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Authors: Ben Pastor

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After showing Guidi the title –
Die Olympischen Spiele, 1936
– Bora opened the book to the illustrated pages covering the 110-meters obstacle race. “Here. Please look. The gold medalist, and holder of the new world record, was Forrest Towns, USA, with 14.2 seconds. Another American, Pollard, won the bronze medal with 14.4 seconds. After the Canadian O'Connor, who came in sixth, was a third American, William Bader. Magda's parents never knew his last name, as she kept mum about it; but the little girl was baptized Wilhelmina.”

“Well, Major – William is not a rare first name, is it?”

“No. And Willi, as mentioned in Magda's letters, is a German endearment for Wilhelm or even Wilfred, not a nickname for William. I just thought it was
interesting.
Her parents told me the athlete was from St Louis, a city in Missouri.”

Guidi had so many worries – about Francesca, about the aftermath of Rau's killing, about Caruso's hatred for him – Bora's eleventh-hour interest in Magda's love life was infuriating to him. “So now we know who the child's father is, Major,” he said under his breath. “Is this what you called me here for?”

“In days to come I hope to know more than that.” Quickly Bora replaced the book in his briefcase, and with it in hand preceded Guidi out of the hospital. “I also wanted you to do this for me.” He handed a scribbled list to the inspector. “We need to
get all the details possible on what was dumped in the garbage in Magda Reiner's neighborhood on the night she died. Surely with the open market nearby, the garbage men go through the bins.”

Guidi put the list in his pocket without reading it. “I imagine you have no interest in hearing what
I
might have found out in the past few days.” In the sunny springtime air, he felt alive and rebellious, and just about as sick of Rome as he was sick of the war, Bora, the Germans and the Americans, too, who might be good at winning Olympic medals but didn't seem capable of breaking through Nazi defenses.

Bora tossed the briefcase in the back of his Mercedes, waiting by the curb. “But I do. I am most curious, and frankly, without your standing up to Caruso, I might have been tempted to throw
Ras
Merlo to his compatriots. Please tell me, but not here. I abhor talking in the street.”

They drove in the Mercedes (the side window was still without glass) back to the city center. Bora felt a deep dislike for the encroachment of modern housing on the once suburban villas. Guidi kept his counsel until they reached Latour's at Via Cola di Rienzo, since it was clear Bora craved coffee and would have it in the best place available. Facing the major over a steaming demitasse, and resolute not to inform him that Sutor had been inside at the time of the murder, he announced, “It wasn't Magda who went shopping for clothes. The description fits Hannah Kund.”

Bora looked genuinely interested. “It may be because Hannah spoke Italian and Magda didn't.”

“In any case, she certainly did not volunteer that piece of information when I spoke to her. Also, the neighbors noticed that Magda often stopped by the market bins on her way to work and dumped garbage from a paper bag. People notice these things, in times of scarcity, as she seemed to go through more cans than you'd expect one person to consume. And I am ahead of you as regards any evidence thrown out on the night of her death.”

“Excellent. Is there a blanket on your list?”

“A German army blanket, which a garbage collector took for himself – yes, it's in my office now. The man reported finding in the same bin a stack of German military magazines, some of them ripped crosswise, apparently to make them into toilet paper – these, too, he brought home. I showed him a few recent issues I'd gotten my hands on, and as far as I can judge he recognized the headings of
Signal, Adler
and
Wehrmacht.

Here Guidi stared at Bora, who only said, “Well, at least they planned to send all branches of the service down the drain. What else?”

“A sealed bottle of mineral water, three unopened cans of meat, a can opener and a pair of fancy women's underpants. The magazines are long gone, and also the bottle and the cans. Can opener and underpants are in my office with the blanket. All of it was stuffed in a pillowcase.”

Bora made no attempt to conceal his elation. “Well, that's outstanding. What about the key chain?”

Guidi shook his head. “It was probably disposed of elsewhere, or taken along.”

“Well, it's still good. But why did it take you so long to get this information?”

“The garbage collector assigned to Magda's neighborhood had been ‘borrowed' by your colleagues to clear rubble from the air raids until a week ago. He grudgingly gave up the loot, especially the underpants, which he'd made a present of to some girl.”

Bora had finished his coffee. He took out a cigarette pack and offered one to Guidi; after a moment of hesitation, he put the pack away without taking one for himself. “I'd be obliged to you if you had the material delivered to my office,” he said. “Much as I dislike the idea, the underwear will fall into my bailiwick, as I'll have to confront Merlo and Sutor with it. We will be in touch by phone in the next few days.”

*

By evening Bora was at Mount Soratte. Hours earlier the field marshal had sent out orders to abandon Cassino. Early on Thursday he visited the troops at Valmontone, on the directly threatened Highway 6. He was weak and in severe pain, but the events were too enormous to dwell on it. On his return to headquarters he reported to Westphal, who looked exhausted, and left work at about eight – in time to join Colonel Dollmann for dinner and the long drive back to Soratte.

As they traveled along under the cover of night, the conversation circled around the desperate situation of the troops at Fondi, but it was mostly because neither one of them wanted to be the first to resume the conversation initiated at the hospital.

“Borromeo told me you managed to meet with him briefly yesterday,” Dollmann said when talk of endangered defenses was exhausted. “What is new?”

“With him, the riots around most every Vatican soup kitchen.”

“And with you?”

Bora had agreed to drive the first half of the trip over, and though he knew the road well, he kept absolute attention on the pavement unrolling before them from the dark. “I told him I think I know what happened to Cardinal Hohmann and Marina Fonseca.” Dollmann's silence he expected, so he added, “For whatever it's worth, I told him in confession.”

“Well, I'm not privy to the disburdening of your eternal soul. Where's the suicide note? Hand it back.”

“That is in the care of His Holiness himself. As for my hypothesis, Colonel, you might as well hear it. If we both know, after the end of the war one of us can inform Gemma Fonseca.”

Dollmann groaned from the darkness where he sat. “This is most annoying. Why don't you tell Guidi?”

“Because he's had his troubles from certain quarters already. I dropped the subject with him when I realized where it was going. For now it's nothing but a hypothesis, as I said, but a more plausible one than the Mayerling scenario prepared for us. What would you say, Colonel, if I told you that Baroness
Fonseca, having met the cardinal at a politically friendly home somewhere near the Pantheon between one and three p.m. on 7 April, had to return home to self-administer the second insulin dose of the day?”

“I'd say nothing.”

“Well, what if I added that the cardinal, having ample time to return to his residence and get ready for the four forty-five meeting with you, accompanied her there, as the lady sometimes grew unsteady just before her treatment?”

“I don't follow you.”

“You will if I add that persons unknown, concealed in Marina Fonseca's city flat and armed with a Beretta removed from her all but inaccessible villa at Sant'Onofrio, and loaded for the occasion, surprised the couple as they entered.”

“You are being
fantastic,
” Dollmann commented.

“Am I? I daresay, Colonel Dollmann, that a sickly woman and an octogenarian make fairly easy prey. I submit to you that she was forced to compose the ‘suicide' note, but that – even in her extremity of illness and terror – she had enough spirit to embed in it a message of distress by using her right hand to write it. And I don't think it an abuse of your patience adding that they then injected Marina Fonseca with a massive dose of insulin, causing a nearly immediate collapse. They undressed her and placed her on the bed. With a frail old man like the cardinal, God knows; an insignificant but well-placed blow could bring him down. Afterwards, it was just a matter of securing her fingerprints on the handgun, arranging the distasteful scene, and staging the murder-suicide with the selfsame gun.”

“That's even more fantastic, Bora.”

“Less fantastic than it is for an adulterous couple to leave front and bedroom door unlocked in wartime, or for a diabetic to use up at one sitting the doses expected to last her well past the holiday, and leave the empty vials but not the syringe for the police to find. And certainly less fantastic than the sudden
murderous craze of a long-standing member of the Tertiary Order.”

Bora added nothing else, and Dollmann was as silent as a grave for the following ten miles or so. Even then, he only said, “You have everything but the murderers.”

It was Bora's turn to keep his counsel as the glum periphery sank further and further behind them. The lonely fork in the road by the olive groves of Fiano dimly came up before he spoke again.

“I told you, I have those, too. But – like the policeman whose office was rifled even as my room was – I am not so deluded as to go after them now.”

As for Sandro Guidi, he did not regret having given a thirty-day notice on his rent. Thanks to Danza he'd already secured new accommodations on Via Matilde di Canossa, off Via Tiburtina, where he'd soon move his few belongings. Truly, he was anxious to go.

Getting up on Friday, through the half-open door, he could see Francesca massaging her legs on the bed, stretching to reach for them as she sat up with a face of discomfort. These days she was sweaty, often nauseous, not bothering to change from her nightgown.

“Need anything?” he asked as he went by, and she gave him a look of disgust. “Close the damn windows in your room, will you? I can smell the stinking asphalt and it makes me want to puke.” And it was true, she vomited often, and every half-hour she headed for the bathroom with a waddling walk he couldn't reconcile to the boyish thinness of a few months ago. Dr Raimondi, whose wife had volunteered to adopt her child, had invited her to stay with them until the delivery, but Francesca made it clear she had no intention of being cooped up anywhere until the time came. So she spent her days reading magazines between the bedroom and the toilet, shrugging off Signora Carmela's lamentations about the professor. To Guidi
she had little to say, but then he acted as if leaving in less than a week's time meant nothing to him.

Driving to work on a morning that looked like enamel, Guidi simply wanted to extricate himself from the situation. As for the Reiner case, blanket, can opener and underwear had been duly delivered, but Bora had neither called back nor showed up.

20 MAY 1944

Dollmann and Bora were less than half an hour from Soratte when the colonel, who had taken the wheel, silently handed him a folder from the leather case at his side. Bora rested it on his knees to open it. In the delicate light of early morning, as they steadily climbed toward the redoubt, the informer's nameless photograph and one typewritten page of details already seemed like an obituary. He'd nearly forgotten about this. “As promised,” Dollmann reminded him, observing Bora's response to the material through the corner of his eye. “Return it as soon as you're well acquainted with it, no later than on our way back.” All he could see was a setting of the jaw under Bora's skin.

“Is this all we know, Colonel?”

“It's all you need to know.”

“How dependable is the informer's routine?”

“Very. Never missed a date so far.”

“So the next trip is on the twenty-first.”

“Sunday, correct.”

Bora spoke heedfully, keeping his eyes on the folder. “I will be there.”

“How do you plan to do it?”

“I'll use my side arm from twenty feet away, no more.”

“It's risky.”

“Everything is risky if it's not done well. This will be done well.”

Seeing a column of armored cars approaching in the rear-view mirror, Dollmann pulled to the grassy side of the road to let them pass, and spoke over the idling of the engine. “What if something goes wrong? You know I cannot help you then.”

“Like all seducers, you're not expected to be there if there's hell to pay.”

“We're both doing it to spite Kappler, I think.”

“Not I.”

Dollmann flicked some ashes from his cigarette off the dashboard with a finicky sweep of his gloved fingers. “How do you know I will not turn you in afterwards?”

“I don't. It's likely that I don't care. We all go to bed with our conscience and must face it in the morning. I haven't been to Stalingrad to break down and worry about Kappler.”

BOOK: A Dark Song of Blood
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