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Numbers in the Dark and Other Stories - Italo Calvino [24]

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those Germans have got their eyes on us … That's why we're all tense …’ and he laughed as if it were only Corrado who had thought of it.

But his mother passed a hand over her face. Tietro, is there going to be a war? Are they coming back?’

‘There,’ thought Pietro, ‘up until yesterday, when you heard someone talking about the danger of another war, you couldn't imagine anything specific, because the old war had their face, and nobody knew what face the new one would have. But now we know: war has got its face back: and it's theirs again.’

After dinner Pietro went out; it was raining.

‘Pietro?’ his mother asked.

‘What?’

‘Going out in this weather…’

‘So?’

‘Nothing… Don't be late …’

‘I'm not a boy any more, Mum …’

‘Right… Bye …’

His mother closed the door behind him and stood listening to his footsteps on the gravel, the clang of the gate. She stood listening to the rain falling. Germany was far away, far beyond the Alps. It was raining there too, perhaps. Kesselring went by in his car, spraying mud; the SS who had taken her son away was going to a rally, in a shiny black raincoat, his old soldier's raincoat. Of course it was silly to be worried tonight; likewise tomorrow night; even in a year's time perhaps. But she didn't know how long she would be free not to worry; even in wartime there were nights when you didn't have to worry, but you were already worrying about the next night.

She was alone, outside there was the noise of the rain. Across a rain-soaked Europe the eyes of old enemies pierced the night, right through to her.

I can see their eyes,’ she thought, ‘but they must see ours too.’ And she stood firm, staring hard into the dark.

A General in the Library


One day, in the illustrious nation of Panduria, a suspicion crept into the minds of top officials: that books contained opinions hostile to military prestige. In fact trials and enquiries had revealed that the tendency, now so widespread, of thinking of generals as people actually capable of making mistakes and causing catastrophes, and of wars as things that did not always amount to splendid cavalry charges towards a glorious destiny, was shared by a large number of books, ancient and modern, foreign and Pandurese.

Panduria's General Staff met together to assess the situation. But they didn't know where to begin, because none of them was particularly well-versed in matters bibliographical. A commission of enquiry was set up under General Fedina, a severe and scrupulous official. The commission was to examine all the books in the biggest library in Panduria.

The library was in an old building full of columns and staircases, the walls peeling and even crumbling here and there. Its cold rooms were crammed to bursting with books, and in parts inaccessible, with some corners only mice could explore. Weighed down by huge military expenditures, Panduria's state budget was unable to offer any assistance.

The military took over the library one rainy morning in November. The general climbed off his horse, squat, stiff, his thick neck shaven, his eyebrows frowning over pince-nez; four lanky lieutenants, chins held high and eyelids lowered, got out of a car, each with a briefcase in his hand. Then came a squadron of soldiers who set up camp in the old courtyard, with mules, bales of hay, tents, cooking equipment, camp radio, and signalling flags.

Sentries were placed at the doors, together with a notice forbidding entry, ‘for the duration of large-scale manoeuvres now under way’. This was an expedient which would allow the enquiry to be carried out in great secret. The scholars who used to go to the library every morning wearing heavy coats and scarves and balaclavas so as not to freeze, had to go back home again. Puzzled, they asked each other: What's this about large-scale manoeuvres in the library? Won't they make a mess of the place? And the cavalry? And are they going to be shooting too?’

Of the library staff, only one little old man, Signor Crispino, was kept so that he could explain to the officers how the books were arranged. He was a shortish

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