by Gordon Kerr
THE PARTISAN HEART
Gordon Kerr
For Diane, Lindsey and Sean
Lasting from September 1943 to May 1945, the Italian Civil War was a brutal conflict contested by the Italian resistance movement and elements of the former Italian Army, fighting on the side of the Allies against the Axis forces. During the hostilities, around forty thousand partisans and former soldiers lost their lives and tens of thousands of civilians were tortured, killed or deported to Germany.
All of the events and characters of The Partisan Heart are fictional, as are several of the place names. The majority of the action, however, takes place in a real valley – the ruggedly beautiful Valtellina.
Contents
Title Page
Dedication
Epigraph
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
Acknowledgements
Copyright
1
10 October 1999
Beldoro
North Italy
A woman screamed.
The noise startled several pigeons dozing on the telephone wires that snaked between the buildings above the square. The birds took off, wings slapping, before lazily settling back where they had started. The streets had been hushed until then, the only sound the crackle of the dry leaves being chased in small circles by the brisk wind. It was autumn, after all, and the town of Beldoro was bedding down for winter. The large palm trees outside the big hotels on the lakeside had been wrapped in sacking material, to protect them from the chills of the coming months and the boats in the marina were wearing slick coverings. The wind was keeping people off the streets and the square was empty.
The scream was brief and ended abruptly, as if it had been silenced. In fact, its final moments were muffled and the sleepy stillness that had enveloped the square outside, before the scream had momentarily splintered it, returned immediately.
Above the square, Alfio Bonfadini had heard it, though. He had been on his way to the toilet when the sudden noise had stopped him in his tracks. He listened, unsure if he really had heard such a sound, pulling the lace curtains of his bedroom window to one side to see what was going on. His overweight body was naked, having just got out of the bed where the dozing, full figure of a woman still lay. She was called Silvia and the noise had failed to stir her, tired as she was after their lovemaking.
Alfio pulled the curtain across his face so that he could not be seen and watched as a grey van appeared from around the corner at the far end of the square and roared up to the pavement in front of the bar that occupied part of the ground floor of the building. His immediate thought was one of panic. What was going on? Christ! Maybe it was Silvia’s husband! She was the wife of a man named Ignazio Mazzini, but there was little love in their marriage. On the first occasion she and Alfio had crept upstairs, pulling at each other’s clothes, she had told him that Ignazio had not slept with her since the night of their wedding five years previously. Nonetheless, it was well documented – mainly in the files of the local carabinieri – that Ignazio could be a violent man with a temper that was easily roused.
My God, how could I be such a fool as to take up with such a woman? he thought, his heart beginning to pound and a sick feeling starting to worm its way into his stomach.
It had all seemed so easy and so comfortable. She worked part-time in the shop with him. In the middle of the morning, every couple of days, when the first rush of business – or, at any rate, such a rush as one could expect in a shop selling wool and ladies’ underwear – had died away, they would put a notice on the door and would sneak upstairs to his bedroom and make love for an hour. An hour and no more. On the stroke of twelve they would return to their chores and no one would be any the wiser. Or, at least, they thought no one knew, but it was common knowledge that there was no point trying the door of the shop between eleven and twelve on every second day. But, blissfully ignorant, once they were back behind the counter, Alfio and Silvia did not speak of it. It was as if it were two other people who made love in that room, with the lace curtains swaying gently in the breeze and the sound of mopeds and cars seeping in through the gaps in the window frames.
Alfio watched what was becoming frenzied activity down below. A man jumped out of the van and rushed round to its rear, throwing open the back doors, out of which two other men jumped and ran into the bar below, next door to his shop. Almost immediately, from the bar came a scrum of bodies. The three men re-appeared, half-carrying, half-dragging a blonde-haired woman whose legs appeared to have lost any of the properties that made them useful.
‘Madoooonna!’ whispered Alfio, his surprise elongating the expletive.
The men all wore black balaclavas, with holes for eyes and large, round holes for their mouths, just like the Basque Separatists or the IRA men in Ireland that he sometimes saw on the TV news. Not that there was anyone around to see them though. The square slept on.
They were struggling, but not because the woman was protesting. Rather, it was because she had become like a rag doll, arms flailing and legs collapsing underneath her. Finally, one of them grabbed her around the middle and threw her over his shoulders, running the last few steps to the van and dropping her in heavily, before climbing in himself. His colleagues followed and the doors slammed shut as the van sped off around the square, slamming through the gears, and down Via Costanza towards the mountains.
Bonfadini was confused as he hurriedly pulled on his trousers. He also felt a deep sense of relief that it had not been Ignazio. That could have been very bad. He resolved then and there to bring his relationship with Silvia to an end. He would tell her he could no longer afford her wages. Then he would wait a while and re-advertise the job. He could take on a widow or, better still, a younger woman with no husband. He could return to his mid-morning breaks without being concerned about having his kneecaps broken.
He fastened his trousers quickly and dragged a t-shirt over his head. Naturally nosey, he wanted to see what was going on. He ran downstairs into the backyard from where he could get to the street via a short alleyway, loudly shouting ‘Get dressed!’ to the stirring Silvia as he went. He just had time at the bottom of the steps to hear two police cars arrive from different directions, sirens wailing and blue lights flashing, before he ran into a wall, hearing his nose splinter and feeling it spread across his face. At least, it felt as if he had run into a wall. His body folded and crumpled to the ground, his eyes filling with water, and the pain beginning. It started somewhere at the back of his head, undertaking an inevitable journey towards the middle of his face where it would, he knew, explode into something memorable. As his body slumped to the floor, blood gushing from his smashed nose, he caught a glimpse of the tall figure of Ignazio, Silvia’s husband, stepping back into the shadows at the bottom of the stairs, a baseball bat hanging limply at his side and a slow, satisfied smile beginning to crease his dark features.
2
3 November 1999
Dulcino
The Valtellina
North Italy
‘Michael!’
Night falls in layers in the Valtellina, especially as autumn shakes off its sprinkling of brightly-coloured leaves and the valley adopts the greyness of winter. The arrival of darkness seems to exonerate each day, no matter what has filled it, no matter what indiscretion, what cruelty, what moments of doubt have distinguished it from all the other days
that have gone before or will follow relentlessly, after.
For Michael, however, these last few days had been empty. His eyes, too, were vacant, although they should, at that moment, have been focused on the view of the valley from the balcony on which he stood. It was a view for which tourists would pay good money.
It consisted, in the near-distance, of a town, its thin, weak lights just beginning to flicker in the growing twilight. Into the far-distance, in either direction, villages were strung along the length of the valley like the pearls of a necklace.
The Valtellina, unlike the other valleys that dangle longitudinally from the arc of the Alps, stretches east to west, about a hundred kilometres in length. Once its settlements had been sparse, groups of houses gathered round the few bits of grazing land that fed the cattle that kept their owners just above subsistence level. But as times got better and as roads began to connect the farthest flung corners of the valley with the outside world, so people had moved towards the mouth of the valley, where it and its neighbour, the Valchiavenna, descended into plains that led to the glittering waters of Lake Como.
Tourism had opened up the valley. The Milanesi had arrived in their Alfa Romeos and Porsches, building chalets and renovating old, run-down houses, turning the cattle sheds on the ground floors into garages for their gleaming chariots, and the villages had rapidly grown into towns, while new settlements grew where before there had been nothing. Supermarkets arrived, things of wonder to people starved for centuries of the luxuries enjoyed by the inhabitants of the bigger towns and cities.
Michael watched columns of smoke rise from chimneys the length of the valley. Drifting into mist, miles away to the west, Lake Como lay in oriental stillness, its gleam just visible beyond the red roofs of the countless villages. At this hour, seven o’clock, steamers would be making their final incisions of the day in the lake’s glass-like surface, late commuters and tourists huddling at the rails like notes on a stave as the evening’s gentle breeze began to stir the flags on the grand hotels and restaurants on the far side of the lake.
‘Michael!’
Renzo, Michael’s brother-in-law, had been standing in the doorway for what had seemed to him like an eternity, one foot in the real world and one hesitant foot in the uncertain world in which Michael seemed to have become immured. It was a world from which Renzo felt excluded and one which he did not fully understand. Nor did he wish to. Renzo was a much younger man, but seemed somehow older, Michael always thought. He was so different from his sister, Rosa, Michael’s wife. He took life seriously; the old adage about life not being a rehearsal seemed to have been specially coined for him. In fact, for Renzo life seemed to be a command performance in which he constantly had to give his all. He gave it to his village, Dulcino, on the edge of which his house stood. He was mayor and had represented the village on all sorts of committees and councils since he was old enough to do so.
‘You should come in now, Michael. It’s getting cold out there. It gets cold quickly in the Valtellina at this time of year.’
‘Why do you respect the dead so much here, Renzo?’ Michael said, without turning. ‘You seem to be in awe of them … or maybe you’re just afraid of them … I don’t know.’ The tired voice faded into nothing and the eyes, briefly filled, emptied again.
Renzo stared at Michael for an instant, as if he did not understand and then stepped back through the doorway, back into the real world.
Outside, night continued to slide down the sides of the mountains.
He came in shortly afterwards, shivering as he stepped through the doors that divided the darkness that now enveloped the valley from the electric light that illuminated the interior of the house.
‘Michael, at last.’ It was Giovanna, Renzo’s wife, wiping her hands on her brightly-coloured apron as she emerged from the kitchen. She was the possessor of the darkest eyes Michael had ever seen. They had an opaque quality that belied her warm, generous nature. Giovanna and Michael had become good friends and confidants overs the years. She always listened patiently to his troubles without criticism – even when he knew it was well deserved. In such circumstances, he would almost prefer to turn to her rather than to his wife who would rapidly become impatient with him and tell him to stop being so self-indulgent. The aromas of cooking followed Giovanna into the room. She walked over to him and took both his hands in hers.
‘I thought you were going to stay out there all night!’ She shivered, clasping his cold hands. ‘Oh, but you’re freezing. Come over and warm yourself.’ She led him over to the fire that blazed in a corner of the room and sat him down on the long sofa that stretched in front of it. Voices interspersed by bursts of music came from a television. At this time of day, it was constantly switched on, providing a noisy backdrop to the routines of the household. She turned to face him on the sofa, a serious, concerned look on her face.
‘We don’t want you getting ill, Michael. You have to take care of yourself, especially when you go home, when you’re on your own again.’
‘You don’t have to worry, Giovanna. I can take care of myself.’
‘I know that, Michael, but I also know that it’s time you went home. I know it feels soon, but you need to start getting on with your life. You’re thirty-three, not that old. You’ve got your career. You need to get busy again.’
‘You’re absolutely right, Giovanna. But I just need to think about it all a bit more … You know what I’m like.’ He smiled, a rarity lately.
They were interrupted by a sudden high-pitched yell that came from a far corner of the house. At the same time, they both turned their heads in the direction from which it came.
‘I told the children to finish their homework and that doesn’t sound like homework to me!’ She sighed and began to rise. ‘I’d better see what’s going on.’
She bustled off towards the back of the house and within a few seconds came a stream of angry Italian, in the middle of which he heard his name.
He sat back on the sofa, sinking deep into its generous upholstery and stared at the ceiling as if there was something of great interest up there. Gradually, the television intruded on his concentration, however, and he turned his attention to it as an advert in which a faded American actor to whom he was unable to put a name was attempting to sell dog food. It came to an end and the urgent tones of the music that introduced the evening news filled the room.
The first item was the same one that had filled Italian TV screens for three-and-a-bit weeks now – the kidnapping in broad daylight of Teresa, the thirty-five-year-old daughter of the Italian industrialist, Luigi Ronconi. The kidnapping had great local interest, firstly because it had happened in one of the towns that lined Lake Como and, secondly, because Luigi Ronconi had been born in a Valtellina village, not far away from where Michael now sat, but was now one of Italy’s wealthiest men. Added to that, he was a war hero and a ruthless businessman. Nothing had been heard of the woman or the kidnappers since the incident and, lacking anything new to say, the programme raked over the ashes of the case, showing old and familiar footage: the shots of the bar where the kidnapping had taken place, the interview with the bar owner who had been powerless to intervene and the testimony of the valiant shopkeeper, Alfio Bonfadini, whose nose had been broken by what was described as a ruthless and vicious gang as he tried to stop them. He was now a hero and the papers were full of pictures of him, face black and blue and plasters crisscrossing his swollen, broken nose.
That item concluded, the news drifted into yet another story about a government official who had been caught up in corruption. Michael wondered why they were surprised. It was a way of life in this country, after all.
He searched for the remote control and killed the television, the newsreader’s sculpted hair momentarily turning a shade of iridescent purple as the screen shut down.
That night, it seemed to Michael as if he was beginning to re-enter the world. Sitting at the dinner table with Renzo, Giovanna and their two children, passing plates o
f bresaola and pasta and salad, entering once again into commerce with the day-to-day business of the world. The meal passed in an uncharacteristically quiet manner, however; the children, as they had done for the last few weeks, treated him like a ghost, not daring to speak, afraid, almost, that just one word would make him fall to pieces. Renzo and Giovanna tiptoed around things, and were selective in their topics of conversation.
For his part, he was conscious of their needs as a family, their need to trade in the events of their day, to exchange conversation like currency, maintaining a knowledge that made them whole, that bound them together.
Consequently, he made his excuses early and fled to his bedroom. Once there, he stared out into the blackness of the valley, seeing nothing, before closing the shutters. A whole world was carrying on out there, but he sensed none of it. He threw off his clothes and crumpled onto the bed, lying there in the dark, listening to the muffled voices coming from the other side of the house, their sounds interrupted by the hoot of an owl or the bark of a dog on the far side of the valley, a bark echoed along its length as if a message was being passed from one to another. Now and then there would be the laughter of a group of kids passing on the lane in front of the house, but to him it was all like radio waves from another planet, another world. A world that he had once inhabited.
Eventually he drifted into sleep, carefully keeping to one side of the bed as if an electric current ran down the other.
Blue.
Blue was all he could see at first. A sea of dancing blue whose waves crashed against the walls and splashed against the ceiling.
Then, slowly, more began to leak into his cracked vision. A desk, a few feet from the bottom of the bed, and on it a thick, leather-bound book. A jacket – his own? – hanging over the back of a wicker chair in the corner.