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* * *

The first police sirens are heard around seven-thirty. She closes the window — it’s cold outside — still an hour to go before kickoff and apparently it’s proving difficult to contain the supporters’ excitement: all these hearts together, it’s too much. She wonders who’s playing tonight. Time passes. Marthe Carrare examines the first file again, strangely satisfied by its concordance with the donor’s file. It could hardly be any more perfect — what the hell are they doing at the Pitié? Just then, the telephone rings. It’s Harfang: We’ll take it.

* * *

Marthe Carrare hangs up and immediately calls Le Havre, warning Thomas that a team from Pitié-Salpêtrière will be contacting him to organize its arrival. The recipient is a patient in Harfang’s department — do you know him? By name. She smiles. Says: They’ve got a good team there, they know what they’re doing. Thomas checks his watch and replies: Okay, we’ll get ready for the removal, we should be going into the OR about three hours from now, I’ll call you back. They hang up. Harfang. Marthe says the name out loud. Harfang. She too knows him. Knew of him before she knew him — that beautiful name, that strange name doing the rounds of hospital corridors for more than a century, so that people said simply he’s a Harfang as a way of summarizing a discussion about a practitioner’s excellence, or they talked about the “Harfang dynasty” as a way of describing the family that had provided the faculty with dozens of professors and practitioners, men named Charles-Henri and men named Louis, men named Jules, Robert, Bernard, and now men named Mathieu, Gilles, and Vincent, all doctors who had worked, were working in public hospitals — we’re servants of the state, they liked to think as they ran the New York Marathon, went skiing in Courchevel, or sailed in the Gulf of Morbihan on carbon monohulls, distinguishing themselves in this way from the grasping medical masses, many of whom, including the youngest, opened private practices in calm, leafy quarters as soon as they had completed their training, sometimes going into partnership with Harfangs in order to cover the whole spectrum of pathologies affecting the human body, and offering quick checkups to overweight businessmen, guys who worked crazy hours and worried about cholesterol levels, hardened arteries, prostate troubles, and declining libidos — among them five generations of pulmonologists following a patrilineal filiation that prioritized male primogeniture when handing out chairs and department directorships; among them one girl, Brigitte, ranked first in the internship entrance examination in Paris, in 1952, but who abandoned her studies two years later, persuaded that she was in love with a protégé of her father’s when the truth was she was yielding to surreptitious pressure ordering her to make way, to leave more room for the young males of the clan; including this one, Emmanuel Harfang, the surgeon.

She remembers that during her internship, she had hung around for a while with a gang led by two Harfang cousins. One was in pediatric cardiology, the other in gynecology. They both had the famous “Harfang cowlick,” a shock of white hair growing over their forehead which they slicked back over the dark hair that covered the rest of their head, a distinguishing feature of the clan, a legendary family seal, rally around my white plume and all the ad hoc swagger intended to loosen the panties of the girls they met; they wore 501 jeans and oxford shirts, tartan-lined beige raincoats with the collars turned up; they never went out in sneakers, always Church’s shoes, though they absolutely scorned tassel loafers; they were of medium height, wirily built, pale-skinned and golden-eyed, thin-lipped, with prominent Adam’s apples that would make Marthe involuntarily swallow whenever she saw them sliding up and down under the skin of their throats; they looked like each other, and they also resembled this Emmanuel Harfang, ten years their junior, who repairs and transplants hearts at Pitié-Salpêtrière.

Emmanuel Harfang would descend the steps of the auditorium perfectly on time for his symposiums, staring straight ahead and jumping the final steps so that his momentum would carry him up to the lectern with an athletic bound, holding a sheet of paper that he wouldn’t read, beginning his speech without even greeting his audience, favoring direct openings and abrupt attacks, getting straight to the point without bothering with the usual civilities, without bothering to state his name, as if everyone in the room was supposed to know who he was — a Harfang, son of a Harfang, grandson of a Harfang — a tactic that was also designed, in all probability, to wake up an audience who had a tendency to nod off early in the afternoon, pleasantly drowsy after eating those famous meals in the nearby restaurants reserved for the occasion, where the carafes of red wine would be lined up on paper napkins, always that modest Corbières wine that went well with red meat, because as soon as Harfang pronounced his first words, the auditorium would snap out of its digestive torpor, every person in the audience remembering, when they looked at this slender, athletic man, that he was the pillar of a first-class cycling squad, part of a team that represented the hospital in various criteriums, filled with guys capable of riding 120 miles on Sunday morning, regardless of how difficult it was to combine such endeavors with their professional lives, guys ready to get up early to race, no matter how desperately they yearned for more sleep, for the chance to caress their wives, make love, play with their children, or simply just lie around listening to the radio, the light in the bathroom always brighter, the smell of toast always more desirable on mornings like that; guys who hoped to join this elite club and who would give anything, would elbow others out of the way, to be chosen by Harfang—“singled out” was the term they used, as Harfang, suddenly noticing their presence, would point at them with his index finger and, leaning his head to one side to assess their physical condition, checking out a possible rival, would ask them, a strange smile twisting across his face: You like cycling?