Amid the ruins of an abandoned Alsatian carnival, St-Cyr and
Kohler investigate a pair of suspicious suicides
During the Great War, Hermann Kohler and Jean-Louis St-Cyr fought in
Alsace on opposite sides of the barbed wire. Two decades later, they
return as partners: a Gestapo officer and a French cop investigating
everyday crimes in a world gone mad with war. In February 1943, Alsace
is unrecognizable--an occupied country where speaking French is all it
takes to lose one's freedom. St-Cyr and Kohler have been summoned to a
POW camp where soldiers and résistants manufacture textiles on the
grounds of a deserted carnival. Where industry and warfare overlap, they
will find a conspiracy worthy of the most twisted house of mirrors.
Two prisoners of this garish, decrepit circus have killed themselves,
and the jailers must at least make a show of finding out why. Although
the trenches of the Great War are long gone, St-Cyr and Kohler find that
in Alsace, the fires of battle smolder still.