Wilful Behaviour - LightNovelsOnl.com
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'Why do you want to know?' Marco demanded in the same sulky tone he'd used before.
Brunetti toyed with the idea of not explaining, but then he thought he would, if only to stop Marco from using that tone. 'Because I am going to go back to the Questura and see what I can find out about him, and if he has ever been in trouble or if there is any sort of case outstanding against him, I am going to endanger my job by threatening him with the abuse of my power until he agrees not to bring charges against you.' His voice had risen as he spoke, and he realized how similar his anger towards Marco was to that he sometimes felt towards the children. 'Does that answer your question? And now give me his name.'
'Piero Sbrissa' Marco said. 'His studio is in San Marco.'
Thanks' Brunetti said, slipping around Marco and back into the restaurant, from where he called back, 'I'll call you. Don't talk to anyone' and left.
At the Questura, Vianello spent an hour on the computer and Brunetti two on the phone, and by the end of that time, each had found sufficient indication that there might be some hope of persuading Architetto Sbrissa to see the wisdom of refraining from making any formal charge against his client, Marco Erizzo. The architect, it seemed, had more than once experienced unaccountably long delays in obtaining building permits, or so three of his former clients told Brunetti. In each case, they had agreed to Sbrissa's suggestion that they use a less than legal - though more than common - method of resolving their problems, though none of the men was willing to name the sum involved. Vianello, for his part, discovered that Sbrissa reported having earned only sixteen million lire from Marco Erizzo the previous year, though Marco's secretary, when the inspector called her, said that their records contained signed receipts for more than forty.
Brunetti called a friend of his at the Carabinieri Carabinieri station in San Zaccaria and learned that Sbrissa had called them that morning to report an attack and had agreed to go in later that day, after he'd seen a doctor, to make a formal station in San Zaccaria and learned that Sbrissa had called them that morning to report an attack and had agreed to go in later that day, after he'd seen a doctor, to make a formal denuncia. denuncia. It was the work of a moment for Brunetti to pa.s.s on the information about Sbrissa's tax records and to ask his friend if Architetto Sbrissa might be persuaded to reconsider filing his complaint; the It was the work of a moment for Brunetti to pa.s.s on the information about Sbrissa's tax records and to ask his friend if Architetto Sbrissa might be persuaded to reconsider filing his complaint; the carabiniere carabiniere said he'd discuss it with the architect himself but had no doubt whatsoever that Signor Sbrissa would see the path of greater wisdom. said he'd discuss it with the architect himself but had no doubt whatsoever that Signor Sbrissa would see the path of greater wisdom.
Marco, when Brunetti phoned to tell him that the situation was being taken care of, at first refused to believe him. He wanted to know what Brunetti had done, and when Brunetti refused to tell him, Marco went silent, then blurted out that he had been disonorato disonorato by having had to ask the police for help. by having had to ask the police for help.
With some effort, Brunetti restrained himself from commenting and, instead, said only, 'You're my friend, Marco, and that's the end of it.'
'But you have to let me do something for you.'
'All right, you can,' Brunetti said immediately.
'Good. What? Anything.'
'The next time we eat at the restaurant, ask Signora Maria to give Paola the recipe for the filling she makes for the mussels.'
There was a long pause, but finally Marco said, as much in sorrow as in earnest. That's blackmail. She'd never do it.'
If s too bad Signora Maria didn't hit Sbrissa, then'
'No, you wouldn't get it, even then,' Marco said, resigned.
'She'd go to jail before she'd tell you about the mussels.' 'I was afraid of that,' Brunetti said, a.s.sured Marco that he'd think of some way he could pay his debt, and hung up.
Rewarding as this was at a personal level, it did little to advance Brunetti's understanding of what he had come to think of as the Leonardo, Guzzardi, Filipetto triangle. He went down to Signorina Elettra's office but found that she had left for the day: not surprising, really, as it was almost five, and she often complained of the tedium of the last two hours in the office. Just as he was turning to leave, the door to Vice-Questore Patta's office opened and the man himself emerged, his dove grey overcoat folded over one arm and a new briefcase Brunetti identified instantly as Bottega Veneta in his left hand.
'Ah, Brunetti,' Patta said at once, 'I've got a meeting with the Praetore in twenty minutes.' Brunetti, who cared nothing about whether Patta chose to come to work or not or how long he chose to remain there, thought it interesting that the man's response was always a kind of Pavlovian mendacity: he wondered if Patta planned a career in politics after retiring from the police.
'Then I won't keep you, sir,' Brunetti said and moved aside to allow his superior to pa.s.s.
'Has there been any progress on . . .' Patta began but, obviously unable to recall Claudia's surname, continued, 'the murder of that young girl?'
'I'm gathering information, sir,' Brunetti said.
Patta, with a hurried glance at his watch, gave him a distracted, 'Good, good,' said goodbye, and was gone.
Brunetti was curious as to whether Signorina Elettra had discovered anything, but he hesitated to approach her computer: if she had found anything important, she would surely have told him; and the information in her computer, given the suspicion with which she regarded some of the men who worked at the Questura, would surely be hedged round by moats and mazes more than sufficient to defeat any attempt he might make to penetrate them.
He went back upstairs to his own office and leafed through the file on Claudia's murder until he found the home phone number of her flatmate. He dialled the Milano prefix, then the number, and was soon talking to her mother, who agreed to call the girl to the phone; she warned Brunetti that her daughter was not to be upset, and said she'd be listening on the extension.
The call proved futile, however, for Lucia had no memory of hearing Claudia use Filipetto's name, nor did she remember hearing her speak of a notary. His sense of the mother's silent presence prevented Brunetti from asking the girl how she was, and when Lucia asked if there had been any progress, he could tell her nothing more than that they were investigating all possible leads and were optimistic that there would be progress soon. It distressed Brunetti to have to listen to himself coming out with such plat.i.tudes.
He was unable to set himself to anything after that, the echo of futility ringing clear in his ears, and so he left the Questura and headed back towards Rialto and. home. At Piero's cheese stand, where he should have turned left, he continued straight on and allowed himself to head deeper into Santa Croce, toward Campo San Boldo. He didn't stop until he was in front of Signora Jacobs's home and ringing her doorbell.
He had to wait a long time before her deep voice asked who it was.
'Commissario Brunetti,' he answered.
'I told you I don't want to talk to you' she said, sounding weary rather than angry.
'But I need to talk to you, Signora.'
'What about?'
'Notaio Filipetto'
'Who?' she asked after a long time. she asked after a long time.
'Notaio Filipetto' Brunetti repeated, offering no further clarification.
The door clicked open, surprising Brunetti. He went in and quickly up to her floor, where he found her propped against the door jamb as though drunk.
Thank you, Signora' he said, slipping his hand under her elbow and accompanying her back inside. He forced himself to pay no attention to the things in the room this time and took her slowly over to her chair, noting the lightness of her body. The instant she was seated, she reached beside her for a cigarette, but her hand was shaking so much that three of them jumped out of the packet and fell at her feet before she managed to get one lit. Just as he often wondered where all the food his children ate could possibly go, so too did he wonder, as he watched her inhale greedily, into what empty s.p.a.ces in her lungs all of that smoke could possibly disappear.
He thought she would ask him something, but she remained silent until the cigarette was reduced to a tiny stub and dropped into a blue ceramic bowl already half filled with b.u.t.ts.
'Signora' he began, 'the name of Dottor Filipetto has come up in our investigation.' He paused, waiting to see if she would question him or refer to the notary's name, but she did not. 'And so I've come to you' he went on, 'to see if you can tell me why Claudia might have wanted to talk to him.'
'Claudia, is it, now?' she asked.
'I beg your pardon' Brunetti said, genuinely taken aback.
'You speak of her as though she were a friend' she said angrily. 'Claudia' she repeated, and his thoughts fled to her.
Which was more intimate, Brunetti wondered, to startle a person soon after s.e.x or soon after death? Probably the latter, as they had been stripped of all pretence or opportunity to deceive. They lie there, exhausted and seeming painfully vulnerable, though they have been removed from all vulnerability and from all pain. To be helpless implies that help might be of some service: the dead were beyond that, beyond help and beyond hope.
'I wish that had been possible' Brunetti said.
'Why?' she demanded, 'so you could ask her questions and pick at her secrets?'
'No, Signora, so that I could have talked to her about the books we both read.'
Signora Jacobs snorted in mingled disgust and disbelief.
Offended, though also intrigued by the idea that Claudia had secrets, Brunetti defended himself. 'She was one of my wife's students. We'd already talked about books.'
'Books' she said, this time the disgust triumphant. Her anger caused her to catch her breath, and that in its turn provoked an explosion of coughing. It was a deep, humid smoker's cough, and she went on for so long that Brunetti finally went into the kitchen and brought her a gla.s.s of water. He held it out until she took it and waited as she forced it down in tiny sips and finally stopped coughing.
Thank you,' she said quite naturally and handed him the gla.s.s.
'You're welcome' he said, with equal ease, set the gla.s.s on the desk to her left and pulled his chair across so that he could sit facing her.
'Signora' he began, 1 1 don't know what you think of the police, or what you think of me, but you must believe that all I want is to find the person who killed her. I don't want to know anything that she might have wanted to remain secret, not unless it will help me do that. If such a thing is possible, I want her to rest in peace.' He looked at her all the time he was speaking, willing her to believe him. don't know what you think of the police, or what you think of me, but you must believe that all I want is to find the person who killed her. I don't want to know anything that she might have wanted to remain secret, not unless it will help me do that. If such a thing is possible, I want her to rest in peace.' He looked at her all the time he was speaking, willing her to believe him.
Signora Jacobs reached for another cigarette and lit it. Again she inhaled deeply and Brunetti felt himself grow tense, waiting for another explosion of coughing. But none came. When the b.u.t.t was smouldering in the blue bowl she said, 'Her family hasn't the knack.'
Confused, he asked, 'Of what?'
'Resting in peace. Doing anything in peace.'
I'm sorry, but I don't know anyone in her family, only Claudia.' He considered how to phrase the next question, then abandoned caution and asked simply, 'Would you tell me about them?'
She pulled her hands to her face and made a steeple of them, touching her mouth with her forefingers. It was an att.i.tude usually a.s.sociated with prayer, though Brunetti suspected it had been a long time since this woman had prayed for, or to, anything.
'You know who her grandfather was,' she said. Brunetti nodded. 'And her father?' This time he shook his head.
'He was born during the war, so of course his father named him Benito.' She looked at him and smiled, as though she had just told a joke, but Brunetti did not return her smile. He waited for her to continue.
'He was that kind of man, Luca.'
To Brunetti, Luca Guzzardi was a political opportunist who had died in a madhouse, so he thought it best to remain silent.
'He really believed in it all. The marching and the uniforms and the return to the glory of the Roman Empire.' She shook her head at this but did not smile. 'At least he believed it at the beginning.'
Brunetti had never known, nor had either of his parents ever told him, if his father believed in all this. He didn't know if it made a difference or, if it did, what kind. He bided his time silently, knowing that the old will always return to their subject.
'He was a beautiful man.' Signora Jacobs turned towards the sideboard that stood against the wall, gesturing with one hand to a ragged row of bleached photographs. Sensing that it was expected of him, Brunetti got to his feet and went over to examine the pictures. The first was a half-portrait of a young man, his head all but obscured by the plume-crested helmet of the Bersaglieri, Bersaglieri, an element of uniform the adult Brunetti had always found especially ludicrous. In another, the same young man held a rifle, in the one next to it, a sword, his body half draped in a long dark cloak. In each photo the pose was self-consciously belligerent, the chin thrust out, the gaze unyielding in response to the need to immortalize this moment of high patriotism. Brunetti found the poses as silly as the plumes and ribbons and epaulettes with which the young man's uniform was bedecked. So resistant was Brunetti to the lure of the military that he could rarely resist the temptation to superimpose upon men in uniform the template of New Guinean tribesmen with bones stuck through their noses, their naked bodies painted white, their p.e.n.i.ses safeguarded by metre-long bamboo sheaths. Official ceremonies and parades thus caused him a certain amount of difficulty. an element of uniform the adult Brunetti had always found especially ludicrous. In another, the same young man held a rifle, in the one next to it, a sword, his body half draped in a long dark cloak. In each photo the pose was self-consciously belligerent, the chin thrust out, the gaze unyielding in response to the need to immortalize this moment of high patriotism. Brunetti found the poses as silly as the plumes and ribbons and epaulettes with which the young man's uniform was bedecked. So resistant was Brunetti to the lure of the military that he could rarely resist the temptation to superimpose upon men in uniform the template of New Guinean tribesmen with bones stuck through their noses, their naked bodies painted white, their p.e.n.i.ses safeguarded by metre-long bamboo sheaths. Official ceremonies and parades thus caused him a certain amount of difficulty.
He continued to look at the photographs until he judged the necessary period of time had pa.s.sed, and then he returned to his seat opposite Signora Jacobs. Tell me more about him, Signora.'
Her glance was direct, its keenness touched by the faint clouding of age. 'What's to tell? We were young, I was in love, and the future was ours.'
Brunetti permitted himself to respond to the intimacy of her remark. 'Only you were in love?'
Her smile was that of an old person, one who had left almost everything behind. 'I told you: he was beautiful. Men like that, in the end, love only themselves.' Before he could comment, she added, 'I didn't know that then. Or didn't want to.' She reached for another cigarette and lit it. Blowing out a long trail of smoke, she said, 'It comes to the same thing, though, doesn't it?' She turned the burning tip of the cigarette towards herself, looked at it for a moment, then said, 'The strange thing is that, even knowing this about him, it doesn't change the way I loved him. And still do' She glanced up at him, then down at her lap. Softly, she said, 'That's why I want to give him back his good name.'
Brunetti remained silent, not wanting to interrupt her. Sensing this, she went on, 'It was all so exciting, the sense or the hope that everything would be made new. Austria had been full of it for years, and so it never occurred to me to question it. And when I saw it again here, in men like Luca and his friends, I couldn't see what it really was or what they were really like or that all it would bring us, all of us, was death and suffering.' She sighed and then added, 'Neither could Luca.'
When it began to seem as if she would not speak again, Brunetti asked, 'How long did you know him?'
She considered this, then answered, 'Six years, all through the last years of the war and his trial and then .. ' her voice trailed off, leaving Brunetti curious as to how she would put it. 'And then what came after,' was all she said.
'Did you see him on San Servolo?'
She cleared her throat, a tearing, wet sound that set Brunetti's teeth on edge, so deeply did it speak of illness and dark liquids. 'Yes. I went out once a week until they wouldn't let me see him any more.'
'Why was that?'
'I think it was because they didn't want anyone to know how they were kept.'
'But why the change? If they'd let you go in the beginning, that is' Brunetti explained.
'Because he got much worse after he was there. And after he realized he wasn't going to leave.'
'Should he have?' Brunetti asked, then clarified his question. That is, when he first went in, did he or did you think he was going to be able to leave?'
That was the agreement,' she said.
'With whom?' Brunetti asked.
'Why are you asking all of this?' she asked him.
'Because I want to understand things. About him, and about the past.'
'Why?'
He thought that should be obvious to her. 'Because it might help.'
'About Claudia?' she asked. He wished there had been some trace of hope in her voice, but he knew she was too old to find hope in anything that followed death.
He decided to tell her the truth, rather than what he wanted to say. 'Perhaps.' Then he led her back to his original question. 'What was the agreement?'
She lit another cigarette and smoked half of it before she decided to answer. 'With the judges. That he would confess to everything and, when he had his collapse, they'd send him to San Servolo, where he could stay a year or two and when everyone had forgotten about him, he'd be released.' She finished the cigarette and stuffed it among the others in the ashtray. 'And come back to me' she added. After a long pause, she said, That was all I wanted.'
'But what happened?'
She studied Brunetti's face, then answered, 'You're too young to know about San Servolo, about what really happened there.'
He nodded.
'I was never told. I went there one Sat.u.r.day morning. I went out every week, even when all they did was tell me I couldn't see him and send me home. But that time they told me he had died.' Her voice ground to a halt, and she looked down at her lap, where her hands lay, inert. She turned them over and looked down at the smooth palms, rubbing at the left with the tips of the first three fingers of the right in what seemed to Brunetti an attempt to erase the lifeline. That's all they told me' she went on. 'No explanation. But it could have been anything. One of the other patients could have killed him. That was always covered up, when it happened. Or it could have been one of the guards. Or it could have been typhus, for all I know. They were kept like animals, once people stopped coming to see them.' She drew her hands into tight fists and pressed them on her thighs.
'But what about the agreement with the judges?' Brunetti asked.
She smiled and laughed, almost as if she really found his question amusing. 'You, of all people, Commissario, should know better than to believe anything a judge promises you.' When Brunetti didn't argue the point, she continued. Two of the judges were Communists, so they wanted someone to be punished, and the third was the son of the Fascist Party chief in Mestre, so he had to prove that he was the purest of the pure and not at all influenced by his father's politics.'
'What about the Amnesty?' Brunetti asked, thinking of the general slate-cleaning Togliatti had orchestrated just after the end of the war, pardoning all crimes committed by either side during the Fascist era. He didn't understand how Guzzardi could have been convicted when thousands went free for having done the same things, or far worse.
The judges declared that the crime took place on Swiss territory' she said simply. 'No amnesty would cover that.'
'I don't understand' Brunetti protested.
The home of the Swiss Consul. They said it was Swiss territory.'
'But that' s absurd' Brunetti said.
That's not what the judges said' she insisted. 'And the appeal court confirmed it. Legally, I did everything I could.' Her voice was truculent and had taken on that hard edge voices acquire when they are used to defend a belief rather than a fact.