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Authors: Michele Giuttari

Tags: #Mystery

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BOOK: Death in Tuscany
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'A nuisance, would you say?' he asked, thinking of Professor d'Incisa's anger.

'No, Superintendent. I'd never say that. When they come into hospital they're patients, and we're here to take care of them. That's our job.'

'Of course. I only meant that if they take you away from other urgent cases—'

'Even junkies are human beings, and not all of them are the same. It can be discouraging, but they're never a nuisance. That's not just a question of professional ethics, it's a question of conscience.'

Among these junkies, are there many minors?'

'Yes, quite a few'

'Even children?'

'I beg your pardon?'

'She wasn't an adult, am I right?'

'Well, not really, but

'According to the pathologist she might have been fourteen, perhaps even thirteen.'

The woman seemed quite struck by this, and thought about it for a few moments. 'Oh my God, I suppose that's possible. But I thought she was older than that. Being a junkie . . .'

And that doesn't seem strange to you?'

'To be honest, yes, now that you've told me.'

'So you can understand why I have to ask you all these questions?'

'Oh, don't worry about that. If I can help you in any way

'Thank you. I have one more question. I didn't find any shoes among the girl's personal effects.'

She thought for a moment. 'That's right, she was barefoot.' And did that seem normal to you?'

'To be honest, I don't think anyone was bothered about it. The paramedics might have taken them off.'

As far as you recall, were her feet bruised or particularly dirty?'

Again, the woman thought for a moment. 'No, I'm pretty sure they weren't

'Thank you. I'm going to try and find out if it was the paramedics who took her shoes off. But if it was, they would have given them to someone, wouldn't they?'

'Of course, to one of the nurses.'

'The strange thing is, she didn't have any bra or knickers on either.'

'I don't understand.'

'Was she wearing any underwear when she was brought in?'

'I really don't know. We didn't undress her. There was no need to when we administered the Narcan, or when we took the blood test and put her on a drip.'

'Were you there all the time they were working on her?' 'Yes, all the time.'

'And in your opinion, was every possible care taken?'

Absolutely Professor d'Incisa may have been tired, but he directed his team with total dedication and did absolutely everything that had to be done. I'd swear to that in court.'

Ferrara smiled. 'That won't be necessary. This isn't an interrogation. We're not even investigating a crime. I'm just trying to understand how a child ended up full of drugs in an isolated spot which isn't even a hangout for junkies, and how she ended up here without shoes
...
or underwear.'

'When you put it like that, it does seem strange. Perhaps you should ask the nurses who looked after her when she was taken to the ward. They should know more about the clothes. You'll probably find they've been put somewhere by mistake.'

'I'm sure you're right. Do you remember which nurses?'

'One of them was definitely Elena Scandellari. She's here now, do you want me to call her?'

She was there, too! Could the day, which had begun so badly and continued to get worse, be ending well after all?

'You'd be doing me a great favour. Tell her I'm waiting for her here. You can go back to work. I've kept you too long. Thank you, you've been a great help.'

'If you need anything else, let me know. I didn't think she was so . . .'

'Young?'

'Yes.'

Ferrara wouldn't have been able to swear to it, but he had the impression her glasses had steamed up.

'Maybe she wasn't,' he said, trying to make her feel better. We're only guessing. She may have been fifteen or sixteen.'

'Even so . . .' the woman sighed as she went out.

The sigh made Ferrara think she might be feeling guilty that after that first day she hadn't seen the girl again, as if she had failed in her duty to her patient. But perhaps that was unfair, perhaps she had simply had some days off.

Elena Scandellari, who knocked at the door a few minutes later, couldn't have been more than thirty. She was buxom and quite pretty, and Ferrara guessed that she was usually lively and cheerful, but at the moment she seemed intimidated to be in the presence of a high-ranking police officer.

'Did Signora Finzi tell you why I wanted to see you?'

'About the clothes?'

'That's right. Apparently the girl wasn't wearing any shoes when she was admitted. Did the paramedics give them to one of you?'

'No, she didn't have any'

And she wasn't wearing underwear either, is that right?'

'That's right, signore.'

And didn't that strike you as odd?'

'Yes, especially as she must have had her period recently. I thought, "Look how these little whores go around these days" . . . I'm sorry,' she added, remembering that she was talking about someone who had died.

'Do you mean she had blood on her?'

'Yes, I saw the bloodstains when they stripped her to change her.'

'Where?'

'On the insides of the thighs. The genital area seemed clean, but as if it had been washed in a hurry, at least that was the impression I had. I remember it well.'

'Were there any bloodstains on her jeans as well?' Ferrara asked.

'I didn't notice.'

It didn't matter. He'd be able to check that out himself, or better still, Forensics would do it for him.

'I see. In the days that followed her admission, did she lose any more blood?'

'No, that's why I thought she must just have had her period. It was probably just finishing.'

'Right . . . Did she have anything in her pockets?'

'A few sticks of chewing gum
...
I also remember a used tissue rolled into a ball. That was it.'

'Did you throw the tissue away?'

'It was rubbish, Superintendent
..."
she said, apologetically. 'Of course. So you cleaned her and put her in a hospital gown.'

'Yes, obviously'

And you didn't tell anyone about the bloodstains? You didn't report them?'

'No, I didn't. I thought that was her business anyway, the poor girl. If someone comes in who's been knocked down by a car and their underwear is soiled, I don't tell the whole department!'

Ferrara smiled. It was a slightly bitter smile: that rolled-up tissue might have been able to tell him something. But he certainly couldn't fault the nurse's humanity.

'One more thing. Has Signora Finzi been away?'

'Just for a few days. She came back today'

For some reason, that cheered him up.

It was a bit late now to go back to Headquarters, so he told the driver to drop him on the banks of the Arno, near where he lived.

On the way, he called Leone's office.

The pathologist greeted him with the words, 'You left without saying goodbye!'

'That's why I'm calling you now'

'Oh, I see, it's not because you wanted to ask me some questions

Ferrara smiled. 'Why didn't you become a detective, Leone?'

'For the same reason you didn't become a pathologist, judging by the way you ran off today just when things were getting nasty. The State needs both of us, and God in His infinite wisdom invented the division of labour. So what do you want to know?'

'Everything.'

'Obviously. Okay, let's say . . . today is Friday, tomorrow we start the lab tests, so . . . You can call me again next Friday, all right?'

'Can't you at least tell me part of it?'

'You mean, let's stop joking?'

'If possible . . .'

'At your service, Chief Superintendent. Given what I've seen so far, I think the hospital's diagnosis was correct.'

'So do I, but that's not the most important thing. It's the circumstances in which the drugs were taken that interest me. And there's something else: I've just found out that when the child—'

BOOK: Death in Tuscany
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