Read The Girl of his Dreams - Brunetti 17 Online

Authors: Donna Leon

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The Girl of his Dreams - Brunetti 17 (17 page)

BOOK: The Girl of his Dreams - Brunetti 17
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'How does it open?' Pucetti asked, nodding toward the watch, which he did not touch. A few grains of Bocchese's black dusting powder had fallen from it on to Brunetti's desk.

Brunetti picked it up and pressed the knob on the top. Nothing happened. He turned the watch over and saw a tiny flange on the edge, then prised the back open with his fingernail. In a delicate italic script was written,
'Per Giorgio, con amore, Orsola.'
The date was 25

10

94.

'Well, it lasted at least ten years

observed Vianello.

'Let's hope they got married here

Brunetti said, reaching for the phone. As indeed they had. Giorgio Fornari had married Orsola Vivarini on the twenty-fifth of October 1984.

Vianello took the phone book and flipped to the Fs. He quickly found a Giorgio Fornari, but the address was in Dorsoduro. Looking iip, he said, 'Whatever happened, it didn't happen there, did it?' Before either of them could answer, he flipped to the back of the book and checked the Vs. 'Nothing.'

‘P
ucetti

Brunetti said, turning to the young officer. Take the photos downstairs and see if anyone recognizes her. If not, or even if someone does, take them over to the Carabinieri and see if you can get anything from them

Brunetti knew that photos were taken of the children who were arrested for burglary, but since regulations demanded that the photos be sent to the Ministry of the Interior, the local police were left with no visual record save memory by which to identify repeat offenders.

When the younger man was gone, Brunetti said, 'I think we should go over to Dorsoduro and see how Signor Fornari lost his watch and his wedding ring.' He glanced at his own watch and saw that, if they left now and walked along the
riva
to the
traghetto
at San Marco, they would be there before lunchtime. Before they left the Questura, however, Brunetti checked the address in
Colli, Campielli, e Canali
and located the building at the end of Fondamenta Venier.

By the time they reached Ponte del Vin, they found themselves encased in people walking in the direction of the Piazza or strolling towards them from it. On the top of the bridge, Vianello gazed at the sea of heads and shoulders in front of them.
‘I
can't

he whispered. Brunetti turned and led them back towards the
imbar
cadero
and the boat that would take them to the San Zaccaria stop.

Despite their change of direction, the tide continued to sweep around them: comment was superfluous. When they reached the
imbarcadero,
they found that the snake of people waiting for the boat extended all the way back to the
riva.
Without hesitation, both men walked around to the right and up to the metal chain blocking entry.

Immediately they were approached by a hatchet-faced blonde dressed in jeans so tight they seemed to put her breathing, if not her life, at risk.

'This is an exit,' she said in a shrill voice, shooing her hands at them in a flutter of exasperation. 'And you'll block the people who want to get off.'

'This is a police warrant card,' Vianello said, producing it from his pocket and stepping over the chain to show it to her, 'and you're blocking the police in the performance of their duties.' She acknowledged no defeat, but whatever she said was drowned as the engine of the approaching vaporetto slipped into reverse. She wheeled around and stood, hands on hips in front of them, as though afraid they would try to slip on to the boat while the arriving passengers were still trying to get off.

They waited patiently, and when the flood from the boat ebbed, she had to move away to unhook the chain that blocked the waiting passengers. They walked on board with them.

As the boat pulled away from the landing, Brunetti nudged Vianello with his elbow and said, 'Resistance to an officer in performance of his duties. Three-year suspended sentence if it was a first offence.'

'I'd make it five

Vianello said. 'For the jeans if for nothing else.'

'Ah

Brunetti sighed with mock exaggeration, 'where have they gone, tho
se good old days when we could in
timidate anyone we wanted to?'

Vianello laughed out loud.
‘I
think having this many people around all the time makes me bad tempered.'

'Get used to it, then.'

'To what?' Vianello asked.

'Bad temper, because it's just going to get worse. Last year sixteen million, this year twenty: God alone knows what it'll be like in a year

Talking about this and saying the things each of them had said a hundred times, they passed the time until the vaporetto pulled up at the Zattere stop. It was not yet twelve, so they decided to see if they could find Fornari before they thought about lunch.

The day had softened, and the walk along the Zattere smothered them in light and beauty. Vianello, who appeared not to have freed himself of the weight of all those tourists, asked, 'What do we do when the Chinese start coming?'

'They already have, I think.'

'Part of the twenty million?' Seeing Brunetti's nod, Vianello added, 'Then what do we do when there are twenty million of them, plus the others?'

‘I
don't know,' Brunetti said, letting his eyes feast on the facade of the Redentore on the far side of the canal, 'Ask for a transfer, I suppose.'

After considering this possibility, Vianello asked, 'Could you live anywhere else?'

By way of answer, Brunetti nodded with his chin at the church across the canal. 'No more than you, Lorenzo

he answered.

They cut to the left before the ex-Swiss Consulate, then right, and into Calle de Mezo, and then they were there. Only there was no there there. That is, Signor Fornari and his wife, though they did indeed own the apartment on the third floor, did not live in it. Or so they were informed by the woman who owned the apartment two floors down, whose bell they rang when they saw that neither Fornari nor Vivarini was listed on the bells beside the front door.

French people lived there now, she informed them, as though Signor Fornari had rented the place to a pack of marauding Visigoths. He and his wife lived now in her mother's apartment, had been there ever since the old Signora had had to be put into the Casa di Dio six years ago. Lovely people, yes, Signora Orsola and Signor Giorgio, he selling kitchens and she running the family business: sugar. And such lovely children, Matteo and Ludovica, both of them so beautiful, and
..

Before she could continue, perhaps, with praise of the next generation, Brunetti asked if she by any chance had the phone number and address of Signor Fornari. This conversation took place entirely between the woman at her front window and Brunetti standing on the pavement below, and was open to anyone who passed by or who chose to open a window in any of the nearby buildings. At no time did the woman enquire who the Veneziano-speaking man was, nor did she display any reluctance in giving him both the address and phone number of Giorgio Fornari and his wife.

'San Marco,' Vianello repeated as they turned away from the closing window. Impatient, the Inspector dialled Pucetti and asked him to check where the address was. While they waited for the young officer to locate it, the two men continued to walk towards Cantinone Storico, having decided it was the best bet for lunch.

Vianello stopped walking. He pressed the phone closer to his ear, muttered something Brunetti did not hear, then thanked Pucetti and snapped the phone closed. 'It looks like the building backs on to Rio di Ca Michiel,' Vianello said.

Because they were in a hurry, they decided not to have pasta and settled for a single dish of shrimp with vegetables and coriander. They shared a bottle of Gottardi pinot noir, turned down dessert, and finished with coffee. Feeling full but still faintly unsatisfied, Brunetti and Vianello walked out to the Accademia. Crossing the bridge, they discussed things other than what they might expect at the address they were heading towards. By unspoken agreement, they ignored the rows of
vu cumprà
who lined the steps of the bridge on both sides, confining their discussion to the sorry state of the surface of the steps and the growing need for repair or replacement of many of them.

'You think they deliberately choose materials that will wear out quickly?' Vianello asked, pointing down at one of the gaps in the surface beneath them.

'Humidity and millions of feet are just as sure to do the job for them, I think

Brunetti said, knowing as he spoke that, however true, this explanation in no way excluded the other.

Talking idly, they crossed in front of the people seated at Paolin, eating the first
gelati
of springtime, turned left and wove their way back towards the canal. At the end of a narrow
calk
that led down to the Grand Canal, they rang the bell marked Fornari.

'Si?'
a woman's voice enquired.

‘Is
this the home of Giorgio Fornari?' Brunetti asked in Italian, rather than Veneziano.

'Yes, it is. What do you want?'

"This is Commissario Guido Brunetti, of the police, Signora. I'd like to speak to Signor Fornari.'

'What's wrong?' she asked with that involuntary intake of breath he had heard many times.

'Nothing, Signora. I'd like to speak to Signor Fornari.'

'He's not here.'

'May I ask who you are, Signora?' 'His wife

'Then perhaps I could speak to you?' 'What is this about?' she asked with mounting impatience.

'Some missing property

he said. After a moment's silence, she said, 'I don't understand.'

'Perhaps I could come up and explain it to you, Signora

Brunetti suggested.

'All right

she said. A moment later the latch on the front door snapped open.

'Take the lift

the woman's voice came from the speaker beside them. 'Top floor.'

The lift was a tiny wooden box which held them with room to spare for a third person, a very thin third person. In mid-passage, the box gave a sudden small jerk, and Brunetti turned aside in surprise. He saw two grim-faced men looking as startled as he felt, then recognized himself and Vianello, who met his eyes in the mirror on the side wall.

The box shuddered to a stop and continued to vibrate for a few seconds, before Brunetti pushed back the swinging doors. At a doorway on the right stood a woman of medium height, medium build, with medium-len
gth hair of an in
determinate colour somewhere between red and brown.

'I'm Orsola Vivarini

she said without extending her hand or smiling.

Brunetti stepped from the box, followed by Vianello. 'Guido Brunetti

he repeated, then turned to Vianello and gave his name.

'Come into the study

she said and led them down a
bright corridor at the end of which light flooded in from a tall window that looked across at the buildings and rooftops on the other side of the Grand Canal. She stopped halfway down and opened a door on the right that led into a long narrow room two walls of which were covered almost to the ceiling with bookcases. There were three windows, but the building opposite was so close that less light penetrated than from the single window in the hall.

She led them towards a pair of comfortable-looking sofas that faced one another across a low walnut table covered with the scars of decades of feet and spills. A book lay face down on the sofa the woman chose; before sitting on the other, Brunetti closed a magazine and placed it on the table. Vianello sat beside him.

She regarded
them levelly, without smiling ‘I’
m afraid I don't understand why you've come, Commissario,' she said.

Her voice flowed in the Veneto cadence: in other circumstances, Brunetti would have slipped into Veneziano, but she was speaking in Italian, and so he did his part to retain the formality of their exchange. 'It's about two objects belonging to your husband which have been found.'

'And they thoug
ht it necessary to send a comm
issario to give them back?' she asked in a tone in which scepticism took the place of surprise.

'No, Signora,' Brunetti answered. 'There's a possibility that this is part of a wider investigation.' The remark, though it often served as a multi-purpose lie, this time was true.

She raised both hands from her lap and opened the palms in a gesture of confusion. 'I'm afraid I'm completely at a loss here, then

She
tried unsuccessfully to smile. ‘P
erhaps you'd tell me what this is all about?'

BOOK: The Girl of his Dreams - Brunetti 17
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