Read This Night's Foul Work Online
Authors: Fred Vargas
âCommandant
Danglard? Veyrenc de Bilhc here. What's the latest?'
âWe've found her, thirty-eight kilometres outside Paris, by following the cat.'
âThe cat? What do you mean?'
âThe ⦠cat ⦠wanted ⦠to ⦠find ⦠Retancourt. Get it?'
âOK, OK,' said Veyrenc, sensing that his colleague was stressed-out.
âShe's more dead than alive. We're on the road to Dourdan and she's in a para-lethal state of suspension.'
âCan you explain a bit what's happened? I need to know.'
Why, I wonder? thought Danglard.
Veyrenc listened to Danglard's account, which was much less coherent that it would normally be, and hung up. He pressed the wound on his thigh, exploring the degree of pain with his fingers, and imagined Adamsberg leaning over Retancourt, trying desperately
to find a means of bringing his stalwart
lieutenant
back into the land of the living.
The one who in the past had brought you back to life
Lies now in sore distress, victim of deadly strife
.
Do not surrender, lord, to the call of despair
,
The gods may look kindly, if you venture to dare
,
And letting fall their wrath, will forthwith grant her breath
,
If with courage and strength you draw her back from death
.
âWhat, not asleep yet? Come on, time for bed,' said a nurse, taking him by the arm.
A
DAMSBERG WAS STANDING BY
R
ETANCOURT'S BED, HIS HANDS GRIPPING
the sheets, but could still not see whether she was breathing. For all the injections, pumps and cleansing processes applied by the doctors, he could sense no change in her appearance, except that the nurses had washed her thoroughly and cut her hair, which had been infested with fleas. The dogs, of course. Over the bed, a screen was giving out weak vital signals. But Adamsberg preferred not to look at it, in case the green line should suddenly go flat.
The doctor took him by the arm and pulled him away from the bed.
âGo and see the others, get a bite to to eat, and think about something else. You can't do any more here. She just needs rest.'
âShe's not resting doctor, she's dying.'
The doctor looked away.
âIt's not looking good,' he admitted. âShe's had a massive dose of Novaxon and it's paralysed her whole organism. The nervous system has closed down, but the heart's somehow managing to hold out. I really don't understand how she's surviving. Even if we manage to save her,
commissaire
, I can't be certain she'll have all her mental faculties. There's only a minimal flow of blood to the brain. It's in the hands of fate now â try to understand.'
âA few days ago,' said Adamsberg, having difficulty articulating through
clenched teeth, âI saved a guy whose fate had dictated that he was going to die. There isn't such a thing as fate. She's survived this long, she'll hold out. You'll see, doctor, it'll be one for your record books.'
âGo and see the others. She could last for days in this state. I'll call you if anything changes, I promise.'
âYou can't take everything out, clean it and put it back in?'
âNo, we can't.'
âSorry, doctor,' said Adamsberg, letting go his arm, which he had been clutching. He went back to the bed and ran his hands over Retancourt's cropped hair.
âI'll be back, Violette,' he said softly.
That was what Retancourt always said to the cat when she went out, so that it wouldn't worry.
The crude and explosive hilarity reigning in the restaurant sounded more like a birthday party than a team of police officers plunged in the deepest anguish. Adamsberg looked at them from the doorway, the candlelight making all their faces deceptively young and beautiful, their elbows resting on the white cloth, glasses passing from hand to hand and jokes being cracked. Yes, it was the right thing to do, as he had hoped; it was best, after all, that they should have this brief respite outside real time, and enjoy it to the full, because they knew it couldn't last. He was afraid that his arrival might break the mood of fragile happiness behind which their worries could be seen as if through glass. He forced a smile as he joined them.
âShe's a bit better,' he announced as he sat down. âPass me a plate.'
Even Adamsberg, whose mind was still clinging on to Retancourt's body, benefited a little from the food, wine and laughter. He had never been very good at meals in company, still less jolly ones, since he was incapable of cracking jokes quickly or making clever repartee. Like an ibex watching a train speed by in the valley, he sat peaceably like a
foreign observer, watching his colleagues exchange excited remarks. Froissy, curiously, was on top form at times like this, helped by the food and drink and a wicked sense of humour which one wouldn't have suspected from seeing her in the office. Adamsberg let himself be carried along by the mood, while constantly keeping an eye on the screen of his mobile. Which rang at eleven-forty.
âShe's going downhill again,' said Dr Lavoisier. âWe're going to try a total blood transfusion: it's the last hope. The problem is that she's group A negative and, God help us, our reserves were used up yesterday for a road-crash victim.'
âWhat about donors?'
âWe've only got one here, and we need three. The two other regulars are on holiday. It's Easter weekend,
commissaire
, half the town's away. I'm so sorry. By the time we find donors from other centres it'll be too late.'
A sudden silence fell over the table at the sight of Adamsberg's devastated face. He left the room at a run, followed by Estalère. The young man returned a few minutes later and collapsed into his seat.
âUrgent blood transfusion,' he said. âGroup A negative, but they haven't got the right donors on hand.'
Sweating from his run, Adamsberg came into the white-walled room where the only A-negative donor in Dourdan was finishing giving blood. It seemed to him as though Retancourt's cheeks had turned blue.
âI'm Group O,' he announced to the doctor, pulling off his jacket.
âRight, we can use you, you can be the next.'
âI've drunk two glasses of wine.'
âNever mind. The state she's in, that's the least of our worries.'
A quarter of an hour later, his arm numbed by the tourniquet, Adamsberg
could sense his blood flowing into Retancourt's body. Lying on his back alongside her bed, he kept his eyes fixed on her face, waiting for any sign of a return to life. Please. But try as he might to concentrate and pray to the third virgin, he couldn't give more blood than anyone else. And the doctor had said he needed three. Three donors. Three virgins. Three.
His head was starting to spin, since he had scarcely touched his food. He accepted the vertigo without displeasure, feeling that his train of thought was slipping away from him. Still forcing himself to keep watching Retancourt, he noticed that the roots of her hair were fairer than the ends. He had never noticed before that Retancourt dyed her hair a darker blonde than the natural colour. What an odd aesthetic idea. There was a lot he didn't know about Retancourt.
âAre you all right?' asked the doctor. âNot going to pass out?'
Adamsberg made a negative sign and returned to his vertiginous thoughts. Light blonde and dark blonde in Retancourt's hair, the quick of the virgin. Therefore, he calculated with difficulty, the
lieutenant
must have dyed her hair in December or January, since the fairer roots had grown about two or three centimetres, an odd idea in wintertime, and he had not noticed. He had lost his father about then, but that had nothing to do with it. It seemed to him that Retancourt's lips had moved, but he couldn't see very well. Perhaps she wanted to tell him something, to talk about the quick growing on her head, coming out of her skull like the horns of the ibex. Good God, the quick. From a long way off, he heard the doctor saying something.
âStop now,' said a voice, that of Dr Lariboisier, or whatever his name was. âWe don't want two corpses instead of one. That's as much as we can take from him.'
At the hospital reception desk, a man was asking:
âViolette Retancourt, where is she?'
âSorry, you can't see her now.'
âI'm a donor, Group O, universally compatible.'
âShe's in resuscitation,' said the woman at the desk, jumping up. âI'll take you there.'
Adamsberg was talking to himself when they took off the tourniquet. Hands helped him up, and someone made him drink some sugary water, while another medic was giving him an injection in his other arm. The door opened, and a large shape wearing a leather jacket burst into the room.
âLieutenant
Noël,' said the large shape. âGroup O.'
I
N FRONT OF THE HOSPITAL, AS A CONTRAST WITH THE BLEAK CONCRETE
surroundings, the planners had put a little green space, to indicate that some flowers ought to be included somewhere. In his comings and goings, Adamsberg had spotted this concession to nature, fifteen metres square, with two benches and five flower baskets arranged around a little fountain. It was now two in the morning, and the
commissaire
, feeling better with his sugar balance restored, was resting and listening to the plashing of the water, a comforting sound that he knew medieval monks had valued for its soothing qualities. After Noël had finished the final transfusion, the two men had stood and looked at Retancourt's inert body, one each side of her bed, as if they were supervising a risky scientific experiment.
âIt's coming through now,' said Noël.
âNot yet,' said the doctor.
From time to time, Noël would impatiently and fruitlessly grip Retancourt's arm to try and hurry up the process, stir her blood, get the system going again, restart the engine.
âCome on, big girl, for Chrissake, get moving!'
On edge and unable to stand still without moving and speaking, Noël paced from one end of the bed to the other, rubbing Retancourt's feet to warm them up, then tried her hands, checked the drip, patted her head.
âThat's not helping,' said the doctor irritably.
The heartbeat on the screen suddenly accelerated.
âHere she comes now,' said the doctor, as if announcing the arrival of a train.
âCome on, big girl,' repeated Noël for the tenth time. âMake an effort.'
âWe have to hope,' said Lavoisier, with the involuntary brutality that doctors display, âthat she's not going to wake up with brain damage.'
Retancourt opened her blue eyes weakly and looked blankly at the ceiling.
âWhat's her first name?' asked Lavoisier.
âViolette,' said Adamsberg.
âLike the flower,' added Noël.
Lavoisier sat on the bed, turned Retancourt's face towards him and took her hand.
âIs your name Violette?' he asked. âIf yes, blink your eyes for me.'
âCome on, big girl,' said Noël.
âDon't try to help her, Noël,' said Adamsberg.
âNothing to do with help or not,' said Lavoisier, running out of patience. âShe's got to understand the question. For pity's sake, shut up â she's got to concentrate. Violette, tell me, is that your name?'
Ten agonising seconds passed before Retancourt unmistakably blinked her eyes.
âShe's understood,' said Lavoisier.
âOf course she understood,' said Noël. âYou should make the question harder, doc.'
âThat's already a hard question, when you're coming back from where she's been,' said the doctor.
âLook, I think we're in the way,' said Adamsberg.
Lieutenant
Noël was incapable of sitting and listening to the sound of the fountain like Adamsberg. The
commissaire
watched him pacing up and down the little garden, where the two policemen seemed to be in a tiny circus ring, lit from ground level by blue lights.
âWho told you,
lieutenant?'
âEstalère phoned me from the restaurant. He knew my blood group would be compatible. He's the kind of guy who remembers personal details. Whether you take sugar in your coffee, whether you're A, B or O. Tell me what's happened,
commissaire
, I've missed out on a lot of this.'
Adamsberg summarised, in his own haphazard fashion, the elements Noël had missed while he was out consulting the seagulls. Curiously, the
lieutenant
, who was in theory a hardcore positivist, asked him to repeat twice the
De sanctis reliquis
recipe. And he was opposed to Adamsberg's proposal to give up on the third virgin. Nor did he make any inappropriate jokes about the cat's penile bone or the quick of virgins.
âWe can't just allow some girl to get knocked off without lifting a finger,
commissaire.'
âBut I was probably mistaken when I thought the third virgin had already been chosen.'
âWhy?'
âBecause in the end, I think the killer chose Retancourt for that.'
âBut that wouldn't make sense,' said Noël, stopping short.
âWhy not? She meets the requirements of the recipe.'
Noël looked across at Adamsberg through the darkness.
âWell, for a start,
commissaire
, Retancourt would have to be a virgin.'
âYes, well, I think she is.'
âI don't.'
âYou'd be the only one to think that, Noël.'
âI don't think. I know. She's not a virgin. Not at all.'
Noël sat down on the bench, looking pleased with himself, while Adamsberg in turn started walking round the garden.
âSurely you're the last person Retancourt would take into her confidence.'
âWe yell at each other so much that we end up telling each other the story of our lives. She's not a virgin, full stop.'