The Conductor Whose Baton Was Found in the Wrong CityB2Mystery & CrimeListen to the whole story5 mots-clésVocabulaire CléThe baton arrived in a manila envelope on a Tuesday, which Mara always thought was the least dramatic day of the week for a secret to surface.Traduire le paragrapheShe worked as an archivist for the National Music Conservatory in Prague, a job that involved cataloguing instruments, scores, and the kinds of personal effects that musicians leave behind when they die with more ambition than family. The envelope had been forwarded from a police evidence office in Brno — two hundred kilometres east — where it had apparently sat, unclaimed and mislabelled, for eleven years. Inside was a single carbon-fibre baton, 26 centimetres long, with a cork handle wrapped in faded blue electrical tape. Mara recognised it before she even read the attached note.Traduire le paragrapheIt had belonged to Ondřej Vávra.Traduire le paragrapheVávra had been the most celebrated conductor in the country during the 1990s: famously exacting, privately generous, and reportedly dead since 2013. According to every obituary, he had collapsed in his apartment in Prague on the fourteenth of March and had been found by a neighbour two days later. The cause of death was cardiac arrest. He was sixty-one. There had been a funeral, a commemorative concert, and a scholarship fund established in his name.Traduire le paragrapheAnd yet his baton had been in Brno on the seventeenth of March — three days after his supposed death — logged as personal property recovered from a hotel room where the guest had left without checking out.Traduire le paragrapheMara sat with this information for a long time before she did anything with it.Traduire le paragrapheThe sensible interpretation was simple enough: Vávra had owned more than one baton. All conductors did. The one in Brno probably belonged to a different trip, a different year, and the police had simply filed it under his name by mistake when someone cleared the room. It happened. Archives were full of exactly this kind of administrative accident.Traduire le paragrapheBut the blue electrical tape bothered her.Traduire le paragrapheVávra had wrapped his batons himself — she had watched him do it once, during a rehearsal break, while he talked to her about phrasing in the second movement of a Dvořák symphony. He used that specific tape because he had sensitive fingertips and ordinary grip tape irritated the skin. It was a private eccentricity, not widely known, and she had never seen it mentioned in any profile or interview. The baton in the envelope was wrapped in exactly the same way.Traduire le paragrapheShe called his former manager, a brisk woman named Sokolová who now ran a small concert agency in Vienna. Sokolová did not seem surprised by the call in the way that innocent people are surprised.Traduire le paragraphe"Where did you get that number?" she said, instead of hello.Traduire le paragrapheMara told her about the baton. There was a pause on the line that lasted slightly too long.Traduire le paragraphe"Ondřej is dead," Sokolová said. "I was at the funeral."Traduire le paragraphe"I know. I was there too." Mara kept her voice neutral. "I'm just trying to account for the provenance of an archived object. Standard procedure."Traduire le paragrapheAnother pause. "Send me a photograph of the handle."Traduire le paragrapheMara did. The response came three hours later, not from Sokolová but from a law firm in Zurich, informing her that the baton was the subject of an ongoing estate matter and requesting that the Conservatory hold it securely pending further instructions.Traduire le paragrapheThat was when Mara understood that the question was no longer whether Vávra had been in Brno after his death. The question was who needed her not to ask.Traduire le paragrapheShe spent the next two weeks doing what archivists do: reading carefully and saying nothing out loud. She found a hotel register — now digitised — that listed an "O. Novák" checking into the Grandhotel Brno on the fifteenth of March 2013, one day after Vávra's recorded death. She found a train ticket purchased with cash, impossible to trace but not impossible to find, tucked into a programme from a 2012 concert that had been donated to the Conservatory library by an anonymous source. The handwriting on the cash ticket receipt — a clerk had noted the passenger's destination — matched a note Vávra had written to her once, correcting her interpretation of a tempo marking.Traduire le paragrapheO. Novák. Ondřej Novák. His mother's maiden name, which she only knew because she had once helped digitise his personal papers.Traduire le paragrapheShe sat back in her chair and looked at the baton in its evidence bag on her desk.Traduire le paragrapheHe had not died. He had left. Carefully, convincingly, with help — Sokolová's help, almost certainly — and for reasons that Mara could only guess at. Debt, perhaps. A threat. Or simply the exhaustion of being a public person who had never really wanted to be public, which she could believe more easily than the others because she had heard it in his music, in the way he sometimes conducted the quietest passages with his eyes closed, as though the audience had already gone home.Traduire le paragrapheShe could report what she had found. She probably should. There was a scholarship fund receiving donations in the name of a man who might still be alive somewhere, eating breakfast in a small apartment and listening to the radio.Traduire le paragrapheBut she also thought about the law firm in Zurich, and the pause in Sokolová's voice, and the fact that eleven years had passed without anyone being hurt by his absence.Traduire le paragrapheIn the end, she wrote a single line in the accession record: Baton, carbon fibre. Provenance unverified. Donated anonymously, 2024.Traduire le paragrapheThen she locked it in a cabinet with the other things that had no clean explanation, and went home.Traduire le paragrapheThe least dramatic day of the week, she thought again, walking out into the November cold. And yet.Traduire le paragrapheHistoires pour débutantsLectures graduéesHistoires courtesMystery & Crime storiesL'application contient plus de 200 English histoires. Continuez à lire.Continuer dans l'applicationEssai gratuit · iOS & AndroidVérification de la compréhensionComprehension Questions0 of 3 répondu1Why does the baton's blue electrical tape make Mara suspicious that it specifically belonged to Vávra?ABecause blue tape was his signature style, mentioned in many interviews and profilesBBecause she had personally watched him wrap his batons with that tape, for a reason few people knewCBecause the police report confirmed that the tape was a rare brand sold only in Prague2What does the response from the Zurich law firm suggest to Mara?AThat the estate dispute is routine and the baton will soon be returned to the familyBThat someone with legal resources wants to control what she discovers and prevent further questionsCThat Vávra had planned to donate his batons to the Conservatory before he died3How does Mara ultimately handle her discovery?AShe reports everything to the police and the scholarship fund's board of directorsBShe confronts Sokolová directly and demands a full explanationCShe records the baton with vague details and quietly closes the matter without reporting itVérifiez votre compréhension avant de continuer.ResetVérifier les réponses