Read The Waters of Eternal Youth Online
Authors: Donna Leon
As he walked towards the Questura the next morning, Brunetti considered the ways this case differed from the others he'd dealt with during his career: there was an injured person but no evidence that she had been the victim of a crime, and there was no need to hurry the investigation, for, in the absence of both victim and suspect, what need of haste to seek a guilty person?
The whole thing had taken on the feeling of an academic exercise, carried out to allow the wife of the ÂVice-ÂQuestore to rise a few steps up the ladder of Venetian society, and to help an old woman die in peace. Yet Brunetti was incapable of ridding himself of his concern for the girl's fate.
Ahead of him as he entered the Questura, his colleague Claudia Griffoni was just starting up the steps. She turned at the sound of her name and paused on the third step to wait for him.
âAre you working on anything important?' Brunetti asked as he approached.
âA tourist was mugged and robbed last night,' she answered. âIn Calle degli Avvocati.'
Brunetti was surprised: the street was home to a small hotel and a number of people of ample means. He closed his eyes and called up the memory: a narrow Âcul-Âde-Âsac leading off from Campo Sant'Angelo, it ended against the door of a building and was a place where the unwary could be trapped.
âWhat happened?'
She pulled a notebook from the pocket of her jacket and opened it. âThe victim's Irish; Âtwenty-Âthree years old. I was at the hospital this morning at eight to see him. He was in a bar last night, chatting up a girl. Bought her a few drinks, had a few himself, and then she suggested they go to her home together. When they got to the end of the
calle
, two men jumped him from behind. He doesn't remember any more than that.'
âWhat time was this?'
She looked at the notebook. âAbout Âone-Âthirty. The call came at 1.37.'
âWho called?'
âA man who lives in the
calle
: the noise woke his dog up, and the dog's barking woke him up. When he saw a man lying in the
calle
, he called the Carabinieri. But by the time they got there, he was gone; the Carabinieri found him in the
campo
, propped up against a building. They called an ambulance that took him to the hospital.'
Common as this might be in any other city, the attack astonished Brunetti. This sort of crime did not happen here. Had seldom happened here: he corrected himself.
âYou talked to him?' At her nod, Brunetti added, âWhat did he say?'
âThat he was too drunk to defend himself, especially against two of them.'
âWas he badly hurt?'
âHis head needed a couple of stitches, and he's bruised, but nothing's broken.' After a moment, she added, âIt could have been much worse, I suppose.'
âThe girl?'
âNo sign of her. He didn't remember anything about her except that she spoke a little English and seemed to know the way they were going. He doesn't know what happened to her.'
âSo she could have led him there,' Brunetti suggested.
âOr she could have reacted with good sense and run like hell when the punching started,' Griffoni shot back.
âOf course,' Brunetti temporized. âDid you get a description?' he asked.
âHe was still fuddled when I talked to him,' Griffoni said. âI don't know if it was the drink or the shock or maybe what they gave him when they put the stitches in his head. He wouldn't know them if he saw them, although he'd remember the girl.'
âYou think it's worth pursuing?' he asked her.
She waved the notebook in a vague circle and said, âI doubt it. There's no video camera near there. He doesn't remember what bar he was in or how they got to where it happened: everything looked the same to him. He thought they went over three or four bridges.'
âSo it could have been anywhere,' Brunetti observed.
âExactly.' They began to climb the steps. At the second landing, she stopped and asked, âMay I say something that will sound strange?'
âOf course.'
âWhere I last worked, this sort of thing happened ten times a night, twenty. Every night; more on the weekends. We kept up a steady stream in and out of the hospitals.'
âNaples,' he stated. He knew it was her home as well as her last posting.
â
Casa mia
,' she said with a laugh.
âAnd so?' Brunetti asked.
âOne mugging â and it's only the third since I've been here â and I'm shocked by it. When I realize that, I begin to suspect I've been reassigned to a different planet.' She shook her head in wonder.
Brunetti turned to the last flight of steps that would take him up to his office but stopped and turned back to her. âWe're spoiled, aren't we?' he asked.
She pulled her lips together, the way a student would when confronted with a difficult question from a teacher, perhaps a trick question. Brunetti watched her formulate her answer. âPerhaps it would be better to say that you're lucky,' she finally said.
âWhat are you going to do about it?' he asked, gesturing towards the notebook that was still in her hand.
She tilted her head and raised one shoulder in a resigned gesture. âUnless the girl suddenly shows up and gives us a description of the two men, there's nothing we can do.'
âOther than sit and wait for them to come in and confess?' Brunetti suggested.
âI hadn't thought of that,' she agreed drily.
âThen if there's nothing for you to do, come up to my office and let me tell you about another case where it seems there is little to be done.'
It took Brunetti some time to tell her about Contessa Lando-ÂContinui and her granddaughter, as Griffoni frequently interrupted to ask for explanations and write the answers in her notebook.
When he was finished, though the events made no more sense to him than they had before he tried to explain them, Brunetti was aware of how strong were the opinions he had formed of people he had never met. He felt nothing but pity for Manuela, whom he continued to think of as a girl, although she was at least thirty. He disliked her mother, whom he defined in Paola's terms as someone who had âthrown her life away'. Unfortunately, she might somehow have created the circumstances in which her daughter's could be thrown away, as well. The father was little more than a shadow with a double name. An emotional Schettino, he had stayed on board his own
Costa Concordia
until the marital seas got rough and then jumped ship and found a new crew with whom to sail away from the wreck. Brunetti realized he also pitied Contessa Lando-ÂContinui for her aching need to know what had happened to her granddaughter before she ceased knowing anything at all.
âYou really convinced Patta to ask a magistrate to open a case?' Griffoni asked with open admiration.
âI told you what he's getting in return,' Brunetti answered.
âYou make it sound so easy,' she said.
Brunetti laughed. âI've known him so long, I've begun to feel something close to affection for him,' he confessed. Seeing her surprise, he added, âThough only at times.'
Griffoni closed her notebook and sat back in her chair. âIf you will allow me to say this, I can never trust a Sicilian.'
Brunetti's first response was amusement, thinking she was joking. But when he realized she was not, he managed to disguise his startled reaction by raising his hand to his mouth and then moving his fingers to rub against his jaw in a manner he sought to make seem contemplative. Is this, he wondered, what it sounds like when I say how little I can trust Neapolitans? Why are other people's prejudices so strange, while our own are so Âthought-Âout and reasonable?
To get away from this subject as quickly as possible, Brunetti asked, âDo you have time to help with this?'
âYes, of course,' she said. âOtherwise, I might be tempted to take another look at the baggage handlers.'
âClaudia, my dear,' he said in his most patient and philosophical voice, âyou and I will become grandparents many times over and the baggage handlers will still be opening suitcases and helping themselves to whatever it is they please, and the videos of their doing so will by then fill a warehouse. But it's our grandchildren who will be handling the investigation, not us, and the investigation will continue into the fourth generation.'
Griffoni steered away from the topic, saying as quickly as she could, âWhat is it you'd like me to do?'
By way of an answer, Brunetti asked, âDo you know anything about horses?'
âWho told you?' she asked, raising her eyebrows.
âTold me what?'
âAbout the horses,' she answered.
Raising his hands in feigned surrender, Brunetti said, âNo one told me anything about horses, or about you and horses. It was a simple question.' She remained silent, and so he asked, âWhy did it surprise you?'
âI haven't mentioned it to anyone here.'
He shook his head, more confused with every remark.
âI ride,' Griffoni said. âDressage.'
âIs that the one where the horses sort of dance?' Brunetti asked, as ignorant of horse riding as he was of pigeon racing. âI see it on television sometimes. The riders wear tall hats, don't they?'
âYes.'
âDo you ride here?'
âNo,' she said, her disappointment audible.
âWhy not?'
âGuido,' she said, voice tight, âcould you tell me what you want to know and let this other stuff go?'
âOf course,' he said apologetically, seeing how troubled this conversation â he realized it was really more like an inquisition â had made her.
âHer granddaughter had a horse and kept it near Treviso. I want to talk to them, and I'd like to take someone with me who knows about riding.' Then, as if he thought she might not follow his explanation, he added, âThat's why I asked you.'
âYou just told me all this happened fifteen years ago,' Griffoni said. âAnd you think the same people will still be there?'
âPerhaps. Perhaps not. Whoever's there, I want to understand whatever answers I get.'
âYou make it sound like they're going to make you take a test ride on a horse and not answer your questions unless you do.'
âIt's not the questions I'm concerned with,' Brunetti said. âIt's the answers. If they talk about her and riding or her and horses, I need to understand what it is they're telling me.'
She appeared utterly confused. âIt sounds as if you think they're foreigners.'
Brunetti smiled at this and said, âNo, I'm the foreigner. I don't know enough about what goes on between the rider and the horse, especially if it's a young girl.' When she said nothing, Brunetti was forced to add, sounding defensive, âPlease don't tell me I'm crazy. Or that it's all pop psychology.'
Before he could continue, she interrupted. âIf anything was troubling her, the horse would have known about it, that's for sure.' Then, grinning, she added, âUnfortunately, they're hard to interview.'
The idea made Brunetti smile. âWhat I'm hoping,' he said, âis that someone there will remember her. At the time, it was reported as an accident, so I'm sure no one bothered to question these people.'
âHave you seen the report?'
âSignorina Elettra should have found it by now.'
âShall we go and find out?' Griffoni asked and got to her feet.
Signorina Elettra appeared to have given herself a promotion, for today she wore a Âdouble-Âbreasted blue jacket with epaulettes and gold braid at the cuffs. Griffoni's glance was a mixture of envy and appreciation, which she did nothing to disguise.
Brunetti stepped forward since he had made the request. âDid you find the report of her accident?' he asked.
âAre you sure of the date, Commissario?' Signorina Elettra asked, but she said it as a statement and not a question.
Signorina Elettra had found the newspaper accounts of the incident, as had he, so there was no doubt as to the date. She knew this and he knew this, so her remark was a coded announcement that . . . Brunetti's mind flashed to but immediately excluded: âshe had failed to find it but was still searching', âit did not appear in the files', and settled on âshe suspected it had been lost'.
âThose files were all computerized, weren't they?' Brunetti asked.
âAt the time, yes.' Signorina Elettra answered. âEveryÂthing from the paper reports was transcribed and entered into the system.'
âAnd the paper copy?' Griffoni, who had moved over to prop herself against Brunetti's place at the windowsill, asked.
âDestroyed, of course,' Signorina Elettra said and, as though she had been waiting for them to catch up with her, relaxed back in her chair.
Both heads swivelled towards her at the same moment, both faces registering comprehension. Brunetti left it to the other commissario to state the obvious. âSo if the computer doesn't have the report, then it's gone.' Never had the simple word sounded so final to Brunetti.
Signorina Elettra nodded but went on to say, âBefore you start suspecting conspiracy, you should know that about a third of the reports that were put into the system are missing, at least for that year. There was a bug in the program, and before they found it, they continued to enter material and destroy the originals.'
âHow long did it take to discover what was happening?' Griffoni asked.
âThey'd entered almost everything before they noticed.'
Brunetti and Griffoni exchanged a glance. In her shrug, he read her irritation with incompetence and error. She asked, âWhat about the hospital? If they took her there, then a medical report must exist.'
Ah, Brunetti thought, is this how southerners imagine us to be? Creatures of order, routine, method? The last time he had been to the hospital, it was to visit his Âsister-Âin-Âlaw the night before she was to be operated on for varicose veins. He'd walked in on his brother taping a plastic folder to her leg; inside the clear plastic was a sheet of paper on which could be read, âOperate on
THIS
leg.' He had chosen not to comment.