The Dante Conspiracy

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Authors: Tom Kasey

Tags: #Mystery

BOOK: The Dante Conspiracy
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© Tom Kasey 2013

 

Tom Kasey has
asserted his rights under the Copyright, Design and Patents Act, 1988, to be
identified as the author of this work.

First
published 2013 by Endeavour Press Ltd.

 
 
 

Table
of Contents

 

Chapter
1

Chapter
2

Chapter
3

Chapter
4

Chapter
5

Chapter
6

Chapter
7

Chapter
8

Chapter
9

Chapter
10

Chapter
11

Chapter
12

Chapter
13

Chapter
14

Chapter
15

Chapter
16

Chapter
17

Chapter
18

Chapter
19

Chapter
20

Chapter
21

Chapter
22

Chapter
23

Chapter
24

Chapter
25

Chapter
26

Chapter
27

Chapter
28

Chapter
29

Chapter
30

Extract
from Trade Off by Tom Kasey

 
 
 
 

Chapter 1

 

Florence, Italy

Present day

 

‘I’ll ask you again. Where is it?’

The Italian’s voice was calm and measured, polite in fact, but
the effect on the naked elderly man was dramatic. He was tied to a steel-framed
chair roughly bolted to the concrete floor more or less in the centre of the old
barn.

‘I’ve already told you,’ he said desperately, shaking his head.
‘I have no idea what you’re talking about.’

‘Oh, I think you do,’ the questioner said, and gave a nod to
the third man in the room.

Like the man asking the questions, this figure looked like a
businessman – expensive dark suit, white shirt, tasteful tie and highly-polished
black loafers, the only incongruous notes being the waterproof apron and pair of
latex rubber examination gloves he was wearing, both now streaked with bloody smears
– but his eyes glittered coldly and dispassionately as he waited just behind the
bound captive.

‘One more, I think, just as a reminder,’ the questioner said,
and made a brief gesture.

The man tied to the chair tensed his body uselessly,
then
began to scream as the third man clamped a pair of heavy
duty wire cutters around the last joint of the index finger of his left hand and
slowly began to squeeze the jaws together. The man’s scream rose in a crescendo
of agony as the jaws finally snapped together, the bloody end of the finger tumbling
to the floor, where it lay beside three others which had already been removed by
the same brutal method.

The torturer lay down the pliers on a white hand-towel, now streaked
and blotched with blood, which he’d positioned beside his briefcase, a case which
contained the tools of his ghastly trade, several of which he’d already employed
on their prisoner even before he’d started work on the man’s hands. Then he reached
for a gas-powered soldering iron and used it to roughly cauterise the bleeding from
the mutilated stump. They didn’t want the man to bleed to death.
At least, not yet.

Shocked and exhausted, pain from his ravaged hand racing up his
arms like waves of fire, the man in the chair slumped forward, tears of agony coursing
down his cheeks as his chin rested on his naked chest. A spreading damp patch below
the chair indicated that he’d lost control of his bladder.

The questioner noticed this and gave a small nod of satisfaction.
It wouldn’t take long now, he was certain. That assumed, of course, that their captive
did possess the information they wanted, but he didn’t have any real doubts about
that. If they weren’t sure, they wouldn’t even be here.

The snatch had gone exactly according to their plan, grabbing
the man earlier that evening from his apartment in the old city, knocking him out
and then driving him to the deserted farmhouse with its useful small barn up in
the hills near
Gualdo
, to the north of Florence. They’d
used the place a couple of times before, but probably wouldn’t go back there again:
before they’d finished this night’s work there would be too much forensic evidence
in the barn for them to feel comfortable about ever returning.

‘Come on, Professor. You know what we want. Just give it to us,
and then all this will stop, and we’ll take you to the hospital.’

That, of course, was a lie. Professor Antonio Bertorelli was
not going to any hospital, but it never hurt to give a man in his position some
kind of a straw to grasp at.

‘Come on,’ the questioner repeated.
‘The “Ravenna
variant”.
It’s in that. That’s why you talked about it. You know it and we
know it. Just tell us where it is. We just need to know where to find it.’

‘Please, please, no more. I don’t know what you’re looking for.
I really don’t. That was just an academic curiosity. If I did know where this thing
is you want, I promise I’d tell you. I’d tell you anything to make this stop.’

For the first time since they’d started work on him, a scintilla
of doubt pierced the mind of the questioner. He’d expected the old man to break
almost as soon as he came round, lashed to the chair, and realized what they were
going to do to him. It had happened before, often the moment their captive was shown
the tools in the briefcase, and Bertorelli was not only about sixty years old but
was also an academic, a soft target who should have crumbled almost immediately.
But he’d already held out longer – a lot longer – than most.

But they had to be sure.

The questioner nodded to himself, his decision made.

‘I’m almost inclined to believe you,’ he said, his voice soft
and pleasant, ‘but I’m sure you understand that we do need to make absolutely sure.
Guido, use the torch.’

The captive’s head snapped round to his left, to see what his
tormentor was planning to do next. Then, even before the man stepped back beside
him, he started screaming again.

Guido picked up a simple and utilitarian object, a chef’s blowtorch,
turned the knob to start the flow of gas,
then
squeezed
the trigger on the handle to light the flame, the roar of the burning gas a deeper
counterpoint to the noise the academic was making.

‘Last chance, Professor. Tell me now or you’re going to fry.’

But Bertorelli just kept screaming, the noise echoing around
the barn. That didn’t matter, because there was nobody within half a mile of the
farmhouse, and both the men knew it.

Guido smiled at the captive,
then
slowly
lowered the blowtorch until the flame was just licking the back of the professor’s
hand, burning off the hairs. Then he lowered it still further and watched with interest
as the living flesh began to cook, the blood boiling, and the unholy smell of roasting
human meat started to fill the barn.

After about thirty seconds he released the trigger, took a small
bottle of water from his briefcase and splashed some onto Bertorelli’s hand. A small
cloud of steam rose, and the rest of the water, stained red with blood, dripped
onto the floor.

The academic was screaming and sobbing, taking in great gulps
of air and weeping copiously.

Guido looked across at his companion.

‘I really don’t think he knows,’ he said.

The questioner – the name he used was Marco – nodded.

‘You might be right,’ he agreed, ‘but do it again, for a minute
this time. We really do have to make sure.’

Guido nodded, and pressed the trigger again. Once more the roar
of burning gas and Bertorelli’s agonised screams echoed from the old solid stone
walls of the barn as he bent forward to continue his work.

The man’s screams grew louder and more intense as the electric-blue
core of the flame dug ever deeper into the back of his left hand, the flesh sizzling
and popping as it burned. Then, suddenly, he fell silent, his head slumping forward.
Immediately Guido released his grip on the trigger, silencing the roar of the gas.
He felt the captive’s neck, and nodded at Marco.

‘He’s still got a pulse,’ he announced.
‘Probably
just passed out from the pain.
But I genuinely don’t think he knows the answer
we’re looking for.’

Almost reluctantly, Marco nodded.

‘I think you’re right. Finish it now,’ he ordered, ‘while he’s
still out.’

Guido replaced the blowtorch in the recess in his briefcase and
took out a loop of rope and a long screwdriver. He seized Bertorelli’s hair and
lifted his chin so that he could drop the rope underneath, then put the screwdriver
into the other end of the loop and began twisting it to form an effective garrotte.
Within a few seconds, the rope was tightening around the academic’s neck, and then
he began to really put the pressure on, twisting the screwdriver until it would
move no further, and just held it there in position for nearly two minutes. He knew
from experience that that should be time enough.

Then he pulled out the screwdriver blade to release the rope
and again felt for a pulse, before glancing over at his companion.

‘He’s gone,’ he reported briefly.

Guido put the screwdriver back in the briefcase, checked that
the soldering iron was now cool – he’d switched it off before he’d started using
the blowtorch – and packed it away. Then he cleaned the jaws of the pair of wire
cutters and put that tool into the correct position as well. He was always neat
and methodical in his work. Once he got home, he would boil the wire cutters and
every other tool which had come into direct contact with the professor in a strong
solution of bleach, which would eliminate any possible forensic evidence to link
his tools with the crime.

The exception was the rope, the actual murder weapon, and his
apron and gloves. He dropped all those on the concrete floor behind the dead man,
took a small plastic bottle of petrol from his case and splashed the contents over
the pile, then lit a match and tossed it onto the spreading pool of liquid. It caught
immediately, with a whoosh of flame, and the discarded objects started to burn.

The two men took a last look around the barn, making sure that
they hadn’t overlooked anything,
then
walked away without
a backward glance.

Two minutes later, they were driving down the hill in an unremarkable
white Fiat van, while Marco tried to decide exactly what he should tell their employer.

 

 

Chapter 2

 

‘Who is he, Cesare?’

‘He
was
a Professor
Antonio Bertorelli,’ Sergeant Lombardi replied, emphasizing the tense of the verb
as he glanced at his superior. ‘At least, that’s the name on the driving licence
we found in the wallet, and the picture looks right.’

Inspector Perini nodded in a somewhat distracted manner, his
gaze still fixed on the naked body tied to the chair in front of him. The arc lights,
powered by a petrol generator that was running just outside the open door of the
barn and was making a loud throbbing sound that echoed around the walls of the old
building, cast a harsh and unforgiving light over the naked and mutilated corpse
of the elderly man, showing every wound and injury with pitiless clarity.

‘And you said he was found by a neighbour?’

‘More a local than a neighbour, actually.
This place is pretty isolated. A man who lives a few kilometres further up the road
drove past and thought he saw flames through the door of the barn. He knew nobody
lived here, so he stopped to investigate. He found this and lost his dinner a few
seconds later.’

Silvio Perini nodded again. He’d seen the pool of vomit near
the open door.

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