and family. But over the course of time, for many of them, things had started to happen. Losing jobs, unexplained anger attacks, drinking too much, fear of open spaces, fear of enclosed spaces, fear of sudden noises or deafening silence. It was as if they were being steadily taken apart from the inside and nothing anyone tried to do could prevent it. Then came the suicides. Not many at first, but gradually increasing, as if they were being picked off by a deadly mental sniper. Rocco had been luckier than most. He still suffered the night-time blacks, the vivid images bustling with ghosts, but they were mostly bearable. It hadn’t prevented the first major casualty in his life, his marriage to Emilie, and he still had cause to wonder if he’d got off all that lightly in comparison.

‘Where can I reach him?’

Santer gave him a number, then told him to wait a moment. There was a rustle of paper, then he said, ‘This wouldn’t have anything to do with a couple of murders down south, would it? I just had a nationwide alert in from one of the gang task forces.’

‘Go on.’

‘A little ferret named Maurice Tappa got himself taken out in Marseilles, in broad daylight. Then a “person of interest” named Jean-Louis Pichard was found dead at his place of work in an agricultural supply depot near Chalon-sur-Saone. They were both on a watch list of known faces with gang connections. They’re running tests to determine causes of death.’

Rocco couldn’t see an obvious link to his own investigation, but habit made him ask what the men had been into.

Santer hummed to himself while scanning the report. ‘Well, they weren’t altar boys, I can tell you that. Undeclared imports is the polite term — on both of them. Tappa’s the juiciest: drugs, arms, low-quality precious metals — now there’s a contradiction for you — oh, and people. Would you believe that — people? Christ, these gangs will find a profit in anything.’

People. Rocco’s instincts were kicked awake. ‘Where from?’

‘It doesn’t say, but my last ten centimes would be on Morocco, Tunisia and anywhere south of there. Wh- oh, Jesus, this is tied in with Farek, isn’t it? It’s got to be.’

‘Why do you say that?’

‘I’ve got a cop’s nose, too, remember — and longer than yours. There’s been a lot of Algerian-linked activity recently, after all the trouble.’

Trouble. Hell of an understatement, thought Rocco. That ‘trouble’ was going to be bubbling around for a long time to come.

‘I remember.’

‘It makes sense that the lid had to come off somewhere. Maybe him coming over here is the beginning.’ He paused, then added, ‘One thing I heard about Farek: he doesn’t look ethnic Algerian. Something in his genes, I reckon, a French or European farmer who got too friendly with the natives way back. Means you could pass him in the street and you wouldn’t look twice.’

‘What does he look like? I’ll contact Caspar, but a description would help.’

‘Sorry — I don’t have a photo. But there is one thing: he’s said to be accompanied everywhere he goes by a bodyguard — a fat, bald man in a white djellaba. And I mean fat. Goes by the name of Bouhassa.’

As Rocco replaced the telephone while attempting to unravel the knots of information he’d picked up over the past couple of days, the office door opened. It was Massin. He didn’t look happy.

‘A word.’ Then the senior officer was gone.

Rocco trailed him back to his office, wondering if he was about to get sidelined to another investigation. He’d managed to forget, in all that had happened, his intention of briefing Massin about what was going on. He had a feeling that omission was about to come back and bite him.

CHAPTER TWENTY-SEVEN

‘It would be in the interests of the smooth running of this establishment,’ said Massin coolly, ‘if you could explain why you’ve had a man locked up downstairs since last night without specific charges. Perhaps your previous division kept people incarcerated for as long as they liked, but that is not the practice in mine.’ He sat down behind his desk and stared hard at Rocco like a skinny bulldog looking for a snack. ‘And how is it that you find it so convenient to harness the efforts of manpower in the building without going through me first?’

Rocco guessed he was referring to his talk with Dr Rizzotti and using Desmoulins to get some uniforms trawling for anyone who knew the dead man. ‘I was going to brief you about the prisoner,’ he replied. ‘His name’s Armand Maurat. He’s a truck driver from Saint-Quentin involved in the trafficking of illegals out of North Africa into France.’

Massin’s eyes flickered. ‘Saint-Quentin? What’s he doing here, then?’ The answer seemed to hit him as soon as the question was out of his mouth, and he went tight around the eyes. ‘I see. Am I going to be receiving a call on the question of professional courtesy from the Saint-Quentin police?’ Rocco’s brief gave him a wide remit across the region, but observing the various courtesy procedures before entering other jurisdictions wasn’t something he found easy.

‘I doubt it,’ he said easily. ‘Maurat’s a low-level crim and his family won’t be making a fuss.’ He decided against revealing the scare tactics he’d used against the driver — it would only upset Massin even more. ‘The dead man in the canal came off Maurat’s truck, along with a number of others. They were part of a conspiracy to supply cheap workers for factories in the area.’ He was being elastic with the numbers and a little dramatic with the word ‘conspiracy’, but the men down the pipeline responsible for the operation were not in a position to contradict him. And since the threat of conspiracies always sent a major shiver through the senior brass, he decided it was worth taking a chance. Massin would need to be convinced of the criminal implications for his region for him to take positive action, and not let Maurat go on a point of regulations. ‘I brought him in,’ Rocco added, ‘because he was in genuine fear for his life from the man who recruited him. I persuaded him to get his mother to leave home for a few days, too.’ He shrugged. ‘If the organiser has no leverage, we stand a better chance of bringing him down.’

‘Aren’t threats just a natural part of keeping people in line among these organisations?’

‘The threats are real, but not only from the organisers. I’ve just spoken to Captain Santer in Clichy. He told me that at least two members of this group in the south have been murdered within the last forty-eight hours.’

Massin’s eyebrows shot up, although whether at the revelation that Rocco had been speaking to his old boss or the deaths of two criminals wasn’t clear. ‘I see. That’s quite a coincidence. Is there a motive?’

‘Not sure. But it could be outsiders.’ Rocco explained what he knew so far about the people pipeline, and threw in as a rumour Samir Farek’s decision to set up in France. He kept the details Nicole had given him to the bare minimum, using just enough about Farek’s criminal past to make him a viable threat worth investigating.

‘But a man like Farek might not be involved with this pipeline,’ Massin pointed out. ‘As I understand it, there are levels of crime where some criminals choose not to operate. Bank robbers do not sell drugs, for example; those committing fraud do not involve themselves with gun crime.’ He smiled thinly. ‘Amazing, isn’t it; even criminals have a hierarchy.’

Massin was pernickety and tight-arsed, thought Rocco, but he wasn’t stupid. He was beginning to view the officer in a different light.

‘That’s true. We don’t know yet if he’s responsible for the killings down south, but getting rid of the organisers would be an effective way of sending a message to anyone else involved, especially to others in the same line of business. If he hits Paris with that kind of reputation, he’ll roll right over the smaller gangs without a fight. They won’t want to take the risk of running up against his kind of opposition.’

‘Does he have contacts here already?’

‘Almost certainly. He’s been here in the past, although mostly to Marseilles. I hate to think,’ he continued as Massin opened his mouth to speak, ‘how much crap we’d be in if a man like Farek got established in the north. He’s got a long history, and none of it sounds good.’ He added that there was a possibility that Farek had served in the French army, which put him automatically at a higher level of threat in terms of skills and knowledge than most ordinary street criminals. Former military men were more organised, more disciplined and more willing to use weapons to defend their territory. And they were trained to kill.

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