:46:02
None.
:46:04
General Colbert. Any success in Vienna?
:46:07
Inquiries were made by our agents
at the Pension Kleist.
:46:12
They showed photographs of Rodin,
Montclair and Casson to the desk clerk.
:46:16
Some money changed hands.
He stated that he recognized them.
:46:20
They had arrived on June 14.
:46:24
Were there any visitors?
:46:26
One man the next afternoon.
:46:28
He left half an hour later.
:46:31
The only description the clerk could give
was the man was well-groomed...
:46:35
...in his early thirties and had fair hair.
:46:39
Surely a better description can be found.
:46:41
From whom?
:46:45
Rodin, for instance.
:46:48
I hardly think he'd accept an invitation
from any of our departments, Colonel.
:46:58
Commissioner Berthier, any suggestions?
:47:02
We're in trouble on this one.
:47:04
Our agents inside the OAS
can't pin him down...
:47:06
...since not even the OAS know who he is.
:47:09
Action Service can't destroy him.
They don't know who to destroy.
:47:12
Surveillance can't get him at the border,
they don't know what he looks like.
:47:16
The gendarmes, all 48,000 of them,
can't pursue him.
:47:19
They don't know who to pursue.
:47:21
The police can't arrest him.
We don't know who to arrest.
:47:25
Without a name,
all other proposals are meaningless.
:47:28
The first task, then, is to find it.
:47:30
With a name, we get a passport and a face.
:47:34
With a face, we get an arrest.
:47:37
But to find his name,
and to do it in secret...
:47:40
...is a job of pure detective work.
:47:43
Commissioner,
who is the best detective on the force?
:47:49
The best detective...
:47:50
...is my own deputy commissioner,
Claude Lebel.
:47:59
Claude!