Rounding the Mark (15 page)

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Authors: Andrea Camilleri

BOOK: Rounding the Mark
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“So he didn’t see where the guy came from.”
“No. And he’d never seen him before. As for the other guy that recognized him, I was only able to have a brief discussion with him. He’s a fisherman and had a basket full of fish he had to go sell in Montechiaro. He told me he’d seen the man in the picture about three, four months ago, on the beach.”
“Three or four months ago? But that was the middle of the winter! What was he doing there?”
“That’s the same thing the fisherman asked himself. He’d just pulled his boat ashore when he saw the man from the photograph on a rock nearby.”
“On a rock?”
“Yeah, one of those rocks right under the villa with the big terrace.”
“And what was he doing?”
“Nothing. He was looking out at the sea and talking on a cell phone. But the fisherman got a good look at him, ’cause at one point the man turned around and started glaring at him. He had the impression the guy on the rock was trying to tell him something.”
“Like what?”
“Like get the fuck out of here . . . What do I do now?”
“I don’t understand. What are you supposed to do?”
“Should I keep looking, or should I stop?”
“Well, it seems useless to waste any more of your time. You can go back to Vigàta.”
Fazio breathed a sigh of relief. This search hadn’t agreed with him from the start.
“You’re not coming?”
“I’ll be along later. First I need to stop for a few minutes in Montechiaro.”
It was a bald-faced lie; he had nothing whatsoever to do in Montechiaro. For a stretch he followed Fazio’s car, and then, when he’d lost sight of it, he did a U-turn and drove back in the direction he’d come. Spigonella had made an impression on him. Was it possible there wasn’t a living soul besides the cigar-smoking caretaker in that entire residential area? He hadn’t seen any dogs, either, or even a single cat turned feral by the seclusion. It was an ideal location for anyone who wanted to do whatever he pleased—like shack up with a woman in secret, set up a gambling house, or organize an orgy or giant snortfest. One needed only take care to cover the windows with shades that didn’t let a single ray of light filter out, and nobody would ever know what was going on inside. Every villa had enough space around it for cars to enter and park well inside the gate and walls. Once the gate closed, it was as though those cars had never come.
While driving around, he had an idea. He braked, got out, and started walking, looking absorbed, now and then kicking the little white stones he encountered along the road.
The little boy’s long escape, which had begun on the landing wharf in the port of Vigàta, had ended not far from Spigonella. He was almost certain the child was running away from Spigonella when the car ran him down.
The nameless dead man he’d encountered while out for a swim had also been sighted in Spigonella. And in all likelihood he’d been killed in Spigonella. Their two stories seemed to run parallel, even though they weren’t supposed to. The inspector recalled the famous expression coined by a politician killed by the Red Brigades: “parallel convergences.” Was the ultimate point of convergence none other than the ghost town of Spigonella? Why not?
But where to begin? Should he try to find out who owned those villas? This immediately seemed an impossible undertaking. Since every single one of those constructions was strictly unauthorized, there was no point in checking the land registry or town hall. Discouraged, he leaned against an electrical pole. The moment his shoulders touched the wood of the pole, he stepped away as though he’d gotten a shock. Electricity! Of course! All towns had to have electricity, and therefore the homeowners had to submit signed requests to be hooked up. But his enthusiasm was short-lived. He could already imagine the electrical company’s response: Since there were no registered streets or street numbers in Spigonella, and since, in short, there was no such place as Spigonella, the electrical bills were sent to the owners’ regular residential addresses. Sorting out these owners would surely be a long and arduous process. And were he to ask how long, the answer would be so vague as to be almost poetic. What about trying the telephone company? Right!
Aside from the fact that the phone company’s answer would have many points in common with the electrical company’s, what about cell phones? Hadn’t one of the witnesses, the fisherman, stated that when he’d seen the unknown dead man, the guy was talking on a cell phone? Hopeless. No matter which way he turned, he ran into a wall. An idea came to him. He got in the car, turned on the ignition, and drove off. Finding the road wasn’t easy. He drove past the same villa two or three times, and then finally, in the distance, saw what he was looking for. The caretaker was still sitting in the same cane chair, the extinguished cigar in his mouth. Montalbano pulled up, got out, and approached the man.
“Good afternoon.”
“If you say so . . . Good afternoon.”
“I’m a police inspector.”
“I figured. You came by with the other policeman, the one that showed me the photograph.”
Had a sharp eye, this caretaker.
“I wanted to ask you something.”
“Go right ahead.”
“Do you see many immigrants around here?”
The caretaker gave him an astonished look.
“Immigrants? Sir, around here we don’t see no immigrants, emigrants, or even migrants. All we ever see is the people who live here when they come. Immigrants! Hah!”
“Why does that seem so preposterous to you?”
“’Cause around here the private security car passes every two hours. And those guys . . . if they saw an immigrant, they’d kick his ass all they way back to where he came from!”
“So why haven’t I seen any of these security officers today?”
“Because today they’re on strike for half the day.”
“Thank you.”
“No, thank you for helping make a little of the time go by.”
He got back in the car and left. But when he got to the white-and-red house in front of which he and Fazio had met, he turned around. He knew there was nothing to find there, but he couldn’t bring himself to leave that place. He pulled up again at the edge of the cliff. It was getting dark. Against the still luminous sky, the villa with the enormous terrace looked ghostly. Despite the luxurious homes, the well-tended trees rising above the enclosure walls, and the lush greenery everywhere, Spigonella was a wasteland. Of course, all seaside towns, especially those that depend on vacationers, seem dead in the off-season. But Spigonella must have been already dead at the moment of its birth. In its beginning was its end, to mangle Eliot again. Getting back into his car, this time he finally drove back to Vigàta.
“Marzilla call, Cat?”
“No, Chief, he din’t. But Pontius Pilate did.”
“What’d he say?”
“He said he in’t gonna make the plane, but tomorrow he can, and so tomorrow afternoon he’ll be here in the afternoon.”
The inspector went into his office but didn’t sit down. He immediately made a phone call. He wanted to see if there was any chance of doing something that had occurred to him as he was parking the car in front of the police station.
“Signora Albanese? Good evening, how are you? This is Inspector Montalbano. Can you tell me what time your husband will be done with today’s fishing? Ah, he didn’t go out today? Is he at home? Could I talk to him? Ciccio, what are you doing at home? A touch of the flu? Feeling any better now? All gone? Good, I’m glad. Listen, I wanted to ask you something . . . What’s that? Why don’t I come by for dinner, so we can talk about it in person? I really don’t want to take advantage of you, or put your wife to any trouble . . . What was that? Pasta with fresh ricotta? And a second course of whitebait? I’ll be there in half an hour.”
 
 
He was unable to speak for the duration of the meal. From time to time Ciccio Albanese would ask him:
“What was that you wanted to ask me, Inspector?”
But Montalbano didn’t even answer, merely rotating the forefinger of his left hand, gesturing “later, later,” since either his mouth was too full or he simply didn’t want to open it, lest the air dilute the taste he was jealously guarding between his tongue and palate.
When the coffee was served, he decided it was time to talk about what he wanted, but only after complimenting Albanese’s wife on her cooking.
“You were right, Ciccio. The dead man was spotted three months ago at Spigonella. Things must have happened the way you said: first they killed him, then they threw him into the water at Spigonella or nearby. You really are very good, as everyone says.”
Ciccio Albanese absorbed the praise without a blink, as his due.
“What else can I do for you?” was all he said.
Montalbano told him. Albanese thought about it a minute, then turned to his wife.
“Is Tanino in Montelusa or Palermo? Do you know?”
“This morning my sister said he was here.”
Before phoning Montelusa, Albanese felt he needed to explain.
“Tanino is my wife’s sister’s son. He’s studying law in Palermo. His dad has a house in Tricase and Tanino goes there often. He’s got a dinghy and likes to scuba dive.”
The phone call took only about five minutes.
“Tanino’ll expect you at eight o’clock tomorrow morning. Now let me explain how you get there.”
 
 
“Fazio? Sorry to bother you at this hour, but the other day, I think I saw one of our men with a small video camera and—”
“Yeah, that was Torrisi, Chief. He just bought it. From Torretta.”
Of course! Torretta must have moved the entire Zanzibar bazaar into the Vigàta police headquarters!
“Send Torrisi right over here to Marinella, with the video camera and anything else I might need to operate it.”
11
When he opened the shutters, he took heart. The morning looked happy to be what it was, alive with light and color. In the shower Montalbano even tried to sing, which he rarely did; being somewhat tone-deaf, however, he merely hummed the tune. Though he wasn’t running late, he realized he was hurrying because he was anxious to leave the house and get to Tricase. In the car, in fact, he realized at one point that he was driving too fast. At the Spigonella-Tricase fork, he turned left and, once past the bend, found himself at the mound of gravel. The bouquet of flowers was gone, and there was a laborer filling a wheelbarrow with gravel. A bit further on, two more laborers worked on the road. The few paltry things commemorating the death and life of the little boy had all disappeared. By now his small body must have been buried anonymously in the Montechiaro cemetery. At Tricase he carefully followed the instructions Ciccio Albanese had given him and, when very near the shore, he pulled up in front of a small yellow house. A pleasant-looking kid of about twenty, in shorts and barefoot, stood in the doorway. A rubber dinghy bobbed in the water a short distance away. They shook hands. Tanino gave the inspector a curious look, and only then did Montalbano realize he was decked out like a tourist. In fact, in addition to the video camera in his hand, he had a pair of binoculars slung across his chest.
“Shall we go?” asked the kid.
“Sure. But first I want to undress.”
“Go ahead.”
He went into the house and came back out in a bathing suit. Tanino locked the door and they climbed aboard the dinghy. Only then did the kid ask:
“Where are we going?”
“Your uncle didn’t tell you?”
“My uncle only told me to make myself available.”
“I want to shoot some footage of the coast at Spigonella. But I don’t want anyone to see us.”
“Who’s going to see us, Inspector? At this time of year there isn’t a soul in Spigonella.”
“Just do as I say.”
After barely half an hour on the water, Tanino slowed down.
“Down there are the first houses in Spigonella. Is this speed okay for you?”
“Perfect.”
“Should I go a little closer?”
“No.”
Montalbano grabbed the videocam and realized, to his horror, that he didn’t know how to use it. The instructions Torretta had given him the night before had turned into a formless mush in his brain.

Matre santa!
I can’t remember anything!” he groaned.
“Want me to try? I’ve got one just like it at home.”
They traded places, and the inspector took the rudder, steering with one hand and holding the binoculars to his eyes with the other.
“And this is where Spigonella ends,” Tanino said at a certain point, turning around to face the inspector.
Lost in thought, Montalbano didn’t answer. The binoculars dangled from his neck.
“Inspector?”
“Hm?”
“What should we do now?”
“Let’s go back. And, if possible, a little closer and a little slower.”
“It’s possible.”
“Another thing: when we’re in front of the villa with the big terrace, could you zoom in on those rocks in the water below?”
They passed by Spigonella a second time, then left it behind them.
“What next?”
“Are you sure you got some good shots?”
“Cross my heart.”
“Okay, then, let’s go home. Do you know who owns that villa with the terrace?”
“I do. An American had it built, but that was before I was born.”
“An American?’
“Actually he was the son of a couple that had emigrated from Montechiaro. He came here a few times in the early days, or at least that’s what I’m told. Then he never came back. There were rumors he’d been arrested.”
“Here in Sicily?’
“No, in America. For smuggling.”
“Narcotics?”
“And cigarettes. People say that for a while he was directing all the traffic in the Mediterranean from here.”
“Have you ever seen those rocks in front of the house from up close?”

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