The Red Collar

The Red Collar

by Jean-Christophe Rufin
The Red Collar

The Red Collar

by Jean-Christophe Rufin

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Overview

“A beautifully memorable and unusual story about war and what it does to us” from the bestselling author and founder of Doctors Without Borders (The Independent).

In 1919, in a small town in the province of Berry, France, under the crushing heat of summer, a war hero is being held prisoner in an abandoned barracks. In front of the door to his prison, a mangy dog barks night and day. Miles from where he is being held, in the French countryside, a young extraordinarily intelligent woman works the land, waiting and hoping. A judge whose principles have been sorely shaken by the war is traveling to an unknown location to sort out certain affairs of which it is better not to speak.

Three characters. In their midst, a dog who holds the key both to their destinies and to this intriguing plot.

Full of poetry and life, The Red Collar is at once a delightfully simple narrative about the human spirit and a profound work about loyalty and love.

“A superbly crafted little gem that does everything a novel can do in less than 150 pages . . . It’s a lucky reader who gets to experience the power of The Red Collar.” —Shelf Awareness

“A graceful, unpretentious little miracle, a morality play of immense skill.” —The Irish Times

“In The Red Collar, a delicate and poetic novel, Rufin examines that which makes us human.” —L’express (France)

“Without special effects, with simplicity and the pure pleasure of telling a story, Jean-Christophe Rufin explores the meaning of faithfulness, loyalty, and honor.” —Le Figaro (France)

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781609452834
Publisher: Europa Editions, Incorporated
Publication date: 10/08/2019
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 160
Sales rank: 1,020,252
File size: 1 MB

About the Author

Jean-Christophe Rufin is one of the founders of Doctors Without Borders and a former Ambassador of France in Senegal. He has written numerous bestsellers, including The Abyssinian, for which he won the Goncourt Prize for a debut novel in 1997. He also won the Goncourt Prize in 2001 for Brazil Red.Adriana Hunter is a British translator of French Literature. She is known for translating more than fifty French novels, such as Fear and Trembling by Amélie Nothomb or The Girl Who Played Go by Shan Sa. In 2011 she won the Scott Moncrieff prize for her translation of Véronique Olmi's Beside the Sea.

Read an Excerpt

CHAPTER 1

At one o'clock in the afternoon, with the crushing heat over the town, the dog's howling was unbearable. The animal had been there on the Place Michelet for two days, and for two days it had barked. It was a big, brown, shorthaired dog with no collar and a torn ear. It wailed methodically, more or less once every three seconds, making a deep sound that was enough to drive you mad.

Dujeux had thrown stones at it from the doorstep of the old barracks block that had been turned into a prison for deserters and spies during the war. But that was no use. When the dog knew a stone was heading its way, it slunk back for a moment, then set off again all the more loudly. There was only one prisoner in the building, and he didn't seem to want to escape. Unfortunately, Dujeux was the only guard, and, being conscientious, he felt he couldn't leave the premises. He had no way of chasing the animal off, or of really frightening it.

No one ventured outside in this scorching heat. The barking bounced from wall to wall through the empty streets. Dujeux briefly considered using his pistol. But it was peacetime now; he wondered whether he had any right to fire a shot like that, in the middle of the town, even at a dog. More importantly, the prisoner could have used this as grounds to set the townspeople even more vehemently against the authorities.

It would be an understatement to say Dujeux loathed this particular inmate. The policemen who'd caught the fellow had formed a poor opinion of him too. He'd put up no resistance when they led him to the military prison, but smiled at them a little too sweetly, which they hated. He came across as so confident he was in the right, as if he'd agreed to come of his own free will, as if he alone could have triggered a local revolution ...

Perhaps he actually could. Dujeux wouldn't swear to anything. What did he, a Breton from Concarneau, know about this little place in the Bas-Berry region? He didn't care for it, that much he knew. The weather was damp all year round and too hot in the few weeks when the sun shone all day. In winter and the rainy seasons the earth exhaled unwholesome mists that smelled of rotten grass. In summer a dry dust hovered over every track, and the small town, which was surrounded on all sides by open country, somehow managed — although no one knew why — to stink of sulfur.

Dujeux had closed the door and now held his head in his hands. The barking was giving him a migraine. With the lack of staff, no one ever came to relieve him. He slept in his office, on a straw mattress that he tidied away in a metal cupboard during the day. He'd had no sleep for the last two nights because of the dog. He was getting too old for this. He genuinely felt that, over the age of fifty, a man should be spared this sort of ordeal. His only hope was that the officer appointed to make the investigation would arrive soon.

Perrine, the girl from the Bar des Marronniers, came across the square morning and evening to bring him wine. He needed to hold out somehow. The girl handed the bottles through the window and he gave her the money without a word. The dog didn't seem to bother her, and on the evening of the first day she'd even stopped to stroke it. The locals had chosen their camp. And it was not Dujeux's.

He'd put Perrine's bottles under the desk and helped himself to them surreptitiously. He didn't want to be caught drinking if the officer turned up unexpectedly. He was so exhausted by lack of sleep that he couldn't be sure he would hear anyone coming.

In fact, he must have fallen asleep for a moment because there the man was in front of him when he woke up. Standing in the doorway to the office, strapped into a royal blue tunic that was far too thick for the time of year but was nevertheless buttoned up to the neck, was a tall man who stared down at Dujeux sternly. The guard sat up and, all fingers and thumbs, fastened a few buttons on his jacket. Then he rose to his feet and came to attention. He was conscious of his puffy eyes and the smell of wine on him.

"Can't you get that mutt to stop?"

These were the military investigating officer's first words. He was looking out of the window, paying no attention to Dujeux who, still standing to attention, was battling with a wave of nausea and thought it best not to open his mouth.

"Mind you, he doesn't look dangerous," the major went on. "When the driver dropped me off, he didn't move."

So a car had parked outside the prison and Dujeux hadn't heard a thing. He'd obviously slept longer than he realized.

The major turned to him and said a rather weary "At ease." He clearly didn't put much stock in discipline. He behaved quite naturally, apparently viewing the military trappings of the situation as tiresomely quaint. He took a stick-back chair, turned it around and straddled it, leaning over its back. Dujeux relaxed. He would have liked a slug of wine and, with this heat, the officer might have been happy to join him. But Dujeux dismissed the idea and had to settle for swallowing painfully to ease the tightness in his throat.

"Is he in there?" asked the major, tilting his chin toward the metal door that led to the cells.

"Yes, sir."

"How many do you have at the moment?"

"Just the one, sir. Since the end of the war, it's emptied out a good deal ..."

That was just his luck, poor Dujeux. With only one customer he should have been able to take it easy. But of course there had to be a dog and it had to howl incessantly outside the prison.

The major was sweating. He deftly undid the twenty or so buttons of his tunic. Dujeux realized he must have buttoned them up just before coming in, to impress him. The major was about thirty years old and, with this war they'd just had, it was quite common to see stripes popping up on men that young. His regulation moustache wasn't up to growing thickly and looked like a couple of eyebrows under his nose. His eyes were a steely blue, but they were gentle, and almost certainly nearsighted. A pair of horn-rimmed spectacles peeped out of a pocket in his vest. Did he not wear them out of vanity? Or did he want his eyes to have this unfocused look that suspects must have found unsettling during questioning? He took out a checkered handkerchief and mopped his brow.

"Your name, master sergeant?"

"Dujeux, Raymond Dujeux."

"Did you serve in the war?"

The jailer stood a little taller. This was a good opportunity. He could score a few points, override the sloppy way he was dressed and show that he took no pleasure in this position as jailbird-keeper.

"Indeed I did, sir. I was a chasseur. You wouldn't know now, I've cut off my beard ..."

The major didn't smile so Dujeux plowed on with, "Injured twice. First in the shoulder at Marne, and then in the stomach, as we made our way up to Mort-Homme. That's why, since then, I've ..."

The officer waved his hand to show he understood, there was no need to say more.

"Do you have his file?"

Dujeux hurried over to a rolltop desk, opened it and handed a folder to the officer. Its hardbound exterior was deceptive. There were in fact only two documents inside: the policemen's statement and the prisoner's military record. The major quickly appraised them. They didn't tell him anything he didn't already know. He stood up and Dujeux started reaching for the set of keys. But instead of heading for the cells, the major turned back toward the window.

"You should open this, it's stifling in here."

"It's because of the dog, sir ..."

The animal was there in the full glare of the sun, barking insistently. When it stopped to catch its breath, its tongue lolled out and it was obviously panting.

"What is it, what sort of breed, do you think? It looks like a Weimaraner."

"With all due respect, I'd say it's more likely a mongrel. We see a lot of dogs like that around here. They're used to guard the flocks. But they're hunting dogs too."

The officer didn't seem to have heard this.

"Unless it's a Pyrenean Shepherd ..."

Dujeux thought it best not to intervene. Just another aristocrat obsessed with hunting and hounds, one of those country squires who'd done so much damage during the war with their airs and graces, and their incompetence ...

"Right," the officer concluded laconically, "let's get on with it. I'm going to hear what the suspect has to say."

"Would you like to see him in his cell or should I bring him in here, sir?"

The major glanced out the window. The noise the dog was making was no quieter. At least in the depths of the building the barking wouldn't be so intrusive.

"In his cell," he replied.

Dujeux picked up the big ring with the keys threaded onto it. When he opened the door that led to the cells a waft of cooler air came into the office. The breeze might have come from a cellar were it not for a hovering stench of bodies and excrement. The corridor was lit from the far end by a transom window that dripped a cold milky light into the darkness. The place was a collection of old barracks rooms, and heavy locks had been added to the doors to turn it into a prison. The doors hung open to show the empty cells. The last cell down at the end was closed, and Dujeux made a lot of noise opening it, like a walker thumping the ground with his foot to wake snakes. Then he showed the officer in.

A man lay full-length on one of the two bunks, his face turned toward the wall. He was motionless. Dujeux wanted to show a bit of enthusiasm and shouted, "On your feet!" The officer gestured for him to be quiet and to leave them, then went and sat on the other bed and waited a while. He seemed to be gathering his strength, not like an athlete preparing to launch and perform, but rather like someone who has to carry out a chore and isn't sure he will have the energy for it.

"Good afternoon, Morlac," he breathed, rubbing the bridge of his nose.

The man didn't move. Judging by his breathing, though, he clearly wasn't asleep.

"I'm Squadron Leader Lantier du Grez. Hugues Lantier du Grez. We're going to have a bit of a chat, if you'd like to."

Dujeux heard these words and shook his head disconsolately as he returned to his office. Nothing was the same since the war ended. Even the military justice system seemed hesitant, weakened, like this over-friendly young investigating officer. Gone were the days when convicts were shot without a by-your-leave.

The jailer sat back down behind his desk. He felt more relaxed, but didn't know why. Something had changed. It wasn't the heat, which actually felt more oppressive after he'd been immersed in the cool of the cells. It wasn't his thirst, which was becoming more and more intense, and which he decided to slake by cautiously taking a bottle from under his desk. In fact, what had changed was the silence: The dog had stopped barking.

After two days of hell, this was the first moment of quiet. Dujeux darted over to the window to see whether the animal was still there. He couldn't see it at first. Then, by twisting his head, he could make it out in the shadow of the church, sitting on its haunches, alert but silent.

Since the investigating officer had stepped into its master's cell, the dog had stopped baying relentlessly.

* * *

The major had opened the file and put it on his knee. He'd perched himself on the bedstead, leaning against the wall. It looked as if he planned on staying quite a while; he had all the time in the world. The prisoner hadn't moved. He still had his back turned, lying there on his hard bed, but it was obvious he wasn't asleep.

"Jacques Pierre Marcel Morlac," the major intoned monotonously. "Born June 25, 1891."

He ran his hand through his hair as he made his calculations. "So that makes you twenty-eight years old. Twenty-eight years and two months, as it's August."

He didn't appear to wait for any reply before continuing with, "Your official domicile is your parents' farm, the place you were born, in fact, in Bigny. Very near here, I believe. Mobilized in November '15. November '15? They must have deemed you were the family breadwinner, and that won you some time."

These presentations were an old habit of the major's. He trotted out the facts and figures with a sympathetic expression. The differences in dates and places that defined each individual were fundamental: It was thanks to them that soldiers were who they were. And at the same time, they were so trifling, these differences, so minute that they demonstrated better than any system of regimental numbers just how little there was to distinguish between men. Aside from these few jottings (a name, a birth date ...), they constituted a compact, anonymous, indistinct mass. And it was this mass that the war had pummeled, wasted, consumed. No one could have lived through that war and still believed an individual had any value. And yet justice, which Lantier now served, required individuals to be brought before him for sentencing. Which was why he had to gather these scraps of information and stow them in a file where they would dry out like flowers pressed between the pages of a heavy book.

"First you were assigned to the supply corps in the Champagne region. That can't have been too tough. Requisitioning fodder from farms, that's something you know about. And it's not dangerous."

The major paused deliberately to see whether the accused would react. The figure lying before him still didn't move.

"Then you were sent off with your unit to join the Oriental Expeditionary Force. You reached Salonika in July '16. Well, at least this heat won't be bothering you too much! You had time to get used to that over there."

A truck laboring up the street trundled hoarsely past the basement window and drove off into the distance.

"You'll have to tell me about that campaign, in the Balkans. I never understood it at all. We wanted to give the Turks a hard time in the Dardanelles and they threw us back out to sea, is that right? Then we fell back to Salonika and played cat and mouse with the Greeks who couldn't make up their minds to join the war as our allies. Correct me if I'm wrong. Either way, those of us who were in the Somme always thought the guys in the Oriental Force were a bunch of draft dodgers taking it easy on the beach ..."

In adopting these surprisingly colloquial terms and, more particularly, making a genuine insult, Lantier knew what he was doing. His face still looked just as weary. These dramatic flourishes were always part of his interrogation routine. He knew which nerve to niggle in a man, just as a peasant knows the sensitive points on his livestock. The prisoner lying in front of him moved one of his feet. It was a good sign.

"Be that as it may, you distinguished yourself. Well done. August '17, a citation from General Sarrail: 'Corporal Morlac played a decisive part in an attack against Bulgarian and Austrian forces. He was in the front line for the maneuver and personally accounted for nine enemy infantrymen before sustaining injuries to his head and shoulder, and losing consciousness on the battlefield. He held on until his unit managed to get him back behind French lines during the night. This heroic action marked the beginning of a victorious counteroffensive from our troops in the Tcherna area.' Commendable! My congratulations."

This passage had certainly had its effect because the prisoner was no longer trying to pretend he was sleeping. Still lying full-length, he shifted position, perhaps hoping to smother what the officer was saying.

"It really must have been an act of exceptional bravery for you to be awarded the Légion d'honneur. The Légion d'honneur! To a lowly corporal! I don't know much about the Oriental Force but I think I've heard of only two or three similar cases in France. That's something to be extremely proud of. Are you extremely proud, Mr. Morlac?"

The prisoner was shuffling around under his blanket. It clearly wouldn't be long before he put in an appearance.

"Let's come to the act for which you were arrested. I can't imagine how a man who's won his Légion d'honneur in such circumstances could knowingly render himself guilty of what you've been charged with. I imagine you were drunk, Mr. Morlac? The war shook us all up. Sometimes the memories catch up with us and, to get away from them, we have a bit of a drink. A bit too much. Which can make people do things they regret. Is that it? In that case, offer up your apology, express your sincere regret and we'll leave it at that."

Facing the major on the bare boards of his bed, the man had finally sat up. He was swimming with sweat under his blanket, cheeks flushed and hair awry. But his eyes weren't bleary with sleep. He sat on the edge of the bed, his bare legs dangling. He smoothed one hand round the back of his neck with a grimace, and stretched. Then he looked directly at the investigating officer who was still sitting with the file in his lap and smiling wearily.

"No," the man said. "I wasn't drunk. And I don't regret anything."

(Continues…)


Excerpted from "The Red Collar"
by .
Copyright © 2014 Éditions Gallimard, Paris.
Excerpted by permission of Europa Editions.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

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