Through a Glass Darkly

Through a Glass Darkly Read Free Page A

Book: Through a Glass Darkly Read Free
Author: Donna Leon
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just asked the sum of two plus two, but he wiped the expression away and said, ‘The solvents and chemicals they work with, more than anything else. At least at the paint factory. They spill them and splash them on themselves and breathe them in all day. And that’s not even to mention all the waste they have to get rid of. Somewhere.’
    Brunetti, who had been hearing this kind of thing from Vianello for some time, avoided the Inspector’s glance. He asked, ‘And do you think your protests will change things, Signor Ribetti?’
    Ribetti threw his open hands in the air. ‘God knows. But at least it’s something, some little protest. And maybe other people will see that it’s possible to protest. If we don’t,’ he said, his voice mournful and filled with conviction, ‘they’ll kill us all.’
    Precisely because he had had this kind of conversation with Vianello many times, Brunetti did not have to ask Ribetti who ‘they’ were. Brunetti realized how much he too had come tobelieve, how much he had been converted, in recent years, and not only because of Vianello’s ecological conscience. He increasingly noticed articles about global warming, about the ecomafia and their unbridled dumping of toxic waste all over the South; he had even come to believe that there was a connection between the murder of a RAI television journalist in Somalia some years before and the dumping of toxic waste in that poor afflicted country. What surprised him was that there were people who could still believe that protesting against such things, in their small way, would make some difference. And, he confessed to himself, he did not like to admit that it surprised him.
    â€˜But to more practical matters,’ Brunetti said abruptly. ‘If you’ve never had any trouble with the police before, then it might be possible for us to do something.’ He looked at Vianello. ‘If you stay here, I’ll go and talk to Zedda and have a look at the report. If no one’s been hurt and if no charges have been brought, then I see no reason why Signor Ribetti has to remain in custody.’
    Ribetti cast him a glance of mingled fear and relief. ‘Thank you, Commissario,’ he said, and then quickly added, ‘Even if you can’t do anything or if nothing happens, still, thank you.’
    Brunetti stood up. He went to the door and was glad to find it unlocked. Out in the corridor, he asked for Zedda, whom he found in his office, an office only a quarter the size of his own, with one window that looked out over a parking lot.
    Even before Brunetti could ask, Zedda said, ‘Take him home, Brunetti. Nothing’s going to come of this. No one got hurt, no one has made a
denuncia
, and we certainly don’t want any trouble with them. They’re a pain in the ass, but they’re harmless. So just pack up your friend and take him home.’
    A younger Brunetti might have thought it necessary to make it clear that Ribetti was Vianello’s friend and not his, but after so many years working with the Inspector, Brunetti could no longer make this distinction, so he thanked Zedda and asked if there were any forms to be signed. Zedda waved him away, saying that it had been good to see Brunetti again, and came around his desk to shake hands.
    Brunetti returned to the interrogation room, told Ribetti that he was free to go and could come with them if he chose, then led the others out to the waiting police car.

3
    THE THREE OF them emerged from the main entrance of the Mestre Questura and started down the steps. Vianello put an arm around Ribetti’s shoulder and said, ‘Come on, Marco, the least we can do is give you a ride back to Piazzale Roma.’ Ribetti smiled and thanked him. He wiped a hand over his eyes and drew it down one side of his face, and Brunetti could almost feel it graze across his unshaven cheek. As they continued down the steps towards the

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