La Capelière, two old buildings standing side by side, belonged to the Société nationale de protection de la nature. In 1979 this ancient property, hidden away among the tamarisks that skirted the lagoon of Le Vaccarès had become the information center for the National Reserve of Camargue.
At the entrance, a notice on the ramshackle dry-stone wall displayed a pair of flamingos, face to face, and the acronym S.N.P.N. in the middle. The paint was wrinkled by the rising damp from the stagnant water, and baked into strips by the sun.
On the ground floor there was a small museum, the administrative offices and a laboratory. The first floor held a dormitory for students who were in residence, as well as the flat of the institution’s head, Dr. Christophe Texeira, a researcher and lecturer at the University of Provence. He was forty-five; his hair was speckled with gray and his face was dominated by his prominent chin and two dark eyes that kept in perpetual motion beneath his bushy eyebrows. His thick lips brought him great success with his female students. He seemed the happiest of men.
That evening, alone in the office that was also his laboratory, Christophe Texeira was finding it hard to concentrate: a report on the latest survey of the insects of the Reserve of Vigueirat, on the far side of the Rhône, had raised a tide of weariness inside him.
Texeira had come to the Camargue for its birds, but for the past two years he had been regularly asked to count its mosquitoes and spiders, not to mention the frogs and toads. That night, he was pacing up and down and occasionally glancing out of the window.
The moon was setting.
On the surface of the reed bed, the tips of the rushes were quivering in the lingering brightness. In the gusts of the salty breeze they intermeshed like lines of silver blades.
He peered through his binoculars, then slumped into his chair. What intrigued him that evening were the photographs laid out on his desk, beside the pink and green files of reports.
The pictures were magnificent.
A walker who had called by the previous weekend had managed to photograph some white spoonbills: two near Grenouillet and another which had strayed into the grass that runs between the canals toward Sambuc, near the stud farm at Loule.
It was incredible! This hiker had taken several pictures of these mythical birds while he, the head of the nature reserve and with a doctorate in biology, had hardly seen any on this side of the delta. Usually they gathered on the south bank of the Vaccarès, near La Gacholle. But not always.
“I’m looking for white spoonbills,” the visitor had said.
“That will be difficult,” Texeira had replied.
“They need to be told of love and marvels.”
Marvels!
The man looked distinctly eccentric: shoulder-length black hair, smooth face, as stocky as a prop forward, with the air of someone who doesn’t know what to do with all his muscles. What was more, he was dressed like something the cat had dragged in: Viet Cong sandals, a heavy wool sweater despite the heat, scuffed jeans and a patched-up haversack.
On the other hand, the Zeiss binoculars, the 200 mm narrow aperture zoom lens and the Nikon digital camera that hung around his neck made the biologist green with envy. Not to mention the pair of periscopic binoculars he glimpsed in the man’s bag.
These rare photographs had arrived through the letter box of the S.N.P.N. and had been postmarked: Tarascon, July 1.
The biologist could not remember the walker’s name, otherwise he would have telephoned to congratulate him.
In fact, had he ever got his name?
Texeira went into the entrance hall of the center, turned on the lights and glanced at the bulky visitors’ book on the table, beside the till.
Each page was divided into six columns, in which the visitors could note down the species they had observed, the places, dates and of course their names, and their addresses and jobs as optional extras.
On the page for Saturday, there were a good ten names, but they were just tourists, who had wanted to leave a trace of their visit and find something witty to say.
He looked at his watch again. It was nearly 1 p.m. He decided to get down to work and polish off the figures in his insect survey.
A few minutes later, he noticed that his new assistant had made yet another mistake: he came across a Cassida viridis and a Cassida sanguinolenta, two larvae, beside a Polistes gallicus, a variety of wasp. He would have to go back over the whole thing, label by label. He decided that it was high time to sleep on the problem and go up to his flat on the first floor.
As he closed the shutters in his bedroom, he noticed that the gate of the reserve was open. Grumbling, he pulled on his trousers and trainers, then went out into the gray night air.
He could have sworn he had closed the gate before going into his office. This gave him pause for thought: his memory was utterly infallible. He could see himself lifting the latch and could even remember thinking once again that he really should get it fixed because for some months now the accumulated rust had been making it ever harder to close.
So someone had entered the park after 7 p.m.
He decided to check, took the torch from the cupboard and set off down the path that ran alongside the Fournelet canal—the only practicable route for a visitor to this miniature bayou.
After five minutes spent weaving through creeks overgrown with ash trees and monstrous brambles, he came to a halt beside the observation hut of Les Aulnes, overlooking the swamp. He listened to the night air. At first, there was total silence, then, as the seconds crept by, the little sounds of nature swelled again.
A short while later, he felt everything stirring around him: there was a gentle slapping of stagnant water nearby, the scurry of tiny rapid feet among the clumps of rock samphire; no doubt a rodent fleeing some pressing danger.
Like a wild cat, he sprang up the wooden steps of the hut. The quiet waters gleamed like old silver beneath the moon. In the middle, a dead oak had slumped into the mud, poking its branches out of the filthy water like a drowning man waving for help. Up on its trunk, a little wader was sitting up for the night, surveying the glittering pond around it.
It took him a moment to realize that the song of the frogs had stopped. He was so used to their incessant racket that he hadn’t been paying attention. But now, Texeira pricked up his ears: he could still hear them, further off, by the Vaccarès, but not in his immediate vicinity. Experience told him that some other presence was close.
Then he heard the sharp sound of footfalls and snapping reeds on the far side of the swamp, in the direction of the salt meadows. In fact they were coming from the old warden’s hut, which lay about two hundred meters away, beyond the reed bed.
With all of his senses alerted, Texeira listened. The sounds of footsteps stopped. His first thought was of some big game, a wild boar perhaps, or a roebuck escaped from a hunting reserve, or else a bull which had managed—as they quite often did—to break through the barbed wire around the Loule estate.
But that would not explain the open gate! It must be a human presence, maybe the type of keen birdwatcher who came to take up position long before the sun rose over the marshes so as to admire the dawn ballet of the birds of the Camargue.
He went down from the observation hut, crossed the last few meters of the path beneath the trees, and stopped at the edge of the clump of samphire. At the far side, the bright walls of the shed and its pointed, churchlike roof stood out clearly against the dark gray of the tamarisks.
The sound of footfalls had started again, in fits and starts, as though someone were looking for something beside the reed bed, at the far side of the swamp.
Then came a splash and movement in the water.
And footsteps. Massive, weighty ones.
It reminded Texeira of the big game animals he had tracked in eastern Africa. He threw himself flat behind some samphire to get a better view.
Then a strange high voice, like a counter tenor, like a tinkle of crystal, arose from the surface of the stagnant water:
“Lagadigadeu, la tarasco, lagadigadeu …”
Then a second, more virile voice, as deep as an organ’s bass notes, joined the first one, becoming a scream of terror ripping apart the shadows.
“Laïssa passa la vieio masco … Laïssa passa que vaï dansa …”*
The two voices mingled.
“La tarasco dou casteu, la tarasco dou casteu …”†
Then utter silence fell. Texeira emerged from his hiding place and aimed his torch in the direction of the voices. But he saw nothing. He searched through the darkness, playing the light across the black surface of the swamp. Nothing.
To build up his courage, he shouted: “I am Christophe Texeira, the head of the reserve. You’re trespassing, and I’m asking you to leave now … Immediately! The joke isn’t funny any more.”