The Bernini Bust (2 page)

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Authors: Iain Pears

Tags: #Di Stefano, #Italy, #Jonathan (Fictitious character), #General, #Flavia (Fictitious character), #Fiction, #Mystery Fiction, #Art thefts, #Police Procedural, #Mystery & Detective, #Argyll, #Women Sleuths, #Policewomen, #Police, #California, #Police - Italy

BOOK: The Bernini Bust
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Argyll had by this time reconciled himself to di Souza’s company, and they walked over the lawn together so that the Spaniard could present himself to the appropriate authority. He was still plainly irritated that there had been no one to meet him at the airport.

“What about these priceless objects of yours?” Argyll asked as they ignored the whistles and shouts of a guardian telling them to get off the grass. “Where are they?”

“Oh, at the airport. They arrived a couple of days ago, I gather. But you know what customs people are like. Same the world over. It’s all on account of the other pieces I brought over.”

“What other pieces?”

“Langton’s. He’s been buying stuff all over the place. Nothing important, I gather, but he wanted to get some of it back here. So he asked me to arrange shipment for him. Another healthy fee, and a satisfied customer. One should always be happy to oblige a man with access to so much money, don’t you think?”

Still in an effusive mood, Hector babbled on, hopping from topic to topic with the agility of a mountain goat. He burbled away about his important clients - all nonsense as Argyll knew; Hector’s career had always been more style than substance - and eventually broke off to point at a small figure emerging from the office block and heading in their direction. “So this place is inhabited, after all,” he said. “Who’s that odd little man over there?”

“That’s the museum director. Samuel Thanet. Pleasant enough, but the anxious type. Hello, Mr. Thanet,” he continued, switching to English as the man came into earshot. “How are you? Enjoying life?” It is always a good idea to be nice to museum directors, especially if they command an acquisitions budget bigger than all of Italy’s museums rolled together. In this, at least, he and di Souza had a common outlook.

In making the characterisation Argyll was accurate, but a little unfair. If Samuel Thanet looked worried, it was mainly because he had a great deal to be worried about. It is not easy being in charge of a museum, but when it is owned and run in an almost medieval fashion by a man used to having his every whim treated like a heavenly command, life can become well nigh intolerable.

Not that Thanet bore any resemblance to the archetypal laid-back Californian even on his days off. Instead of the tall, lean, suntanned, jogging type the outside world is convinced lives in the area, Thanet was short, overweight, much given to highly formal clothes and was restrained to the point of neurosis. He was not one to waste energy on tennis or surfing; such as he had was divided equally between worrying and an almost fanatical devotion to his museum.

For which latter occupation he needed money, and for that he needed to be appallingly sycophantic to the museum’s patron and owner. There is nothing unusual about this; all museum directors have to be sycophantic to someone, be it patrons, donors or boards of governors. It’s part of the job; some might say the most important part. And everybody else in the museum has to be sycophantic to the director. By the time you make it to the top, you are well practised in the art.

Even for the practised courtier, however, Arthur M. Moresby II was a bit of a handful. It wasn’t just a question of telling him how wonderful he was; he knew that already. It was a given, like the sun rising, or the income tax form arriving. Rather, Moresby had whims. For a start, he was a businessman, and liked reality to be presented in terms of development concepts and budgeting proposals. Next he liked those around him to be lean, mean and hungry. And however ambitious Thanet might be for his museum, he was far from lean, could occasionally be mean, but was utterly hopeless at appearing hungry. It made him nervous, and the prospect of an encounter with the great man turned him into a chronic insomniac for weeks ahead.

“I’m afraid I’m having to deal with several crises simultaneously at the moment,” he said in reply to the question, sneezed loudly, and whipped out a handkerchief too late. He blew his nose and looked apologetic. Allergies, he said. Martyr to them.

“Really? I haven’t noticed any crises. By the way, may I introduce Senor di Souza? He’s arrived with your new sculptures.”

The comment, innocent enough, clearly added another crisis to Thanet’s mental checklist. His brow furrowed mightily and he eyed di Souza with considerable alarm.

“What new sculptures?” he said.

This was more than di Souza’s ego could bear. Being ostentatiously ignored was one thing; at least that indicated people knew you were around. But to have Thanet appear genuinely oblivious of his existence was too much. In a clipped and stern voice, marred only by his limited English vocabulary, he explained his presence.

Thanet looked even more irritated, although it appeared to be the content of the message, not the style of its delivery, which alarmed him.

“That infernal man Langton again. He really has no right to cut across established procedures like this,” he muttered.

“You
must
have known I was coming…’ di Souza began, but Thanet cut him off.

“What, exactly, have you brought with you?” he demanded.

“Three cases of Roman sculpture, provided by myself, and one case brought for Mr. Langton.”

“And what’s in that?”

“I’ve no idea. Don’t you know?”

“If I knew I wouldn’t ask, would I?”

Di Souza looked perplexed. All he’d done was arrange shipment, he said. He assumed it was other bits of sculpture.

“It’s like trying to run a madhouse,” Thanet confided to nobody in particular, shaking his head in disbelief.

“Do you really give your agents free run to buy things? What about my Titian? Did Langton buy that on a whim as well?”

Thanet shifted from foot to foot, then decided to unburden himself. “It’s Mr. Moresby, I’m afraid,” he said. “He often decides to buy things on his own account, and instructs people like Langton to go ahead. Then they turn up here.”

What he meant, and couldn’t bring himself to say, was that, in the past, he had found his employer and benefactor’s judgement in artistic matters to be a little shaky. An alarming number of pictures in the museum were there partly because Mr. Moresby was convinced he could spot a masterwork which the dealers, curators and historians of several dozen countries had unaccountably overlooked. And partly for other reasons. There was one picture, and Thanet shuddered involuntarily every time he thought of it, which had almost certainly been painted in the 1920s, probably in London.

But Mr. Moresby had been persuaded it was by Frans Hals when he bought it eighteen months previously, and Frans Hals it was still labelled. Thanet couldn’t think of it without remembering the occasion he was walking through the gallery, past a little knot of visitors, and had heard one of them snickering as he read the description. Nor could he forget the awful row that erupted when a junior curator produced proof that the thing was a dud. The Frans Hals was still there; the junior curator wasn’t.

“In both of your cases,” he said, pushing such thoughts aside, “I’m afraid museum procedure was bypassed. It’s no good, you know. Not professional. I shall have to talk to Mr. Moresby - again - when he comes this evening.”

Commercial instincts pricked up their metaphorical ears here. This was the first mention of an impending visit by Moresby himself, a figure legendary in equal parts for his excessive wealth, prodigality in art collecting and singular unpleasantness.

“He’s coming here?” They said almost in unison. Thanet looked at them, knowing exactly what was passing at high speed through their minds.

“Yes. We’re having to arrange a party at short notice. You’re both invited, I suppose. You can make up numbers.”

A bit graceless, but the man was under pressure. Argyll ignored it.

“Panic in the ranks, eh?”

Thanet nodded sombrely. “That’s it, I’m afraid. He likes surprising us with this sort of thing. I’m told he’s constantly dropping in at short notice at his factories to see how things are run. Always fires someone,
pour encourager les autres.
So I suppose we can count ourselves lucky we have some warning, even if only a few hours.” He sniffled once more, and the two visitors took a step backwards to avoid being caught in the blast. After dithering for some time, Thanet decided not to sneeze after all, and wiped his teary eyes instead. He sighed in a rheumy fashion and sniffed heavily. “I do hate this time of year,” he said confidentially.

“It could be worse,” he went on. “We’re just going to give him a reception, then a tour of the museum. And I think there will be an important announcement to justify our efforts.” He looked suddenly smug as he said it, very much like someone nursing a delightful secret.

“I should be delighted to come, thank you,” said Argyll. Not that he liked parties particularly, but if the room was going to be positively strewn with billionaires, he couldn’t afford to miss it. Even a measly multi-millionaire would satisfy. Doesn’t do to be fussy.

He was about to make careful enquiries about the guest list when he was interrupted by a semi-sniffle of alarm from Thanet, who whipped out his handkerchief once more and gave a convincing impression of trying to hide behind it.

The focus of his anxiety was a small, brown-haired woman whose immaculately constructed elegance was marred only by a face of steadfast and determined hardness. Early middle-age, but fighting back with the best technology money could buy. She had driven up to the museum in a vast car and was now heading their way.

“Damnation,” said Thanet, turning to confront the menace.

“Samuel Thanet. I want a word with you,” she called as she marched across the lawn, giving the luckless gardener a nasty look as he started to protest once more.

Her eyes swept across the assembled company with all the warmth of a high-pressure water-hose. “What piece of chicanery have you pulled off this time?”

“Oh, Mrs. Moresby…’ Thanet said desperately, giving the others the only introduction they ever received.

“Oh, Mrs. Moresby,” she mimicked in an unappealing fashion. “Stop whining. What I want to know is,” she paused for dramatic effect and pointed an accusing finger at him, “what in God’s name are you up to now?”

Thanet stared at her in bewilderment. “What?” he said in surprise, “I don’t know what…’

“You know very well what. You’ve been bamboozling my husband again.”

Di Souza, always adverse to being left out of conversations with handsome and vastly wealthy women, spotted his opportunity. “What does bamboozling mean?” he asked, smiling in the way which, he firmly believed, normally made hearts flutter.

Mrs. Moresby added him to her list of people who deserved looks of withering contempt. “Bam-boozling,” she said slowly but rather nastily. “From bamboozle. Verb. To defraud. To corrupt. To pull the wool over the eyes of sweet, trusting old men. To buy, in other words, stolen or otherwise illegally acquired works of art for the purposes of egotistical self-aggrandisement. That’s what bamboozling means. And this stumpy little creep,” she said, pointing at Thanet in case there was any doubt, “is the arch bamboozler. Got it?”

Di Souza nodded slowly, having failed to understand what on earth she was talking about. “Yes, perfectly, thank you,” he said in what he always considered to be his most charming fashion. Highly reliable usually, and the prop on which he had built an old but deserved reputation for irresistibility. It singularly failed to work its magic on Anne Moresby.

“Good,” said Mrs. Moresby. “Now keep your nose out of this.”

Di Souza drew himself up in dignified protest. “Madam, please…’

“Ah, shut up.” She cut him dead and directed her full attention at Thanet. “Your grasping ambition for this museum is out of hand. I’m warning you, if you keep on manipulating my husband, when he comes this evening you are going to pay a very heavy price indeed. So you watch yourself.” She poked him in the chest for emphasis.

She did an abrupt about-turn and marched back across the lawn. Didn’t even say goodbye. In the background the gardener threw up his hands in despair and, as soon as the car swept back out into the street, came across to examine the damage.

Thanet watched her go impassively. He almost looked pleased.

“What on earth was that all about?” Argyll asked in astonishment.

Thanet shook his head and declined the invitation to hand out confidences. “Oh, it’s a long story. Mrs. Moresby likes to take on the role of the dutiful wife protecting her husband from the outside world. And looking after her own interests into the bargain. I’m very much afraid she likes to practise on me. It may well indicate that Mr. Moresby will indeed be making an important announcement tonight.”

Clearly, much remained unsaid here, but Argyll had no opportunity to pursue the matter. Thanet fended off further questions, apologised profusely for the unorthodox way in which di Souza had been welcomed, and sniffled his way off to the solitary splendour of his office in the administrative block. The two Europeans watched him go in silence.

“Can’t say I’d like his job,” Argyll ventured after a pause.

“I don’t know,” di Souza said. “Whatever Moresby’s faults, I have heard that he pays well. Are you going to go this evening?”

Argyll nodded. “Seems so.”

Di Souza waved his hand dismissively. “Good. The place will probably be littered with artistically starved wealth. All wanting genuine works of art imported direct from Europe. Could make your career, if you oil your way around the clientele properly. And mine, come to think of it. If I can only unload my stock on some of them I’ll be able to retire a happy man. I just hope that dreadful woman won’t be there.”

“The trouble is, I’ve never been very good at parties…’

Di Souza tut-tutted. “You’re the only art dealer I know who feels embarrassed about selling things to people. You must get over this disgusting reticence, you know. I know it’s the mark of an English gentleman but it’s bad news here. The hard sell, my boy. That’s what’s needed. Get the bit between your teeth, the wind in your sails, the eye on the ball…’

“And trip up?”

“And make money.”

Argyll looked shocked. “I’m most surprised to hear you talking in such blatantly materialistic terms. And you an aesthete, too.”

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