Part 28 (1/2)

Elena stopped, too, as if giving me a short break. She followed my gaze to the pool. ”Do you know,” she said, pointing at the coins, ”how much we collect every night from the Fontana di Trevi? Three thousand euros.”

”Every day?”

Elena nodded. ”They say they give the money to a supermarket for food for poor families.” She shrugged as if to say that might happen and it might not. She touched my arm. ”Andiamo.” Let's go.

Elena started moving fast again, skirting the fountain, not giving it another thought. I got my legs moving and scurried after her, but I kept slowing inadvertently, darting glances at the fountain. I felt envious of the tourists, and I wondered if I didn't throw a coin, would I get back to this city? I shook the thought away. It didn't matter. How could it possibly when I was about to meet my father, to see him resurrected from the land of the dead?

Elena threw a glance over her shoulder at me. Her expression seemed to say, Hurry or I'll change my mind.

At a corner of the Trevi's piazza, I followed Elena to the right, into a narrow, jaggedly shaped street. A bookstore was on a corner. Elena turned left in front of it, then right, then left, weaving away from the fountain, the sounds of its crowds and splas.h.i.+ng water receding quickly.

Suddenly, Elena stopped at a wood door. Many of the doors in Rome are works of art-some are tiny, others three stories tall and arched at the top. They might be made of hammered metal or studded with iron posts or boasting handles the size of a globe and shaped like a lion's head. Some were painted faded red, others a vibrant green. They might be trimmed with marble or decorated with bra.s.s finis.h.i.+ngs. But this door was boring in contrast to the usual lot. It was the same size as the doors at home, rectangular, nondescript-made of wood that was clearly thick and solid, with fist-sized circles carved at the four corners.

Elena reached up and pressed the top right circle. The seemingly solid wood depressed, then just as quickly regained its shape, so that nothing about the door appeared different.

There was a clicking sound. Elena looked over her shoulder, past me, her eyes darting up and down the street, then she pressed the door with the flat of her hand and it swung inward.

She gestured at me to follow her. We stepped into a foyer, cold and dark, made of white marble with streaks of gray. The only light in the small s.p.a.ce came from two iron sconces high on either side wall. There was nothing else in the foyer-not a piece of art on the walls, not a chair or a hall table. Elena took a few steps toward the other end. I did the same and stood behind her. It was so quiet that I began to notice the pulse in my ears, the beat of my heart. Both sounded like drums, thudding slowly, then faster and louder, faster and louder.

I watched as Elena reached out and touched the marble wall, sliding aside what was apparently a small panel. A keypad was behind it. She punched in a few numbers and then letters with an elegant finger, not bothering to hide them from me. The letters I recognized-V-I-C-T-O-R-I-A.

”My mother's name,” I said.

Elena nodded.

”And what were the numbers?”

”0618.”

I thought about it for a second. ”June 18. The day they got married.”

Elena nodded. ”It changes frequently, but yes, that's correct.” She slid the panel shut.

I noticed, right then, that I was trembling a little. I tried to calm myself, tried not to think any thoughts at all, because, if I did, they would only be a battalion of warring questions-What am I doing? Where are we going? Where is my father?

But the questions broke through anyway, muddling my mind, the whole experience reeling with the surreal.

I looked at Elena. Her mouth was grim, her eyes worried. She seemed to see me studying her, and she gave me a smile that broke the tension in her face. But then just as quick it was gone.

A whirring sound, and suddenly the back wall of the foyer began to move. It was a pocket door of sorts, I realized. I stared in awe at the s.p.a.ce behind it. Would my father be standing there? What would he look like? Would I want to hug him? Or would I want to slug him for disappearing on us? Or would it be something else altogether-would I feel nothing upon seeing a man who was, after all, just a stranger now?

43.

B ut there was no one there. Beyond the marble foyer was a metal gangplank that spanned a vast subterranean s.p.a.ce of light brown crumbling brick. A few sconces illuminated the place, casting circles of golden light around them and eerie shadows below.

Elena gestured. ”These are archeological ruins of the ancient aqueducts. We find them whenever we dig in this city.”

Who, I wondered, was the ”we” she was referring to? The government? She and my father?

Before I could ask, Elena made her way across the gangplank, then down a set of metal stairs. When we reached the bottom, there was another gangplank, which Elena crossed immediately. I followed her but she was moving fast again, and I couldn't keep up with her. The antic.i.p.ation and the uneven gangway made me feel off-kilter and shaky.

I began to feel paranoid. ”Elena, where are we going?” I was following my aunt to...where? She'd said she would take me to my father, but what did that mean?

”He keeps an office here,” she said. ”When he first left the United States, he needed to hide himself, but he still wanted to continue his mission, to work to shut down the Camorra.”

After a few more gangplanks and stairs we came to a thick iron door with a simple round knocker. Elena looked at me, that worried expression taking over her face. I sensed a change in her energy, an antic.i.p.ation that was suddenly greater than mine. She gave me a little smile and a raise of her eyebrows that seemed to say, Here we go.

The blood pounded in my ears, taking over my head, so that I felt a sudden intense headache. I was, I realized, holding my breath. I made myself breathe.

Elena raised her hand toward the knocker on the door.

And then suddenly, I was overtaken by a force of emotion-dread. A terrifying dread that was so strong, I literally felt as if it would kill me. My throat began to close, a feeling I'd never had before. And then I felt something cool on my forehead. I raised my hand and touched it. Sweat. My face was coated with it. My body temperature had soared. I felt my face flush deeply. G.o.d bless it, I thought, then G.o.dd.a.m.n it. I knew what was happening-I was suffering a flop sweat attack.

Occasionally, when I got supernervous, like at the beginning of a trial, I experienced what can only be described as extreme perspiration. This little problem of mine was mortifying. It felt as if someone dropped burning charcoals into my stomach and then threw some gasoline on them. And then a truck full of lumber. The waterworks in my body would kick into gear, and my face would get as red as the fire inside me. The last time it had happened was months before when I was about to go on air as an anchor for Trial TV. The only thing that had stopped it was some emergency Benadryl. I had no Benadryl on me now.

”I can't,” I choked out to Aunt Elena before she could knock. ”I can't do this right now. I need some air. Just for a minute.” If I didn't try and stop it, it would get worse and I didn't want to meet my father in this state, sweating like a bull and glowing like a lit Christmas tree.

”Maybe this is too much,” Elena said, a frown on her face.

”No, no. It's just that it's too much for the moment. I just need a few minutes. Can we go up, please? Please?”

Elena paused, inhaled sharply.

I didn't want to lose her, to lose this opportunity. ”Just a few minutes,” I said again.

She gave a terse nod.

We retraced our steps. When we arrived back at the foyer, the place seemed too tiny, the walls felt as if they were shrinking into themselves. Elena said nothing but led me outside. We walked a few blocks away, and finally I stopped and leaned against a mustard stucco wall, sucking in air, fanning my face with my hand.

”I'm sorry,” I said to her. ”I have this little problem that happens sometimes. But I'm fine. Really. I'm having a hard time making my brain process this. Do you understand?”

”Certo,” she said. Certainly.

”Does he know we're coming?”

She studied me for a second, then said simply, ”Si.”

For some reason, that stopped the sweating. ”Is he okay with that?”

A small smile. ”Yes, cara. He is more than okay with that.”