Read Suffer the Little Children Online
Authors: Donna Leon
âThey'll be sent to an orphanage.'
BRUNETTI GAVE NO
sign of the effect Marvilli's words had had on him and resisted the desire to exchange glances with Vianello. He hoped the Inspector would follow his example and say nothing that would lessen, or spoil, the easy communication they seemed to have established with the Captain.
âAnd then what?' Brunetti asked professionally. âWhat happens to the children?'
Marvilli could not disguise his confusion. âI told you, Commissario. We see that they're taken to an orphanage, and then it's the duty of the social services and the Children's Court to see that they're taken care of.'
Brunetti chose to let this lie and continued, âI see. So in each case, you . . .' Brunetti tried
to think what word he was supposed to use here. Repossessed? Confiscated? Stole? â âgot the baby and handed it over to social services.'
âThat was our responsibility,' agreed Marvilli simply.
Brunetti asked, âAnd Pedrolli? What will happen to him?'
Marvilli considered before answering, âThat will depend on the examining magistrate, I suppose. If Pedrolli decides to cooperate, then the charges will be minor.'
âCooperate how?' Brunetti asked. From Marvilli's silence, Brunetti realized that he had asked the wrong question, but before he could ask another, Marvilli shot back his cuff and looked at his watch. âI think I have to get back to headquarters, Signori.' He moved sideways and out of the booth. When he was standing, he asked, âWill you let me pay for this?'
âThanks, Captain, but no,' Brunetti answered with a smile. âI'd like to be able to save two lives in one day.'
Marvilli laughed. He offered his hand to Brunetti and then, with a polite, âGoodbye, Inspector,' leaned across the table and shook Vianello's hand as well.
If Brunetti expected him to make some remark about keeping the local police informed, perhaps to ask them to share with the Carabinieri any information they might obtain, he was disappointed. The Captain thanked
Brunetti again for the coffee, turned and left the bar.
Brunetti looked at the plates and discarded napkins. âIf I have another coffee, I'll be able to fly back to the Questura.'
âSame here,' muttered Vianello, then asked, âWhere do we start?'
âWith Pedrolli, I think, and then perhaps we should find this clinic in Verona,' Brunetti answered. âAnd I'd like very much to know how the Carabinieri found out about Pedrolli.'
Vianello gestured towards the place where Marvilli had been sitting. âYes, he was very coy about that, wasn't he?'
Neither proposed a solution, and finally, after a contemplative silence, Vianello said, âThe wife's probably at the hospital. You want to go and talk to her?'
Brunetti nodded. He got to his feet and went over to the bar.
âTen Euros, Commissario,' said Sergio.
Brunetti placed the bill on the counter then half turned to the door, where Vianello was already waiting for him. Over his shoulder, Brunetti asked, âBambola?'
Sergio smiled. âI saw his real name on his work permit, and there was no way I was going to be able to pronounce it. So he suggested I call him Bambola, since it's as close as anyone can get to his real name in Italian.'
âWork permit?' Brunetti asked.
âAt that
pasticceria
in Barbaria delle Tolle,' Sergio said, pronouncing the name of the
calle
in Veneziano, something Brunetti had never heard a foreigner succeed in doing. âHe actually has one.'
Vianello and Brunetti left the bar, heading back to the Questura. It was not yet seven, so they went to the squad room, where there was an ancient black and white television on which they could watch the early morning news. They sat through the interminable political reports, as ministers and politicians were filmed speaking into microphones while a voiceover explained what they had supposedly said. Then a car bomb. Government denials that inflation was rising. Three new saints.
Gradually, other officers drifted in and joined them. The programme moved on to a badly focused film of a blue Carabinieri sedan pulling up at the Questura in Brescia. A man with his face buried in his handcuffed hands emerged from the car. The voiceover explained that the Carabinieri had effected night-time raids in Brescia, Verona, and Venice to close up a ring of baby-traffickers. Five people had been arrested and three babies consigned to the care of the state.
âPoor things,' Vianello muttered, and it was clear that he was speaking about the children.
âBut what else to do with them?' Brunetti responded.
Alvise, who had come in unnoticed and now stood near them, interrupted loudly, as though speaking to the television but in
reality addressing Brunetti, âWhat else? Leave them with their parents, for the love of God.'
âTheir parents didn't want them,' Brunetti observed drily. âThat's why all this is happening.'
Alvise threw his right hand into the air. âI don't mean the people they were born to: I mean their parents, the people who raised them, who had them for â' he raised his voice further â âsome of them had them for eighteen months. That's a year and a half. They're walking by then, talking. You can't just go in and take them away and put them in an orphanage.
Porco Giuda
, these are children, not shipments of cocaine we can sequester and put in a closet.' Alvise slammed his hand down on a table and gave his superior a red-faced look. âWhat sort of country is this, anyway, where something like this can happen?'
Brunetti could only agree. Alvise's question was perfectly fair. What sort of country, indeed?
The screen was filled with soccer players, either on strike or being arrested, Brunetti could not tell and did not care, so he turned away from the television and left the room, followed by Vianello.
As they climbed the stairs, the Inspector said, âHe's right, you know. Alvise.'
Brunetti did not answer, so Vianello added, âIt might be the first time in recorded history that he
has
been right, but he's right.'
Brunetti waited at the top of the stairs, and
when Vianello reached him, said, âThe law is a heartless beast, Lorenzo.'
âWhat's that supposed to mean?'
âIt means,' Brunetti said, stopping just inside the door to his office, âthat if these people are allowed to keep the babies, it establishes a precedent: people can buy babies or get them any way they want and from anywhere they want, and for any purpose they want, and it's completely legal for them to do so.'
âWhat other purpose could there be than to raise them and love them?' asked an outraged Vianello.
From the first time he had heard them, Brunetti had decided to treat all rumours of the buying of babies and children for use as involuntary organ donors as an urban myth. But, over the years, the rumours had grown in frequency and moved geographically from the Third World to the First, and now, though he still refused to believe them, hearing them unsettled him. Logic suggested that an operation as complicated as a transplant required a number of people and a controlled and well-staffed medical environment where at least one of the patients could recover. The chances that this could happen and that all of those involved would keep quiet were odds Brunetti was not willing to give. This, at least, surely held true in Italy. Beyond its borders, Brunetti no longer dared to speculate.
He still remembered reading â it must have been more than a decade ago â the agonized, and
agonizing, letter in
La Repubblica
, from a woman who admitted that she had broken what she knew to be the law and taken her twelve-year-old daughter to India for a kidney transplant. The letter recounted the diagnosis, the assigning of her daughter's name to a ranking so low on the health service waiting list for transplants as to amount to a sentence of death.
The woman wrote that she was fully aware that some person, some other child, perhaps, would be constrained by poverty to sell a piece of their living flesh. She knew, further, that the donor's health would afterwards be permanently compromised, regardless of what they were paid and regardless of what they did with the money. But when she measured her daughter's life against the increased risk for some stranger, she had opted to accept that guilt. So she had taken her daughter to India with one badly functioning kidney and had brought her back to Italy with a healthy one.
One of the things Brunetti had always secretly admired about some of the ancients â and he had to admit that it was one of the reasons he read them so relentlessly â was the apparent ease with which they made ethical decisions. Right and wrong; white and black. Ah, what easy times they seemed.
But along came science to stick a rod between the spinning wheels of ethical decision while the rules tried to catch up with science and technology. Conception could be achieved any which way, the dead were no longer entirely
dead, the living not necessarily fully alive, and maybe there did exist a place where hearts and livers were for sale.
He wanted to express this in his answer to Vianello, but could find no way to compress or phrase it so that it made any sense. Instead, he turned to Vianello and put a hand on his shoulder. âI don't have any big answers, only small ideas.'
âWhat does that mean?'
âIt means,' he said, though the idea came to him only as he spoke, âthat because we didn't arrest him, maybe we can try to protect him.'
âI'm not sure I understand,' said Vianello.
âI'm not sure I do, either, Lorenzo, but I think he's a man who might need protection.'
âFrom Marvilli?'
âNo, not from him. But from the sort of men Marvilli works for.'
Vianello sat down in one of the chairs in Brunetti's office. âHave you dealt with them before?' he asked.
Brunetti, still feeling the buzz of the caffeine and sugar and too restless to sit, leaned against his desk. âNo, not with the men in Verona. I suppose I meant the type.'
âMen who'd give the babies to an orphanage?' Vianello asked, unable to evade the hold that thought had taken on him.
âYes,' Brunetti agreed, âI suppose you could refer to them that way.'
Vianello acknowledged this concept with a shake of his head. âHow can we protect him?'
âThe first way would be to find out if he has a lawyer and, if so, who that is,' Brunetti answered.
With a wry smile, Vianello said, âSounds like you want to stack the deck against us.'
âIf they're going to charge him with the list Marvilli gave us, then he needs a good one.'
âDonatini?' Vianello suggested, pronouncing the name as though it were a dirty word.
Brunetti raised his hands in feigned horror. âNo, I'd draw the line short of that. He'll need someone as good as Donatini, but honest.'
More because it was expected of him than because he fully meant it, Vianello repeated, âHonest? A lawyer?'
âThere are some, you know,' Brunetti said. âThere's Rosato, though I don't know how much criminal work she does. And Barasciutti, and Leonardi . . .' His voice wound down and stopped.
Without feeling it necessary to mention that they had been working among criminal lawyers for close to half a century between them and had come up with the names of only three honest ones, Vianello said, âInstead of honest, we could settle for effective.' They chose to overlook the fact that this would place Donatini's name back at the top of the list.
Brunetti glanced at his watch. âWhen I see his wife, I'll ask her if she knows one.' He pushed himself away from his desk, walked around behind it and sat down.
He noticed some papers that had not been
there when he left the previous day but barely glanced at them. âThere's one thing we have to find out,' he said.
âWho authorized it?' Vianello asked.
âExactly. There's no way a squad of Carabinieri would come into the city and break into a home without having permission from a judge and without having informed us.'
âPatta?' Vianello asked. âCould he have known?'
The Vice-Questore's name had been the first to come to Brunetti's mind, but the more he considered this, the less likely it seemed. âPossibly. But then we would have heard.' He did not mention that the inevitable source of that information would not have been the Vice-Questore himself but his secretary, Signorina Elettra.
âThen who?' Vianello asked.
After some time, Brunetti said, âIt could have been Scarpa.'
âBut he belongs to Patta,' Vianello said, making no attempt to disguise his distaste for the Lieutenant.
âHe's mishandled a few things recently. He could have taken it straight to the Questore as a way of trying to bolster his position.'
âBut when Patta hears about it?' Vianello asked. âHe's not going to like having been hopped over by Scarpa.'
It was not the first time that Brunetti had considered the symbiosis between those two gentlemen from the South, Vice-Questore Patta
and his watchdog, Lieutenant Scarpa. He had always assumed that Scarpa's sights were set on the Vice-Questore's patronage. Could it be, however, that the Lieutenant saw his liaison with Patta as nothing more than a flirtation, a stepping stone on the way to the realization of a higher ambition and that his real target was the Questore himself?
Over the years, Brunetti had learned that he underestimated Scarpa to his cost, so perhaps it was best to admit this possibility and bear it in mind in his future dealings with the Lieutenant. Patta might be a fool and much given to indolence and personal vanity, but Brunetti had seen no evidence that he was corrupt in anything beyond the trivial nor that he was in the hands of the Mafia.
He glanced away from Vianello to follow this train of thought. Have we arrived, then, he wondered, at the point where the absence of a vice equals the presence of its opposite? Have we all gone mad?