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He shifted in the doorway, uncertain whether to come in or go on his way. He came in, his hands behind his back, his shoulders stooped like a general who has run out of tactics.

‘I don’t like people who stand up to me,’ he said.

I didn’t react.

He stopped, then said to the wall, ‘This is the first time I’ve lost control like that. I usually handle the situation more tactfully … But the Frenchman really went too far.’ He turned to me. ‘Are the French all like that? Don’t they know how to behave themselves?’ He opened his arms and slapped them against his thighs. ‘Is it any surprise I flipped? Has anybody bothered you since you’ve been here? You’re being treated properly. You’re given food and drink, and we let you sleep in peace. You won’t find better-off hostages anywhere in the world. In other places, hostages are fed to the dogs, their throats are cut like sheep … I’ve never executed a hostage. And this Frenchman dares to mock my authority. How do you expect my men to respect me if I let my prisoners humiliate me?’

He wiped his face with his forearm.

‘It’s all a matter of discipline, doctor,’ he went on. ‘And without discipline, anything can happen. Some of my men are ready to flay you alive. They don’t care about the money. What could they buy with it, where would they go? The whole country’s ablaze. All they’ve ever known is war. And war has only one face: theirs! If it was up to them, they’d tear you to pieces just for the practice.’

He looked behind him, as if fearing to be overheard, and when he spoke again it was in a conspiratorial tone.

‘Do you think I like rotting here, having to break camp purely on guesswork and constantly moving about to avoid ambushes? Do you think I enjoy it?’

He again looked over his shoulder.

‘I’d be ready to swap my weapons, all my weapons, for your scalpel,’ he continued. ‘War’s no picnic. I suffer from it just as much as a shepherd who steps on a landmine or a little girl cut down by a stray bullet. Nobody, and I mean nobody, is safe when tragedy is established as a dogma, when wrongdoing becomes logical. If you asked the greatest of fighters or the person who’s amassed the most astonishing booty what he’d like most, he’d answer quick as a flash, “A moment’s rest!” No people are made for war. Ours no more than yours. But we haven’t been given the choice. I may be a brute, but I’d love to have a cushy job, and a little woman waiting for me in the evening, and maybe even a couple of kids who’d throw their arms around my neck when I got home from work. Just my luck, instead of a school exercise book they stuck a gun in my hand and said, “It’s every man for himself.” So I do what I can …’

I simply stared at him, hoping that I wasn’t letting him see what I was thinking. My silence irritated him, but he could live with it. He must have realised that he had gone too far with Bruno and saw me as a witness for the prosecution whom he had to make an effort to win over. From the helpless look on his face, I didn’t get the feeling I was successfully concealing the aversion I felt for him. His bestiality had shocked me, and I didn’t think, whatever mitigating circumstances he put forward in his defence, that I could ever consider him as belonging to the human race.

He mopped himself with a handkerchief, wiped the corners of his mouth, where there was a kind of milky secretion, and put the handkerchief back in his pocket. His eyes searched for something on the ceiling, then came back to me, sizing me up. He took out a packet of Camels and offered me one, which I refused. I wanted him to go, to stop polluting the cell with his drunken breath, to leave me to the semi-darkness and the silence … He wouldn’t go. He stood there in the middle of the room, every inch a hypocrite, looking at a flaking patch of wall.

He stuck a cigarette between his lips, which were as thick and hard as wood, lit it and took a puff, putting on a show of nervousness.

‘My mother died of old age at thirty-five. Our people didn’t even have enough to buy an aspirin. In fact, we didn’t even know what an aspirin looked like. When epidemics came, we weren’t any better off than our sheep … And they want us to believe that there’s justice on earth and a God in heaven?’

He took a long drag, breathed it out through his nose, and stared at the burning tip of his cigarette, apparently finding something fascinating in it. He stood there for a while, lost in his memories, then turned to me again.

‘There is no justice or mercy,’ he said. ‘There are those who live and those who survive, and in both scenarios, the unlucky ones suffer.’

He stubbed out his cigarette under his boot as if crushing the head of a snake. Before leaving, he stopped in the doorway and turned to face me.

‘I didn’t choose violence. It was violence that recruited me. It doesn’t matter if it was of my own free will or without my knowing. We each make do as best we can. I don’t hate anybody in particular and so I don’t see why I shouldn’t treat everyone the same. To me, black or white, innocent or guilty, victim or killer, it doesn’t matter. I’m too colour blind to tell the wheat from the chaff. And besides, what’s the wheat and what’s the chaff? What’s good for some people is bad for others. Everything depends on which side you’re on. There’s no point feeling regret or remorse. What difference does it make when the bad deed has already been done? I may have had a heart when I was little, today it’s calcified. When I put my hand on my chest, all I feel in there is anger. I don’t know how to feel sorry for people because nobody ever felt sorry for me. I’m only the hand that holds my rifle, and I don’t know which of us, me or my rifle, gives the orders.’

He left the jail. Two of his henchmen came running in the bright sun, their rifles over their shoulders, and escorted him to his ‘office’. Standing in one of the ruined buildings, Joma, who had been skinning a goat, stopped what he was doing and watched the captain and his praetorian guard cross the yard. When the three men disappeared into the command post, he perched on a low wall and kicked away a skeletal dog that had approached the animal carcass.

Bruno stirred in his corner. ‘Has he gone?’

‘Yes.’

He pushed back his mosquito net and sat up. ‘What an actor! I hope you didn’t take his little performance at face value, Monsieur Krausmann. The man’s a crocodile, and you don’t soften up a crocodile by wiping away his tears. That son of a bitch would praise the devil if it suited him. He doesn’t believe a word he says. The fact is, he’s scared. It’s my mention of the International Criminal Court that’s preying on his mind.’

I didn’t reply. I admit the captain’s words had thrown me. The human misery he embodied and his unexpected about-turn had made him less abstract to me.

That evening we were treated to better food: fresh meat, pancakes and a potato stew. In our famished state, this was a banquet.

‘You see, Monsieur Krausmann?’ Bruno said. ‘No tyrant is above the law. You just have to remind him of the fact.’

6

Day broke. I knew that it wouldn’t bring anything more than it had already taken from me. I didn’t need to glance at the window to figure out what time it was. Here, in this anteroom to nervous breakdowns, time didn’t matter: it was just a light replacing the dark, a dull, lustreless light that flashed unpleasantly across the mind and left no trace. Day broke, and then what? As far as I was concerned, it was merely a stranger passing through, who had nothing to do with me. Before, day had had a meaning, a purpose. It was the work that awaited me, or a train to catch. I recognised the morning instinctively. My hand would reach out mechanically to the alarm clock and switch it off. I didn’t need it: I had a clock in my head, the alarm was merely for back-up. However sleepy I was, I would feel the dawn as a familiar presence, even in the dead of winter. I loved to sense it standing by my bedside, so tangible that I seemed to hear it breathe. That was before, at a time when every day had its commitments: patients to examine, fears to assuage, tasks to accomplish, plans to map out, prospects to establish. I had a status, a reputation, a schedule, lunches arranged long in advance, a watch on my wrist, a beautiful calendar on my desk; I had a mobile phone so that I could be reached anywhere, and voice mail in order not to miss anything that might interest me; I had it all going on, before, I was a centre of gravity. I stepped into the world each morning surrounded by every convenience. I would find the bathroom still warm from Jessica’s shower, and that warmth would intoxicate me. I would take my shower as if setting out along a path; my day was all laid out for me. Jessica would be finishing her breakfast in the kitchen. She would give me a dazzling smile, the same smile as when we first met: an enduring smile that reinvigorated me and that I always greeted with the same delight because it was meant for me, and me alone. A slice of bread and butter in one hand, a cup of coffee in the other, she would raise her lips to me and I would place a fleeting kiss on them, as befitted a happily married couple. I love you, she would say, sitting back in her chair … I love you, I would say, a tad frustrated at not finding anything more interesting to say … Is there a better formula than ‘I love you’? … Outside, Frankfurt was rolling up its sleeves. No matter if it was raining or windy, Frankfurt always worked hard. I would get in my car, make sure the rear-view mirror was properly adjusted and the windscreen spotlessly clean, and set off to win praise and personal satisfaction. The streets would be swarming with reassuring activity, the lights regulated the flow of traffic. I would switch on the radio thanks to a button on the steering wheel and let the noise of the world sweep over me: another scandal in high places; the end of a police search; the crowning of a champion; the misbehaviour of a pop star; the failure of a political initiative; a controversy about a new book; the kidnapping of a journalist in some conflict zone or other … What effect did the kidnapping of a journalist have on me? Did I even raise an eyebrow when I heard the news? One thing was sure, I never imagined for a moment that it could happen to me. The radio! It was an essential element of driving for me. Whenever I forgot to switch it on, a good part of my morning was out of kilter. But that was before, when everything that now seems fundamental was simply part of a well-worn routine. How could I have believed that some things didn’t matter, that I was allowed not to care about them? … What I would have given now to get back to those simple everyday gestures, those little pleasures and concerns that gave my life its particular pattern! What I would have given now to see my letterbox again, the bills that upset me, the circulars I threw in the bin without deigning to look at what they said! I missed the esplanades, I missed the banks of the Main, I missed the noisy restaurants, I missed everything: the placid flow of the crowds on the main streets, the queues outside the cinemas, the street vendors in the squares filled with tourists, my surgery, my patients, my neighbour, my neighbour’s dog whose barking disturbed me when I was reading, my sofa that held so many wonderful memories, my can of beer sweating with coldness, my computer showing pending emails, even the constant spam I never managed to get rid of — all these fragments of life which, fitted together, made my existence an unexpected joy … But now, the fact that day broke was a pure formality. For me, it was a blank page in the proofs of my captivity, a blank page that prolonged the blank pages of yesterday and the previous days; my jigsaw puzzle was made up of pieces so identical, so anonymous, that it was impossible for me to put them in the right place. My world resembled a botched watercolour that the painter had tried angrily to erase with his bare hands. There were times when I wondered if I wasn’t already dead and buried, with a ton of dust over my body and a void in my head. I had stopped waiting, I had stopped holding on to things; my resolve had crumbled after so many fruitless vigils; I no longer felt able to keep the vow I had made the other night not to give in.