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"Leo," Teresa interjected. "You're no more or less human than the rest of us. Plus, you're lucky to be alive. Just take it easy. And then . . ." She glanced at the surgeon, who had once again looked at his watch. "Oh, for G.o.d's sake, Pino . . . Since he won't ask, I will. How long will he be like this? What does it mean?"
"It means a wheelchair. For at least two, three months. Possibly longer. It is simply a matter of waiting now. I have no crystal ball. It is possible . . ." He stared at Falcone to make sure this went home. " . . . if you're unlucky, that you will be in a wheelchair forever. I don't think this is irreversible, but one can never be sure. You will need regular physiotherapy to work on that leg. I gather you are a bachelor. Perhaps there is a police home that could look after you."
"A home home?" Falcone roared.
"He will not go to a home," Raffaella said quietly. "Please, Leo. Listen to your surgeon. He surely knows what's best for you."
"And what the h.e.l.l am I supposed to do all day?"
"Relax," Pino suggested mildly. "Read books. Listen to music. Take up a hobby. I recommend painting. It's a talent found in the most unlikely of men at times. Apart from the physio I don't expect you to experience much in the way of discomfort. Most men would appreciate the opportunity."
"Most men!" Falcone spat back at him. He glared at Teresa. "Get Costa and Peroni in here now now."
Pino shook his head. "No. I absolutely forbid it. The stress of work is the last thing you need at this time."
Falcone glowered at the surgeon. "At least let them send me the files to read. A man's allowed to read, isn't he?"
"By all means," Pino said, smiling. "You can read to your heart's content."
THE FOOD TASTED BETTER WHEN LAVAZZI AND MALIPIERO were gone. Gianfranco Randazzo sat one table in from the window, alone in the room, eating and drinking slowly, enjoying the food and the solitude, trying to stretch out the meal for as long as possible. Escaping the monastery made him realise how he was beginning to hate the place. He was becoming sluggish and stupid. One more day. That was all he was prepared to wait. Then he'd get in touch with the right men, in the Questura and in the city, to remind them of a few salient facts. And how it was impolite to have to call in favours by name. were gone. Gianfranco Randazzo sat one table in from the window, alone in the room, eating and drinking slowly, enjoying the food and the solitude, trying to stretch out the meal for as long as possible. Escaping the monastery made him realise how he was beginning to hate the place. He was becoming sluggish and stupid. One more day. That was all he was prepared to wait. Then he'd get in touch with the right men, in the Questura and in the city, to remind them of a few salient facts. And how it was impolite to have to call in favours by name.
It was now close to two forty-five. He'd worked his way through a larger meal than he'd normally have eaten: antipasti of soft sh.e.l.l crab, calamari and mantis shrimp, porcini risotto, then lamb cutlets with a single contorno contorno of spinach. All accompanied by the best bottle of heavy Barolo on the wine list, almost fifteen degrees proof, a heavy, swirling red of pure alcoholic clout. He felt a little drunk, a little angry too. All of this was undeserved. Aldo Bracci was a lout and a criminal. The thug got what was coming. of spinach. All accompanied by the best bottle of heavy Barolo on the wine list, almost fifteen degrees proof, a heavy, swirling red of pure alcoholic clout. He felt a little drunk, a little angry too. All of this was undeserved. Aldo Bracci was a lout and a criminal. The thug got what was coming.
And Randazzo's reward? To be sent into some kind of exile, humiliated when he stepped outside for a brief respite, forced to wear the stupid, itching, sweaty robe of a monk, a disguise that fooled no one, he thought, not by the way the waiter had looked at him, stifling a laugh, when he'd arrived with the two idiots from the Questura, who'd spent the rest of the lunch filling their faces at his expense.
There were scores to be settled after treatment like this. Randazzo ran a few possibilities through his head. He wasn't going to be content with just a chalet in the mountains anymore. Ma.s.siter would make millions out of the Isola degli Arcangeli. He wouldn't miss a few drops of that spilling over, trickling down to the man who removed the final obstacle to the deal.
He was going over a few more options when the waiter returned with another dish: tiny wild strawberries covered in cream and some kind of booze.
"I didn't order that," Randazzo snarled.
"Keep your hair on. It's a gift!" the waiter remarked, grinning, mocking him. "We don't get monks in here often. I'm hoping you'll be bringing along some colleagues colleagues in the future. If that's the right word. We always do good business with the Church. We can give you a little in the future. If that's the right word. We always do good business with the Church. We can give you a little sconto sconto off the bill if you like. How does ten percent sound? Twenty for you?" off the bill if you like. How does ten percent sound? Twenty for you?"
"You can start today." Randazzo glanced at the tables outside. "Make sure it comes off theirs too."
Then he looked again. They weren't there. Lavazzi and Malipiero had, without his noticing, finished eating, then somehow wandered off somewhere, maybe to b.u.m a few drinks from some neighbourhood cafe.
Except.
They were filling their faces for free anyway. It didn't make sense to Randazzo's befuddled mind. Sometimes, he thought, there were men who just had to bunk off work, even when there was no good reason. It was bred into their genes. Like a twist in the DNA that, if you could just unravel it, read "lazy b.a.s.t.a.r.d, never going to change."
Randazzo stared at the little piazza and wondered why he didn't eat here more often. It was Castello, true, but not like the down-at-heel working-cla.s.s quartiere quartiere around the Via Garibaldi where the Questura kept some apartments. This was a good place to eat, a quiet and pretty location, one the tourists found only by accident. Cla.s.sy. It deserved to be popular. The last time he looked, every table outside had been occupied. Now there was just a single party left outdoors. Three men in blue shirts, sungla.s.ses, slicked-back hair, well-ironed slacks, sat at the opposite end of the terrace to the table the two cops had occupied. Randazzo could understand why everyone else had left. It was hot. It was getting late. around the Via Garibaldi where the Questura kept some apartments. This was a good place to eat, a quiet and pretty location, one the tourists found only by accident. Cla.s.sy. It deserved to be popular. The last time he looked, every table outside had been occupied. Now there was just a single party left outdoors. Three men in blue shirts, sungla.s.ses, slicked-back hair, well-ironed slacks, sat at the opposite end of the terrace to the table the two cops had occupied. Randazzo could understand why everyone else had left. It was hot. It was getting late.
The waiter had gone back to the counter, back to flicking at bread-crumbs and dust with his cloth. Randazzo got to his feet, a little unsteadily, and lifted the bottle of wine. It came up too easily from the table. He glowered at the Barolo, with its fancy yellow label and dark, dark gla.s.s. It was empty.
"Coffee," he mumbled.
The waiter turned and grimaced at him. "What?"
"Coffee," Randazzo barked angrily. "And grappa. Good grappa. Not the s.h.i.t you'd normally give out. Big one. I'll take it outside."
On another occasion he'd have sat there anyway, looking at the a.r.s.enale gates, thinking about those stolen lions. He liked his history, the good parts anyway. There was a time when entire naval fleets sailed out from the vast military boatyard hidden behind that castellated frontage. Big enough, powerful enough to browbeat the entire eastern Mediterranean into submission, to send emperors fleeing for safety, nations flocking to their treasuries to find some gold that could keep the Venetian pirates at bay.
Piracy and thieving. These were in the native blood. It was fruitless trying to pretend otherwise. He stumbled to the nearest table outside, fell into a chair, waited for the coffee and the drink to arrive, took one gulp of the latter, then poured some cane sugar into his cup and sipped at that.
He was next to the four businessmen, who were staring at him. They could go to h.e.l.l, Randazzo decided. He'd heard them speaking. Small talk. In a language he half recognised because it was close to native Veneto.
The Croatians were everywhere these days. In the holiday business. In the smuggling rings. It was hard to draw the line between the legitimate ones and the crooks.
Randazzo gave them a sarcastic grin and mumbled, "Salute." "Salute."
The biggest raised his gla.s.s of beer and said the same back.
Randazzo considered mumbling some low insult under his breath, then thought the better of it.
"What do we call you?" one of the men asked. "Father? Brother? What?"
Randazzo peered at them. In his view the Croatians were sc.u.m, mainly. Opportunists who'd just crawled their way to the other side of the Adriatic in the hope of s.c.r.e.w.i.n.g some money out of the first mug they encountered. He gave them one sour glance, then returned to his grappa.
"Maybe he's supposed to be one of the silent ones," the nearest suggested. "You know. The kind of monk who never says a thing because he's too busy contemplating G.o.d or something?"
The weasel-like dark-eyed creature by his side laughed. "Too busy contemplating his gla.s.s, more like. And what's on his plate. You pay for that, Father, Brother, Sister, Uncle? Or whatever they call you?"
And they never had any respect. That was another thing that bugged him about the Croatians.
"I pay for everything," Randazzo replied, trying not to sound drunk. "Including sc.u.m like you."
They were coming into focus now. There were three of them. One older, bigger than the rest. Randazzo took a good look around the empty square.
"Lavazzi! Malipiero!" he yelled. "Where the h.e.l.l are you when you're wanted?"
"Language, language," the big one tut-tutted under his breath.
"Where the fu . . ."
Randazzo cut what he was about to say and looked inside the restaurant. There was no one there now. Not even the insolent little waiter. The piazza was silent and empty, not a face at any of the windows, not a hand pushing out ribbons of washing onto the ropes that were strung across the adjoining alleyways, one wall to the other. Nothing but him, the men and some old stone lions.
He sniffed the air. There was a stink here, rising up from the water lapping in the ca.n.a.l by the a.r.s.enale gates, reaching him on the slightest of August breezes.
The big one got up, brushed crumbs off his trousers, then took a final gulp of his beer. "You know," he said, "I don't think there's anything worse than that. A man of the Church using profanities. Feeding his face with good, rich food when half the world's starving." He glared at Randazzo, then nodded back at the restaurant. "Back where we come from, people dream about eating somewhere like this. Even the priests."
But I'm not a priest, Randazzo wanted to object. Something, some note of alarm sounding in the Barolo fuzz that filled his brain, stopped him. Randazzo wanted to object. Something, some note of alarm sounding in the Barolo fuzz that filled his brain, stopped him.
The other two were up on their feet now, one of them with something to say.
"You know what's worse than a greedy priest?" he asked.
Randazzo yelled for Lavazzi and Malipiero again, swore he'd kick their a.s.ses when they finally dragged themselves out of whatever fleapit they'd found.
"What's worse," the Croatian continued, coming close to him with a look on his face that was more disappointment than threat, "is a crooked cop. One who takes what's on offer and still doesn't know his place."
"A lack of grat.i.tude," said the big one, taking something out of his pocket, something black and dull and familiar, s.c.r.e.w.i.n.g an object onto its nose with a casual disdain that made Gianfranco Randazzo start to shiver inside the hot, itchy Franciscan habit, "is tantamount to a lack of respect."
The Croatian stood in front of Randazzo now, the gun with its silencer firm in his right hand. "And that, Commissario," he added, "is why I've decided this doesn't happen easy."
Randazzo's head cleared in an instant; every last confusing speck of the heavy bloodred booze fled somewhere deep inside his bloodstream.
"I di-didn't talk to anyone," he stuttered. "I wouldn't talk to anyone. Tell him. Tell them all. I . . ."
They weren't even listening. They were just scanning the piazza, making certain they were alone.
"I'll be sure to pa.s.s that on," the big one said, then pressed the pistol hard on Randazzo's right knee, just as the policeman was coming off the seat, trying to summon the strength and the courage to run. There was a compressed, powerful retort, like the popping of a balloon inside a pillowcase.
Gianfranco Randazzo lifted his shattered leg and, still convinced he was able to run, screamed when his foot hit the ground, felt himself falling, felt something stab through his chest and his gut, small hot metal devils whirling through him, cutting and slicing, fiery chunks of metal scorching through his flesh.
The paved piazza rose up to meet him. His head banged hard on the cobbles, his teeth smashed on the hard, hard stone.
He looked up, trying to see them. Above him stood the stone lion, leering, a stolen object happy to watch something else being robbed from a man.
Then its worn features disappeared, were replaced by the face of the big Croatian. An unseen object, hard, cold, metallic, came from nowhere and placed itself on a pulsing vein in Randazzo's right temple.
"Ciao," the man murmured. the man murmured.
SCACCHI'S BOAT WAS STILL ABSENT WHEN THEY'D CIRCLED the island. Apart from the woman, anxiously scanning the sky, looking for the source of the noise, Costa knew he had nothing to go on. Nothing except an illicit little shack, erected somewhere at the back of Piero Scacchi's property, and recently, from what he'd seen from the pa.s.senger seat of Andrea Correr's plane. It was a shot in the dark. Just the kind of trick Leo Falcone would have pulled when things were getting difficult. Costa hoped a little of the old b.a.s.t.a.r.d's luck had rubbed off. the island. Apart from the woman, anxiously scanning the sky, looking for the source of the noise, Costa knew he had nothing to go on. Nothing except an illicit little shack, erected somewhere at the back of Piero Scacchi's property, and recently, from what he'd seen from the pa.s.senger seat of Andrea Correr's plane. It was a shot in the dark. Just the kind of trick Leo Falcone would have pulled when things were getting difficult. Costa hoped a little of the old b.a.s.t.a.r.d's luck had rubbed off.
He walked up from the beach, climbed over a low rickety fence and found himself in a field. Immaculate rows of pepper plants, dotted with red fruit, stretched in front of him, verdant on raised beds. Beyond a fence to the left lay similar ranks of purple artichokes, and to the right a field of equally proper spinach beet, a vivid sheet of green. Scacchi, or whoever tended these crops, was careful. Not a plant was out of place, not a leaf showed a sign of disease or insect damage. Nic recalled the way his own father had worked the vegetable garden outside the family house back in Rome, on the outskirts of the city, close to the old Appian Way. There had been the same peasant skill, the same monotonous, backbreaking care there, and it showed in the crops, in every shining leaf.
He looked ahead, towards the shack, now no more than a hundred metres away. The woman was gone. Back inside perhaps. Or fleeing to find help, suspecting what was on the way. Costa thought about what he knew of the background of the case, took out his service pistol, looked at it, checked the magazine, then put it back in the holster hidden beneath his dark jacket.
Guns depressed him. They always had, and, he suspected, always would.
Then he took out his mobile phone and checked for messages. There were none. Not a word from Teresa or Peroni. Or Emily either, and he wondered why he'd thought of her last.
Casting these misgivings to one side, or trying to, he walked on to the little house, found the door open, went in, and said, quietly, calmly, with not a hint of threat in his voice, "Signora Conti?"
The place wasn't what he expected. From the outside it seemed a run-down rural hovel, plain white walls, poorly built, with a single small window giving out onto the tiny patch of garden, nasturtiums and roses, that sat in front of the cheap green single door. But from within, it looked like a home, and not that of a peasant farmer either. There were paintings on the walls, only dimly visible in the poor light, a hi-fi system playing cla.s.sical music at low volume, and shelves of books. The smell of food drifted in from an adjoining open door. The place was spotless, tidy and organised in a way which seemed, to him, more urban than rural.
"Signora Conti?" he called again. "I wish to talk with you. There's nothing to fear."
The woman came out of the kitchen, wiping her hands with a cloth, glowering at him. She had short light brown hair, an attractive, intelligent face, and eyes that kept darting around the room, in any direction but his.
"Who are you?" she demanded. "What right do you have to walk in here? Flying your plane over my house . . . ?"
"Signora Conti-"
"Stop saying this name!" she insisted, voice rising. "There's no such person here. Go, please. Before I call the police."
He took out the photo from his pocket. They had just one in the files in the Questura. It was old. She'd changed her appearance. Dyed her hair, cut it short.
He held it up in front of her. "You're Laura Conti. I know why you're here. I know why you're hiding. Piero's done a good job keeping you safe. The postcards. Putting you so close to him, so close to the city. It's clever. He's a smart man."
"Piero?" she asked. "Where is he? What have you done with him?"
"I haven't done anything with him. He's not here. I thought perhaps you knew . . ."
"He's the landlord. Nothing else. I don't understand what you're saying. It's nonsense."
"Laura . . ."
"Not that name!"
He took one step towards her. She shivered at his closeness.
"I need your help," he said. "I need it desperately. And I can't allow this to go on. It's wrong. There's a time to run away, and a time to face up to your past. This is that time. You and Daniel-"
"Daniel, Daniel, Daniel . . ." she whispered, holding her head in her hands. "What are you talking about? My name is Paola Soranzo. I live here with my husband, Carlo. We are simple farmers. Now leave us alone."
Costa tossed the photo on the table. She didn't even look at it. "I can't do that," he said. "Not for your sake. Not for mine. I have to . . ."
He was reaching into his jacket, looking for the badge, when the man crept up behind him, quiet as a church mouse, unseen until the moment the long, ugly double barrel of a shotgun emerged round Nic Costa's right shoulder and angled up towards his face.
A hand came round the left side of his chest, found the gun in its holster, removed it, threw the weapon to the floor. Then he came slowly into view. Daniel Forster could pa.s.s easily as a Sant' Erasmo farmer now. His hair was dyed almost black, long beneath a grubby beret. He wore a heavy moustache and stubble. And he had the farmer's hunch too, the turned shoulders that came from working the fields. Costa was impressed. He raised his hands and kept them high all the same.
"Signor Forster . . ." he began to say.
"Shut up!" the man yelled, then cracked the side of Nic's head painfully with the barrel of the shotgun.
The woman was screaming, in fright or anger. Costa didn't know which. Then the hard wooden stock of the gun fell again, and he tumbled to the floor, not caring.
THE LAWYERS' OFFICES WERE ON THE THIRD FLOOR OF a block on the Zattere waterfront in Dorsoduro, with a view out to Guidecca, the low residential island opposite. Emily Deacon forced her mind off the conversation briefly and stared at the Molino Stucky, the old mill almost opposite. This was, like the Isola degli Arcangeli, a piece of Venetian obsolescence seeking a purpose in a new, changing world. Unused for decades since the company behind the towering, red-brick factorylike structure collapsed, it had been through any number of redevelopment schemes trying to revive the place for industrial or manufacturing purposes. Now it was turning into a mix of hotels and apartments, a sign of the way Venice was headed. Ma.s.siter was right. There was only one form of commerce allowed in this city these days-the milking of ever-increasing numbers of visitors. Compared to the Molino Stucky, the Arcangeli's island was paradise, a unique mix of extraordinary architecture and location, not some ungainly refurbished mill block perched at the end of an island few would ever wish to visit. She could appreciate why Ma.s.siter didn't intend to be enc.u.mbered by the Arcangeli's futile aspirations to continue their gla.s.smaking trade. He'd seen the main chance and was now intent on seizing it. a block on the Zattere waterfront in Dorsoduro, with a view out to Guidecca, the low residential island opposite. Emily Deacon forced her mind off the conversation briefly and stared at the Molino Stucky, the old mill almost opposite. This was, like the Isola degli Arcangeli, a piece of Venetian obsolescence seeking a purpose in a new, changing world. Unused for decades since the company behind the towering, red-brick factorylike structure collapsed, it had been through any number of redevelopment schemes trying to revive the place for industrial or manufacturing purposes. Now it was turning into a mix of hotels and apartments, a sign of the way Venice was headed. Ma.s.siter was right. There was only one form of commerce allowed in this city these days-the milking of ever-increasing numbers of visitors. Compared to the Molino Stucky, the Arcangeli's island was paradise, a unique mix of extraordinary architecture and location, not some ungainly refurbished mill block perched at the end of an island few would ever wish to visit. She could appreciate why Ma.s.siter didn't intend to be enc.u.mbered by the Arcangeli's futile aspirations to continue their gla.s.smaking trade. He'd seen the main chance and was now intent on seizing it.
She listened to the argument continuing to rattle from side to side, between Ma.s.siter's two surly attorneys, one English, one Milanese, and the single local lawyer representing the Arcangeli, a man who was both out of his depth and, it seemed to her, a little afraid of the Englishman. Michele Arcangelo sat by the man's side, intent on stiffening his resolve every time some new demand from Ma.s.siter fell on the table, his one good eye staring at the sheaves of papers and plans that marked, as he surely knew, the end of the Arcangeli's tenure on their sad little island. His brother Gabriele remained mute on the other side, looking as if he wished he were anywhere else in the world. This was all, Emily decided, Michele's game. He was driven by his ego, his desire to be seen as an equal with his father. Ma.s.siter's solution left him with nothing but money. Plenty of money. Several million euros to spare, even after the family's debts were cleared. All the same, it was apparent to her this was meaningless. Without some stake in the island's future, Michele Arcangelo would deem this deal worthless. Unless the alternative was even more difficult to swallow.
The Arcangeli had conceded every point but one. That last concerned the fornace fornace. Michele was insistent that Ma.s.siter hold to his original offer, allowing them to work the place unhindered and set up a small shop to market their goods. It was a final sticking point, one Ma.s.siter was reluctant to let pa.s.s. On the yacht, Emily had seen enough of the plans for the scheme to understand what the Englishman wanted for the building. It would be a restaurant and conference facility, sitting alongside the gallery of the palazzo, the premium hotel rooms of the mansion, and in front of a new hotel facility of cheaper rooms intended to be squeezed in at the rear of the property. The idea that he'd allow a working furnace, with its gas and smoke and industrial stink, to live alongside the rest of the island was unthinkable. Tourists demanded perfection, solitude, a promise of escape. Not the Arcangeli clan's hot, noisy nights of gla.s.smaking on their doorstep. This doubtless explained why Ma.s.siter had concealed from the Arcangeli from the beginning his greater plan for the island, allowing them to believe his interest was merely personal, focused on the establishment of the exhibition facility.
There was a reason for Emily's presence in the room. She wanted to keep Hugo Ma.s.siter's trust, as much as possible, until it no longer mattered. Trust and usefulness were indivisible to him. So she looked at her watch and, quite deliberately, interrupted Michele in full flow as he embarked upon a bitter tirade about the major changes being introduced into the contract at such a late stage.