Lorraine Connection (30 page)

Read Lorraine Connection Online

Authors: Dominique Manotti

‘Bravo.’

‘Compliments are always nice when they come from a
connoisseur
.’ Valentin brings out a bottle of brandy. ‘I believe you’re a brandy drinker? Let’s drink to our past and future collaboration.’

For Montoya, the brandy has the flavour of a journey’s end.

 

All Saints’ Day and a well-earned rest. Yesterday, the Warsaw contact telephoned. Mission accomplished. Tomaso dreams of acquiring holdings in Quignard’s businesses, big international deals that are being struck at this very moment.
I
don’t
see
how
he
can
say
no.
Even
if
I
don’t
know
exactly
what
they’re
about
yet,
I’m
not
going
to
be
short
of
cash
to
invest
if
I
can
take
over
the
Hakim
brothers’
business.
Which
shouldn’t
be
too
difficult
Quignard’s
major
operations
can
launder
the
money
and
provide
a
seal
of
respectability.
Respectability.
Perhaps
it’ll
be
my
turn
to
buy
a
hunt.
That
would
be
funny,
ending
up
as
a
patriarch,
a
landowner.
The
builders
start
work
on
the
Oiseau
Bleu
tomorrow.
Make
the
place
a
bit
less
steamy
while
we’re
at
it?
Kristina
wont
agree.
Talk
to
her
about
it,
but
not
today.
Today’s
a
holiday.
He’s taken the morning in bed with Kristina, his Croatian mistress, luxuriant flesh and feisty attitude, even in love. His hands and his mind wander. It’s more than just physical attraction, a genuine affection for a woman who’s lived on the edge. When he met her, she was wearing fatigues, the black beret of the Croatian militia, a Kalashnikov slung over her shoulder. To avenge her father killed by the Serbs, she said. He hadn’t delved any further. Everyone has their own reasons for fighting. It seemed to him as if she enjoyed it. Just like him. My wife. A desire to get married. A church
wedding
. After all, you’re a Catholic, like me. In white. She laughs. ‘Our customers wouldn’t like it.’Fuck the lot of them.

Plans for the day: a makeshift brunch, then a long slow walk to Place Stanislas, arms entwined. ‘This evening I’ll take you to eat frogs’ legs in the country.’

Around eight p.m., the two of them get into the magnificent shiny black Mercedes that a driver had left in front of the Oiseau Bleu that morning, Tomaso at the wheel. He switches on the ignition, starts up the engine, and the car explodes. Demolished, twisted like an iron straw. Tomaso’s body is ripped apart, his head blown off, and his passenger is rushed to hospital by ambulance. She’s badly wounded but may perhaps survive.

 

All Saints’ Day and the hunting was superb. Quignard, on
excellent
form, shot like a god. All the guests except the
superintendent
have left after the evening meal. The two men are in the small lounge of the hunting lodge, reclining in vast leather armchairs before a log fire, nursing glasses of brandy. A day spent walking in the countryside in the cold, their boots heavy with mud. There’s the thrill as they approach their prey, gun in hand or on their shoulder, the shots, the smell of powder, of blood. A copious
dinner
, the alcohol, the tiredness, the warmth of the fire, moments of bliss.

The superintendent speaks first.

‘My transfer to Nancy is going through. It’ll be official in a week. You’re the first to know.’ Quignard raises his glass to his guest.

‘Congratulations. I’m delighted for you.’ A pause. ‘You’re going to have a big case as soon as you arrive. Do you remember Tomaso? You met him here, on the hunt a couple of weeks ago. My son-in-law, the lawyer Lavaudant, phoned me during dinner to tell me that Tomaso was killed when his car blew up today, outside his joint in Nancy.’

‘He had a nightclub in Nancy, the Oiseau Bleu, didn’t he?’ Quignard nods. ‘A club with a dubious reputation, from what my colleagues say. And where one explosion already took place a few days ago.’

‘True. I met Tomaso in Brussels, where he had some big car hire contracts with the European Commission. I had his security company working in quite a few of the factories down the valley. I found him rather a pleasant man. But my son-in-law gave me a warning when he met Tomaso here, at the Grande Commune hunt. According to him, Tomaso was a rather disreputable
character
, a former mercenary in the pay of Croatia. His legitimate business was allegedly a front for trafficking stolen cars to Eastern Europe. His death must have been a gangland killing.’

‘Perhaps. The chosen method of operation could lead one to suppose something of that nature. The investigation will establish that.’

‘By the way. I must introduce you to my son-in-law. He has a big legal practice in Nancy. He’s just taken on the defence of the Hakim brothers. And do you know what? About a decade ago, the Hakims were working with the French police in Tangier. According to my son-in-law, they wouldn’t be averse to doing so again.’

‘Interesting. But I’m the new boy in Nancy. I don’t know the ropes, the way I do here. I’m going to start by seeing how things work.’

‘Of course. Well, you know of my son-in-law’s existence, and that he can always act as a go-between if need be.’

‘Thank you. I’ll bear that in mind.’

Two
days
later

Robert Leroy, an elderly man with white hair, very erect, with a great deal of style and dressed in indoor wear, velvet trousers and a silk and wool jacket, pours drinks for his two guests, Dubernard and Meynial. They are in his cosy little smoking room whose wide picture window overlooks the treetops of the Bois de Boulogne and the Auteuil racecourse, invisible in the dark at this hour and time of year.

‘Yesterday, Benoît-Rey called me for a meeting, it sounded urgent, and he suggested that you should also be present. He’ll be coming alone.’

‘We’re here on behalf of the École Polytechnique Alumni Association.’

‘Absolutely. Myself as chairman, you two as members of the board. Benoît-Rey is a graduate of course, and a member of the Association.’

‘Of course.’

‘We were at school at the same time. He graduated in ’71 and I in ’70.’

‘What does he want to discuss?’

‘He hasn’t breathed a word to me.’

‘Certainly not the Thomson privatisation. He’s head of the Alcatel steering group for the bid.’ The three men look at each other.

‘That’s likely to be tricky. You’re at Alcatel, and Robert and I are with Matra …’

‘Should the Association allow itself to get involved in this business?’

‘Benoît-Rey is no joker, and he doesn’t take risks for nothing. If he’s referring a matter to the Association, then I’m sure he has excellent reasons for doing so.’

‘That’s what worries me.’

‘Let’s wait and see what Benoît-Rey has to say before we
discuss
it.’

The three men drink in silence. The doorbell rings. A few moments later, Benoît-Rey is shown into the smoking room. The three men rise and Leroy makes the introductions. Complicit smiles all round, everyone knows each other.

‘What would you like to drink?’

A glance at the drinks trolley laden with a variety of bottles.

‘A Suze for a change, thank you.’

They sit down, all eyes on Leroy, who nods his impeccably brushed white head towards Benoît-Rey with an encouraging smile.

‘You asked for a meeting with the board of the Association, and most of us are here. Over to you.’

Benoît-Rey takes out twenty or so sheets of paper folded in half, puts them on the coffee table in front of him, leans forward, elbows on knees and hands clasped, then looks from one to the other.

‘I received these documents in my office at Alcatel from a more or less anonymous source. I’ve carried out a whole battery of checks, as discreetly as possible, which reveal: one, that the Daewoo factory in Lorraine, opened two years ago in a European priority development area, has benefited from a large number of subsidies; two, that it has transferred these subsidies to Daewoo Poland, with which it does eighty per cent of its business, by simply falsifying the purchase and sales ledgers; and three, that the super-profits thus earned were paid into personal accounts (he taps the documents sitting on the table in front of him) on arrival in Poland. Here you have their numbers and code names
and the amounts and payment dates.’ Silence. They are paying close attention. ‘There’s one more sheet, which bears the names of the account holders. ‘I’ve decided not to show this sheet to anyone.’ A pause. ‘For the time being. Not even to my
chairman
or my colleagues. We have discussed this case in the Alcatel working party which I head up, and we think that the European Development funding misappropriated for the past two years by Daewoo has been used as bribes to garner support for their Thomson Multimedia bid. Not just any old support. That of the key decision-makers. At the top of the political ladder.’

A break to allow the idea to sink in. The chairman speaks up:

‘Why come and tell the Association about this?’

‘We want the Matra-Daewoo takeover of Thomson to be halted, which will save us having to publish the information we have. The world of politics and the business community have a lot to gain from complying, no need to go into detail. You’re well aware of the disastrous consequences such a scandal would have. For this to be achieved without doing any damage, this
information
must be placed in the hands of the proper people, through neutral, credible and reliable channels. Channels that everyone knows would not orchestrate the leaks themselves. We’ve thought long and hard, and we think the board of the Association is the best placed – perhaps even the only possible – option.’

Meynial sits up, shakes his head, taps the file with his fingertips.

‘Difficult if we don’t have all the information, especially that last page you mention.’

‘I don’t think so. The people whose names are on that
document
will never forgive those who have read it. On the other hand, if you tell them it exists, but that you haven’t seen it, they will know who they are, and will be grateful to you for having preserved a degree of anonymity. The information simply has to reach the right people, those who were genuinely in a position to make a decision on this bid, and who are therefore likely to have received bribes. There’s no point naming names. We all know who they are.’

A few moments’ silence, then Leroy rises.

‘I agree with your line of reasoning, which seems wise to me. Give us a few days to examine the documents, discuss the matter and arrange the rest.’

15
November

Headlines in the financial press: 

THOMSON BACK TO SQUARE ONE

Press release from the Finance Ministry:

The Privatisation Commission has informed the Finance Minister that it is not in a position to endorse the
government
’s choice in the Thomson SA takeover bid, given Daewoo’s methods of acquiring Thomson Multimedia. The government will shortly give a ruling on the conditions
governing
the pursuit of the privatisation process.

 

Praise for
Lorraine
Connection
:

 

‘A breathtaking parade of graft, corruption and bad business practice. Superior stuff’ – Sue Baker,
Publishing
News

 

‘A controversial novel in its native France, examining the shady politics of power and oppression through the eyes of an investigating
policie
r
’ – Maxim Jakubowski,
Bookseller

 

Praise for
Dead
Horsemeat:

 

‘Set in French Dick Francis country, it is even better than
Rough
Trade


TLS

 

‘Daquin is an outsider – an openly gay police officer in a rigidly straight
organisation
. But this brief description does not do justice to the peace and verve of Manotti’s writing. She effortlessly handles a fiendishly complicated plot. And is funny’ –
Daily
Telegraph

 

‘Packs more into 175 pages than some American or British novels twice its length. Manotti unravels it skilfully and with style’ –
Sunday
Telegraph

 

‘Fits together the shady past and present of stop-at-nothing yuppies in a socially acute crime yarn with punch and pace’ – Boyd Tonkin,
Independent

 

‘Highly recommended’ – Bob Cornwall,
Tangled
Web

 

‘Apart from the sheer élan of the storytelling, it’s the complex picture of a
society
that affords the real pleasure’ –
Good
Book
Guide

 

‘Bleak, transgressive, sexy and quite literally unputdownable’ – Anne Beech (Pluto Press),
Bookseller

 

‘A heady brew of drug-trafficking, political and business intrigue and horse
racing
. Manotti reveals the skulduggery and deadly plots in a new Europe where borders are as national to the business elites as they are impenetrable to refugees’ –
New
Internationalist

 

‘A volatile mixture of power, cocaine and horse-flesh – excellent’ – Sue Baker,
Publish
ing
News

 

‘A rare treat, but for the lover of horses it’s a little disturbing. You have been warned!’ –
Horse
magazine

 

‘EuroCrime at its best … this one is a racing certainty’ – Pete Ayrton, Serpent’s Tail

 

Praise for
Rough
Trade
:

 

‘The novel I like more this year … extraordinarily vivid’ – Joan Smith,
Independent

 

‘Highly evocative’ –
Time
Out

 

‘Manotti has Ellroy’s gift for complex plotting, but she has a grip on the
economics
, politics and social history of Paris which marks her as special …
le
flair
in abundance’ –
TLS

 

‘A splendid neo-realistic tale of everyday bleakness and transgression’ – Maxim Jakubowski,
Guardian

 

‘It’s difficult to believe that this gripping, politically sophisticated mystery is the author’s first novel’ – Marcel Berlins,
The
Times

 

‘The complexity and uncompromising tone has drawn comparisons with American writers such as James Ellroy. But Manotti’s ability to convey the unique rhythms of a French police investigation distinguishes
Rough
Trade


Daily
Telegraph

 

‘This vivid portrait, with a clever twist, shows a side of Paris that a tourist will rarely see’ –
Sunday
Times

 

‘A memorable trip down the mean streets of the 10th arrondissement’ –
Independent

 

‘Utterly-convincing realism’ –
The
Herald
(Glasgow)

 

‘Stopped me in my tracks … I’ve been begging Arcadia to fast-track translations of everything she’s written’ – Anne Beech (Pluto Press),
Bookseller

 

‘Hard-hitting’ – Bob Cornwall,
Tangled
Web

 

‘Outstanding … the sexual exploitation of Thai children, the unspeakable
sadism
of zealots and the pornography of the rich are all themes that she uses with total command’ – Colin Spencer,
Gay
Times

 

‘First rate’ –
Crime
Time

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