The first letter, written in November 1925 from the Palazzo Fortuny in Venice, was a thank you for a dinner Efigenia had given Fortuny and his wife Henriette. The occasion was a staging of Saint Joan at the Goldoni Theater. Fortuny’s printed silk velvet had been used for the costumes and stage sets. Another letter from Venice, dated September 1928, had a pen and ink drawing of the Jemaa el Fna in Marrakech and referred to a Biennale exhibition of his sketches of Morocco and Spain.
The third letter had been written in January 1930 from Paris after Fortuny had been obliged to close his factory on the Giudecca because of the stock market crash. The factory produced cotton prints made on the innovative machines he had installed. Efigenia had offered him a sum of money to help reopen the factory.
Urbino made some notes. His handwriting was cramped due to the cold in the room. He found these details about Fortuny’s formerly unknown relationship with Efigenia fascinating. They would help flesh out his portrait of a man he not only admired but also, in the humblest of ways, identified with. For there were some pale parallels to Urbino’s own life.
Fortuny, like Urbino, had been born elsewhere, in Spain, but had fallen under the spell of Venice and had made it his home and the center of his work. He had bought a Venetian palazzo and renovated it to suit his special needs – although in Urbino’s case the palazzo had been inherited. He had been a man of great curiosity, with a love of things Venetian and Arabic. But Fortuny, unlike Urbino who feared that he was something of a dilettante, had excelled in various domains. He had defied categories, being not only a textile designer and couturier, but also a painter, inventor, sculptor, set designer, theater director, costume designer, and photographer.
And he had been an eccentric – for example, dressing in summer clothes in the depths of winter and sporting a black Inverness cape – which only endeared him to Urbino’s heart more, as the Pindars did.
Urbino unfolded the next letter, written in October 1931 in London, where Fortuny was working on a lighting project for the Royal Academy, but, chilled as he was, he had lost his concentration and returned all the letters to the box.
As he sat at the table, his eyes started to bring into focus an object in the collection that he had been staring at without actually seeing. As he took in its details, he realized that it was something he had not noticed in the collection on previous visits.
It was an oblong wooden box the size of a small vegetable crate. It was designed as a miniature stage. Constructed of dark wood and lacquered, it rested on its longer side on a shelf. On one side of the box, a piece of Fortuny fabric, pleated in the way that Fortuny had devised, simulated a theater curtain. It must have been cut from a much larger swath of material. Across the top of the box was a carved ornamental panel with ‘Melponeme’ and ‘Thalia’ painted in cursive gold letters. On the stage of this miniature theater were small carved and painted wooden figures. Urbino went over to examine them.
There were four figures, none higher than nine inches. It did not take Urbino long to identify them as caricatures of some of the house’s residents: Olimpia, Gaby, Ercule, and Apollonia. They were lined up as if receiving an audience’s applause after a performance. A delicately carved bouquet of white roses was at the feet of the Apollonia figure, painted flat black and holding a string of purple rosary beads. The black lace head covering that Apollonia wore all the time looked more like a snood and revealed a fringe of white hair.
Urbino picked up the figure representing Olimpia. It wore a yellow coat spotted with black: an ocelot coat.
Gaby’s voice startled him. ‘Alessandro!’ He almost dropped the figure. He put Olimpia back on the stage. He waited for Gaby to start spouting the words lurking within her cousin’s name, but instead she asked, ‘Do you like the theater?’
‘It’s very well done.’ He turned back to look at the figures. The whole effect was weird, but amusing. ‘Yes, I do like it.’
‘Alessandro is very talented. I told him he could put it down here. The museum hasn’t had a new addition since my grandfather was alive.’
‘Alessandro did it?’ Urbino had not been aware that Apollonia’s son was interested in woodcarving or carpentry. He had not been aware he was very much interested in anything. He was well past the age when he should have applied himself and found a job, but his main and only job seemed to be looking after his mother – and living off her.
‘Yes, our Alessandro.’ Warmth filled her voice. ‘He’s working on statues of Eufrosina and him. He wants to do the whole family of us under the same roof. He was so excited about the idea that I told him he shouldn’t wait until he finished the others to put these on display.’
‘How clever to have the names of the muses of both tragedy and comedy on the stage.’
‘That was my idea! Neither one alone suits us. Our family has had both comedy and tragedy. Often at the same time.’
Gaby went over to the stage and picked up the figure of Olimpia. She rubbed it against her sleeve and replaced it, taking care that it was exactly aligned with the others as it had been before Urbino had examined it. She moved the figure of Ercule, whose roundness and spectacles had been exaggerated and who was wearing a long white robe, fractionally closer to Olimpia and away from the figure representing her. The Gaby figure wore a small red cap and a red scarf, and a gray, uniform-like outfit with pants.
Gaby started to dust Alessandro’s theater with the orange cloth. Urbino bid her goodbye and brought the box upstairs to Apollonia. Bianchi was still there, sitting with her in front of scattered papers that looked like legal documents. She hardly said a word, took the box, counted the letters inside, and gave him a curt nod. It was his dismissal.
It seemed warmer outside the Palazzo Pindar than inside. Sunshine fell from a pale blue sky, and even though a cold wind was blowing from the Dolomites, it had an invigorating effect. Most of the snow had melted, but wherever it lingered, it maintained a purity that provided refreshing accents to the scene.
Urbino set out for the Campo San Giacomo dell’Orio. The calli were lively with local residents. Tourists seldom found their way into this area, even in the height of summer. In a few minutes, he was walking past the round-apsed church with its square brick campanile that dominated the large, but somehow secretive, square. Children, bundled up against the cold, ran across the stones and rode their tricycles.
He went into a restaurant beside the canal and ordered a plate of tramezzini sandwiches and half a liter of red wine. As he ate, he picked up a copy of that day’s Gazzettino that someone had left on the table. He read the headlines, but nothing caught his interest. His mind was a jumble of many things, and they all centered on the Palazzo Pindar.
The contessa had asked him to keep his ears and eyes open. Olimpia’s visit to the contessa, although apparently intended to quench any worries, had had just the opposite effect on him. His curiosity was fired even more.
The time he had spent in the Palazzo Pindar had brought a few revelations. Ercule had showed something other than his usually genial side by mocking Gaby’s devotion to the collection and the absence of visitors. He had also made a point of emphasizing that the collection belonged to him and Olimpia as well, and not only Gaby.
As for Gaby, she was as troubled as ever, and her attachment to the family collection was one of the symptoms of her illness. Olimpia and Ercule seemed concerned about her, as well they might be, and they seemed to have genuine feeling for her. But Olimpia’s dismissals of her fears of being in danger and Ercule’s barbs suggested that their concern and feeling might be compromised by more selfish elements.
Gaby had confided her fears in Mina. Would she be inclined to confide them in him? He had known her for a much longer time, and there was his relationship with Barbara to recommend him further. By telling Mina, she might have hoped that Urbino and Barbara would become aware of her fears. There might be reasons she did not want to speak with either of them directly. Or maybe she had told Mina in the hope that she would say something to O
limpia, and not necessarily to Urbino or the contessa.
Urbino’s thoughts returned to the collection, unusual in its inclusion of many disparate objects whose only reason for being together was that they were related to the Pindar clan.
The latest edition to the collection was one of the strangest of all: Alessandro’s theater with the carved wooden figures of four living family members, and with those of him and his sister Eufrosina waiting in the wings to make their appearance. Was affection behind the curious effort? Or was it his intention to poke fun at his relatives by turning them into caricatures? Urbino was curious to see what Alessandro did with the figures of Eufrosina and himself.
Urbino finished his wine. Fifteen minutes later he was crossing the Grand Canal in the traghetto that ferried passengers between Cannaregio and Santa Croce. The cold wind whipped against his Austrian cape and his eyes smarted.
When the traghetto reached the landing at the Campo San Marcuola, he headed toward the Palazzo Uccello, which was in a quiet area of the Cannaregio between the Grand Canal and the lagoon. He kept going over Olimpia’s visit to the contessa. She had seemed determined that Gaby’s fears should be discounted. It had been the purpose of her trip, hadn’t it?
But then Urbino, as he often did, considered the situation from the opposite point of view. This way of thinking often rewarded him with insights that might never have come to him otherwise.
Suppose Olimpia’s whole purpose in coming to the Ca’ da Capo-Zendrini had not been to influence the contessa to discount Gaby’s comments but instead to take them more seriously? She had seemed pleased to find Urbino with the contessa. Perhaps she knew that her visit would have its devious effect more surely and more quickly because of his presence. She must know that she could count on his skepticism, given his experience as a sleuth.
Were Urbino and the contessa playing into her hands? What could her motive be? The Pindar family was fond of games, and this could be one of Olimpia’s, and a very serious one indeed.
As Urbino crossed the hump-backed bridge by the Palazzo Uccello, another possibility, closer to his original one, occurred to him.
Maybe Olimpia was not so much clever in making the visit as she was desperate to put them off a scent.
Desperation or a game? Which of the two might it have been?
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Copyright © 2007 by Edward Sklepowich
Cover design by Elizabeth Connor
ISBN: 978-1-5040-0136-6
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