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A Season for the Dead

Page 6

by David Hewson


  Rossi sighed. He got the message. There was, Costa knew, no need to labour it.

  ‘So you’re a Catholic? In spite of everything they say about your old man?’

  ‘No. Not at all. I just like to look for meanings. It’s a hobby if you like.’

  A couple of tourists turned on the light for an adjoining painting. It was brightness and shade again, Rossi noticed, but there was more action in this one. Some old guy was lying on the floor, dying, a madman over his body, holding a bloodied sword. There was something deeply disturbing about the work. It was dense, vivid, savage. It seemed poised on the very edge of sanity.

  ‘Matthew’s Martyrdom,’ Costa said quietly. ‘Another story. For another time.’

  ‘I never did work out why a religion based around love and peace seemed to involve so much killing.’ Rossi grunted. ‘You know the answer to that? Or do you need to be a Catholic to understand?’

  ‘It’s about martyrdom. Sacrificing yourself for something bigger than one human being. Could be the Church. For my dad it could be the hammer and sickle.’

  ‘Sounds the kind of thing dumb people do,’ Rossi mumbled, then wiped his sleeve across his mouth.

  Costa knew what it meant. He wanted a beer. He followed the big man outside, watched him working out where to go next.

  ‘Listen.’ Rossi’s watery eyes hooded over. ‘If you want to hear more about this I’ve an idea.’

  ‘Really?’

  ‘Yeah. We’re having dinner with Crazy Teresa tonight. It could be useful.’

  ‘We? We have a date with Crazy Teresa?’

  Rossi eyed him as if to say: so what?

  ‘We hardly know each other,’ Costa objected.

  ‘It’s Crazy Teresa. Everybody knows her.’

  ‘I meant we hardly know each other.’

  Rossi seemed offended by that. ‘Look. I know this relationship didn’t get off to the greatest of starts. But I’m trying here, kid. I’m doing my best. And there is something in it too. She wants to talk. I know the rumours doing the rounds. There’s a touch of truth in them but it’s not gone as far as people think. I’m not eating with Crazy Teresa on my own, not tonight.’

  Costa couldn’t believe his ears. ‘Jesus. Why should I be there?’

  ‘She wants you. Don’t ask me why. It’s only polite. Interdepartmental relations and all that.’

  ‘Wonderful.’

  Costa couldn’t work up much enthusiasm to complain. He had nothing else to do. Maybe Crazy Teresa off duty would be a different woman.

  ‘Is that a yes?’

  ‘Depends,’ Costa said slyly. ‘Are we still negotiating?’

  EIGHT

  Sara Farnese lived in the Borgo, the residential area that led from the river to the very walls of the Vatican. This was still Rome, still under the jurisdiction of the city. Yet it was impossible to ignore the proximity of the papal state up the hill. Her home was in Vicolo delle Palline, a narrow cobbled lane that ran between the Via dei Corridori and the Borgo Pio. Il Pasette, the elevated, fortified corridor which joined the Vatican with the Pope’s former fortress, the Castel Sant’Angelo, abutted her medieval, ochre-coloured building. When parties of visiting luminaries were allowed to walk down the passage, treading in the footsteps of long-dead pontiffs sometimes fleeing for their lives, she could hear them through the wall and often listened to their idle chatter. The commercial bustle of St Peter’s Square and the hectic tourist trade around it were only minutes away, but in the little street and the close, narrow lanes she favoured, people moved at a different pace. This was still a local quarter, residential, largely untouched by the modernization of the city. Homes were handed down from generation to generation – though not hers, which had been bought at a substantial price.

  She had acquired the first-floor apartment four years before when she finally moved to Rome for good at the age of twenty-three, putting on the professional suit of a university lecturer and, shortly after, starting to look older, perhaps more serious, than she felt. College, in London and America, was now a fading memory. Her teenage years, spent in boarding schools throughout Europe and finally in the cold Swiss town of Montreux, seemed remote, as if they had happened to another person. She remembered boarding the steamer and meandering across the great shining expanse of Lake Geneva on her own, trying to escape the prying attention of her classmates, who found her distant, different. She would sit on deck for hours, overlooked by nothing except the towering crown of mountains bordering the eastern end of the glittering inland sea, peering down at her from high, like God from Heaven: some vast, omnipresent watcher over her life, detached from its emotionless daily tedium.

  These were Sara Farnese’s most vivid memories, ones of physical, geographical objects. The green at Harvard. The college quadrangles of Oxford. A handful of ancient streets behind the Blue Mosque in Istanbul where she could lose herself for hours, following the tangled history of Byzantium, imagining herself into its formative years under Constantine, realizing that the study of early Christianity, the subject she had chosen – or had it chosen her, she was unsure which – was one where she had a certain distinct talent.

  There were few people stored in the dark vault hidden within her head. An exception lay in one of the oldest memories of all: Sister Annette, in the convent kindergarten in Paris, taking her to one side on a sunny June morning. This was twenty-two years ago. Yet, seated now in the apartment in the Borgo, she could still recall the nun’s gaunt, worried face, framed by a starched white wimple, like a picture waiting to be hung on the wall.

  They had gone to a small room she had never visited before. The bright sunlight filtered through a single stained-glass window depicting Jesus with a lamb in his arms. The plangent clatter of the bells of St Eustache drifted into the room, together with the racket of a reggae band busking outside Les Halles shopping complex. The place smelled of dust, as if it were little used, though it was as clean, and as simple, as every other corner of the convent. They sat next to each other on hard wooden chairs, with their hands joined together around an old, battered Bible.

  Sister Annette was not as old as she looked, the child Sara thought. Sometimes she imagined the nun’s face without the wrinkles, without the tension which seemed to come from some inwardly felt pain. Without the wimple and the habit too, dressed in normal clothes, like the people she saw on the street. When Sara did this, Sister Annette became a different person: full of life, vibrant, restless. Normal somehow. This imaginary person and the real sister who now sat next to her shared only one identical feature. They both had very bright, very intense blue eyes and, on this long-dead Paris day, the real Annette turned them on the infant Sara with a fierce, unbending power which gave the child no room for escape.

  Memories were about generalities, not details. Even the child Sara had understood this and never tried to fix each word precisely in her head. It was the meaning which counted and in that, said the nun’s eyes, there could be no room for mistakes.

  They had spoken about the mysteries of God and how no one, not even the greatest human being who has ever lived, could begin to understand everything in his mind. Not Sister Annette. Not the kindly priest with the foreign accent who came into the convent from time to time, gave them talks she could not understand, then left, touching each child on the head as he walked to the front door and the bright world beyond.

  Even the Holy Father himself was outside every last detail of God’s great plan she said, which surprised the child Sara greatly since she had been given to understand that the distant white figure who lived in the Vatican was, in some unexplained way, part of Heaven itself.

  On occasion God could appear cruel. There would be times when no one would comprehend his meaning. The innocent would suffer, perhaps more than the wicked. There would be pain where it was undeserved, grief which could appear so great it was impossible to believe one would ever escape its morbid clutches. One would ask – and this was quite normal, Sister Annette said, this happened to e
veryone – whether a loving God could allow such things to happen at all. This was the Devil talking, whispering in our ears at the moment of our greatest weakness. God’s grace, though sometimes incomprehensible, was there to make us free. We made our own prisons. We – not him – sent ourselves to Hell. He loved us through our agonies and would, in the end, redeem us with his kindness. Once we had walked the path towards him. Once we had found our own particular path to Paradise.

  Life was a mystery, she said, a gift. And like all gifts it could be taken away. When that moment happened, the faithful didn’t complain. They thanked God that the gift was there at all. They acceded to his greater wisdom. They loved him all the more and found, in that love, some solace.

  Sara had looked up into the sharp blue eyes, trying to understand. She adored this woman with all her heart. For as long as she had been in the school – and that pre-dated even the haziest of distant memories – Sister Annette had been like a parent. Her own mother and father were infrequent visitors, tall, stern figures, not staying long when they did arrive. They were busy people. She felt fortunate they had the time to come at all. When they did they would kiss her on the cheek, leave endless gifts and promises. Sister Annette had agreed on this point too, and Sara knew she would never lie. This was not an absence of affection on their part. They lived in a different world, one where a quiet, five-year-old child who spoke so little, who spent her time in daydreams she never revealed to another living soul, would never be happy. They did this for her own good and she would one day be grateful.

  ‘God works constantly,’ the sister said, ‘beyond our understanding.’

  She hesitated. There was, the child thought, something wrong with her. A cold. Flu perhaps. Sister Annette was ill and the thought made Sara clasp the nun’s hand to the Bible all the more tightly. It was impossible for the child to imagine a world without this woman in it.

  ‘Sara,’ the nun said finally. ‘God has taken your mother and your father to him. Yesterday. In America. There was an accident.’

  She recalled – would always recall – how this made her mouth go dry, made something hard and painful begin to grow in her throat, like a cancer coming from nowhere.

  ‘They live with God now. They’re in his Heaven, where you’ll see them one day too, provided you are a good girl, as you are now. God loves you, Sara. We all love you. We will love you every day till he calls us to go to him too and wait for you patiently there until we’re reunited. Your parents. All of us.’ Sister Annette paused. Her eyes were glassy. ‘There’s nothing for you to worry about,’ she said in a voice that abruptly took on a practical tone. ‘We’ll look after you, for ever if you like. You can go out into the world too if you choose. You’ll have the means to do whatever you want.’

  At this point the nun hugged her. Sara could still remember the smell. The stink of death sat upon her, an old, dry stink, like something going off. Within the year, Annette would join God in Heaven. She would become part of the great procession to his door, willingly, smiling perhaps, as she died.

  ‘Be sad,’ Sister Annette said. ‘But be happy and wise too. And be grateful. You’ve much to be grateful for.’

  ‘I will,’ the child answered, wondering if she had the courage to make good her promise.

  The sister smiled. ‘I know you will. You’re a good girl, my little Sara. You always will be. And one day – on this earth – you’ll be rewarded. One day you’ll know some great joy in your life.’

  Those last words were so fixed in Sara’s memory she was convinced they were accurate, the very ones Sister Annette had used. Yet there was another memory too, an inexplicable flaw in the picture: that as the sister spoke there were tears, thick and salty, running down her cheeks, so slowly, so ponderously, she resembled the pale, static figure of Mary in the chapel whose face was stained with drops that were mother of pearl, not human at all.

  Sara Farnese looked at her watch and wondered at the power of these memories. Sometimes they stood in the way of the present, she thought, easy crutches on which to lean as a substitute for decision and action. What would Sister Annette make of her present existence? She knew the answer and did not wish to dwell on it.

  It was now 2.27 and the press were still making a noise beyond the windows. She was sick of the notes being pushed through the door of the apartment block. She had taken the phone off the hook. Still they waited. Still they haunted her.

  She put on a pair of sunglasses and walked to the window. Outside, in the narrow lane, cameras flashed, voices rose, TV crews scrambled to take advantage of this rare appearance by the woman they all wanted to see. A woman the media was already painting as some kind of black temptress, the guilty party to an affair in which one lover – a married one at that – murdered his wife and his ex-mistress’s partner in the most bloody of fashions.

  People walking down the main road hesitated, stopping to stare at this commotion in the shadow of the Pope’s thoroughfare. Would they be any more forgiving? Would they even wish to understand? She doubted it. The best she could hope for from the masses was a lack of interest, which was unrealistic given the curiosity the media was creating in the story.

  At 2.29 Sara Farnese walked into her bedroom and unlocked the secure compartment in the small bedside cabinet. The phone still bore the sticker from the mobile operator in Monaco. Calls made using it were, he said, untraceable, unlike those from Italian models. He had one too. If they just used the pair of mobiles, at times they agreed beforehand, everything would be fine. No one need ever know.

  She turned on the handset, waited and, sure enough, at half past it rang.

  He wasn’t angry with her, not this time. Sara Farnese felt grateful to hear his voice which was full of warmth and reassurance, telling her everything would be fine, just to keep calm, keep quiet and never say more than was necessary, particularly to the police.

  She cried a little. It was impossible to halt the tears. She told him, too, about the animals on the doorstep and the way the thought of them kept invading her head.

  ‘I’ll send you a gift,’ he said.

  They spoke for no more than four minutes, four minutes in which she felt herself restored to the world, one which Sister Annette would have recognized, even if she found parts of it questionable.

  Just after three she walked tentatively to the window, standing far enough back to be able to see without being seen. The street-cleaning vans had arrived in the Borgo Pio, a day before schedule, even though the place was still just dusty, free of litter, thanks to the cruel August weather which was chasing people from the city. Two vans were working their way along the road, spraying water everywhere, big circular brushes turning from beneath their bellies. Then they turned into Vicolo delle Palline, a place no cleaning truck had ever visited before, and made straight for the crowd beneath the window. The media mob scattered, clutching for their cameras, cursing as the vehicles ploughed slowly through their midst.

  Sara Farnese watched from behind the curtain and wished she could laugh. There had been more generous gifts but none so welcome or well timed. Nevertheless, this unwanted attention would return.

  The crowd began to reassemble. Through it came two now familiar figures, one large, one smaller and slender. She recognized the policemen from the day before and began, very carefully, to assemble her thoughts.

  NINE

  Jay Gallo sat on the dry turf of the Esquiline Hill, not far from the Via Mecenate, eating calzone from the pizza rustica shop around the corner: zucchini flowers and salty anchovies wrapped inside mozzarella. The dig was in its fourth day and halted once again. He wondered how long it would be before some anxious producer in New York read the latest accountant’s report and pulled the plug on the show, taking his meal ticket with it. Gallo desperately wanted out of this job. There was better money to be made running rich tourists around the city and spinning them rare and occasionally racy stories. He hated TV crews. He hated their dirigible-sized egos. He hated their organizational incompetence
. But most of all, Jay Gallo hated their dishonesty. Once, before the drink and the dope took hold and sent his life swerving off in a different direction, Gallo had been a promising scholar at Harvard. He knew his subject: late imperial Rome, though it was now greatly expanded to embrace the needs of a hungry translator and tour guide. Watching this fake archaeology show dig up what may or may not have been an unimportant chunk of the Domus Aurea, Nero’s Golden House, and imbue every shard of pottery, every rusting iron nail, with some dubious link to the past was agony. For all his personal deficiencies, Jay Gallo understood intellectual rigour and recognized when it was being tarnished for the sake of pecuniary gain.

  Scipio Campion – even the name made his teeth grate – personified this sin completely. A minor Oxford professor with very little chin and an accent that could cut glass, he was born with the fake English academic poise American television adored. If the show were to be believed, Campion had – in one single season – found the camp from which Spartacus’s army had surveyed Pompeii; uncovered the remains of a palace in Glastonbury, complete with wall paintings, which he was able to pass off as a possible site of Avalon; and, on the outskirts of modern Alexandria, revealed the tomb – and within it, to much excitement, the decapitated skeleton – of Caesarion, the son of Julius Caesar and Cleopatra. It was all so unseemly. Undeserved too. He had watched Campion go through the motions on camera. There was nothing to it. Jay Gallo knew he could do better if they gave him a chance. The bitch of a producer had laughed in his face when he just happened to mention it.

  He finished the calzone and listened in silence to the latest argument between Campion, the producer and the camera crew, which seemed to focus largely on how the star should be lit.

  ‘Morons,’ Jay Gallo said miserably to no one, wishing he were not in such an evil mood. Business had been bad of late. He’d been reduced to playing errand boy for people he didn’t like, delivering packages that contained God-knew-what to addresses he never wanted to see again. Being stuck on the set of some lousy TV show was better than jail. Just, he mused. Then his mobile phone vibrated in his shirt pocket and with a sweaty, tired hand he pulled it out, got up and walked away from the crew to make sure they didn’t start yelling at him for talking on set.

 

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