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Authors: Michael Dibdin

Cosi Fan Tutti - 5 (8 page)

BOOK: Cosi Fan Tutti - 5
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hand, he had the advantage of having spent much time at the home of Ellen, his clandestine American girlfriend for some years.

‘Oh, yes, I’m the great pretender/ he said, ‘adrift in a world of my own. I seem to be what I’m not, you see. Too real is this feeling of make-believe..
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‘Only spik Ingleesh/

Caputo stood looking on wide-eyed at this novel interrogation, obviously impressed by his superior’s unsuspected linguistic skills. Zen leapt to his feet and came around the desk, towering over the prisoner.

“I wonder, wonder who, who wrote the book of love?’

he demanded. ‘Who wrote the book of love?’

‘Only Ingleesh/

‘Who was that man? I’d like to shake his hand. He made my babay fall in love with me/

It was amazing how much he could remember from those rowdy, drunken parties which Ellen used to give at the beginning of July for her expatriate friends. A shame he couldn’t let rip here. His pleasing light baritone voice had been much admired at the time. How Americans loved to laugh!

‘Ingleesh only spik/

Zen turned sulkily on his heel like an artiste disappointed with his reception.

‘Take him away!’ he told Caputo.

As the prisoner was led to the door, Zen ripped open the sack of personal belongings and let the contents fall out on the desk. The clothes consisted of a pair of black shoes, a light blue shirt and the US naval uniform. There was also a leather wallet, a scattering of coins, a set of keys, the knife - a vicious item with a long retractable blade sharpened to a razor edge - and a light rectangular slab of grey plastic moulded into slots and grooves, rather like an outsize cassette tape, with a strip of metal contacts mounted on a card inside a recess.

“I take it all this has been dusted?’ he called after Caputo, who turned in the doorway.

‘Apart from the suspect’s own, we found a number of extraneous prints. We’re running the files for them now, but we won’t hear before next week.’

Zen nodded vaguely, but he was looking not at Caputo but at the prisoner. His head was turned back towards the desk in the room he was just leaving, and his glowing black eyes were fixed on one item with an intensity which seemed capable of melting the plastic.

While Caputo returned the man to his cell, Zen examined the clothing piece by piece. The uniform was strongly made and neatly cut. To his eyes it looked very much like the real thing, apart from the absence of any labels or other identifying marks. The shirt and shoes, on the other hand, were both of Italian manufacture. The soles of the latter were stamped gucci.

‘Fake/ commented Caputo, coming back in. ‘Look at the position of the logo and check the sloppy stitching at the heel. You can buy them in Piazza Garibaldi for thirty thousand a pair. I can get you twenty/ he added automatically.

Zen held up the grey plastic cassette.

‘Were any of the extraneous prints on this?’ he asked.

Caputo walked over and picked up the sheaf of pages forming the report Zen had skimmed earlier. He turned a few pages.

‘There’s a partial thumb on one side, and a nice forefinger and obscured second digit on the other.’

Using the edge of the cassette, Zen rapped out the rhythm of one of the songs he had quoted earlier on the desktop.

‘All right, Caputo, I need you to do three things. One, take this uniform over to our American allies. I’m pretty sure it’s fake too, but we need to make sure.’

He held up the cassette.

Two, try and find out how we can go about comparing the extraneous prints with those of the crew of that air craft carrier. Their prints must all be on file somewhere for identification purposes. Make it clear we don’t suspect anyone, and it’s purely for purposes of elimination/

‘And the third?’ asked Caputo, frowning at the prospect of these onerous duties which were going to cut into his weekend.

Zen smiled.

‘Ah, that’s more amusing. I want you to get together a team of men to harass the prisoner round the clock, twenty-four hours a day.’

Caputo coughed nervously.

‘Forgive me saying so, chief, but I don’t think we’ll get anywhere that way with this son of a bitch. He’s as tough as they come. To break him we’d have to use the most extreme methods, and that’s bound to leave scarring and internal injuries, to say nothing of the risk of the guy dying on you.’

Zen pursed his lips judiciously.

“I don’t think we quite understand one another, Caputo. I’m talking about verbal harassment.’

Caputo looked utterly perplexed.

‘But he only speaks English!’

‘The only English he speaks is “only spik Ingleesh”. My bet is that he’s as Neapolitan as you. Your job is to prove it. Set up a roster of men to go down there in shifts and abuse him in dialect. Tell him his mother performs fellatio on Arab carpet salesmen’s dogs, that sort of thing. The idea is to get him to respond. It doesn’t matter what he says, just the fact that he understands what’s being said to him. OK?’

Caputo gave a laugh as sharp as a razor cut.

‘I’ll get Santanna on the job. When it comes to this sort of thing, he’s a virtuoso.’

‘Go to work on him until he cracks and says something in return. Then I want you to really go to work on him. I need a name, an address, anything we can pass on to the Questura to get this son of a bitch off our backs.’

He headed for the door.

‘And if la Piscopo calls again?’ asked Caputo.

Zen smiled thinly.

‘Tell her I’m in Rome following up an important lead.’

Caputo gave an exaggerated wink.

‘Right! Oh, before I forget, I managed to get those tickets for you.’

He handed Zen an envelope.

‘My brother-in-law works backstage at San Carlo and gets comps to all the shows. Turns out he doesn’t fancy this one, so if they’re any use to you Zen pocketed the envelope gracefully.

‘Thanks, Caputo. Once we get this stabbing business sorted out, I think you’re due for some leave. A couple of weeks sound good to you? You could spend some time

with the wife and kiddies to make up for all this involuntary overtime.’

Caputo scowled.

‘I’d rather come to work! But I have a few commercial interests which need a little personal attention. You know how it is/

‘That’s the trouble with this country/ Zen agreed, putting the plastic cassette away in his coat pocket. ‘If you don’t do it yourself, it doesn’t get done.’

 

 

Soldati d’onore

 

 

At about the time Aurelio Zen left his office, allegedly to go to Rome, two other policemen entered a superficially similar room in a building at the foot of the Vomero, just off Via Francesco Crispi, about half a mile from Zen’s house as crows flew and footballs rolled. There was the same sense of excessive space, the same bleak decor, the same functional furniture, the same combination of chaotic clutter and impersonal neatness.

There, however, the similarities ended. For here, each desk sported a smart new Olivetti computer, all networked to each other and to a host of other such workstations across the country. Phone calls were routed via the military communications system, with digital encoding to prevent interception. The windows were toughened against bullets and explosives, and incorporated a layer of metallic material designed to baffle electronic eavesdropping.

For this was the local headquarters of the Divisione Investigativa Antimafia, an elite unit comprising handpicked members of the Carabinieri, the police and the Guardia di Finanza, which had been created specifically to combat organized crime. The former regime’s commitment to this particular struggle had always been a matter         of some doubt, to say the least, and one of its most prominent and illustrious figures was currently facing trial on charges of having been, as many had long suspected, ‘the Mafia’s man in Rome’.

One of the first steps of the new government had therefore been to throw a conspicuous amount of money at the DIA, in an effort to demonstrate the difference between their predecessors’ ambiguous and dilatory approach and the determination of these bold new brooms to sweep the country clean. Whether this determination also held good on a political level was of course another question, and one which the two men chatting quietly in the third-floor office had often discussed.

Not at work, though, in however quiet a voice. For rumour had it that when the building had been upgraded to incorporate the various technological marvels of which it now disposed, it had also been fitted with a series of extremely sensitive microphones which could pick up the merest whisper of sound in any corner of any corridor or room, toilets included. There had even been jokes concerning one of the officers on the team, whose bowel movements were of legendary volume, ‘making a big noise for himself in Rome’.

No one had been able to confirm or deny the existence of this surveillance system, still less identify who, exactly, might have access to the results, but the prevailing wisdom held that it was advisable to avoid raising potentially sensitive issues while on the premises. The two men in question have no need to worry about this, however, for they are merely discussing their work, and in particular a new file which they have opened concerning one Ermanno Vallifuoco, who has just been reported missing by his family following his failure to return from a trip into town, supposedly to meet two business associates at a famous hotel on Via Partenope.

One problem is that each of these ‘associates’ claims to have spent the evening in question elsewhere, one at a restaurant (ten witnesses) and the other at home (fourteen, of whom five not directly related to the family), and that each denies ever having arranged to meet Vallifuoco in the first place. But what has brought the matter to the attention of the DIA is the fact that this is the third such disappearance in as many weeks, and two of the presumed victims are successful local businessmen linked to the Camorra and the other a prominent figure in local government.

Attilio Abate, the first man to vanish, failed to return after going out one night to walk his dog in streets surrounding his villa in Baia. The animal, a Great Dane, also disappeared. Abate was reputed to be one of the wealthiest men in the city, the owner of a company which had won substantial government contracts for the supply of military uniforms, bed linen and such items. At first a kidnap was suspected, although no ransom note was received.

Then, ten days later, the second man went missing.

Luca Delia Ragione had been a prominent member of the centre-right coalition which ruled the Campania region until the recent upheavals. Following the earthquake which devastated the inland region of Irpinia in 1980, money poured in from national and international sources, but for one reason or another a substantial proportion of this largesse not only failed to reach the tens of thousands shivering in their makeshift tent cities, but also vanished from the government’s accounts. It had since been alleged that Luca Delia Ragione was responsible for facilitating this financial conjuring trick, and that he also knew the whereabouts of the missing funds. The facts concerning these matters were likely to remain obscure, since he had also gone missing. Early one morning he had left the modern apartment block on Via Greco where he lived for a briefing with his lawyer before a court appearance, and had never been seen again. His car was found in

the street, the alarm defused and the doors unlocked, but despite an extensive search and investigation there had been no further sign of Delia Ragione. And now a third

name had joined this select list…

“I suppose we’d better get out and circulate/ said one of the men, an aggressive-looking individual with a shock of jet-black hair and the build of a middle-weight boxer.

‘I’ve already put out a few feelers/ replied the other. He was shorter and slighter, wiry and slightly feral in appearance, with a scar on his left cheekbone and an incipient

bald spot nestling amid his curly, light-brown hair.

‘And?’

‘Nothing. No one’s heard anything, or if they have they’re not talking. But to be honest they seemed as mystified about it as everyone else. Only more worried, of course.’

Neither officer was in uniform, and their style of dress was completely different. The shorter one wore jeans, running shoes and an open-neck denim shirt. His companion was in a very expensive suit, a silk shirt and tie and black oxfords with a flawless mirror finish.

‘Somebody must know something/ he said.

‘Unless Ermanno had a hand in his own disappearance …’

‘Even then, somebody must be hiding him out.’

‘But not necessarily anyone known to us. He was under judicial advisement, just like Abate and Delia Ragione.

Like them, he has an interest in lying low until…’

He broke off, glancing at the wall. The two men exchanged a glance.

‘Until the situation stabilizes/ the elegant one suggested.

‘And there are plenty of other people who have an interest in postponing judicial enquiries into their cases until…’

‘Until the situation stabilizes/ his companion concluded with a nod. ‘Exactly. In which case there isn’t a chance of us finding out anything useful. You can’t play both sides against the middle if they are the middle.’

There was silence for a while.

 

 

‘Marotta seems to have disappeared too/ the man in the Lacoste shirt said casually. ‘Do you think there could be a link?’

The other looked sceptical.

“I don’t see it. Marotta’s just a gofer, when all’s said and done. The other three are in the upper echelons of the Gaetano clan, the command and supply level. I could see why they might want to take them out of circulation, but Marotta? He doesn’t know enough to be a danger to anyone but himself. They’d just hand him over and let him sweat it out/

Another silence.

‘Vallifuoco used to frequent prostitutes/ the man in the suit murmured as though to himself.

‘So?’

‘Maybe that’s where he went last night, under cover of that business meeting.’

His companion considered this a moment.

‘Maybe. We could look into the car, too. He drove a late model Jaguar, very distinctive.’

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