"Is there a place near here where I could get him a prepaid?"
"There's a tabaccaio a block or so away."
The three of them walked to the tiny quick-mart and Prescott used Sachs's cash to purchase a phone and some minutes for text and voice.
She entered her number into the phone. "Text me if you see him." She handed him the Nokia and another twenty.
"Grazie tante, Signorina!"
"Prego. Ask him how his cat, Mario, is? After getting kicked."
Prescott posed the question.
With a dark face, Pronti answered.
"He says Mario wasn't badly hurt. The greatest injury was to his pride." Prescott shrugged. "But, then, isn't that often the case?"
Chapter 41
C apitano Rhyme glanced up as he was finishing a call to Amelia Sachs.
Ercole fell silent, noticing the phone.
Sachs, still in Milan, was reporting no success; it was almost certain that the clue they'd found--the Post-it note--was from Malek Dadi, not the Composer. For completeness's sake, she was taking soil samples in the warehouse, and photographing footprints. As for fingerprints, she'd found nearly three hundred latents, too many for a practical analysis. But the effort was surely futile; it was unlikely the Composer had any connection to the place.
Rhyme was disappointed, though not surprised. He was disappointed too that Sachs wouldn't be able to return to Naples until tomorrow. The crew of Mike Hill's private plane would stay in Switzerland that night and would collect Sachs in the morning, early.
She reported, though, that she'd found a great hotel, the Manin, across the street from what had been the famed Milan zoo. It was also within walking distance of La Scala, the opera house, and the Duomo, the Milan cathedral. She was lukewarm about tourist sites but would probably hit them, since there wasn't time to do what she really wanted: head out to Maranello--the home of Ferrari--and take an F1 out on the track for a joyride.
Rhyme now looked up at the Forestry officer. "Yes, yes, Ercole. Tell me." He nodded too to Thom, indicia of his thanks.
"Beatrice Renza has finished her analysis of the evidence." Ercole lowered his voice, unnecessarily, for they were alone. "In the Soames case. I will report to you now. First, about the apartment where the attack occurred."
Ercole walked to the desk and found the yellow pad that the unauthorized investigative team was using for the renegade assignment--the mini chart. He wrote carefully, apparently recalling his bad marks for penmanship:
The Smoking Station, Natalia Garelli's Apartment, Via Carlo Cattaneo
--Trace: --Acetic acid.
--Acetone.
--Ammonia.
--Ammonium oxalate.
--Ash.
--Benzene.
--Butane.
--Cadmium.
--Calcium.
--Carbon monoxide.
--Cumin.
--Enzymes: --Protease.
--Lipases.
--Amylases.
--Hexamine.
--Methanol.
--Nicotine.
--Phosphates.
--Potassium.
--Red wine.
--Saffron.
--Sodium carbonate.
--Sodium perborate.
--Curry.
--Tobacco and tobacco ash.
--Cardamom.
--Urate.
The Attack Site, Adjoining Roof, Via Carlo Cattaneo
--Trace: --Cumin.
--Enzymes: --Protease.
--Lipases.
--Amylases.
--Phosphates.
--Saffron.
--Sodium carbonate.
--Sodium perborate.
--Cardamom.
--Curry.
--Urates.
"As you can see," Ercole said excitedly, "there are similarities, common elements of the two. So it's likely that the same person at the smoking station, who left that trace, also was the attacker."
Not necessarily likely but certainly possible, Rhyme thought. Scanning the listings, considering possibilities, plugging in theories, unplugging others.
"Beatrice is working to tell us what the chemicals might mean."
"Fine, fine, fine, though I think we might not need her to."
The Forestry officer paused. Then he said, "But alone, they're just substances. How can we tell what they might be from? We need to see what they combine to become."
Rhyme muttered, "Which is what I've done. The chemicals at the smoking station--for instance, the acetic acid, acetone, ammonia, benzene, butane and cadmium--are, no shock here, from cigarettes."
"But they're poisons, aren't they?"
Thom laughed. "Don't smoke, Ercole."
"No, I don't. I won't."
Rhyme frowned at the interruption. "So, I was saying. At the smoking station, cigarette smoke residue. But, the other ingredients: I see laundry detergent. The spices, of course, are obvious. Curry. Indian food. Now, at the site of the assault? Laundry detergent and spices only. Now, think back, Ercole. On the roof, was there laundry hanging anywhere nearby? I've seen that everywhere in Naples."
"No, I'm sure there was not. Because I, as a matter of fact, looked for that very thing myself. I was thinking that someone reeling in laundry might have seen the attack."
"Hm," Rhyme offered, and refrained from yet another lecture about the unreliability of witnesses. "The couple whose apartment this was, do you have their number?"
"The woman of the pair, yes. Natalia. She's a fellow student. And most beautiful."
"Do I care?"
"You would if you saw her."
"Call her. Now. Find out if she did laundry before the party. And if the food served at the party was Indian. Curry."
Ercole searched his phone then placed a call and, Rhyme was pleased to hear, got through immediately. A conversation in Italian ensued; like most, it sounded passionate, more expressive than a similar English exchange.
When Ercole disconnected, he said, "Yes, to the laundry question, I am sorry to report. She had just washed the clothing for the beds that afternoon, thinking some guests might wish to stay over, rather than drive back home late. The clue did not come from the rapist.
"And, unfortunately, as to food, the same. There was, at the party, nothing other than chips--you know, potato chips and the like--and nuts and dolce, sweets. But at dinner before the party she and her boyfriend ate curry. I remember a picture of him. He's Indian. So, that too is bad news for us."
"Yes, it is."
The spices and detergent at the smoking station would have come from Natalia when she was either mixing with guests or cleaning up afterward. And she would have left those bits of trace at the site of the attack when she went to the woman's aid.
Ercole asked, "You had mentioned, I believe, that Garry thought perhaps a former lover of his was blaming him to get revenge."
Rhyme said, "His lawyer told us that. Someone, Valentina Morelli. She is apparently in Florence or nearby there. She's still not returning calls."
At that moment Ercole's phone chimed and he glanced at the screen. He seemed to be blushing. And smiling. He typed a response.
Rhyme and Thom looked at each other. Rhyme suspected they were thinking the same: a woman.
Probably that attractive blonde, Daniela, whom he'd been fawning over.
Well, the young man could do worse than date a beautiful, intense policewoman.
Lincoln Rhyme knew this for a fact.
Ercole put his phone away. "I have saved the best for the last."
"Which means what?" Rhyme groused. Sachs was not present to temper his delivery.
"Now, at Garry's flat, Signor Reston was very helpful in instructing me. He counseled that I should become the perp. And I did that and we found something quite interesting."
Impatient eyebrows.
"The building was typical construction, symmetrical. For every window on the right, there was one on the left. For every gable in the front, there was one in the back. For eve
ry--"
"Ercole?"
"Ah, yes. But in the back, there was only one low window--about twenty centimeters high--for allowing light into the cellar apartment. To the right as you faced the rear of the building. Only the one. Why was there no window to the left? Symmetry everywhere but there. The yard itself was not higher on the left than to the right, except in the very place where the window would have been. There was a small hill. Now, beneath the porch were empty flower pots. They matched flower pots on the deck above--but those were full of earth."
Rhyme was intrigued. "So the perp broke into the window on the left. It was Garry's bedroom?"
"Yes. And he, or she, scattered the drugs inside and used the dirt in a couple of the pots to cover up the window."
"But the crime scene people didn't find glass or dirt on the floor?"
"Ah," Ercole said. "He--or she--was clever. They used a glass cutter. Here, look." He extracted from a folder some eight-by-ten glossy shots and displayed them. "Beatrice has printed these out."
Rhyme could see the even fracture marks, in the shape of a rough rectangle.
Ercole continued, "And after he was finished he put a piece of cardboard he'd found in the yard against the open window before piling the dirt up to conceal the break-in. I am sorry to tell you there were no fingerprints on the flower pots or cardboard. But I did see marks that were left by..." He paused. "That were consistent with marks left by latex gloves."
Good.
"And I found footprints that were probably left by the breakerer-and-enterer. Is that a word?"
"It will do." Rhyme reflected that the young man had quite the career ahead of him.
Ercole added to the mini evidence chart.
Garry Soames's apartment, Corso Umberto I, Naples
--Low window cut open. --No fingerprints, but marks consistent with latex gloves.
--Blocked by cardboard before dirt piled up to conceal break-in.
--Footprints outside broken window and on floor just inside. --Size 71/2 (m)/9 (f)/40 (European), leather sole.
--Gamma hydroxybutyric acid, date-rape drug.
--Tire print, in mud in backyard. --Continental 195/65R15.
--Soil collected from footprint. --Awaiting analysis.
"And the date-rape drug? Where was that?"
"On the windowsill."
Staring at the chart, Rhyme mused, "Who the hell's the intruder?"
The breakerer-and-enterer...
He continued, "Is it the same as the person who called the police and gave them Garry's name? That was a woman's voice. And the shoe size could be a woman's."
Ercole said, "I looked up the tire tread information. The Continental tire. We don't know if it was the intruder's but it was only a day or two old. And it makes sense to park there so as not to be seen from the street."
"Yes, it does."
"Unfortunately, many, many types of cars can use that tire. But we can--"
A voice interrupted, cutting through the room like a whip. "Forestry Officer. You'll leave the room. At once."
Rhyme wheeled about to face Dante Spiro. The lean man was wearing a black suit with a tie-less white shirt. With his goatee, bald head and enraged expression he looked particularly demonic.
"Sir..." Ercole's face was white.
"Leave. Now." A vicious string of Italian.
The young officer shot a glance toward Rhyme.
"He is not your superior--I am," Spiro growled.
The young man walked forward, carefully navigating around Spiro.
His eyes still boring into Rhyme's, the prosecutor muttered to Ercole, "Close the door as you leave."
"Si, Procuratore."
Chapter 42
How could you do this? You are working against a case that I am prosecuting?"
Spiro stepped toward Rhyme.
Thom moved forward.
The prosecutor said, "You, too. You will leave."
The aide said calmly, "No."
Spiro turned to face Thom but, looking into the American's eyes, apparently decided not to fight this battle and demand that he leave. Which the aide would not have done, in any event.
Back to Rhyme: "I have never wanted you here. Never wanted your presence. Massimo Rossi felt it might be advantageous and since he is the lead investigator I--in my foolish weakness--said yes. But, as it turns out, you are just another one of them."
A frown of curiosity from Rhyme.
"Another meddling American. You have no sense of propriety, loyalty, of boundaries. You are part of a big, crass machine of a nation that stumbles forward wherever it wishes to go, crushing those in your path. Always without apology."
Rhyme wasn't inclined to point out the superficiality of the words; he hadn't flown four thousand miles to defend U.S. foreign policy.
"Yes, admittedly, you have come up with helpful thoughts in the case but, if you think about the matter, it is a problem of your own making! The Composer is an American. You failed to find and stop him. Accordingly your assistance is the least you can do.
"But to do the opposite--to undermine a case, my case, the case against a man charged of a horrific sexual assault, against an unconscious woman? Well, that is beyond the pale, Mr. Rhyme. Garry Soames is not the subject of a witch trial. He has been arrested according to the laws of this nation, a democracy, on the basis of reasonable evidence and accounts, and is being afforded all of the rights due him. Inspector Laura Martelli and I are continuing to pursue the leads. If he proves to be innocent, he will be freed. But for now he appears to be guilty and he will be incarcerated until a magistrate decides he may be released pending trial."
Rhyme began to speak.
"No, let me finish. If you had come to me and said you wished to offer suggestions to the defense, suggest forensic advice, I would have understood. But you didn't do that. To add insult to this travesty, you enlisted into your service our own officer, that young man, who until a few days ago investigated the condition of goat barns and issued citations for trying to sell unwashed broccolini. You used police facilities for unauthorized defense investigations. That is a serious breach of the laws here, Mr. Rhyme. And, frankly, worse, in my opinion, it is an affront to the country that is acting as your host. I will be drawing up charges against you and Ercole Benelli. These charges will be lodged formally if you do not leave the country immediately. And I assure you, sir, you will not enjoy the amenities of the prison that I will recommend for your incarceration. That is all I have to say on this matter."
He turned and walked to the door, pulling it open.
Rhyme said, "Truth."
Spiro stopped. He looked back.
Rhyme said, "There's only one thing that matters to me. The truth."
A cold smile. "Do I suspect an excuse is about to wing my way? That's something else Americans love: excuses. They can do anything, then excuse away their behavior. We kill thousands wrongly, but it was because we were blinded by a higher cause. How your country must feel shame. Day and night."
"Not an excuse, Prosecutor. A fact. There is absolutely nothing I will not do to arrive at the truth. And that includes going behind your back and anyone else's if I need to. What we did here, I knew it was against procedure, if not against the law."
"Which it is," Spiro reminded.
"Garry Soames could very likely be guilty of raping Frieda S. I don't care. I honestly don't. If my line of inquiry proves him guilty, I'll give those details to you as happily as if I found exculpatory evidence. I told Garry's lawyer as much. But what I can't do is allow any uncertainty to remain. Has this piece of evidence told us everything it possibly can? Is it being coy? Is it being duplicitous? Is it pretending to be something else entirely?"
"Very clever, Mr. Rhyme. Do you use that personification in your courses, to charm your students?"
He did, as a matter of fact.
"I found your investigation into the rape case well done--"
"Condescension! Yet another quality you Americans so excel in."
r /> "No. I mean it. You and Inspector Martelli have done a fine job. But it's also true that your case is lacking. I identified threads of investigation that I thought it was a good idea to pursue."
"Ach, these are just words. You have my ultimatum. Leave the country at once or face the consequences."
Again he turned.
"Did you know about the break-in at Garry's apartment?"
He paused.
"Someone wearing latex gloves broke the window of his bedroom and hid the break-in, covering the cut-out window with dirt. And it was the room where the date-rape drug traces were found on his clothing. And the window frame and sill--outside the building--contain traces of the drug too."
Rhyme nodded to Thom, who found the yellow pad, the mini chart. He handed it toward Spiro, who waved his hand dismissively.
He continued to the door.
"Please. Just take one look."
Sighing loudly, the prosecutor returned and snatched the pad. He read for a moment. "And you found evidence linking someone at the, as you say, smoking station with the scene where the victim was attacked. The trace, the detersivo per il bucato--the soap--and the spices."
So he recognized the ingredients in the detergent. Impressive.
In a firm voice, he said, "But that proves nothing. The source for that trace would be the hostess, Natalia. She went to the victim's aid. And her boyfriend, Dev, is Indian. Explaining the curry." The prosecutor's face softened. He cocked his head as he said to Rhyme, "I myself was suspicious of him at first. I took his statement at the school and while doing so I observed that he frequently would look over women students as they passed. His eyes seemed hungry. And he was seen talking to the victim, Frieda, earlier that evening. But every minute of the party he was accounted for. And his DNA did not match that which was inside the victim."
Rhyme added, "And a CCTV at a nearby hotel had malfunctioned."
"As they will do."
"Yes, you're right: The evidence at Natalia's isn't helpful. But what we discovered at Garry's is. The footprint at the scene."
Spiro's eyes now revealed curiosity. He read. "Small man size, or woman's. And it was a woman who called to report that Garry was seen adulterating Frieda's wine."
"Ercole collected soil from where the perp walked. It's being analyzed now. By Beatrice. That might be helpful." Rhyme added, "It might have been the actual rapist. But it might have been someone just wishing to get him into trouble--the woman who called. Garry's lawyer told us that he was quite the ladies' man. A player, you know?"
The Burial Hour Page 25