Dead Lagoon - 4 (4 page)

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Authors: Michael Dibdin

Tags: #Mystery & Detective

BOOK: Dead Lagoon - 4
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He slipped some money to the cashier and they stepped outside. Already the sunshine was looser and more generous. Zen paused to look at a series of posters gummed to the wall. The design was identical to the ones he had seen earlier that morning, on the window of the closed café in Cannaregio, but these were much newer. At the top was a drawing of the lion of Saint Mark, rampant, its expression full of defiance. The huge black capitals beneath read NUOVA REPUBBLICA VENETA and the text announced a rally the following evening in Campo Santa Margherita.

‘Total chaos,’ Aldo Valentini repeated, leading the way back to the Questura. ‘Every day it turns out that another big name, someone you would have sworn was absolutely untouchable, is under investigation on charges ranging from corruption to association with the Mafia. Result, no one dares to do a friend a favour any more. Nothing would please me more than to see this country turn into a paradise of moral probity, but how the hell are we supposed to get by in the meantime?’

Zen nodded. This was a conversation he had been having at least once a day for several months. By now he had the lines off by heart.

‘It’s just like in Russia,’ he declared. ‘The old system may have been terrible, but at least it functioned.’

‘My brother-in-law’s just moved into a new house near Rovigo,’ Valentini continued. ‘The telephone people tell him he’ll have to wait six weeks to get a phone installed, so he gets on to the engineer and offers him a
bustarella,
you know. Nothing exorbitant, just the odd fifty thousand or so to move up to the top of the list.’

‘The normal thing,’ murmured Zen.

‘The normal thing. You know what the guy tells him? “No way,
dottore,
” he says. “It’s more than my job’s worth.” Can you believe it? “It’s more than my job’s worth.”’

‘Disgusting.’

‘How the hell are you supposed to get anything done with that sort of attitude? It’s enough to make you sick.’

He tossed his cigarette into the canal, where a seagull made a half-hearted pass at it before landing on the gunwale of the outermost police launch.

Back in their office, a man stood framed in the sunlight streaming in through the window. He turned as Zen and Valentini entered.

‘Aldo?’

He came forward, frowning at Zen.

‘Who’s this?’ he asked suspiciously.

Valentini introduced them.

‘Aurelio Zen, Enzo Gavagnin. Enzo’s head of the Drugs Squad.’

Enzo Gavagnin had a large womanish face and the stocky, muscular body of a gondolier. He inspected Zen coolly.

‘New posting?’

Zen shook his head.

‘I’m with the Ministry,’ he said. ‘On temporary assignment.’

Enzo Gavagnin glanced at Valentini.

‘An emissary from Rome, eh?’ he murmured in a manner both humorous and pointed. ‘I hope you haven’t been giving away any of our secrets, Aldo.’

‘I didn’t know we had any,’ Valentini replied lightly. ‘Anyway, anyone who comes all this way to take the Ada Zulian case off my hands is a friend as far as I’m concerned.’

Gavagnin laughed loudly.

‘Fair enough! Anyway, the reason I came was about that breaking-and-entering on Burano.’

‘The Sfriso business?’

‘If you want to reduce your work-load still further then you’re in luck, because I’ve discovered that there’s an angle which ties it in to a case we’ve been working on for some time …’

Valentini looked doubtful.

‘I don’t know, Enzo. If I shed two cases the same morning, people might start to ask questions.’

Gavagnin took Valentini’s arm and led him away.

‘It’s just because of the possible conflict of interest. Naturally we don’t want our on-going investigation compromised, so it’s better all round if …’

The pair disappeared behind the glass panelling around Valentini’s desk, becoming fuzzy, unfocused images of their former selves. Zen went into his own cubicle and dug the phone book out of the desk drawer. He looked up
Paulon, M
and dialled the number.

‘Well?’

The reply was abrupt to the point of rudeness.

‘Marco?’

‘Who’s this?’

‘Aurelio.’

There was a brief pause.

‘Aurelio! How’s it going? I was reading about you in the paper just a while ago. That business in St Peter’s. I used to go fishing with him, I thought, and here he is consorting with Archbishops and the like! Gave me quite a thrill. Are you here in town?’

‘Yes. Can we meet?’

‘Of course!’

‘I need some advice, maybe some help.’

‘Well I’m out delivering all morning, but … Do you know the
osteria
on the San Girolamo canal, just opposite the church?’

Enzo Gavagnin backed out of Valentini’s cubicle, having concluded his business. He glanced shrewdly at Zen as he passed by.

‘What’s it called?’ asked Zen.

‘Damned if I know, tell you the truth! I’ve been going there after lunch every weekday for the last twenty years, but I’ve never bothered to ask about the name. Everyone calls it “The Hole in the Wall”. It’s got red paint on the windows. Opposite the church. What’s it about, anyway?’

‘I’ll explain later. Thanks, Marco.’

He stood up, buttoning his coat. The preliminaries were complete. It was time to go and pretend to do his job.

Her first thought, when the bell rings, is that it is just another trick, another in the succession of cruel practical jokes which seem designed to test her endurance, her fragile sanity. No one calls at Palazzo Zulian these days, except when her nephews drive over from Verona every weekend, as regular as the tides. But this is Tuesday, and Nanni and Vincenzo will be at work doing whatever it is they do …

The bell rings again, dispelling the lingering possibility that the whole thing had taken place in her mind. What happens twice is real, thinks Ada, sidling across the hallway to the room on the other side, overlooking the alley. An angled mirror fixed to a support just outside the window gives a view of the door, so that you can see who is calling without them seeing you, and decide whether to receive them. But immediately Ada whips her head back, for there in the glass is another face, looking straight back at her.


Contessa!

A strange voice. Not one of her tormentors, or a new one at least. She risks another look. The gaunt figure in a black hat and overcoat is still there, staring straight up at the tell-tale. It’s no use hiding. If she can see him, he can see her. Stands to reason, Ada Zulian tells herself, reluctantly turning back towards the door and walking downstairs.

The stranger is tall and thin, with a hatchet face and clear grey eyes. His expression is stern, almost saturnine, yet his manner is courteous and respectful. He speaks the dialect with ease and precision, in the true Cannaregio accent – the purest in the city, Ada has always held. He hands her a plastic-covered card with writing and a photograph of himself. She frowns at the name typed in capital letters.

‘Zen?’ she says slowly.

She inspects him again, more critically this time.

‘That’s right,
contessa
,’ the man nods. ‘Angelo’s boy.’

Ada sniffs loudly.

‘Giustiniana’s, you mean. Your father had only one thing to do with it, excuse me. Fancy going off to Russia and getting himself killed like that, leaving his wife here all alone! At least my Silvestro fell defending our territories in Dalmatia. What has Russia to do with us, for heaven’s sake? Come in, come in, I’m feeling cold just thinking about it.’

While Ada locks and bolts the door again, her visitor stands looking about him in the bleary, uncertain light of the
andron
. The plaster feels clammy and cold and gives slightly to the touch like a laden sponge. A mysterious smile appears on the man’s face as he absorbs the dank odours and the watery echoes seeping in from the canal at the other end of the hall.

‘She used to bring you round here while she worked,’ Ada continues, leading the way upstairs. ‘And once she saw I didn’t mind, she’d leave you here while she went off to do other jobs. Of course you won’t remember, you were only a toddler.’

The man says nothing. Ada Zulian painfully attains the level expanse of the
portego
and waves him into the salon.

‘What brings you here, anyway? Your mother never calls any more, not that anyone else does either. Not since that trouble I had with Rosetta. Anyone would think it was catching!’

‘But I gather you’ve been having some more problems recently,’ the man remarks cautiously.

Ada Zulian looks at him.

‘Perhaps I have and perhaps I haven’t,’ she replies sharply. ‘What business is that of yours, Aurelio Battista?’

‘Well, since you informed the police …’

‘The police? What have you to do with the police?’

‘I work for them.’

Ada’s laughter startles the silence. The man looks taken aback.

‘What’s so funny?’ he demands.

‘The police? But you were such a timid little fellow! So serious, so anxious, so easily scared! That’s what gave me the idea in the first place.’

‘What idea?’

‘To dress you up as Rosetta! I still had all her dresses then, her little blouses and socks, everything. When I went to San Clemente, they took everything away and burnt it. But at that time I still thought she might come back one day. Really, I mean. Just walk in, as suddenly and inexplicably as she disappeared. I wanted to have everything ready for her, just in case. I wouldn’t have asked any questions, you know. I would have taken her back and carried on as though nothing had ever happened …’

She looks away suddenly, as though she had seen something move in the nether recesses. Only one of the windows is unshuttered, and the dim expanses of the salon are further multiplied and complicated by a profusion of mirrors of every shape and size, all framed in the same gilded wood as the furniture.

‘To tell you the truth,’ Ada goes on at last, ‘I think you helped keep her at bay. As long as you were there, running about in her dresses, Rosetta didn’t dare show her face.’

She sits down on a low, hard sofa covered with worn dark pink silk.

‘Either that, or it was the cause of the whole thing! Perhaps she resented the fact that I’d found someone to replace her, and decided to get her own back. It’s hard to say. But you did look sweet, Aurelio! If only I’d thought to take some photographs.’

The man has been standing looking at her with an air of deferential attention. Now he claps his hands loudly and starts striding about the room with quite unnecessary vigour.

‘Three weeks ago,
contessa,
you dialled the police emergency number and reported the presence of intruders in your house. A patrol boat was dispatched and the house searched from top to bottom. It proved to be empty. Subsequent investigations have failed to reveal a single fact to substantiate your allegations of trespass and persecution.’

He pauses impressively, looking down at the elderly woman perched on the antique settle.

‘Well, of course!’ she retorts. ‘Do you think they’re stupid?’

The man frowns.

‘The police?’

She laughs.

‘I know
they’re
stupid! No, I’m talking about my visitors. They’re far too sly to let themselves be caught by some flat-foot from Ferrara. Swamp-dwellers! They all have malaria, poor things. Runs in the family, rots their brains.’

‘When was the last occurrence of this kind?’ the man inquires in a decidedly supercilious tone.

‘Last night,’ Ada replies pertly. ‘It was almost dawn by the time they finally left me in peace.’

‘What happened?’

‘The same as usual. It’s the skeleton I’m most frightened of. It makes such sudden rushes at me.’

‘How many of them are there?’

Ada shrugs, as if considering the matter.

‘It’s hard to tell. They come and go. Often I’ve thought they’ve gone, then suddenly another one pops out from somewhere.’

‘Have they attacked you?’

She shakes her head.

‘They just try and scare me, keep me awake all night, never knowing what’s going to happen next.’

The man considers her for a long time.

‘How do they get in?’ he asks.

‘Don’t ask me! They just appear. In my bedroom it was last time. A light came on, I woke, and there they were.’

Despite herself, her voice shakes slightly as she remembers her terror.

‘Was the front door locked?’

‘Locked and bolted, as always. But nothing stops them.’

She pulls up the sleeve over her dress and displays a livid patch on her arm.

‘There! That’s what I got from bumping into one of them. There are others, too, not decent to be viewed. I showed the doctor, though.’

The man nods.

‘I’ve read the file on your case,’ he says. ‘The medical evidence is apparently inconclusive. The contusions could have resulted from a collision with some household object. A chair or table, for example.’

‘Do they think I go staggering about bumping into the furniture like some drunk?’ Ada protests. ‘Anyway, what about the mud?’

‘The report mentioned some marks on the floor. There was no sign of shoe tread or other distinguishing features.’

He sighs deeply.

‘You see the problem is,
contessa,
that after what happened before, people are disinclined to believe what you tell them.’

‘I can’t help that,’ returns Ada flatly.

‘On that occasion, you were convicted of causing a public nuisance by calling your deceased daughter Rosetta home every evening. You subsequently spent two years in a mental institution where you were diagnosed as suffering from persistent delusions. It is therefore only natural that without some concrete evidence that the phenomena you now describe have any reality outside your own imagination, it is going to be difficult if not impossible for me to take the matter further.’

‘I didn’t ask you to come,’ Ada retorts.

Her visitor takes a notebook from his pocket and writes something on a page which he tears out and hands to her.

‘That’s my number,’ he says. ‘I’m only just round the corner, in the old house. If this happens again, give me a call, whatever the time, day or night.’

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