Read Seeking Whom He May Devour Online
Authors: Fred Vargas
“We’re not going that far,” Soliman said.
“If the vampire goes that far, so will we,” said Watchee.
“We’ll get him before then. We’ve got Adamsberg.”
“Nobody’s
got
Adamsberg, Sol,” Camille said. “Do you still not know that?”
“Of course I do,” said Soliman glumly. “Do you know the story about the man who tried to put his wife’s eyes in a tin so he could look at them while he was out hunting?”
“Bugger off, Sol!” said Watchee, banging the side window with his fist.
“This is the place,” Camille said.
Soliman unhooked the moped and zoomed off to inspect the nearest churches. Watchee took his own bottle of white with him to the principal café in Tiennes, a place buzzing with fear and revulsion. Fourteen head, for heaven’s sake. There weren’t supposed to be any wolves in the lowlands. It’s all because of those idiots in the Mercantour Wildlife Reserve, a tinny voice spoke out. They’ve played around with wolves and now they’re breeding and spreading like the plague. Soon enough there’ll be wolves all over France and they’ll blanket the country in blood. That’s what happens when you bring wild things back. A rougher voice
climbed
above the din. When you don’t know what you’re talking about you keep your trap shut, the rough voice said. It ain’t a plague and it ain’t wolves: it’s
a
wolf. One single big lone wolf, a bloody monster that’s been tracking north for more than three hundred kilometres. A wolf, a solitary wolf, the Beast of the Mercantour. The vet inspected the wounds. It was the Beast, with fangs as big as that. They just said so on the news. So that idiot had better find out about things before opening his gob. Watchee made his way to the bar. He wanted to find out who the sheep farmer was, and whether he had seen a car in the vicinity of his grazing land last night. They would never get Massart until they knew what car he was driving. But they still had not identified the frigging car.
Soliman came back in a state of high excitement. In a chapel very near Tiennes he had come across five candle stubs set out apart from the others, and in the shape of the letter M. The latch was bent so the door couldn’t be closed at night. Soliman wanted to collect the candle stubs for fingerprinting. After all, you couldn’t ask for a better medium than wax!
“Hang on until he comes,” Camille said.
She was reading
The A to Z of Tools for Trade and Craft;
Soliman was stripped to the waist as he got on with the washing in the blue plastic bowl; Watchee was drowsing in the lorry. They were hanging on until the
flic
came.
The best part of an hour went by in silence.
Suddenly a roar of souped-up revs heralded four bikers coming down the road. They cut off towards the lorry
and
came to a halt a few feet from Soliman. They took off their helmets without a word, smiling intently at the astonished young man. Camille froze.
“What’s this about then, nigger boy?” said one of the bikers. “Having fun with whitie?”
“Not worried about leaving black paw-marks on her, are we?” said another.
Soliman stood up, quivering with anger, holding tight to the linen he had been wringing out over the bowl.
“Quietly does it, monkey man,” the first biker said, dismounting. “We’re going to fix you up. We’re going fix you up right and proper so you’ll forget about screwing around down to the day you’re ripe for retirement benefits.”
Then the second biker, a scrawny ginger-nut, dismounted as well.
“As for you,” he said to Camille, “you’re going to get a facial. A right makeover. After that you’ll have to make do with niggers ’cos no-one else will want you. That’s by way of punishment.”
The four of them drew nearer. They were bare-chested beneath their leather jackets, they were wearing knuckledusters and swinging motorcycle chains. The talkative one was fair and plump.
Soliman crouched ready for the attack and moved over to shield Camille. He had suddenly lost his childish clarity. His upper lip snarled with rage and his eyes narrowed to a slit. Anger made him almost ugly.
“You got a name, monkey boy?” asked the first biker, twirling his chain. “I like to know what to call things I shunt.”
“Melchior!” Soliman spat at him.
The fat guy grinned and moved closer while the other three circled so as to box the boy in.
“Whoever touches the King of Orient is a dead man,” Watchee’s voice boomed through the silence.
The old shepherd was standing bolt upright on the back steps of the lorry aiming his hunting rifle at the bikers. He was rigid, and his eyes shone with loathing.
“A dead man,” Watchee repeated, and he shot a hole in the petrol tank of one of the black bikes. “These bullets are good enough for wild boar. I don’t advise any one of you to move an eyebrow.”
The four bikers stood stock-still, unsure what to do. Watchee raised his chin.
“It is customary to bare your head before royalty,” he said. “Take off your caps. And your jackets. Drop the chains. Take off your knuckledusters. And your boots.”
The bikers obeyed and dumped all their gear on the ground.
“But keep your pants on,” Watchee continued in a rasping tone. “There is a lady present. I wouldn’t want her to be put off for life.”
The four men stood before the old sheep-hand, bare to the waist, in their stockinged feet, struck dumb with humiliation.
“Now, get down on your knees,” Watchee ordered. “Like worms. Put your hands flat on the ground, and touch the earth with your forehead. Keep your bums down. Like hyenas. That’s right. Good. That is the correct posture for greeting royalty.”
Watchee grinned as he saw them prostrate themselves.
“Now listen to me, you young fellas. I’m past the age for sleep. I stay awake all night long. I stand vigil for young Melchior. It’s my job. If you come back I’ll shoot you down like mad dogs. Hey, you, fatso, try to keep still,” he said as he took aim with his rifle. “Or would you rather I start on it now?”
“Don’t shoot, Watchee,” said Adamsberg.
The
commissaire
was approaching quietly from behind, his .357 in his hand.
“Unload that rifle,” he said. “We’re not going to lose a single boar-bullet up the arses of these rats. It would take too much time, and we’re in a hurry. A great hurry. Camille, come over here, grab my mobile from my jacket pocket and call the local
flics
. Soliman, you drain their tanks, puncture their tyres and smash their headlamps. It’ll make us all feel better.”
Camille moved cautiously among these seven warring males. It was the first time she had seen the killer twitch in Soliman’s face, or ferociousness in Watchee’s expression.
Not a word was said in the minutes that followed. The bikers watched Soliman destroy their machines with measured fury.
The
gendarme
s arrived in a paddy wagon, handcuffed the four men and put them aboard. Adamsberg did what was necessary to make the initial statement as succinct as possible and to have the formal procedure put off until a more convenient time. Before they drove off, he put his head through the paddy-wagon window.
“You,” he said to the first biker. “Soliman will catch up with you. And you,” he said as he turned towards the
ginger
-nut, “you I’ll catch up with myself.” Then he told the
gendarme
s he would follow on behind.
“Since when,” Camille asked after the
gendarme
s had driven off, and as Soliman was getting his breath back, leaning on Watchee’s shoulder, “since when has there been a gun on board?”
“Camille, are you not glad there was one on board?” Watchee said.
“As it happens, yes,” Camille said, realising that in all the excitement Watchee had for the first time addressed her by name. “But we’d said: no guns. That was the deal. We’d said: nobody’s going to kill anybody.”
“We’re not going to kill anybody,” Watchee said.
Camille shrugged, sceptically.
“Why did you say ‘Melchior’?” she asked Soliman.
“To let Watchee know I couldn’t cope on my own.”
“You knew he had a rifle?”
“Yes.”
“Have you got a weapon as well?”
“No, I promise. You want to go through my things?”
“No, I don’t.”
Later that evening Adamsberg gave a summary of his conversation with the superintendent of police in Grenoble. The prosecution service had agreed to launch a criminal investigation for manslaughter. They were looking for a man and an animal trained to kill. Adamsberg had provided a description of Auguste Massart. Inquiries would be re-opened into the death of Suzanne Rosselin,
and
in all the villages where sheep had been savaged.
“Why don’t they put out an appeal for witnesses to come forward?” Soliman said. “Or publish Massart’s photograph in the papers?”
“That would be against the law,” Adamsberg said. “Until the case against Massart is supported by evidence, we don’t have the right to make his name public.”
“I found his bloody candles of penance in a chapel two kilometres away. Shouldn’t we take them in for fingerprinting?”
“There won’t be any prints.”
“All right,” said Soliman, plainly disappointed. “If the police are on the case, what use are we?”
“You can’t see?”
“No.”
“Our use is to carry on believing in it. We’re moving on tonight,” he added. “We’ll not stay here.”
“Because of the bikers? I’m not scared of them.”
“No. We have to get a step ahead of Massart. Or at least get closer to him.”
“Nearer to where? Nearer to what? He puts in at any old place.”
“I’m not so sure of that,” Adamsberg said almost under his breath.
Camille glanced at him. When Adamsberg spoke like that it meant that it was more important than it sounded. The softer he spoke, the more you had to listen.
“Not quite any place,” Soliman concurred. “He only strikes when he’s on his red line, and where sheep are easiest to get at. He chooses his sheep farms.”
“That’s not what I meant.”
Soliman looked at him, but did not say a word.
“I’m thinking about Suzanne, and about Sernot,” Adamsberg explained.
“He killed Suzanne because he was afraid,” Soliman said. “And he slit Sernot’s throat because Sernot surprised him.”
“Woe betide him who crosses the vampire’s path,” said Watchee, somewhat sententiously.
“I’m not so sure of that,” Adamsberg said a second time.
“Where do you want to go?” Camille asked with a frown.
Adamsberg took the map from his pocket and unfolded it.
“There,” he said. “To Bourg-en-Bresse. One hundred and twenty kilometres north of here.”
“But for heaven’s sake, why?” Soliman said with a shake of his head.
“Because it’s the only sizable place he’s willing to go through,” said Adamsberg. “With a wolf and a mastiff in tow, it’s no mere detail. Everywhere else the red line keeps away from towns. So if it goes via Bourg-en-Bresse, there must be a reason for it. Seeking whom he may devour.”
“It’s a guess,” said Soliman.
“It’s instinct,” Adamsberg corrected him.
“He passed through Gap,” Soliman pointed out. “And nothing happened in Gap.”
“True,” Adamsberg granted. “Maybe nothing will happen at Bourg-en-Bresse either. But that’s where we’ll be. Better to be one step ahead than two steps behind.”
* * *
It was dark when two and half hours later Camille parked the lorry by the side of the N75, on the outskirts of Bourg-en-Bresse.
She got out on the nearside, towards the open field that ran alongside the road, with a slice of bread and the one glass of wine allowed her by Watchee. Seeing as the road movie was turning out longer than expected, Watchee said, he had to impose rations on the
blanc de Saint-Victor
. They had to keep some until the very end. That was vital, even if it meant drinking barely a gulp a day. But Camille, as lorry-driver, because she was taking a lot of strain in her shoulders and back, was allowed an extra evening ration, so as to relax her muscles for the night and to ensure they were fit again in the morning. It did not even occur to her to turn down Watchee’s offer of liquid embrocation.
She walked along the field to the woods at the end, and then turned back on her steps. A diffuse awareness of danger and vulnerability, the feelings of apprehension and freedom that had arisen on coming out of the Alps, still held her in their sway. Johnstone’s voice, a few moments ago, had made her feel much calmer. Hearing him on the telephone had brought back to her Saint-Victor with its high walls, steep inclines, narrow alleys, and the massive mountains that cradled it and blocked all vistas. Back there things all seemed foreseeable and expected. Here everything seemed confused and anything was possible. Camille pursed her lips and stretched out her arms, as if she was trying to shake off fear, physically. She had never been afraid of possibilities before, and she did not like having a reflex that put her on her guard. She downed Watchee’s ration in a single swig.
She was the last to go to bed, around one in the morning. She tiptoed past Soliman and Watchee, then carefully drew the canvas curtain and listened for Adamsberg’s breathing. She put her boots noiselessly on the floor, undressed without making a sound, and lay down. Adamsberg was not asleep. He did not move, he said not a word, but she could feel that his eyes were wide open. It was not as dark as the night before. If she had turned her head she would have been able to see his face. But she did not turn her head. And lying rigidly still she finally dropped off to sleep.
The mobile woke her a few hours later. By the light seeping through the side-curtains she guessed it was not yet six. She half-closed her eyes again, but not so tight that she could not see Adamsberg sitting up without haste, putting his two bare feet onto the sheep wagon’s filthy floor and getting his mobile phone out of the jacket he had hung on the feeding-trough. He mumbled something and hung up. Camille waited until he was dressed before asking what was going on.
“Another murder,” he said. “Heavens above. What a mess that man is.”
“Who called you?” asked Camille.
“The Grenoble police.”