The Florentine Cypher: Kate Benedict Paranormal Mystery #3 (The Kate Benedict Series)

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The Florentine Cypher: Kate Benedict Paranormal Mystery #3 (The Kate Benedict Series) Page 29

by Carrie Bedford


  I quickly caught up and grabbed her arm. “What the hell, Claire? We have to go find Falcone.”

  “We need to find Ethan,” she said, shaking my hand loose and pressing on through the thick brushwood. Ahead of us, the trees thinned out sufficiently for me to glimpse a clearing, which was more an absence of darkness than anything else. When we reached the edge of it, we hunkered down in the undergrowth. Seconds later, three people moved into view. One of them was Ethan. The tall slender figure next to him could only be Dante, but the third, the woman whose voice we’d heard, was hard to identify. She was too thin to be the nun, and too tall to be the petite nurse. How did Ethan get here? Why was Dante at his brother’s place? And where the heck was Massimo?

  “That’s it. I can’t go any further,” Ethan said. The words came to us, clear above the patter of rain on leaves.

  “Then you give me no choice.”

  A bolt of lightning illuminated the clearing, casting light on a tableau of Dante holding a gun in two hands, pointing it at Ethan. His assistant, Patrizia, stood beside him. Blinded by the flash and ensuing gloom, I blinked until everything came back into focus and my eyes adjusted to the lack of light.

  Beside me, Claire jumped to her feet and ran into the open space.

  Dante glanced at her, but kept the gun on Ethan.

  “Stay away, Claire. I don’t want to hurt you,” he said.

  “Run, Claire,” Ethan shouted. “Get help.”

  Ethan was right. We needed help. I turned back, ready to sprint to the house to raise the alarm. Thunder burst over our heads like a cannon shot. Then, like an echo, a gunshot rang out. I swung back, terrified that Dante had shot Ethan. But Ethan still stood upright. Now Patrizia was pointing a weapon at Dante.

  “Let Ethan go,” she said. “I aimed that shot high, but the next one will hit you. Drop the gun and run away. I won’t shoot you. I won’t come after you. But if you kill him, I will kill you.”

  While I tried to process why Patrizia was threatening Dante, Claire took another couple of steps forward.

  “Stay back,” Dante said. This time, he moved the weapon so that it was aimed at Claire.

  “Final warning, Dante,” Patrizia said. “Drop the gun.”

  Dante moved so fast, I hardly saw it happen. He whirled around and sprinted to the far side of the clearing. Within seconds, he was swallowed up by the blackness among the thickets of trees.

  Claire ran to Ethan, arms outstretched. Wary, I watched the place where Dante had disappeared. He still had a weapon and could turn back to use it at any moment.

  “Get away from open ground,” I shouted. “All of you, come back to the trees, right now.”

  Claire pulled Ethan towards me, with Patrizia following behind. Her heels, which sank into the soft bed of dead leaves, slowed her down.

  Another gunshot flayed the air. Claire screamed. Had she been hit? I ran out to drag her and Ethan into the shelter of a massive oak tree.

  “Are you hurt?” I asked. Her response, if she made one, was drowned out by another shot. I peered past the tree just as Patrizia staggered and fell to her knees.

  “Patrizia,” I called. “Keep moving.”

  She didn’t respond, so I shuffled over at a low crouch and knelt beside her. “Can you walk?” I asked. In the darkness, a black stain crept across her shoulder, and she whimpered when I tried to ease her to a sitting position. She screamed when another shot kicked up the soil a few meters away.

  “We have to move, Patrizia,” I said. “Can you make it?”

  “I’ll try. Bring the gun.”

  It lay on the ground next to her. Gingerly, I held it, while we scrambled on hands and knees to the big oak where Claire and Ethan were sitting, propped up against the wet bark. I lifted Claire’s chin to look at her face. “Were you shot?” I asked.

  She shook her head. “No, sorry, just scared to death.” I gave her a quick hug and moved over to help Ethan settle Patrizia as he took off his sweater to create a makeshift compress for her shoulder. “She’s bleeding badly,” he whispered.

  “We need help. I’ll go to the house,” I said. “Here, keep the gun in case Dante comes back.”

  Another clap of thunder made us all flinch. Seconds later, a loud cracking sound and a muffled yell echoed across the grassy glade. I jumped to my feet. “I’ll be right back with reinforcements,” I said. “And listen out for Massimo. God knows where he is.”

  Then I stopped. Dante was shouting. “Help me, for God’s sake. I’m hurt.”

  I looked at Ethan, unsure what to do. Dante might be playing a trick on us; I had no intention of getting anywhere near him while he was armed.

  “We’re not coming any closer,” Ethan called.

  “Dammit.” Dante’s voice seemed to be fading. “I won’t shoot you. Help me please.”

  “Wait here,” I told Ethan. “I’m going to circle around to get close enough to find out what’s going on.”

  In spite of his objections, I crept away through the undergrowth, staying out of the clearing and, I hoped, out of Dante’s sight. Barbed shrubs tore at my hands and face. Water tipped from leaves, soaking my clothes and boots. What was I doing? I didn’t owe Dante anything. But I kept going, scrabbling through the brushwood until I reached the opposite side of the clearing. I heard Dante again. “Help me, for God’s sake.”

  I sheltered behind a tree trunk and peered through the gloom to see him spread-eagled on the mulchy soil under an ancient oak. A hefty branch pinned his legs to the ground. His gun lay in his open palm.

  “Dante, I’m going to try to move the branch, but first you have to throw that gun as far as away from you as you can.”

  He muttered an expletive, and flipped the gun away, just out of his own reach. My knees were shaking as I moved towards it, but I picked it up and tucked it into my jacket pocket. Then I looked at the branch on Dante’s legs. “I’m not sure I can move this,” I said. “But let’s give it a try.”

  When I grabbed hold of the tree limb and tried to lift it, the branch was so wet and bulky that it was almost impossible to get a grip on it. I shifted it perhaps a centimeter and had to let go. Dante yelled in pain.

  “I’m going to get assistance,” I told him. The rain had flattened his stylish hair and soaked through his cashmere jacket. His formerly impeccable silk tie hung askew.

  “Don’t leave me,” he pleaded.

  “You should have listened to what I told you earlier,” I said. “I warned you, but you ignored me.”

  He groaned. “I don’t want to die.”

  He had no aura. I knew he wasn’t in mortal danger, but I couldn’t resist taking the opportunity to torment him, just a little. “It’s cosmic retribution,” I said. “The gods must be very angry with you, Dante.”

  CHAPTER THIRTY-FIVE

  I stumbled through the woodland out on to the driveway, keeping an eye open for Massimo on the way. I hoped he was okay, but it made more sense to get to the house for help than to look for him by myself. My feet slipping on the wet gravel, I sprinted towards the villa. Low clouds wrapped the hills in a pallid shroud. An owl screeched close by.

  Dante’s black Mercedes was parked on the driveway right in front of the house so I ran around it and took the front steps two at a time. All the lights were on, every window ablaze. The front door was splintered and hung from one hinge, its lock shot out, dangling shards of metal.

  On the top step, I paused. The memory of last night settled heavy on my shoulders. I’d truly thought we were going to die here. Still, there was no choice but to go forward, so I stepped inside and heard the thunder of boots on tile floors above me.

  “Detective Falcone?” I shouted up the stairs. At once, Oberto appeared from a room to my right.

  “I need your help,” I said. “A woman is injured and Dante got hit by a falling branch.”

  If Oberto was surprised to hear that Dante was on the property, he didn’t show it. He toggled a switch on his radio and, in less than a minute, Falcone a
ppeared at the top of the stairs. He hurried down to ask me what had happened. “Where’s Massimo?” he demanded.

  “I don’t know, but we need help. And someone needs to call for an ambulance. There’s a woman with a gunshot wound.”

  While I was explaining what had happened, two officers came into the hallway from the kitchen, holding Renata between them.

  When she saw me, she screamed at me. My Italian’s good, but there were some swear words in there I didn’t catch, which was probably just as well. She told me I’d languish in hell, that Santini’s ghost would come back to haunt me. I was glad when the officers marched her out the front door.

  Falcone told Oberto to take some men to find Dante. “Can you show them where to go?” he asked me.

  “Yes.” Anxious to get back to Claire and Ethan, I hurried to the door. With Oberto and a unit of his men in tow, the grounds didn’t seem as frightening as they had on my way in. We jogged along the driveway to the noise of a siren wailing in the distance.

  “The ambulance will be here soon,” Oberto said. “Which way now?”

  I led them into the undergrowth at the side of the graveled road, pushing through the shrubs. “Ethan?”

  “Over here.”

  Oberto’s men separated into two teams, one heading towards Ethan and Claire.

  “Where’s Vanucci?” he asked.

  “This way.” I led Oberto and the other crew across the clearing to find Dante. I half-expected to find him gone, but he was still there, of course, pushing uselessly at the branch that lay across his legs. Several officers lined up on each side of the massive bough, lifted it clear and rolled it away.

  Dante groaned when Oberto tapped his leg.

  “Oh,” the captain said. “It must be broken.”

  “Of course it’s broken, you moron.”

  While Oberto organized a posse of men to watch over Dante until medical help arrived, I ran back across the clearing to the tree where I’d left Ethan and Claire. Patrizia leaned against the tree trunk while two paramedics worked on her shoulder. “I’m sorry,” she said. “I wanted to help you and Claire this afternoon while I had the chance. I should have done, but I was scared of what Dante would do.”

  “It’s okay,” Ethan said, squatting down next to her. “You rescued me. I’m very grateful.”

  “How?” I asked. “What happened?”

  “Patrizia came to the apartment half an hour or so after you and Dante left. She told the nurse that she’d been instructed to take over from her. Ofelia packed up and left quickly. I think she was glad to be out of there.”

  “We’re moving her out,” one of the medics said as two others laid Patrizia gently on a stretcher.

  “Injured man over here,” someone yelled from deeper in the woods. The police must have found Massimo. We heard the thud of running feet and the crack of breaking twigs as a team rushed in that direction.

  “What about you, Ethan?” I asked. “Perhaps you should go to the hospital too?”

  “No, thank you. These people are in far more need of medical help than I am.”

  “Then let’s go back to the house.” Oberto had joined us. “Stay close to me.”

  We trudged up the driveway, into the circle of light from the lamps at the doorway.

  “They’ve gone!” I blurted out, and then remembered that Ethan had no idea about the auras. I gave Claire a hug. “Your aura’s gone,” I whispered.

  “And Ethan’s?”

  “Yep. He’s going to be okay.”

  When we filed into the house, the umbrella urn by the door caught my eye. I bent over to retrieve the diagram that I’d hidden in there. I unfolded it and gave it to Falcone, who was waiting for us in the front hall.

  “A souvenir,” I said.

  We followed him to the kitchen, where the wood stove gave off a pleasant scent of burning logs and welcome heat.

  “Tea for everyone,” Falcone said to a middle-aged officer who scanned the kitchen, filled a kettle with water and took cups down from a glass-fronted cabinet.

  While he worked, we fussed over Ethan, asking again and again if he was feeling all right. There wasn’t a hint of moving air over his shaggy blond hair. I breathed deeply a couple of times, expelling all the pent-up stress I’d been carrying around with me since Friday night.

  “Can you tell us what happened?” Falcone asked, after introducing himself to Ethan. “How did you end up here?”

  “The nurse tried to give me a sedative just after Claire and Kate left with Dante,” he said. “Not enough to do any harm, but enough to keep me drowsy. I managed to spit it out, though, and hid it under the pillow, so I’d be alert and ready to put up a fight when she came at me with more drugs. Then another woman arrived. She told Ofelia to leave, that she would be taking over. As soon as she’d gone, Patrizia told me that she was going to help me. I had no idea who she was, of course, but it seemed best to go with her. We were halfway down the stairs when Dante and that bodyguard chap appeared.”

  Ethan’s shoulders slumped. “Dante had a gun and he ordered us to go with him. He took us back up to the apartment and into the kitchen. There was a back stairway, very narrow, which led down to an alley.”

  “So that’s how he got out,” Falcone said.

  “My men were all over the gallery and Dante’s office by that time,” Oberto agreed. “We didn’t know there was another way out.” He nodded at Ethan. “Please, go on.”

  “Dante told us we were his hostages and that he’d let us go once he was safely out of the country,” Ethan said. “That seemed like a step up from being fed too many sedatives. And he had the gun of course, so I cooperated, and so did Patrizia. There was a car waiting at the end of the alley. He bundled us into the back seat, tied our hands and put blindfolds on us. He said there were some things he wanted to collect before we drove further south. I got the impression we were heading for a port, Brindisi, perhaps. He mentioned a sailing boat.”

  “But why stop here?” I asked. “This is Santini’s place.”

  “They were brothers,” said Ethan. “Why wouldn’t he come here?”

  “Because they hated each other,” Claire said. “They were fighting over the code and the key. And Dante shot Santini at the vault.”

  Ethan flinched. “Shot him dead?”

  “Yes.” Claire’s bottom lip trembled.

  We all paused while the officer set down cups and saucers. Grateful, I took a sip of tea, which was strong and hot.

  “What happened when you got to the house?” Falcone asked Ethan.

  “They took the blindfolds and ties off and told us to wait by the car. A gnarly-looking old nun answered the door with a gun in her hand, but she and Dante seemed to know each other. They brought Patrizia and me inside. In here, actually. We stood by the stove while the two of them talked and then they started to quarrel. My Italian isn’t very good, but Patrizia said they were arguing about money. The nun said something about being paid upfront. Things got fairly heated.”

  Ethan paused to take a swallow of his tea. His face was pale and his cheekbones jutted sharply over sunken cheeks. He always looked skinny and underfed and now he was almost skeletal. But he was safe.

  “Just then a man ran in, yelling about vehicles coming up the road. That must have been you lot. The nun started screaming at Dante about leading people to the house, told him to take us into the woods and she’d sort things out here. In the mayhem that followed, Patrizia picked up a gun from that counter and hid it down her dress.”

  Falcone drained his teacup and put it down gently on its saucer, even though the china was rustic, not like the elegant porcelain in Dante’s apartment. “Did they mention boxes?” he asked. “Packages?”

  Ethan shook his head. “I don’t think so, or at least Patrizia didn’t mention it. I caught a few words though and I think the old harpy said ‘cantina’ once or twice. That’s a cellar, right?”

  Falcone pushed his chair back and jumped to his feet.

  CHAPTER THI
RTY-SIX

  We followed Falcone from the kitchen into a small walk-in pantry, clumping up behind him when he stopped at a narrow door in the far wall. It was locked.

  “Stand aside,” he said, his voice harsh with tension. We didn’t have enough room, so we filed back into the kitchen and waited for Oberto to shoot out the lock. Falcone opened the door and pulled on a string just inside. A bare bulb lit up a narrow stairway with wooden treads and a rickety handrail leading down into a well of darkness.

  Falcone led the way, with us following, gripping the handrail for questionable support. When he reached the bottom step, he found another pull string. A bright light came on, revealing a large room with plaster walls and a vaulted brick ceiling.

  Four massive casks stood across the back wall, and wine racks loaded with dusty bottles lined one of the side walls. The air smelled of old cork, vinegar and yeast, although the floors were immaculate, swept clean. But it looked just like a wine cellar.

  I was disappointed for Falcone. I’d hoped he would find his relics.

  Ethan limped to the wine racks and lifted out a bottle. “A Sottimani Barbaresco,” he said, looking at the label. “That’s a good wine.”

  He placed the bottle with great reverence back in the rack, and hobbled over to examine the casks, which towered higher than his head. He was a bit of a wine connoisseur. Getting to play in a wine cellar must have felt like a luxury break after all he’d been through.

  He rapped on the first cask. “Hey, it’s full,” he said. “I wonder what varietal it is?”

  Falcone’s head jerked in his direction. “Do that again.”

  Ethan tapped the wood again. He peered up at a plaque on the front of the barrel. “Sangiovese,” he read.

  Falcone pointed to a ladder leaning in one corner. “Drag that over,” he said to a junior policeman who’d accompanied us. Looking a little bewildered, the man did as he was told and positioned it carefully against the cask. Falcone slipped off his black coat and threw it over a wine rack. As he headed towards the cask, I stopped him.

  “I’ll do it. Climbing ladders with one functioning arm isn’t a good idea.”

 

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