Part 15 (1/2)
”Harry, are they looking at you?”
”No.”
”Ignore them. They'll move on in a minute. When they're gone, cross the square to the right of the Pantheon. Take any side street and walk two blocks to the Piazza Navona. Near the fountain in the middle are benches. The piazza will be crowded. Pick a bench and I'll find you there.”
”When?”
”Twenty minutes.”
Harry looked at his watch.
4:32.
”Harry?”
”What?”
”Trust me.”
Adrianna clicked off. Harry stayed as he was, the phone in his hand. The police were still there. If he hung up and they saw him, he'd have to leave. If he didn't hang up, with one end of the line dead, he took the chance the phone company might report it as a phone suddenly out of service, something the police, in their heightened state of awareness, might be looking for. He looked back. And his heart sank.
Two more carabinieri carabinieri on horseback had ridden up and were talking with the others. Four policemen. Only feet away. Slowly he hung up. He couldn't stay there without making another call, and there was no call to make. He had to do something before one of them looked over and saw him just standing there. And he did. Simply stepped out and walked past them. Moving across the square toward the Pantheon. on horseback had ridden up and were talking with the others. Four policemen. Only feet away. Slowly he hung up. He couldn't stay there without making another call, and there was no call to make. He had to do something before one of them looked over and saw him just standing there. And he did. Simply stepped out and walked past them. Moving across the square toward the Pantheon.
One of the carabinieri carabinieri saw him go, even watched him for a moment, then his horse tugged at its bit, and he had to pull him back. When he looked back Harry was gone. saw him go, even watched him for a moment, then his horse tugged at its bit, and he had to pull him back. When he looked back Harry was gone.
43.
ROSCANI ABSENTLY CRUSHED A CIGARETTE into the ashtray in front of him as he read the Italian translation of a fax sent down from Taglia's office. It was a notification from Special Agent David Harris in the FBI's Los Angeles office that Byron Willis, a senior partner in Harry Addison's Beverly Hills law firm, had been shot and killed outside his home the night before by an a.s.sailant or a.s.sailants unknown. The motive appeared to have been robbery. His wallet, wedding ring, and Rolex watch were missing. Los Angeles homicide detectives were working on the case. An autopsy was pending. Further information would be forthcoming.
Roscani ran a hand over his eyes. What the h.e.l.l did this mean? Without more information he had no choice but to take the murder as a coincidence. But he couldn't. It was too close to what was going on. Still, what would be the purpose of killing Harry Addison's partner? Something he knew about Harry? Or Father Daniel?
Roscani typed a response memo on his computer and sent it to his secretary for translation and transmission to Harris/FBI/Los Angeles. In it he thanked the FBI for their cooperation and asked to be personally kept advised of new developments, suggesting-what he was certain the FBI was already doing-that they question close friends and business a.s.sociates of Harry Addison to see if there was some universal thread, a common knowledge some or all might share; and then to put them on alert for their own personal safety.
His phone rang as he finished. It was Valentina Gori, the speech therapist and lip reader he had brought in to a.n.a.lyze the Harry Addison video. She had viewed it a number of times and was downstairs. Did he have time to join her?
HARRY'S FACE WAS FROZEN on the large video screen as Roscani entered, took Valentina's hand, and kissed her on the cheek. Valentina Gori was fifty-two, red-haired, recently a grandmother, and still very attractive. She had a degree in speech therapy from the University of Leuven in Belgium, had studied mime in the French theater in the 1970s, and, afterward, worked as an actress dubbing foreign sound tracks for the Italian film industry while at the same time consulting on speech and speech patterns for both the carabinieri carabinieri and the Italian police. She had also grown up in the same Roman neighborhood as Roscani and knew his entire family. Moreover, when she was twenty-two and he was fifteen, she had stolen his virginity just to show him he wasn't as much in control as he thought he was. It was a relations.h.i.+p they carried to the present. Besides his wife, she was the one person in the world who could look him knowingly in the eye and make him laugh at himself. and the Italian police. She had also grown up in the same Roman neighborhood as Roscani and knew his entire family. Moreover, when she was twenty-two and he was fifteen, she had stolen his virginity just to show him he wasn't as much in control as he thought he was. It was a relations.h.i.+p they carried to the present. Besides his wife, she was the one person in the world who could look him knowingly in the eye and make him laugh at himself.
”I think you're right. It looks like he is about to say something, or is trying trying to say something just before the tape ends. But I'm not sure he wasn't just looking up.” to say something just before the tape ends. But I'm not sure he wasn't just looking up.”
Turning the remote toward the screen, she touched the PAUSE PAUSE/STILL b.u.t.ton. Harry's mouth began to open as the tape inched forward, and Roscani heard his voice growl with the slow-motion sound. And then they reached his last words. He finished, started to relax, then his head made an awkward and abrupt upward move with his mouth open. That was when the taped ended. b.u.t.ton. Harry's mouth began to open as the tape inched forward, and Roscani heard his voice growl with the slow-motion sound. And then they reached his last words. He finished, started to relax, then his head made an awkward and abrupt upward move with his mouth open. That was when the taped ended.
”It almost looks like an i i...”
There was a slow hissing sound, like wind being expelled by an inebriated giant.
”I what?” Roscani was locked on the screen and Harry's frozen image. what?” Roscani was locked on the screen and Harry's frozen image.
”I'm not so sure he wasn't just finished and tired and was simply going to let out a breath.”
”No, he was trying to say something. Again,” Roscani said, and Valentina played it over. In stop motion. Slow motion. At half speed and then normal. Each time Harry reached the same point, there was the brief hissing sound and then the tape was over.
Roscani looked at her. ”What else?-How many thousand films have you seen? You must have other ideas about what's going on up there on the screen.”
Valentina smiled. ”A thousand ideas, Otello. A hundred scenarios. But I can only go from what I see. And hear. And from that, we have a tired man with a lump on his head who has done what has been required of him and would like to rest. Maybe even sleep.”
Roscani turned abruptly to look at her. ”What do you mean required required of him?” of him?”
”I don't know. It's just a feeling.” Valentina winked. ”Occasionally we all do things required of us when our heart isn't entirely in it.”
”We're not talking about s.e.x, Valentina,” Roscani said flatly.
”No-” This was no time for Valentina to break through his veneer, and she realized it. ”Otello, I'm not a psychologist, just an old broad who's been around a little. I look at the screen and see a tired man apparently speaking his mind but who sounds more like he's doing what he thinks somebody wants. Like a child reluctantly clearing the dishes off the table so he can go out to play.”
”You think he made the tape against his will?”
”Don't ask me to draw conclusions from the air, Otello. It's far too difficult.” Valentina smiled and put a hand on his. ”It's not my job, anyway. It's yours.”
44.
HARRY WATCHED HER COME. WATCHED HER cross the Piazza Navona toward the fountain, sipping something from a plastic Coca-Cola cup, light blue skirt and white blouse, hair turned up in a bun, dark gla.s.ses, her walk unhurried. She could have been a secretary or tourist, perhaps wondering whether or not to meet a lover as promised; anything but a journalist about to rendezvous with the most wanted man in Italy. If she had brought the police, he didn't see them.
Now he saw her circle the fountain, half looking, half not. Then, glancing at her watch, she settled on a stone bench twenty feet from a man painting a watercolor of the piazza. Harry waited, still uncertain. Finally he stood up, glancing at the painter as he did. Walking toward her in a wide arc, he came up from behind to sit casually a few feet to her left, facing in the opposite direction. To his surprise she did nothing more than glance his way, then looked off again. Either she was being very careful or his beard and costume worked better than he thought. As bad as things were, the idea she might not know who he was tickled him, and he tilted his head ever so slightly in her direction.
”Would the lady consider s.c.r.e.w.i.n.g a priest?”
She started and looked, and for the briefest instant he thought she was going to slap him. But instead she stared right at him and admonished him out loud.
”If a priest wants to talk dirty to a lady, he ought to do it where people can't see or hear him.”
PIANO, OR FLAT, NUMBER 12, as it read on the worn key tag, was on the top floor of a five-story apartment building at 47 Via di Montoro, a ten-minute walk toward the Tiber from the Piazza Navona. It belonged to a friend who was out of town and would understand, Adrianna said. Then she stood abruptly and walked off, leaving the Coca-Cola cup behind. The key was inside it.
Harry had entered the lobby and taken the small elevator to the top, finding number 12 at the end of the hall.
Once inside, he locked the door behind him and looked around. The flat was small but comfortable, with a bedroom, living room, small kitchen, and bath. Men's clothing hung in the closet-several sport coats, slacks, and two suits. A half dozen s.h.i.+rts, several sweaters, socks, and underwear were in a chest of drawers opposite the bed. In the living room was a telephone and small TV. A computer with separate printer sat on a desk in a cubbyhole near the window.
Moving to the window, Harry stood at the edge and looked down at the street. Nothing any different than when he came in. Pa.s.sing cars, motor scooters, the occasional pedestrian.
Taking off his jacket, he set it on a chair and went into the kitchen. In a cupboard next to the sink he found a gla.s.s and started to fill it. Then he had to set it down. The room spun, and it was all he could do to get his breath. Emotion and exhaustion had caught up with him. That he was even alive was a miracle. That somehow he was off the street was a gift from the G.o.ds.
Finally he calmed enough to splash some water on his face and begin to breathe normally. How long had it been since he'd left Hercules and come here? Three hours, four? He didn't know. All sense of time was gone. He looked at his watch. It was Friday, July 10. Ten after five in the afternoon. Ten after eight in the morning Los Angeles time. Another breath and his eyes went to the telephone.
No. Can't. Don't even consider it. By now the FBI would have every line to his home and office tapped. If he tried to call, they'd know where he was in a millisecond. The fact was that even if he reached someone without being caught, what could they do? In truth, what could anyone do, even Adrianna? He was caught in a horrendous dream that was no dream at all. Just stark, brutal reality.
And except for that few square feet of apartment where he was, there was absolutely nowhere he could go where he didn't risk being caught and turned over to the police. Even here, how long was he safe? He couldn't stay where he was forever.