The Rome Prophecy

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The Rome Prophecy Page 11

by Jon Trace


  He walks around the outside and squeezes in alongside her.

  It’s a tight fit.

  Valentina has to chase off some sudden and inappropriate thoughts that would surely get her a very long spell in Purgatory, if not somewhere worse. ‘How long is it since you’ve been in one of these?’ she asks, shining her torch up across the plaster of the ceiling and wall.

  ‘Seeking forgiveness, or giving forgiveness?’

  ‘Either.’

  ‘Three years since I heard confession. Not quite as long since I wiped the slate clean.’

  ‘Is that really what it does?’ She plays the beam across the wood inside the confessional.

  ‘With venial sin, yes. In the case of my mortal sins, no.’ For a second, she remembers how they met. The first time he told her of the incident in Los Angeles. The lives he took in a fight in the gang-infested streets of Compton. She’s about to say something comforting when she thinks she sees something. ‘Move a minute. Just move to one side.’

  Tom shuffles round.

  Valentina crouches, and her knees crack. She holds the torch like she’s throwing a dart and focuses the beam on the wall. Scraped into the plasterwork are the words DOMINA.

  DOMINUS. TEMPLUM. LIBERA NOS A MALO.

  She focuses on the words.

  Cassandra’s words.

  But Tom’s eyes are on something beneath the writing.

  A geometric shape, hovering beneath the phrase DELIVER US FROM EVIL.

  A triangle.

  A very special triangle.

  34

  Father Brancati goes wild when he sees the graffiti.

  ‘Vandali!’ he shouts. ‘They have no respect. They steal. They wreck things. Not even the Church is sacred any more.’

  ‘A little strange,’ Tom points out, more quietly, ‘to find vandals who write in Latin.’

  Until then the priest hasn’t noticed. He’s so familiar with the old language that he subconsciously translated the text as automatically as reading a prayer book. ‘Yes, I suppose it is. Very strange.’ He moves to touch the lettering with his fingers, to feel the imprint of whatever rough tool was used to scrape out the plaster.

  Valentina grabs his hand. ‘Please don’t touch it. It’s a crime scene and will need to be photographed.’

  He looks shocked. ‘Crime scene? What? Why?’

  She gently leads him out of the confessional. ‘As I mentioned when I phoned you, we’re investigating a violent incident, and there is a link to your church that we have to look into.’ She eases him round and walks him part way down the aisle. ‘You’ve been very kind and helpful, Father. Would you mind waiting in the sacristy until I have finished here?’

  Brancati minds very much, but still does as she says.

  He’s worried about what’s going on.

  Worried about the publicity, the effect on the mission, what his superiors might say. He heads for the sacristy and goes straight to the bottle of brandy he keeps in the cupboard alongside the altar wine.

  He’ll find his mints later.

  Tom takes a snap of the writing with his camera phone while Valentina makes a call to the station.

  She reappears moments later. ‘Federico is sending a photographer and CSI; they’ll take shots, and dust and spray everything and anything all around here.’ She points at the triangle. ‘That’s identical to the pendant we found on the prisoner. She even wrote about it in a story, said she’d had it stolen from her while she was being persecuted in ancient Rome. Does it mean anything to you?’

  Tom is on his knees, peering closely at the symbol. ‘Maybe it’s a scalene.’

  ‘A what?’

  ‘Scalene. It means that none of the sides are the same length and none of the angles match. It’s the only triangular shape where none of the sides or angles are equal.’

  ‘Geometry wasn’t my strong subject at school.’

  ‘What was?’

  ‘Boys,’ she says cheekily. ‘Aside from the boring geometry, does it mean anything?’

  Tom stares at it while he thinks. ‘Triangles have always had immense symbolic power. The Nazis used a whole range of them to pick out and persecute minority groups in their concentration camps. Red for political dissidents, green for criminals, purple for Jehovah’s Witnesses, brown for Gypsies, black for lesbians and pink for homosexuals. I believe the famous six-pointed star was invented because gay Jewish men had to wear a pink triangle overlapping the yellow one that denoted their religion.’

  ‘Triangle overload,’ observes Valentina.

  Tom isn’t put off by her interruption. ‘Indeed. Jewish communists had to wear overlapping red and yellow ones. Modern homosexual communities still use pink triangles as a symbol of gay and lesbian liberation.’

  Valentina tries to make a connection to her case. ‘So, the Latin – Deliver us from evil – and the references to suffrage and souls in purgatory: we take all this as some cry from persecuted souls beyond the grave?’

  Tom doesn’t answer at first. ‘Symbols gets hijacked,’ he says finally. ‘They’re often misinterpreted. You’ll have to be careful that this particular one doesn’t mislead you. For example, within cosmic geometric symbolism, triangles are also used to signify a connection between heaven and earth.’

  ‘Purgatory again?’

  ‘Maybe. Maybe not. Egyptians used a triangle with an eye in it to symbolise the sun god Horus and his all-seeing ability. It became the basis of charms to ward off evil. Then again, if you go back to the Greeks, the triangle was a very positive symbol; it represented the vulva of the Mother Delta. And for the Hebrews it was a symbol of truth.’

  ‘Truth, as in the Bocca della Verità – the Mouth of Truth.’ Valentina scratches her hands through her hair. ‘There are too many coincidences now. A woman with an ancient sword talking as though she is possessed or living centuries ago; brutal violence in a famous church linked with rituals about the public acclamation of truth; and now symbols and souls in a chiesa dedicated to suffrage and Purgatory.’

  ‘And that’s not all.’ Tom stands up and stretches.

  Folding his six feet three inches into a cramped confessional hasn’t been a comfortable experience.

  ‘There’s the obvious connotation of the triangle. The one we haven’t mentioned.’

  Valentina looks duly annoyed that she has to ask. ‘Which is?’

  ‘The occult one. The one Satanists protect. The pentagram. Five interlocking triangles representing the elements of earth, wind, fire and water, plus a fifth component, the supernatural spirit. It’s a symbol that has different powers according to how it’s drawn and where the spiritual segment of the triangle is located. Drawn pointing down, it is used in occult rituals to direct specific forces and energies against people. Drawn pointing upwards, it is used for protection.’

  ‘You learn something every day.’ Valentina throws her hands open. ‘But this leaves us where? How can I make sense out of it all?’

  ‘You can’t,’ says Tom. ‘We know there’s only one person who can do that.’

  35

  Once the photographer and CSI have been briefed, Valentina leaves the evidence-gathering at the church to a junior officer called Paulo Benchabo. A man who smells strongly of garlicky pasta and more than just the first glass of red wine.

  She and Tom are about to return home when Louisa Verdetti calls her.

  The medic still sounds edgy. ‘I’m sorry to trouble you, it’s just that I know you’re chasing a deadline and I have just had quite a session with Suzanna.’

  Valentina traps the phone between her ear and shoulder as she zaps the Fiat open with her key fob. ‘Did she tell you what happened at the church, where the blood on her clothes came from?’

  ‘No. No, I’m sorry she didn’t.’ Louisa sounds stressed. ‘Listen, I don’t want to raise your hopes; this may be something or nothing. I just thought you should know what happened.’

  ‘Thanks.’ Valentina slips into the Punto and quickly opens the door for Tom. �
�What exactly did she say to you?’

  ‘It’s complicated. She became yet another personality, another alter. More riddles, I’m afraid.’

  Valentina holds her head in her spare hand and jams the keys in the ignition slot. This is the last thing she wants. ‘Hold on, I’ll get a pen and paper.’

  ‘Better you come and see. I videoed it. This new alter manifested while I was doing a routine recording of a diagnostic session.’

  Valentina starts the engine. ‘I’m on my way. I’ll be with you within the half-hour.’

  Both she and Tom know that’s optimistic. The journey is less than seven kilometres, but traffic is always bad around the Piazza del Popolo and Viale del Muro Torto.

  By the time they’ve battled their way through and parked, it’s closer to forty minutes.

  Louisa Verdetti is alone in her office, blinds half drawn, desk lamp on. She looks up as Valentina knocks and enters. ‘Buonasera.’ Her expression shows she’s drained.

  ‘Buonasera. Doctor, this is Tom Shaman, he’s a friend and has been unofficially helping me.’

  ‘Buonasera.’ Tom shakes Louisa’s hand and smiles warmly. ‘I hope you don’t mind me being here. I can wait outside if you prefer.’

  That’s not what Valentina wants. ‘Tom is a former priest. He and I worked together in Venice on a serious crime case, and I can vouch for his confidentiality.’

  Louisa looks too tired to argue. She waves a hand at the sofa and picks a DVD off her desk. ‘Please sit down. Let me play this for you. Would you like a drink?’

  ‘Just water, please,’ replies Valentina.

  Tom agrees, so Louisa grabs three glasses and a bottle from off the top of a metal filing cabinet and pours the drinks. She slips the DVD into a player beneath a TV mounted on the wall and starts the recording. She studies the time code at the bottom of frame, then skips it on, until the recording starts mid-sentence.

  Louisa: ‘… all right to continue, Suzanna?’

  Suzanna: ‘I’m not Suzanna. Why do you call me Suzanna? Get down on the ground, quick, get down with me. Keep low!’

  Louisa: ‘I’m sorry, I thought Suzanna was your name. Who are you then?’

  Suzanna: ‘Claudia. I’m Claudia.’

  Louisa: ‘Claudia. That’s a nice name.’

  Claudia: ‘Who are you? I didn’t see you arrive. You didn’t travel with us. Are you some demon sent from the underworld to punish me?’

  Louisa: ‘No. No, I’m not. Don’t be frightened. I’m here to help. You can trust me.’

  Claudia: ‘Then get down flat like me; lie on your belly, or they’ll see you.’

  Louisa: ‘Like this?’

  Claudia: ‘Flatter. Right down, like you’re a snake.

  ’ Louisa: ‘My chin’s almost on the floor, Claudia, I can’t get—’

  Claudia: ‘Shush. Quiet! If they hear you they’ll take both of us again.’

  Louisa: ‘Who? Who will take us?’

  Claudia: ‘The soldiers over there. The ones lying like lizards on the rocks.’

  Louisa: ‘I can’t see any soldiers, Claudia. Outside the door there’s a Carabinieri guard, that’s all. He’s there to protect you, not hurt you.’

  Claudia: ‘How can you say that? We are at war with them. They took my sister, my friends. They killed my brother and my father. We are at war with them.’

  Louisa: ‘I don’t understand. What war?’

  Claudia: ‘The war that never ends between us Sabines and those pig-faced Romans. Our men have either fled, been killed or are still in battle. My brother fought for me, but a brute like that one out there came along and cut him down with his sword.’

  Louisa: ‘How did you get away, Claudia? Did you run, is that how you escaped?’

  Claudia: ‘No. At first, the Romans took me. They trussed me up like a lamb for slaughter, then flung me in a cart with the other Sabines. Sweet Curitis, our divine goddess, must have been protecting me. There was a battle some hours back. The soldiers had to leave our cart to fight with troops sent by Mettus. We were on low-lying land by the bend of the river near where an island floats in the great water. We could see Romans on the hills, moving around near their fires, working their lands. While the soldiers fought, another woman and I escaped from the cart. We cut our bonds on sharp rocks by the shore. We were beneath a bridge about to try to make it to the island to hide, when …’

  Louisa: ‘What happened, Claudia?’

  Claudia: ‘… a soldier grabbed me. I didn’t see him. He came up behind me and put his arm around my throat. I thought I was going to choke to death. I’m sure I would have if it hadn’t been for the other woman. She was very brave. Very quick.’

  Louisa: ‘What did she do?’

  Claudia: ‘She hit him. She had to. She hit him with a big stone. Hard. Hard on the back of his head. It made a sound like a dropped melon. She kept hitting him and he fell. Then … then she picked up his sword and plunged it into his stomach. It was horrible. His blood was everywhere. All over him – all over my face and my clothes. I was terrified.’

  Louisa: ‘Are you all right?’

  Claudia: ‘I can still see his eyes. Staring at us. She pulled out the sword and stabbed him again and again to make him be quiet.’

  Louisa: ‘It’s okay. It’s all over. We don’t need to talk about this any more, Claudia.’

  Claudia: ‘We hid his body. We hid it beneath a place where they launched boats to the island. Just piled boulders, wet with plants of the river, on top of his corpse and left him. The woman said she hoped that Mars, the soldier’s god, would forgive such an inglorious death.’

  Louisa: ‘This other woman – what was her name?’

  Verdetti stops the tape.

  She looks towards Tom and Valentina. ‘She didn’t answer. I asked her several times but it just became incredibly distressing for her.’ She points to her desk. ‘She was so emotionally exhausted and so frightened she crawled right under my desk and fell asleep. I couldn’t move her. It was almost as if she was in a coma.’

  Valentina wishes she had time to sympathise.

  But knows she doesn’t.

  She looks down at some notes she’s made and tries to ask her questions as gently as possible. ‘Louisa, I have to confess my ignorance. I’m not from Rome. Are there significant things in what she said? Things that have special Roman meanings.’

  The doctor nods. ‘The place Claudia is describing – the spot where she said her friend killed the soldier is on the edge of Campus Martius, The Field of Mars. I know exactly the area that she’s describing. It’s the Ponte Fabricio, what I think is the oldest surviving bridge in Rome – maybe in the world – and a link to Tiber Island. She mentioned seeing Romans on the hillsides across the water – that would be right as well. I think she would be looking towards the Quirinal Hill.’

  ‘What’s that?’ asks Tom.

  ‘An area of Rome, like the Aventine, but originally it was essentially a shrine to Quirinus, the Sabines’ equivalent of Mars.’

  Valentina takes a deep breath. She knows she shouldn’t ask what she’s about to, but she’s going to anyway. ‘Louisa, this may sound strange, but would you take us there?’

  Verdetti frowns. ‘Now?’

  ‘I know,’ says Valentina, ‘It’s dark, cold and ridiculously late. But I’m running out of time. Will you? Please.’

  36

  Tom folds himself into the back of the Punto and they trundle towards the Field of Mars.

  It’s a near-impossible fit.

  Certainly a feat worthy of a Guinness World Record for the biggest ex-priest carried in the smallest ever space.

  Tom remembers just a few days ago standing on top of the Eiffel Tower with his friend Jean-Paul, looking down at the Parisian park by the same name.

  Coincidence?

  He certainly hopes so.

  There must be dozens of military parade grounds throughout the world dedicated to the god of war. The only nagging doubt is that while looking out across the
great darkness, he felt the overwhelming conviction that he would not be returning to France. Since then, he has increasingly felt that Rome is where his own god wants him to be, the place where a very specific type of modern battle is about to be fought.

  His type.

  Louisa coaches Valentina on the route. ‘You’ll have to cross the river twice because of our stupid roads. Go west at the Popolo, south down the Lungotevere, all the way past the Ospedale Santo Spirito and keep on until I tell you.’

  ‘Frankly, I’m struggling with all this,’ says Valentina. ‘Not the roads, the case. I thought I was making sense of the Cassandra Complex, then phew, straight out of the blue, another alter breezes in and turns everything upside down.’

  Louisa smiles. ‘I know. I find it difficult too. There is a pattern, though.’

  ‘There is?’

  ‘Our patient is fixating on special women and events. Cassandra is the name of a goddess.’

  ‘And Claudia?’

  ‘Almost as special. The Claudii were among the most powerful and respected clans of ancient times. Just as the Cassandra alter was caught up in the history of the Bocca della Verità, Claudia is caught up in the epic chapter depicting the Rape of the Sabines.’

  ‘Not rape as we generally refer to it,’ adds Tom from the back seat.

  ‘No, that’s right. It wasn’t enforced intercourse. Well, at least not initially. We’re way back in history, probably the days of Romulus, when Rome was mainly male and there was a shortage of wives. The incident she was living out was when Roman soldiers crossed into Sabine, the area we now call Lazio, Umbria and Abruzzo, and carried off the women. They brought them back to the Seven Hills to raise families.’

  The thought makes Tom shudder. ‘Horrendous.’

  ‘Well, actually, after the kidnapping, the women were treated very well. Most became dutiful wives and mothers. They probably wouldn’t have returned even if they’d been able to.’

  Valentina thinks she understands. ‘An early form of Stockholm Syndrome?’

  ‘Something like that.’ Louisa points through the wind-screen. ‘That’s Tiber Island, the Insula Inter-Duos-Pontes.’ She half turns to Tom. ‘It means the island between two bridges. We’re on the wrong side of it. Claudia would have been on the eastern side, so you need to take the road to your left.’

 

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