"August, 1962." "was a stormy time for France." "Many people felt that President Charles De Gaulle had betrayed the country by giving independence to Algeria." "Extremists, mostly from the army swore to kill him in revenge." "They banded together in an underground movement and called themselves the OAS." "The Minister's meeting is over!" "They're very late." "The time elapsed from the first to the lastshot was seven seconds." "In all, more than 140 shots were fired." "Several bullets pierced the President's car." "One came within an inch of his head." "But, as if by a miracle, neither he nor anyone else was hurt." "Six months later:" "Most of the conspirators have been caught and tried." "Their leader, Colonel Bastien-Thiry, has been sentenced to death." "At the last moment, his lawyer tries one more time for a stay of execution." "The appeal for clemency has been turned down." "There is nothing more one can do." "I am sorry." "There is no need." "For heaven's sake, don't you realize you're going to be shot?" "You don't understand." "No French soldier is going to raise his rifle against me." "Fire!" "Here is the 8:00 news for today, March 11, 1963." "An hour ago, in the courtyard of the Fort d'Ivry, outside Paris Lieutenant Colonel Bastien-Thiry was executed by firing squad for leading the attempt on the life of General De Gaulle last August." "The OAS now seems completely demoralized by the splendid performance of our national security forces." "Already it is known that the new chief of operations of the OAS Colonel Mark Rodin, a former paratroop commanderin Algeria is on the run and hiding somewhere in Austria." "Today's execution must surely mean that the OAS is finished once and for all." "What are the finances like, René?" "No wonder our people are giving up." "They've lost faith." "We've failed them every single time." "We won't fail again!" "What can we do?" "We're paralyzed." "Every cop in France knows us." "informants are all around us." "We must find an outsider." "A foreigner." "A foreigner?" "Why?" "A contract killer." "One that hasn't worked in France, so he won't have a police record." "He can come and go as he pleases." "That sort of person costs money." "Yes." "I'll find the right man." "We'd better meet again in three months, in Vienna." "In the pension you both know:" "Pension Kleist." "June 15." "It's a limited market." "I've compiled 11 dossiers over three months." "Only those four men seemed anywhere near right." "Now that you've read the files, what do you think?" "One Englishman did all these jobs?" "I don't believe it." "It's true." "He did that fellow in the Congo?" "And Trujillo?" "Yes." "That's our man then, isn'tit?" "I should say so." "I'm glad you agree on the final choice." "Because he'll be here any moment." "What?" "He's arriving this afternoon from London." "Wolenski." "A normal precaution, you understand." "Come in." "We are not terrorists, you understand." "We are patriots." "Our duty is to the soldiers who died fighting in Algeria and the 3 million French citizens who live there." "You want to get rid of him?" "Speaking as a professional, do you think it's possible?" "It's possible." "The point is getting away with it." "As a professional, it's an important consideration." "In principle, you'd say it could be done?" "Yes." "With enough time and planning." "It would be more difficult than most targets." "Why more?" "Because De Gaulle has the best security in the world." "Their information is first-class." "You see, gentlemen, not only have your own efforts failed but you've queered the pitch for others." "How dare you suggest.." "You can't afford to be emotional." "It's why you've made so many mistakes." "If we decided to employ a professional..." "You have to employ a professional." "Your organization is so riddled with informers that nothing you decide is a secret for long." "The job would have to be done by an outsider." "The only question is by whom and for how much?" "Will you do it?" "Yes." "How much?" "Understand, this is a once-in-a-lifetime job." "They can never work again." "How much?" "Half a million, in cash." "What?" "Half in advance and half on completion." "Half a million francs?" "Dollars." "Are you mad?" "Considering you'd get France in return, I thought it a reasonable price." "But if you can't manage it, there's nothing more to be said." "We accept." "How many people know about this?" "Just the four of us." "Let's keep it that way." "This job depends on absolute secrecy." "No notes must be kept." "If any of you is captured, I shall call it off." "I suggest you stay in a safe place under guard until the work is done." "Agreed?" "Agreed." "The planning will be mine." "No one else will get the details and you won't hear from me again." "Here's the name and account number of my bank in Switzerland." "When they tell me the first $250,000 has been deposited, I'll move provided I'm ready." "But I'll not be hurried in any way." "Agreed." "All I want from you is a phone number in Paris that I can call about changes in De Gaulle's plans." "The contact mustn't know who I am or what this is about." "Send me the number by mail." "How do you expect us to find the money so soon?" "Use your network to rob some banks." "One last thing." "What code name will you use?" "Why not "The Jackal"?" "Why not?" "There's nothing more you want from us." "You'll be working completely alone." "Not completely." "One will have the cooperation of De Gaulle." "He won't listen to his security service and stay out of the public eye." "A pleasant journey home, Mr. Jackal." "960,000 francs?" "This has got to stop!" "You're the Chief of Action Service." "You've had 3 weeks to find out if the OAS is involved..." "...and if they are, what are they up to?" "It is the OAS, General." "But the ones we've caught are small fry." "They've been ordered to do it, but they don't know why." "The Minister's been after me again." "We've questioned all known OAS people." "They know nothing." "What about the informers?" "Nothing." "But we found out this morning that Rodin and the other two are in Rome." "They arrived on June 18." "They've taken the two top floors in Hotel Garibaldi." "You're watching them, of course?" "Twenty-four hours a day." "'Morning." "Birth certificate, please." "Paul Oliver Duggan." "Born in the parish of Sambourne Fishley, April 3, 1929." "Fill in the form." "You'll find the 1929's up those stairs..." "...and left at the first gallery." "Right." "Thanks." "Thank you, sir." "Excuse me, please." "How many krone to the pound?" "The official parity rate is 19.34." "Hello." "Two bottles of hairpin, please." "One in chestnut brown and one in gray." "I've only got Clairol, dear." "That's fine." "And also a tin of solvent." "It is here." "Is it?" "Hello?" "Yes." "Hello, Zurich?" "Mr. Kola, this is he." "That's right." "Account Number 50664." "The money's been deposited." "How much?" "Alitalia announces the departure of Flight 127 to Genova." "Now boarding at Gate 5." "The Hotel Garibaldi is owned by a Frenchman with OAS sympathies." "Extra Action Service staff have been sent from Paris to Rome to keep watching them around-the-clock." "Rodin, Montclair and Casson live at the top floor alone." "On the next floor down are the bodyguards ex-paratroopers or foreign legionnaires." "How many?" "Eight." "They're afraid of being kidnapped." "I know Rodin." "He's not a man to be afraid." "The lift doors on the top floor are welded together and everything goes through the bodyguards." "Not one of them has set a foot outside the hotel for five weeks." "The only contact with the outside world is one man:" "Adjutant Wolenski." "Tell me about him." "Bersie, run the film, please." "This is Wolenski." "He goes to the post office every morning and afternoon." "See that?" "You'll have to cut his hand off to get the mail away from him." "He always waits until the collection van arrives before he posts any letters." "Then he goes to pick up the mail." "All their mail comes to general delivery and is addressed in the name of Partrier." "Wolenski, of course, can identify himself as such." "Colonel Rolland here." "I want everything you've got in the archives on a foreign legionnaire." "His name is Viktor Wolenski." "If the OAS is planning something big, their agents must be working on it now." "You must find out who they are and where they make contact." "I let myself in." "I'll make us some coffee." "Denise." "I ask you to get rid of these." "It's for your own safety." "I'll do it tonight." "Maybe I should do it for you now." "They know all about your fiancé." "I have an assignment for you that sounds very important." "It's not very pleasant." "Go on." "They want you to get involved with an official of the Élysée Palace someone fairly close to De Gaulle." "It might be dangerous." "It's certainly distasteful." "Who is this official?" "I'll show him to you in a week or so." "Good afternoon." "Yes, please come in." "You think you can do it?" "Certainly." "I can take an existing gun, make the modifications." "It must be very light in weight, and it must have a short barrel." "A short barrel." "That's a pity." "Lastly, there must be a silencer and a telescopic sight." "Over what range will you fire?" "I'm not sure yet, but probably not more than 400 feet." "Will the gentleman be moving?" "Stationary." "Will you go for a head shot or a chest shot?" "Probably head." "What about the chances of a second shot?" "I might get the chance, but I doubt it." "In any event, I'll need a silencer to escape." "In that case, you better have explosive bullets." "I can prepare a handful for you." "Glycerin or mercury?" "Mercury, I think." "It's much cleaner." "More Campari?" "No, thank you." "It seems then the gun must be carried past customs without arousing suspicion." "Recognize that?" "The whole thing should be made of hollow aluminium tubes which screw together." "The top one holds the rifle strut." "The one below, the bolt with the breech inside it." "The shoulder rest of the rifle doubles for both purposes..." "...without changing in any way." "That's excellent." "The last two sections house the telescopic sight and silencer." "Here." "It's very remarkable." "It's so simple." "I shall need the gun in about two weeks." "If you could meet me here August 13, you could try out the gun and discuss last minute details." "Very well." "August 13." "Now the question of your fee." "I have to ask a fee of 1,000 pounds for this kind of a job you see and, say another 100 or 200 pounds for the raw materials." "Done." "I'll pay you half the fee now and the rest on delivery." "What do you think?" "Marvelous?" "I knew you didn't come to Genova for a driver's license." "Anyone in London could've done that." "Problem is I won't have time to play around with makeup." "I'm not much good at it anyway." "Forget about makeup." "The important thing is the skin." "It must look gray and tired." "We used a trick in the army to fake illness and get out of fatigue duty." "Can you get hold of some cordite?" "I suppose so." "You swallow a couple of small pieces of cordite." "It'll make you feel sick and turn the skin a gray color." "After about an hour you'll feel all right again, but your skin looks gray much longer." "I'll try it." "What about the French documents?" "French identity card's all right." "The other one, I don't think I've seen what they look like let alone copy it." "I'll get a colleague in France to pick a pocket so I can make a duplicate." "Give me more time, more money." "How much more?" "Five hundred." "Three hundred pounds?" "Half now, half on delivery." "When will I hear from you?" "I'll be returning to Genova on August 14." "Be in the same place where we met tonight at 6:00." "Must be a big job you've got." "There are certain things I wish to make clear." "When you've finished, I want the negatives and all the prints of the photographs you've taken." "You will also forget the name Duggan and the name on the French documents you're going to produce." "Is that understood?" "Taking it easy?" "I wish I had your job." "All my tenants are on holiday." "What time is it?" "Half past 5:00." "I must hurry." "Good-bye." "Good-bye." "That's him." "See?" "In the light coat." "He's the official at the Élysée Palace." "He'll pack his wife and children off to the Loire Valley for the holiday." "You haven't got much time." "I need Wolenski." "Arrange to get him across the border." "What?" "Never mind the Italian government." "Once you have him inside France, bring him to Paris immediately." "You're being very foolish, Viktor." "You know yourself, they always talk in the end." "You've seen it with your own two eyes in Indochina." "And in Algeria, of course." "Tell us what they're waiting for in that hotel!" "What are they planning?" "Who have they been meeting with?" "Nobody?" "Not a soul?" "Then where were they before they went to Rome?" "Tell us, Viktor." "Go back a bit." "Hold it." "Stop." "Question:" "Rome, Viktor." "Why did they go to Rome?" "No answer." "Check." "Question: why are they in Rome?" "Answer: secret." "Check." "Question: where did they stay in Vienna, Viktor?" "No answer." "Check." "Was it the house?" "I am asking you, was it a house?" "Answer:" "Kleist." "Go on." "Question: who is Kleist?" "What does he do?" "What did they do to the bastard?" "I can't understand a word." "Put it on the speakers." "Where from?" ""Who is Kleist?" That bit." "Eho is Kleist?" "Ehat does he do?" "Jack?" "Jackie?" "That wouldn't be Jackie?" "Would it?" "Jackie?" "That's not possible." "Go back, and this time turn up the sound." "Heel, Rex!" "Rex, come here!" "Are you all right?" "I think so." "Do you want me to call for an ambulance?" "No." "Are you sure?" "I'll survive." "There." "See?" "I'm sorry." "It's not your fault." "Sorry to drag you away, Colonel." "Nonsense." "The tape is on your machine in case you want to refer back..." "...and here is the transcript." "Yes." "Jackal." "I thought Wolenski used it as a swear word but it doesn't sound like him." "Fair." "Excuse me, Colonel." "The foreigner could it be a fair foreigner?" "A blonde?" "Is Kleist the foreigner?" "Colonel, it's 4:30." "The plot described above constitutes, in my view the most dangerous single conception that the terrorists could possibly have devised to endanger the life of President De Gaulle." "If the plot exists as described and if a foreign-born assassin, whose code name may be "Jackal" has, in fact, been engaged for this attempt on the life.." "Sorry." "On the life of the President it is my duty to inform you, Minister, that in my opinion we face a national emergency." "New paragraph." "The above report is top secret and intended for your eyes only." "Written at 0800 hours August 14, 1963." "Address to the Minister of the Interior." "Have the dispatch riderstand by and forget everything you've heard." "Well?" "If what Rolland says is true the whole network of our agents inside the OAS is no good to us." "The President must be told." "I'll ask for an interview." "Get me the Élysée Palace." "Minister." "One moment, sir." "The Minister of the Interior." "There you are." "It's all there." "The Duggan driving license and French identity card were easy but that third card was a big headache." "It's nicely dog-eared, isn't it?" "Have you forgotten something?" "Sorry?" "The original driving license." "The one I said I wanted back." "I thought we might have a chat about that." "The fact is, the original driving license is not here." "But don't worry." "It's put away in a very safe place." "Nobody can get at it but me." "What do you want?" "I'm coming to that." "What I propose is simply a little trade." "I give you the original driving license and all those negatives I took of you for a certain sum of money." "How much?" "A thousand pounds." "Isn't it worth that to get those documents back?" "Yes, I suppose so." "An English gentleman can always be trusted to see sense." "I can find the first 500 by noon tomorrow, but we don't meet here." "There's nothing wrong with this place." "It's very quiet and private." "There's everything wrong with this place." "Forget about that." "Nobody comes here unless they're invited by me." "One has to be very discreet, you know, in my little sideline." "I asked for aluminium." "I tried the aluminium but it just did bend like tissue paper." "I had to use stainless steel." "But it's all right." "It looks the same." "Where can I practice?" "There's the Montemorro Forest." "You could be there and back in a day." "Excuse me." "I won't need the case." "Silencer, please." "Strut." "And the sniper scope." "Here." "Trigger." "Trigger, please." "Beautiful piece of work." "I know." "It's really excellent." "Yes." "These are for practice." "I took out six of them to convert to explosive tips." "Let me have one." "Good evening, gentlemen." "Good evening." "Please sit down." "I trust that you've all read Colonel Rolland's report?" "I delivered a copy to the President this afternoon." "Unhappily, in the interest of the dignity of France he feels obliged to impose enormous limitations on us." "He refuses to alter in any way the summer schedule of his public appearances." "Good heavens." "The search for this Jackal will be conducted in absolute secrecy." "Needless to say, you are all sworn to total silence and won't discuss this matter outside this room." "But Minister..." "But it's impossible!" "The President was absolutely adamant." "What extra security precautions do we take, Minister?" "None." "General Colbert." "Any success in Vienna?" "Inquiries were made by our agents at the Pension Kleist." "They showed photographs of Rodin, Montclair and Casson to the desk clerk." "Some money changed hands." "He stated that he recognized them." "They had arrived on June 14." "Were there any visitors?" "One man the next afternoon." "He left half an hour later." "The only description the clerk could give was the man was well-groomed in his early thirties and had fair hair." "Surely a better description can be found." "From whom?" "Rodin, for instance." "I hardly think he'd accept an invitation from any of our departments, Colonel." "Commissioner Berthier, any suggestions?" "We're in trouble on this one." "Our agents inside the OAS can't pin him down since not even the OAS know who he is." "Action Service can't destroy him." "They don't know who to destroy." "Surveillance can't get him at the border, they don't know what he looks like." "The gendarmes, all 48,000 of them, can't pursue him." "They don't know who to pursue." "The police can't arrest him." "We don't know who to arrest." "Without a name, all other proposals are meaningless." "The first task, then, is to find it." "With a name, we get a passport and a face." "With a face, we get an arrest." "But to find his name, and to do it in secret is a job of pure detective work." "Commissioner, who is the best detective on the force?" "The best detective is my own deputy commissioner, Claude Lebel." "Claude!" "Berthier wants to see you." "What?" "Now?" "He's sent a car." "Don't be back later than 9:00." "Commissioner Lebel." "Good evening." "Remember, you have full powers in this investigation and the resources of every department represented here entirely at your disposal." "My instructions are simply:" "no publicity and do not fail." "Keep your copy of the report." "Any questions?" "No, Minister." "In that case, I'll not detain you." "Thank you, Commissioner." "Collect the reports and put them in my private safe." "Yes, Minister." "Good night." "Good night." "Thank you." "You'll have to drop whatever you're doing." "Clear the desk completely." "You want a new office?" "No." "From now on, it's headquarters for this job, nothing else." "The Minister said he wants a progress report by you every evening from now on." "Here. 10:00 sharp." "Oh, God." "I know." "You've just got to find him before he gets to De Gaulle." "I wonder if he has a timetable." "I'm sure he has." "The trouble is, only he knows it." "He might go for a hit tomorrow or maybe not for a month." "You've got to work flat out until you locate him." "After that, we can have Action Service do the rest, the thugs." "Obviously, you've got to have a heavy mug for a thing like this." "Anyway, just go and find this Jackal, will you?" "What?" "I'll need help." "Who?" "Young Caron, and he'll have to be told." "I'll have to get clearance." "All I want is Caron." "That's all." "You know, sir, what they'll do to you if you don't catch him in time." "I've been given a job, so we'll just have to do it." "But no crime has been committed yet." "Where are we supposed to start looking for the criminal?" "We start by recognizing that, after De Gaulle we are the two most powerful people in France." "Now make notes." "Get my secretary transferred until further notice." "You will be my secretary and assistant rolled into one." "I want a camp bed in here with linen and all the usual including something to wash in and shaving things." "Also, get a percolator and lots of coffee." "Right, sir." "Get onto the switchboard." "I want a good telephonist, the best they've got." "I need ten outside lines open around-the-clock." "If there's any nonsense, refer them to Berthier." "This job gets top priority at all times." "Do you want anything from them immediately?" "A person-to-person link to the heads of the homicide divisions of the following countries:" "Holland, Belgium, Italy, West Germany and South Africa." "The fbi in the United States and Scotland Yard's Special Branch in Britain." "How many is that?" "Seven." "Get the head man at home or in the office." "Ask them to take a call from me tomorrow morning and see that there's no one listening in." "In the meantime, I'm going down to General Records to check if this Jackal has ever operated inside France." "Sir, how do you know the Jackal comes from any of these countries?" "I don't." "But he must be on file somewhere." "Sorry I'm late, darling." "What kept you so long?" "There was a long meeting." "I've been waiting for hours." "Yes, I'm sorry about the hour, but..." "Yes, Washington, I know it's 7:00 there." "It's midnight here." "What?" "Could you call him at the club, please?" "I didn't go out." "I just sat waiting for you to call." "It was impossible." "There was a crisis on." "Crisis?" "What crisis?" "Never mind." "What crisis?" "It was nothing." "What crisis?" "Mr. Mallinson." "I'm sorry to disturb you, sir." "It's Paris calling, Inspector Caron." "I don't wish to sound rude, but wouldn't it be better if routine inquiries could be conducted through proper channels?" "Preferably when we're all awake?" "I'm sorry, Mr. Mallinson." "It is very urgent." "Commissioner Lebel didn't wish to make a formal request." "He was hoping that you'd cooperate with us unofficially." "All right." "I'll take the Commissioner's call at 8:30." "Fine." "Good night." "What's left of it." "Who was that?" "The old boy network." "Yes?" "Denise." "Valmy here." "They found out about the Jackal." "All I found in Central Records was that in the 10 last years there've only been four contract killers in France." "We've got three." "The fourth is serving time in Africa somewhere." "So, our man must be from abroad." "Surely he's come to someone's attention somewhere." "Who do I speak to first?" "Scotland Yard Special Branch." "Assistant Commissioner Mallinson." "There's no name." "Nothing to go on, I'm afraid." "It's pretty irregular, all this unofficial secrecy, isn't it?" "Makes my task difficult." "Yes, I know." "I've never heard of a political killer in this country." "It's not our style, is it?" "No, it's more your department..." "...so, I'll leave it in your hands." "Yes..." "And try to get it out of the way by tomorrow." "I'm understaffed as it is." "Yes, sir." "What's the cost?" "Give me the Foreign Office, would you, please, luv?" "Extension 905." "Hello, Barrie?" "Brian Thomas." "Could you meet me in an hour at the usual place?" "We've been plowing through the files till we're cross-eyed." "None of them fits the description." "But before we drop it, I had a thought." "If this contract killer did all his work abroad he'd be quite respectable in England, right?" "So?" "Your people operate abroad." "I thought you might have tabs on a bloke like that." "I'll have a look." "Brian, call for you." "Thomas." "Yes, that's right." "Is this some sort of bloody joke?" "What, now?" "Personally?" "Yes, I'll..." "The Prime Minister?" "The Prime Minister, sir." "He said, "If there's the remotest chance of De Gaulle's life being threatened by a person of these islands, then it is to be stopped."" "He's given me full powers and top priority." "Is this some kind of joke?" "Of course not, sir." "I've got to drop whatever I'm doing." "I shall need six of your best men straight away." "Where's the notification for this?" "Where's the proper authority?" "Yes!" "Yes, sir." "Of course, sir." "Nothing more than taproom gossip, I'm afraid." "Do you remember Trujillo?" "You mean the dictator of some republic in South America?" "Yes, Dominica." "He was killed in 1961." "We got word that an Englishman may have been mixed up in it." "Just an unconfirmed report, mind you." "Did he have a name?" "Charles Harold Calthrop." "He was the Caribbean rep for a small armaments firm." "According to the rumor, he was a fantastic shot." "He disappeared after the assassination." "Nobody knows where he went." "Calthrop." "Is that all there is to go on?" "Afraid so." "Just a name?" "What makes you think it might be him?" "Your friend's code name is "Jackal", right?" "Jackal in French is "chacal."" "See?" "Now it might just be a coincidence but the first three letters of his Christian name, Charles and the first three letters of Calthrop make up..." "That's all the Charles H. Calthrop, way back to 1958." "How many does that make?" "23." "Will you please tell Commissioner Lebel that there is a faint possibility, very faint the name is Charles Harold Calthrop." "That's right." "We've checked with the Passport Office." "23 passports were issued to Charles H. Calthrop during the past five years." "We've interviewed 12 of them so far." "Nothing at all, but I'll keep you posted." "Do you have a garage for rent?" "Excuse me." "Would you happen to know where Mr. Charles Calthrop is?" "Mr." "Calthrop?" "Yes." "I think he's abroad." "He often is, you know." "Thank you." "We better get a search warrant." "What's happening?" "Come in." "We've been through the lot, sir." "He's away, all right." "Let's see what you've got." "What's this?" "His passport." "We checked it." "It's him." "Look." "The Dominican visa." "There's no exit stamp though." "He must have got out on the sly." "You haven't grasped it yet, have you?" "Yes, this is our man, all right." "Definitely." "But hasn't it occurred to you that we're holding his passport?" "If he is out of the country, what's he traveling on?" "He might be on holiday in the UK." "Yes, he might." "Then again, he might not." "His name is Charles Harold Calthrop." "Here's his passport photo." "I'll circulate photos to each of you after the meeting." "Excellent." "Thank you, Commissioner." "It may be Calthrop has already entered the country and is staying at a hotel." "Phillison." "Minister?" "I want every hotel card for the past 72 hours checked by the police." "The same for you, Pascal, with those cards that are filed for the greater Paris area." "Circulate to your staffs this man's name and photograph." "He must be arrested on sight, and my office notified at once." "I want every border post airport, seaport, fishing village alerted." "General Colbert." "Minister?" "Calthrop is probably still abroad, so get your agents working on that." "Yes, sir." "In the meantime, complete silence must be maintained until we're sure the man's in this country." "Thank you." "Good night." "Good night." "Commissioner Lebel's office." "Yes." "Thank you." "Good-bye." "No one called Calthrop has crossed any border point legally since the start of the year." "And no hotel has taken in a guest under that name." "Maybe he's given up and gone into hiding." "If the British found Calthrop's passport in his flat it's because he no longer needed it." "Don't count on that man making too many errors." "He's not the type." "I'm beginning to get a feeling about the Jackal." "He may be abroad, traveling on a false passport." "What you're going to do now is go down to the Passport Office." "Get every passport application for the last three months." "But, sir..." "I don't care who's closed." "Wake the buggers up." "Then take all those papers down to Somerset House get started on checking the applicants' names against death certificates, not birth certificates." "If you find an application filed by someone who died as a child the one who filed it might be our man." "If you find nothing in the first three months, go back three." "And another three if you have to." "Off you go." "Yes?" "How's it going, Hughes?" "How many applications?" "8,041?" "You'll be there a week." "How about I send you some more staff?" "Bloody holiday season." "About 4,000 more to go, Mr. Thomas." "But if we work through lunch, we should be finished tonight." "Superintendent Thomas, Special Branch." "Hughes here, sir." "Paul Oliver Duggan." "Born April 3, 1929, in Sambourne Fishley." "Applied for passport July 14 of this year." "Passport mailed July 17 to an address in Paddington." "That will probably turn out to be an accommodation address." "Why?" "Because Duggan died at the age of two and a half on November 8, 1931." "Passport, please." "One moment." "Mr." "Duggan?" "Yes?" "What's the purpose of your visit to France?" "Tourism." "You buy this in Italy?" "No, it's hired." "I shall be returning it to Genova in about a week." "Papers, please." "Got any luggage?" "In the boot." "Bring it inside." "Thank you." "Once we've found his new name, Lebel shouldn't have trouble catching him." "It's not that simple." "There are over two million foreigners are in Paris at this time of year." "I'm very sorry, Minister." "Commissioner Lebel requested this meeting because he has new information on the British suspect." "Calthrop is traveling on a false passport in the name of Paul Oliver Duggan." "The passport number is 29491." "The photo will reach us in a few hours." "What do we do now?" "The Duggan passport was issued on July 30." "No need to go further back than that." "Special Branch in Britain is trying to trace him through the passenger lists of all airlines and ferries." "If they pick him up in Britain, they'll detain him." "If we locate him inside France, we arrest him." "If he's found in a third country, Action Service will deal with him." "In the meantime, I'll be grateful if you would do this my way." "Good morning, sir." "Paris, please." "MOLITOR 5901." "Carrier Number One, please." "The Jackal is blown." "Wolenski talked before dying." "Repeat: the Jackal is blown." "Room 14." "Thank you, Mr. Duggan." "I'll have coffee in the lounge." "Do you mind my sitting here?" "Thank you." "Boring, aren't they?" "The magazines." "I find them fascinating." "What?" "Articles on pig breeding and combine harvesters?" "I'm enthralled by combine harvesters." "In fact, I yearn to have one as a pet." "Yes?" "When did you say?" "This afternoon." "Repeat that again." "A white Alfa Romeo sports two-seater license number GE 1741." "Duggan crossed the border at Ventimiglia four hours ago." "Call London." "Tell them we'll handle it from now on." "Where is he?" "How should I know?" "Damned secrecy." "We have to wait for the hotel cards." "It's madness." "There's nothing we can do about it." "No, of course I don't live in the Alps." "I went there for a visit, that's all." "Climbing?" "Good lord, no." "I spent the day at the Cadet Academy in Barcelonnette amongst a lot of jaundiced military types watching my son receive his commission." "He's nineteen." "I never know when you're being serious." "It's true, unfortunately." "Why "unfortunately"?" "I see nothing unfortunate.." "I'm not begging for compliments, Mr. Duggan." "Will you have a liqueur?" "No, I must go to bed." "I have to leave very early tomorrow morning." "Are you sure?" "Positive." "Good night, Mr. Duggan." "I've got to leave in a couple of hours." "I've a long way to go." "You've got to go back to your room." "Your husband meeting you?" "No, he isn't there." "Good morning." "Excuse me, madam." "Only three new guests last night." "All right." "Put them in the rack for Nice." "Cards ready yet?" "Hello?" "Nice?" "Repeat, please." "Stay by the phone until I call back." "Don't do a thing." "I don't want him disturbed yet, but isolate the place." "Let no one in or out and stop all phone calls." "He's been staying in this hotel near Grasse." "He's registered for two days." "Shall I put out an alert?" "No." "He'll kill anybody who tries to intercept him." "We'd better get there right away." "You have an Englishman named Duggan staying here." "Where is he?" "Mr." "Duggan's gone, sir." "He left this morning, just after 11:00." "Assemble the staff and guests." "Don't let anyone get away." "Get the manager." "That's strange." "He was booked for two days then just after 11:00, he suddenly asks for his bill and leaves." "He's got five hours start." "Put out an alert for the car." "But Madame de Montpellier's bed was slept in by two people?" "Yes, sir." "Definitely." "You can always tell." "And you saw them in the lounge together?" "That is correct, sir." "I served them coffee and liqueur." "They seemed very engrossed." "In what?" "In each other, sir." "What did Mr. Duggan's luggage consist of when he left?" "Two bags." "Nothing else?" "No parcels or packages of any kind?" "Just the two bags." "I carried them to his car." "That will be all." "You photographed everything?" "Yes." "Go over his room for fingerprints." "Send the stuff to Paris." "I'll have a talk with the lady." "There's more news." "They have a description of your car." "Keep out of sight for a few days." "How's the lady?" "Very disturbed by all this." "You told her nothing?" "I know nothing at all about Mr. Duggan's whereabouts." "We only met in the lounge of that hotel." "He joined me for coffee." "What did he want?" "What did you talk about?" "Social chit-chat." "I imagine he was trying to impress me." "Why do you think that?" "Commissioner, please, we're not children." "No, madam." "When you both met later, was it only in your bedroom?" ""Later"?" "Afterwards." "After the coffee." "Madam, be in no doubt as to the seriousness of your position." "We met in my bedroom." "That's all." "I'd never seen this man until yesterday." "He doesn't even know my real name." "I regret to say that we have lost track of him." "Temporarily, I hope." "But he simply disappeared." "Could that mean he's changed his mind?" "We've obviously scared him off." "Is it possible he's decided to give up?" "His only chance to escape is to get across the border fast." "I think he's still in France." "He may be waiting." "Waiting for what?" "I don't know." "But I don't think we can assume that he's given up." "Good morning." "Madam, there is a gentleman..." "Surprised?" "Thank you, Michel." "Do that later, Ernestine." "Yes, madam." "Yes, I am surprised." "Why?" "Your husband's still away, isn't he?" "Why did you come here?" "To see you." "I had to." "But why?" "Does it matter?" "Make a search of hills, farmhouses, cafes and hotels in a ten-kilometer radius from the scene of the crash." "Look for a fair-haired, young foreigner with two suitcases." "He may have been injured and gone into hiding." "The police were here yesterday looking for you." "Did they say they were coming back?" "Only that I should phone if.." "I know you stole that car." "It has a local license plate." "I know it must be very serious." "I don't mind." "You can tell me what you've done." "You can stay here." "It's safe." "But you must tell me, Paul." "I won't say anything." "Good-bye, Mr. Duggan." "Your coffee, madam." "Madam?" "Good morning." "A single ticket to Paris, please." "What class?" "Second." "How soon will the train be here?" "In an hour." "Platform One." "Your papers." "Danish?" "Please?" "Denmark?" "Yes." "What is your business here?" "I'm a schoolteacher on holiday." "Madam?" "Commissioner, Madame de Montpellier has been murdered!" "Do they know who did it?" "It sounds like Duggan." "He arrived at her place yesterday, but disappeared again with her car." "There's no need for secrecy." "It's a straight murder hunt now." "Put out a general alert for Duggan." "Describe the car." "6:30 time check." "Listen, I've found that car." "The gendarmes by the station say only three men boarded the midday train to Paris." "Two were locals and the third was a teacher traveling on a Danish passport." "Age: about 34." "Five feet ten, brown hair, blue eyes." "He can't remember the name." "What time is that train due at Austerlitz station?" "Ten past 7:00." "Come on!" "You know a good Turkish bath?" "Of course." "Take me there." "It's obvious that the Jackal has been tipped off all along." "And yet he's decided to go ahead, regardless." "He's simply challenged the whole lot of us." "Are you suggesting there's a leak from inside this room?" "I can't say." "We think the Jackal is now in Paris with a new name and face probably masquerading as a Danish schoolteacher." "Minister?" "Can you estimate how many Danes might have entered Paris this afternoon?" "Several hundred at this time of the year." "We must check on the men personally." "I'll have every hotel visited at midnight and 3:00 A. M." "All registration cards will be collected." "Every likely Dane will be investigated." "Good." "In the meantime, I'll try to persuade the President to cancel all public appearances." "You're getting all steamed up." "I think so." "I haven't seen you here before." "No, I'm on holiday from Denmark." "Really?" "I know Copenhagen very well." "Unfortunately, I come from Silkeborg." "It's a very small town." "My name is Jules." "Jules Bernard." "Lundquist." "Per Lundquist." "Perhaps you'd like to come for a drink at my home?" "I live quite nearby." "That would be nice." "So, this Jackal has a Danish passport, right?" "He must have got it somewhere." "Yes." "But if he's had to dye his hair, it looks as if he stole it." "Yes, go on." "Since his trip to Paris in July, he's been based in London." "The chances are, he stole it in one of those two places." "What would you do if you were a Dane and lost your passport?" "I'd go to the consulate." "Are you calling Superintendent Thomas?" "Yes." "Then the Danish Consul in Paris." "Good." "How is it going?" "Not well." "678 Danes arrived in Paris yesterday." "We're interviewing every man about five feet eight." "No Danish schoolteacher has turned up though." "Have the list sent to my office." "Right." "You are quite right, sir." "A Danish schoolteacher had his passport stolen at London Airport on July 12." "Name:" "Per Lundquist of Copenhagen, age 33." "Five feet ten, chestnut brown hair, blue eyes." "That's it!" "That's the one!" "Per Lundquist." "Look him up." "Yes?" "There isn't one." "What?" "One moment, Superintendent." "I don't understand it." "There isn't a Lundquist on the hotels list." "Not one." "The following conversation was recorded at 6:15 this morning." "The number being dialed was identified as MOLITOR 5901." "Hello." "Yes?" "Denise." "Valmy here." "They know he's a Danish schoolteacher." "They're visiting every hotel in Paris." "The contact was arrested an hour ago." "Unfortunately, the information came from this room." "Whose voice was that?" "I regret to have to inform you, Minister that it was the voice of a friend of mine." "She's staying with me at the moment." "Excuse me." "I feel we owe you an apology." "Thank you." "I must report that the President will not change his mind." "Excuse me." "It's occurred to me that we've got two days to catch the Jackal." "What?" "Why?" "How do you know?" "It was silly of me not to have seen it before." "Am I right that the President has no engagements outside the palace..." "...today, tomorrow or Saturday?" "Nothing." "And what is Sunday, August 25?" "Of course!" "Liberation Day!" "That's what he's been waiting for." "We have a little over 48 hours." "We must have been blind, gentlemen." "All we need is the passport photograph of Per Lundquist." "Copenhagen promised to send it by this evening's conference." "There is one thing." "How did you know whose telephone to tap?" "I didn't, so I tapped all of them." "Are you home already?" "We now have the passport photograph of Per Lundquist." "The ban on publicity is off." "This is now a straight murder hunt." "Lundquist's photo will appear in the papers tomorrow morning." "We'll have news flashes on TV every 30 minutes." "Every policeman and CRS man in Paris will be on the street to check the papers of anyone remotely resembling the suspect." "Every detective will be called to help." "How many men does that make?" "Almost 100,000." "Commissioner Lebel." "Yes?" "My congratulations on the splendid job you've done." "We shall take over from now on." "We need detain you no longer." "And, again, thank you." "Did you see it?" "What?" "Your face on the TV just now." "What do you mean?" "I was passing a TV rental shop and I saw your face." "No." "Yes." "Don't turn it off." "What was it about?" "I don't know." "But I swear it was you." "See?" "We apologize for interrupting with the following announcement." "Police still searching for the murderer of Madame de Montpellier." "His name is Per Lundquist, and this is his photograph." "If you have seen this man, contact the police immediately." "For God's sake, wake up, will you?" "The Minister wants to see you!" "We can't find him." "He's vanished." "Just disappeared off the face of the earth." "I don't think we had any idea what kind of man..." "...you have been pursuing." "What about tomorrow?" "The President rekindles the eternal flame at 10:00." "High mass is at 11:00." "There's only one public ceremony in the afternoon at 4:00." "He will present Liberation Medals to veterans of the Resistance." "What about crowd control?" "Crowds will be kept back further than ever before." "Steel barriers go up several hours before each ceremony." "Every house inside the barrier ring is searched from top to bottom including the sewers." "Police will be issued special lapel badges at the last moment in case he tries to masquerade as a security man." "There'll be marksmen inside Notre Dame even among the congregation." "The priests celebrating mass will be searched for concealed weapons." "We'll have firemen and marksmen on every rooftop along the procession route." "Dumont has drafted a number of very tall officers to hedge around the President without him noticing." "Can I pass, please?" "What for?" "I live there." "I have a room at 154." "Papers." "All right." "Thank you." "Excuse me, madam." "Would you be so kind as to give me a drink of water?" "Of course." "Come in." "Please come in." "It's hot, waiting for the ceremony." "Are you getting a medal today?" "I got mine two years ago with one of my.." "Top floor!" "What the hell do you think you're doing?" "Who are you?" "Charles Calthrop." "This is my bloody flat." "I think you better come down to the yard, sir." "Too bloody right, I will." "There's no question of the British government ever concealing that this Jackal was an Englishman." "So far as one can see there was a period when an Englishman came under suspicion but he has now been cleared." "Certainly, the Jackal masqueraded as an Englishman but he also masqueraded as a Dane and as a Frenchman." "So there's no way of proving his identity at all." "But if the Jackal wasn't Calthrop then who the hell was he?" "Subtitles ripped, spellchecked etc." "By -=DFN="