Dying For Siena (22 page)

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Authors: Elizabeth Jennings

Tags: #Suspense

BOOK: Dying For Siena
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Nick’s athletic career was over and, in all the ways that counted to him, Nick had lost his life. Unusual for a Rossi, Nick had never been that good in school. He’d made it through college only because of Lou’s coaching. And Nick had never shown even the remotest interest in anything other than hockey.

He was a young man. In spite of his injuries, he was as healthy as a horse. Like all the Rossis, he’d live forever.

But as what?

“Listen.” Dante leaned forward, ready to give Nick the little Rossi pep talk, the one about how no matter what he was, what he did, no matter what was happening in his life, his family loved him—when his cell phone rang.
Damn!
Just as he was getting started.

He listened carefully, then said he’d be back to the office right away. Snapping the mouthpiece closed, Dante signaled Attilio for the bill, ready for a fight.

Attilio’s son Cecco had gotten mixed up with a bad crowd the summer before last. He’d been doing soft drugs and was barreling straight toward the hard stuff—and hard time—when Dante straightened him out. Completely off the record.

Dante had come down hard on the boy, but now Cecco was studying economics at the university and helping his dad out in the restaurant in the evenings and weekends.

Attilio refused to accept payment for Dante’s meals, which was annoying because the food was so good. Dante was forced to restrict himself to Attilio’s fare once a month.

After he and Attilio had gone through their usual tussle, and Attilio had won, as usual, Dante hooked arms with Nick and they walked out into the
Via Fosso
. It was a ten-minute walk along the
Banchi di Sopra
to the
Questura
, but he veered left, taking the
Chiasso Largo
down to the
piazza
.

There was something there sure to lift Nick’s spirits.

They walked under the cool dark archway and emerged into the blinding sunlight of the
Piazza del Campo.

The
piazza
was dressed for the big event. As had happened literally a thousand times before, a tawny-colored ring of earth circled the square.


La terra in piazza,
” Nick murmured.

“Yeah,” Dante answered.
The earth has gone down.
Overnight the square had turned from silver to gold. Nick had already seen it, but Dante was sure he hadn’t seen it with his heart and mind.

They stood at the top of the
piazza
, above the
Fonte Gaia
. Half of Siena had come out, it seemed. It was the last day before the
Palio,
and excitement and anticipation pulsed in the golden air.

For a Sienese, the
Palio
lasted all year. Each
contrada
kept its members busy from one end of the year to the other. Meetings, the baptism in the
contrada
of the infants born that year, planning the menus for the dinners, the endless scheming against rival
contradas
…it lasted all year and no
one was left out. No one left behind.

And now the preparations were reaching a fever pitch as the dirt had gone down and the square was turned into the world’s oldest, trickiest racetrack. With the world’s craftiest, most low-life jockeys wielding whips made of calf phalluses…what was not to love about it?

The
Palio
was steeped in tradition, every second of it. Even the dirt was traditional—carefully kept in the vaults of the
comune
and brought out twice a year, for the races
.

The Sienese weren’t a reverent people, but they reserved a special place in their hard, flinty hearts for the
terra in piazza
. It was finely ground
tufa
stone, the color of a lion’s mane, dampened and then tamped down by thousands of feet. It was the solemn duty of every inhabitant of the city to come and
calpestare la terra
, to tread the earth until it became as smooth as silk and as hard as marble, hard enough for the horses to race on.

The earth had mystical, magic properties. In ancient times, any Sienese citizen sent into exile brought with him a small vial of
terra senese.

Nick and Lou had been born in America, but by blood and by custom they were Sienese. Their mother had had a small bottle of Siena earth by her bedside in the hospital when they were born. And so they had been born in the
contrada
of the Snail. In Deerfield.

No true-blooded Sienese could see the track for the
Palio
set up and be indifferent. There was a saying for sufferers of depression around the end of June—don’t worry, soon there will be
la terra in piazza
.

Sure enough, Nick was smiling.

Dante was supposed to go as quickly as possible to the
Questura
, but this was just as important.

He slowly walked Nick once around the square on the circular track. It took five minutes, but it connected Nick with five centuries of his family’s and his city’s history.

When they drew even with the
Chiasso del Bargello
, Dante stooped and gathered a pinch of the earth and gave it to Nick. Nick closed his fist around the tawny earth, hard. He stood with his head bowed, then looked up into Dante’s eyes.

And right then, right there, Dante knew Nick would be all right. He was back.

“My men have tracked down the maid Faith saw the night Professor Kane was murdered. She might have some additional information for us. Let’s get going,” he said. “We’ve got a murder to investigate.”

They walked companionably up the
Via di Città
and turned right into the
Via del Castoro
.

Coming up to the
Questura
from the
Via del Castoro
never failed to thrill Dante. Surely no other police station in the world could compare. Ahead, two medieval arches led the eye straight into the cathedral square. A narrow shimmering view of the terra-cotta tracings and bronze tiles of the cupola of the cathedral was visible between the high walls of the street.

The right side of the street was formed by the facade of the
Questura’s
tall amber wall. Dante loved that it was such an integral part of the street, of the city, like a natural outcropping instead of a hated foreign body.

He’d seen a lot of police stations in Italy and America and they were usually apart from the city, architecturally and psychologically. Not his
Questura
. It was as much a part of the thousand-year-old scene as a branch was to a tree.

Dante remembered his four years at the Naples
Questura
fondly. The food and the women had been extraordinary. The
Questura
building in Naples was famous, a landmark of the city, set in the enormous
Piazza Matteotti
, not far from the Bay of Naples. It was a Fascist-era art deco relic faced in white marble and possessed of an eerie beauty that dissipated the closer you came and saw how shabby it was.

Nonetheless, the
Questura
building had been erected to inspire awe and fear, a stern reminder to the people that, here are the police. Behave yourselves. Or else.

Of course, the Neapolitans never did, which constituted a goodly portion of their charm.

That wasn’t the message the
Questura
here gave. Not in Siena. People entered and left the Siena
Questura
as casually as if it were the local butcher’s shop or the hairdresser’s, with no reverence and no fear.

It pleased Dante to the profoundest reaches of his soul that it was so.

Passing by the sentry who was busy arguing good-naturedly with one of the
ispettori
, Dante started up the stairs to the interrogation room. At the last minute, he remembered Nick’s knee and took the stairs slowly, one at a time, instead of his usual three.

The interrogation room was on the third floor. Dante loved his Ed McBain and Michael Connelly novels. Steve Carella and Harry Bosch always managed to outmaneuver and outthink the bad guys in the interrogation room, mainly by keeping the bad guys uncomfortable.

American police procedural writers often took great delight in describing how interrogations were to be carried out in a state of near sensory deprivation, in shabby rooms smelling of smoke and sweat. The few stimuli were supposed to be bad. Bad coffee, bad lighting, grime. Windowless, airless, cheerless rooms.

Nothing could be further from the third floor room universally considered the interrogation room in Siena because it had a rather obvious two-way mirror.

Like all the rooms in the
Questura
, it was airy with a high ceiling and a glorious view. Not of the cathedral, which was the inspectors’ privilege, but over the rooftops of the Eagle
contrada
.

Also, by unspoken agreement, it was where the stationhouse coffee machine was kept. A gleaming Alessi espresso maker kept stoked by twice-weekly offerings of freshly-ground Arabica from Ugo, the proprietor of the corner bar.

The coffee offered to potential criminals was some of the best in Italy.

The woman sitting on a chair and cheerfully chatting with
Ispettrice
Corsi didn’t look like a criminal at all.

In fact, Dante noticed as he pulled back his shoulders and pulled in the annoying gut he was starting to develop and which he was going to start exercising away—any day now—she looked like a young Sophia Loren.


Commissario
.” Rita Corsi rose, smiling.
The other woman rose, too. “Come meet my husband’s second cousin, Sara Tommasi. Sara, this is
Commissario
Dante Rossi and—” She looked inquiringly at Nick.

“My cousin, Nick Rossi,” Dante said brusquely. “He’s…helping us in our inquiries. With the Americans, you know.” He pursed his lips and looked wise, as if calling in outsiders to help with police inquiries was perfectly normal.

Rita nodded and Sara Tommasi smiled at both of them, noticeably more warmly at Nick, Dante was annoyed to see.

“Well…” Dante pointed to a chair for Nick and motioned for the beauteous
Signorina
Tommasi to take a seat. She did so in a way that took chair-sitting to new sensuous heights.

“Why don’t we get started?” Dante circled the desk and sat behind it, signifying power and hierarchy—and because he had a much better view of
Signorina
Tommasi’s décolletage from there.

He was a fervent believer in taking life’s little pleasures where one could.


Signorina
Tommasi, we’ve had the devil’s own time tracking you down. Were you unaware of the fact the police wished to speak with you? We contacted your employer, Stella Catering, and we left messages on your answering service at home.

“Your boss gave us your parents’ number and no one answered there. It was only thanks to the good offices of
Ispettrice
Corsi here,” Dante nodded at Rita, “that we were finally able to get in touch with you.”

“I’m sorry,
Commissario
Rossi.” Sara Tommasi’s voice was low and pleasant. “I had no idea. I got word on the evening of the 28th that my grandmother was ill. She lives in San Casciano and they took her to the hospital in Florence, Careggi.

“My parents and I have been there ever since. I had some free days coming, so I just took them.” She bit down on a luscious lower lip and her eyes took on a sheen. “
Nonna
is very ill. None of us have been thinking of anything but her.”

“I…see.” Dante tried to keep his voice brusque and businesslike, but it was hard. He had a
nonna
, and he loved her, too. “I hope she’s doing better.”

“She is,” Sara replied. “She’s a little better now, though she’s not out of danger. So,” she looked at Rita, Nick and then Dante, “I’d like to get back to her as soon as I can, please. Rita got in touch with me and I drove here immediately, but I’d like to go back this afternoon. What is all this about?”

“It’s about late in the evening of the 28th,
Signorina
Tommasi,” Dante replied evenly. He watched her carefully, her magnificent breasts for the moment forgotten. If Faith was telling the truth, Sara Tommasi was the last person to see Roland Kane alive and as such was a material witness. “You were on duty at the
Certosa
that evening, am I correct?”

She nodded, eyes wide.

“And after dinner, around 10:00 p.m., you delivered a bottle of whiskey to room seventeen, occupied by a certain Professor Roland Kane, one of the Americans—”

Dante stopped. Sara Tommasi was shaking her head. “What is it,
Signorina
Tommasi?”

“I got the call from my mother around 5:00 p.m.,
Commissario
. My mother said
Nonna
had been taken to the hospital. I called Paolo, a colleague who works at Stella Catering, and asked him to cover for me. I set the tables, helped the cook out in the kitchen until Paolo arrived and then left.

“I don’t know exactly what time I left but it can’t have been much later than 5:30. By a quarter to seven I was in
Nonna’s
room at the hospital. You can check with the hospital staff. You can check with my family. For that matter, you can check with Paolo, too.”

Dante leaned forward. “
Signorina
Tommasi, please think carefully about what you’re saying. I understand that with the shock about your grandmother’s illness, things might seem a bit confused. Are you certain you left at 5:30? Because we have an eyewitness who says she saw you after ten o’clock on the second floor, where the guests sleep. Delivering a bottle of whiskey.”

“Me?” The woman’s eyes rounded. “You’re wrong,
Commissario
. Even if I hadn’t been called to Florence, we’re usually done clearing away by ten, and anyway, it’s not the
Certosa’s
policy to offer room service. Any guests who have special requests are supposed to address the administration. I’m sorry. It certainly wasn’t me delivering a bottle of—what was it?”

“Whiskey.” Dante pinched the bridge of his nose. A wise man skirted obstacles. “
Signorina
Tommasi, were you the only woman on staff that evening?”

“Yes. Actually, there are only two women in our cooperative, Stella Catering. We just started up last year, and winning the bid for catering for conferences up at the
Certosa
was our first big—”

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