as though heâd put salt in with sugar and honey. Although they had brushed his curiosity, they had never attracted his attention: he had always walked by, leaving them to the tourists or, more accurately, the tourists to them.
Paola asked if anyone would like another pepper. When they all declined, she asked, âMay I ask what this is all about?â Her voice was level, curious, not a trace of suspicion to be heard.
Chiara and Raffi again exchanged a glance to see who would speak first. Chiara shook her head, and so Raffi said, âI see them once in a while in front of the Frari. They stop people and ask them if they want to do something to stop drugs, and when they say they do â itâs only tourists who stop â they ask them to sign a paper, some sort of petition, and when they do, they keep talking to them.â
âThatâs all?â Brunetti asked from the habit of precision.
Raffi considered his fatherâs question, then said, âMy friends say they ask for money.â
âAnd do they?â Brunetti asked.
Raffiâs surprise was evident. âWhy else would they bother asking them to sign the petition? Thereâs no use signing anything: no one cares what petitions people sign, so whatâs the use of asking people to do it?â
How casually different they were from his own generÂation, Brunetti thought, not for the first time. They had so little to believe in, so little to hope for. He looked back at the political enthusiasms of his youth and was forced to admit that they had all come to nothing. But at least his generÂation had tried.
âSo itâs just a pretext to make money?â Paola asked, using the Venetian expression, â
ciappar schei
â, probably to allow herself to hiss with contempt at the last word.
âIf theyâve got those ID cards, then they must have permits,â Raffi said, reminding both his parents that the times when he could be silenced by the mere tone of their voices were gone, gone, gone, and not coming back.
Brunetti turned to Paola: this was her fight, not his.
âMaybe itâs the only way these people can get money. God knows, the stateâs abandoned them,â she said.
âThe stateâs abandoned us all,â Raffi said with some heat. âItâs abandoned me, too.â He hammered this home, startling Brunetti with the anger in his voice.
âIt doesnât matter how much time we spend at university or what degrees we get; my friends and I will never get jobs.â When he saw his mother about to speak, he ignored her, saying, âI will because of Nonno and all the businesses he has and the people he knows. But my friends wonât, unless they know people too, or theyâll have to go to England, or France, to get a decent job.â Then, roughly, after a momentâs thought, âAny job.â
Across from him, his sister held up her hands in the âTâ that umpires use to call âtime outâ. Raffi stopped, Paola refrained from saying anything to him, and Brunetti gave his daughter his attention.
âMay I remind you that I started this, and I still donât have an answer,â Chiara said impatiently, sounding strangely adult. âI told you about the African because I want to know what I can do about it. About him.â Brunetti waited to see if she was going to say she didnât want to hurt the manâs feelings or frighten him, things he certainly expected her to say.
âI want him to leave me alone,â she said, her voice even. Paola got to her feet and started to clear the table. Raffi began to help his mother, leaving Brunetti to speak to Chiara.
Vianello would be the person to ask to deal with it, Brunetti thought, although he had no idea what to ask his friend to do. What was it that British Chief Inspector used to say, the one heâd met at the conference in Birmingham? âPut the frighteners
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