.” He pointed a finger
upwards.
Turning, he waited for another man to clear the top of
the ladder and then with a nod at the two bracing cops, began to climb as thick
maple rungs and runners bent and heaved under the weight.
“Merde.”
Gilles hurried back inside. If they were going to be
going up and down that damned ladder all day, then someone had better get a
bigger, heavier one in there straight away.
“The
phone, the phone, my kingdom for a phone…”
Tremblay coughed and politely stood by the window so
as not to eavesdrop.
Maintenon made a lightning call to the technical
branch down at the Quai and explained what he needed and why he needed it.
Their reassurances were fulsome, for whatever that was worth, but sooner or
later a bigger ladder would most likely turn up.
When he got back to the upper hallway again, one of
the two remaining gendarmes was just about to go up.
“No. Stay here, no matter how bored you people get.
Understand? No one goes up or down that ladder without the two of you bracing
it.”
“Yes, sir.”
Maintenon took in some air and began to climb.
“Thank you.” Elevators were one thing, but Gilles was
fine with ladders—until you got to the top, and had to let go of the ladder and
reach for the edge of the hatch.
It wobbled alarmingly from side to side. Industrial
safety was a joke in some occupations.
They just never thought it important…
That last part was a bit different, but he made it up
all right, with Tremblay and an unfamiliar young officer steadying him by the
armpits. They wouldn’t let him fall. He clambered up and over. It had been a
very long time since he went over the top. It was beginning to show.
***
The roof was flat. It was much like any other roof.
There would be some kind of a metal bed over steel trusses, with a rubber
bladder to keep out the water and pea gravel to walk on. It was all
heavily-tarred and sticky with the heat.
The surface heaved around substantially, a reminder
that all human constructions were flawed.
There were puddles in the low spots where the drainage
was poor.
“Over here, sir.”
Levain was keeping them back, their grubby hands off
of whatever it was.
Thunderheads rumbled on the northeastern horizon.
“Ah, for the love of God.” Gilles grabbed a gendarme. “I
want you to go down with Monsieur Tremblay. He’ll show you the phone.”
The man was right there at his elbow, all wide-eyed at
the cluster of officers and the sight they were obscuring if that made any
sense…
“What do we need, sir?”
“We’re going to need more technical people…and a tent
or something to put over that hatch. Tarps. We need the lab people up here on
the double. Oh—and bag up that lock…right?”
“Sir.”
The idiots pelted off in the direction of the hatch.
“Hey!”
The pair of relatively-young men slid to an abrupt
halt, feet rasping on the loose gravel, deep in some places and thin or even
missing in others.
“No running on the roof.”
“Sir.”
“Monsieur Tremblay.”
“Er, yes, sir?”
“Don’t let Monsieur Noel come up here…right?’
Face pale and yet illuminated by understandable
excitement, Orson Tremblay nodded soberly and then turned away.
***
Levain pulled the sopping canvas tarpaulin back. A man
stepped forwards as Levain waited.
The technician raised a camera and snapped a
series of pictures.
“Okay.”
Levain went on, and another officer took the tarpaulin
away for tagging and bagging as evidence.
“Well, well, well. What have we here—”
“It’s some kind of infernal machine.”
Gilles almost laughed aloud, but Grosjean had hit the
nail on the head.
Gilles, looking around, saw sodden and
slowly-dissolving cigarette butts, disturbed gravel and other signs of heavy
use in the area.
“Shit.” He beckoned the photographer forward and got
him to document the area.
The fellow took pictures from all angles.
Gilles got carefully onto his knees. There was sense
here, only he really wasn’t an engineer.
“This is obviously some kind of petrol engine.” It had
one cylinder, a carburettor and an exhaust.
There was a heavy base, and an enclosing framework.
There was a fuel tank, and a spark plug, and a pull
handle for starting. There were three red tins lined up, presumably they had
held fuel. Levain picked each one up in turn. Two were empty, mere drops
inside, the third still held some petrol.
Gilles had owned a car once, back home, when he was
very young. This was distinctly out of his experience. It was the machine on
the other end that was different.
“It’s not a generator.” Levain appeared stumped.
“An air pump?”
Maintenon looked up, impressed. Grosjean had hit on
it.
Looking around, there was a series of bundles, lined
up against the wall of the upper story.
“No. It’s a vacuum pump.” How he knew that, Gilles had
no idea, but they were definitely onto something. “Ha. It’s a suction-pump.”
The boys rocked back on their heels on hearing it.
His eyes found Levain.
“Sir?”
“Be thorough.”
Levain nodded.
“And you?”
“I’m going back down.” His eyes swept the long
rooftop.
There was the centre section and then the two lower
sections.
“We’ll have to examine the entire rooftop. If there
was somebody up here, they had to get down somehow. Which reminds me—use gloves
at all times, and that includes coming and going, up and down.” He could have
kicked himself.
Now that they knew where to look, surely they should
have checked the bank’s ladder for prints first, or used their own ladder right
from the beginning. Hindsight was twenty-twenty.
Levain turned away, to organize their small gaggle of
men and take another sweeping look at the blackening horizon.
(End of excerpt. )
Here`s a link to the fourth of The Inspector Gilles Maintenon Mystery Series. As for this one, number 6, How To Rob a Bank will be available for pre-order in the next few weeks.
Thank you for reading.
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