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'What sort of information do you want?' Vianello asked.
'I'd like to know where he was when these men died,' said Brunetti, putting the papers Signorina Elettra had given him on Vianello's desk. 'And I'd like to know where he was the night Mitri was murdered.'
Vianello raised his chin in inquiry and Brunetti explained, 'I've heard that he's a paid killer. He had trouble with someone named Narduzzi a few years ago.' Vianello nodded to show that he recognized the name.
'Remember what happened to him?' Brunetti asked.
'Dead. But I forget how.'
'Strangled, perhaps with an electrical cord.'
'And these two?' Vianello asked, nodding down at the doc.u.mentation.
'The same.'
Vianello put the papers on top of the ones on his own desk and read through them carefully. 'I never heard of either one of these. The Narduzzi murder was about a year ago, wasn't it?'
'Yes. In Padova.' The police there had probably been glad to see the last of Narduzzi. Certainly the investigation had never stretched as far as Venice. 'Can you think of anyone who might know something?'
'There's that man you worked with, the one from Padova.'
'Delia Corte,' Brunetti supplied. 'I'd already thought of him. He probably knows some bad people he can ask. But I wondered if you knew anyone.'
'Two,' Vianello stated, offering no explanation.
'All right. Ask them.'
'What can I offer them in return, Commissario?'
Brunetti had to think about this for a while and consider both the favours he might be able to ask of other policemen and the ones he could safely extend himself. Finally he said, 'I'll owe them a favour and if anything happens to them in Padova, so will della Corte.'
'It's not a great deal,' Vianello said, honestly sceptical.
It's the best they're going to get.'
20.
The next hour was filled with phone calls to and from Padova as Brunetti contacted police and Carabinieri Carabinieri and engaged in the delicate business of calling in some of the favours he had acc.u.mulated during his years in the police. Most of these calls were made from his office to other offices. Delia Corte agreed to ask around in Padova and said he'd be willing to match Brunetti's offer of a favour in return for any help they were given. After he was finished with these, he left the Questura, walked out to a bank of public telephones on the Riva degli Schiavoni, and from there used up a small stack of fifteen-thousand-lire telephone cards ringing the and engaged in the delicate business of calling in some of the favours he had acc.u.mulated during his years in the police. Most of these calls were made from his office to other offices. Delia Corte agreed to ask around in Padova and said he'd be willing to match Brunetti's offer of a favour in return for any help they were given. After he was finished with these, he left the Questura, walked out to a bank of public telephones on the Riva degli Schiavoni, and from there used up a small stack of fifteen-thousand-lire telephone cards ringing the telefonini telefonini of various petty and not so petty criminals with whom he had dealt in the past. of various petty and not so petty criminals with whom he had dealt in the past.
He knew, as did all Italians, that many of these calls could be, perhaps were even now being, intercepted and recorded by various agencies of the State, so he never gave his name and always spoke in the most oblique way, saying only that a certain person in Venice was interested in the whereabouts of Ruggiero Palmieri but no, most decidedly no, he did not want to make contact, nor did he want Signor Palmieri to learn that questions were being asked about him. His sixth call, to a drug dealer whose son Brunetti had not arrested after being attacked by the boy the day after his father's last conviction some years ago, said he would see what he could do.
'And Luigino?' Brunetti asked to show that there were no hard feelings.
'I've sent him to America. To study business,' the father said before he hung up. That probably meant Brunetti would have to arrest him the next time he met him. Or perhaps, empowered by his degree in business management from some prestigious American university, he would rise to great heights in the organization and thus pa.s.s into realms where he would hardly be likely to be subject to arrest by a humble commissario di polizia commissario di polizia from Venice. from Venice.
Using the last of his phone cards and reading her number from a piece of paper, Brunetti called Mitri's widow and, as he had on the day after Mitri's death, listened to a recorded message saying that the family, burdened with grief, was accepting no messages. He switched the phone to the other ear and searched in his pocket until he found a piece of paper with Mitri's brother's number, but there, too, he heard only a message. On a whim, he decided to pa.s.s by Mitri's apartment and see if anyone else from the family was there.
He took the 82 to San Marcuola and easily found his way to the building. He rang the bell and soon heard a man's voice on the intercom, asking who he was. He said he was from the police, gave his rank but not his name, heard nothing for a moment, then was told to come in. The salt was still busy with its corrosive work, and paint and plaster lay in small piles on the stairs as before.
At the top a man in a dark suit stood just inside the open door. He was tall and very thin, with a narrow face and short dark hair just going grey at the temples. When he saw Brunetti, he stepped back to allow him to enter and extended his hand. 'I'm Sandro Bonaventura,' he said, 'Paolo's brother-in-law.' Like his sister, he chose to speak Italian, not Veneziano, though the underlying accent was audible.
Brunetti shook hands and, still not giving his name, entered the apartment. Bonaventura led him into a large room at the end of the short corridor. He noticed that the floor in this room was covered with what looked like the original oak boards, not parquet, and the curtains in front of the double windows appeared to be genuine Fortuny cloth.
Bonaventura motioned to a chair and, when Brunetti was seated, sat opposite him. 'My sister isn't here,' he began. 'She and her granddaughter have gone to stay a few days with my wife.'
'I had hoped to speak to her,' Brunetti said. 'Have you any idea when she'll be back?'
Bonaventura shook his head. 'She and my wife are very close, as close as sisters, so we asked her to come and stay with us when . . . when this happened.' He looked down at his hands and shook his head slowly, then up again and met Brunetti's eyes. 'I can't believe it happened, not to Paolo. There was no reason, none at all.'
'There very often isn't any reason, if a person comes in on a robber and he panics ...'
'You think it was a robbery? What about the note?' Bonaventura asked.
Brunetti paused before he answered, 'It could be that the robber chose him because of the publicity caused by the travel agency. He could have had the note with him, planned to leave it there after the robbery.'
'But why bother?'
Brunetti had no idea at all and found the suggestion ridiculous. 'To divert us from looking for a professional thief,' he invented.
'That's impossible,' Bonaventura said. 'Paolo was killed by some fanatic who thought he was responsible for something he had no idea was going on. My sister's life has been ruined. It's just crazy. Don't talk to me about thieves who come equipped with notes and don't waste your time going around looking for them. You should be looking for the crazy person who did this.'
'Did your brother-in-law have any enemies?' Brunetti asked.
'No, of course not.'
'I find that strange,' Brunetti said.
'What do you mean?' Bonaventura demanded, leaning forward in his chair, putting himself into Brunetti's s.p.a.ce.
'Please, don't be offended, Signor Bonaventura.' Brunetti put a placating palm between them. 'I mean that Dottor Mitri was a businessman, and a successful one. I'm certain that in the course of his years he had to make decisions that displeased people, angered them.'
'People don't kill one another because of a bad business deal,' Bonaventura insisted.
Brunetti, who knew how often they did, said nothing for a while. Then: 'Can you think of anyone he might have had difficulty with?'
'No,' Bonaventura replied instantly and, after a longer period of reflection, added, 'No one.'
'I see. Are you familiar with your brother-in-law's business? Do you work with him?'
'No. I manage our factory in Castelfranco Veneto. Interfar. It's mine, but it's registered under my sister's name.' He saw that Brunetti was not satisfied with this and added, 'For tax reasons.'
Brunetti nodded in what he thought was a very priestlike way. He sometimes believed that a person in Italy could be excused any horror, any enormity, simply by saying that it was done for tax reasons. Wipe out your family, shoot your dog, burn down the neighbour's house: so long as you said you did it for tax reasons, no judge, no jury, would convict. 'Did Dottor Mitri have any involvement in the factory?'
'No, not at all.'
'What kind of factory is it, if I might ask?'
Bonaventura didn't seem to find the question strange. 'Of course you might ask. Pharmaceuticals. Aspirin, insulin, many homeopathic products.'
'And are you a pharmacist, to oversee the operations?'
Bonaventura hesitated before answering, 'No, not at all. I'm just a businessman. I add up the columns of figures, listen to the scientists who prepare the formulas and try to figure out strategies for successful marketing.'
'You don't need a background in pharmacology?' Brunetti asked, thinking of Mitri, who had been a chemist.
'No. It's just a question of making managerial decisions. The product is irrelevant: shoes, s.h.i.+ps, sealing wax.'
'I see,' Brunetti said. 'Your brother-in-law was a chemist, wasn't he?'
'Yes, I think so, originally, at the start of his career.'
'But no longer?'
'No, he hasn't worked as one for years.'
'What did he do, then, at his factories?' Brunetti wondered if Mitri had also been a believer in managerial strategies.
Bonaventura got to his feet. 'I'm sorry to be abrupt with you, Commissario, but I've got things to do here and these are questions I really can't answer. I think it would be better if you contacted the directors of Paolo's factories. I truly don't know anything about his businesses or how he ran them. I'm sorry.'
Brunetti stood. It made sense. The fact that Mitri had once been a chemist didn't necessitate his taking a part in the day-to-day running of the factories. In the multifaceted world of business, a man no longer needed to know anything about what a business did in order to run it. Just think of Patta, he told himself, to see how true that was. 'Thank you for your time,' he said, again extending his hand towards Bonaventura. Bonaventura shook it and led him back to the entrance hall, where they parted, leaving Brunetti to walk to the Questura through the back streets of Cannaregio, to him the most beautiful neighbourhood in the, city. Which meant, he supposed, in the world.
By the time he got back, most of the staff had gone to lunch, so he contented himself with leaving a note on Signorina Elettra's desk, asking her to see what she could find out about Mitri's brother-in-law, Alessandro Bonaventura. As he straightened up and took the liberty of slipping open her top drawer to replace the pencil he'd used, he thought of how much he'd like to leave a message on her e-mail. He had no idea how it worked or what he'd have to do to send her something, but still he wanted to do it, if only to show her that he was not the technological Neanderthaler she seemed to consider him. After all, Vianello had learned; he saw no reason why he couldn't become computer literate. He had a degree in law; that surely must count for something.
He looked at the computer: silent, toasters stilled and screen dark. How difficult could it be? But, perhaps, the saving thought came to him, perhaps, like Mitri, he was more suited to be the man behind the scenes than the one who understood the day-to-day workings of the machines. With that salve fresh on his conscience, he went down to the bar at the bridge to have a tramezzino and a gla.s.s of wine, and wait for the others to get back from lunch.
That happened closer to four than to three, but Brunetti had long since abandoned any illusions about the level of industry on the part of the people with whom he worked, so it didn't trouble him at all to sit quietly in his office for more than an hour, reading that day's paper, even checking his horoscope, curious about the blonde stranger he was going to meet and happy to learn that he 'was soon going to have some good news'. He could use some.
His intercom rang shortly after four and he picked it up, knowing it would be Patta, interested that things could have happened so quickly, curious to learn what the Vice-Questore wanted.
'Could you come down to my office, Commissario?' his superior asked and Brunetti replied politely that he was already on his way.
Signorina Elettra's jacket hung on the back of her chair, and a list of names and what appeared to be numbers stood in neat lines on her computer screen, but there was no sign of her. He knocked on Patta's door and entered at the sound of his voice.
And found Signorina Elettra seated in front of Patta's desk, legs primly pressed together, a notebook resting on her lap, pencil raised as Patta's last word hung in the air. Because it was only the shouted 'Avanti' 'Avanti' telling Brunetti to enter, she did not take note of it. telling Brunetti to enter, she did not take note of it.
Patta barely acknowledged Brunetti's arrival, giving him the slightest of nods, and returned his attention to his dictation. 'And tell them that I do not want... No, make that read, "I will not tolerate ..." I think that has a more forceful sound, don't you, Signorina?'
'Absolutely, Vice-Questore,' she said, eyes on what she was writing.
'I will not tolerate', Patta went on, 'the continued use of police boats and vehicles in unauthorized trips. If a member of the staff...' Here he broke off to add in a more casual style, 'Would you look and see what ranks are ent.i.tled to use the boats and cars and add it, Signorina?'
'Of course, Vice-Questore.'
'Requires the use of police transportation, he is to ... excuse me, Signorina?' Patta broke off in response to the confusion on her face as she glanced up at those last words.
'Perhaps it would be better to say "that person", sir,' she suggested, 'to avoid the sound of s.e.xual prejudice, as if only men had the authority to requisition boats.' She lowered her head and turned a page of her notebook.
'Of course, of course, if you think it wisest,' Patta agreed and continued, '... that person is to fill out the required forms and see that they are approved by the appropriate authority.' His whole manner changed and his face became less imperious, as though he'd told his chin to stop looking like Mussolini's. 'If you'd be so kind, check and see who it is that's supposed to authorize it and add their name to the memo, would you?'
'Of course, sir,' she said and wrote a few more words. She looked up and smiled. 'Will that be all?'
'Yes, yes,' Patta said. As Brunetti watched, he actually leaned forward in his chair as she rose, as if the sympathetic force of his motion could help her to her feet.
At the door, she turned and smiled at them both. 'I'll have that first thing tomorrow morning, sir,' she said.
'Not before?' Patta asked.
'I'm afraid not, sir. I've got the budget for our office's expenses for next month to calculate.' Her smile blended regret with sternness.
'Of course.'
Without another word, she left, closing the door behind her.
'Brunetti,' Patta said with no preamble, 'what's been happening with the Mitri case?'
'I spoke to his brother-in-law today,' Brunetti began, curious to see if Patta had heard about that yet. The blankness in his face suggested that he had not, so Brunetti continued, 'I've also learned that there have been three other murders in the last few years using what might have been a plastic-coated wire of some sort, perhaps electrical. And all the victims seem to have been taken from behind, the way Mitri was.'
'What sort of crimes were they?' Patta asked. 'Like this?'
'No, sir. It would seem that they were executions, probably Mafia.'
'Then', Patta said, dismissing the possibility out of hand, 'they can have nothing to do with this. This is the work of a lunatic, some sort of fanatic driven to murder by...' Here Patta either lost the thread of his argument or recalled to whom he was speaking, for he suddenly stopped.
'I'd like to pursue the possibility that there is some connection between the murders, sir,' Brunetti said, just as if Patta had not spoken.
'Where did they happen?'
'One in Palermo, one in Reggio Calabria and the most recent in Padova.'
'Ah.' Patta sighed audibly. After a moment he explained, 'If they are related, that would make it likely it's not ours, wouldn't it? That it's really the police in those other cities who should be looking at our crime as part of the series?'
'That's entirely possible, sir.' Brunetti did not bother to mention that the same would hold true for the Venetian police: that they also should look into the series.
'Well, then alert them, all of them, to what's happened and let me know when you get an answer from them.'
Brunetti had to admit the genius of the solution. The investigation of the crime had been farmed out, tossed back to the police of those other cities, so Patta had done the officially correct, the bureaucratically efficient, thing: he had pa.s.sed it on to the next desk and in so doing had fulfilled his own duty or, more important, would be perceived to have done, should his decision ever be questioned. Brunetti got to his feet. 'Of course, sir. I'll contact them immediately.'
Patta bowed his head in polite dismissal. It was seldom that Brunetti, a headstrong, difficult man, would prove so amenable to reason.