Echoes Through the Vatican: A Paranormal Mystery (The Echoes Quartet Book 2)

Home > Other > Echoes Through the Vatican: A Paranormal Mystery (The Echoes Quartet Book 2) > Page 12
Echoes Through the Vatican: A Paranormal Mystery (The Echoes Quartet Book 2) Page 12

by K. Francis Ryan


  With what, he reasoned, was nothing short of an act of defiance, the clock’s minute hand sat stubbornly a few minutes before eleven o’clock. He looked down at his desk blotter, drew a deep breath and let his shoulders relax. This was not the time for rash decisions. How he would kill Julian Blessing was something that required careful consideration.

  He looked up, and sat back in his chair with a start. A chair that had been empty seconds before now contained one Julian Blessing. Sokolov looked into Julian’s steel gray eyes and didn’t like what he saw.

  Julian sat with his legs crossed and a modest smile on his face. His forearms were draped casually over the arms of the mobster’s guest chair.

  “You are going to die,” Sokolov said with venom in his voice and an ugly sneer on his lips.

  “We are all going to die, Mr. Sokolov,” Julian said softly. “Now if you are done stating the embarrassingly obvious, can we move along to business? I am busy and so don’t have time to waste,” Julian said and the ease with which he said it shocked him far more than it did his host.

  “That’s it! You are dead fucker!” Sokolov exploded out of his chair, leaned over his desk and glowered at his guest.

  Julian looked thoughtful and wondered why he hadn’t soiled his trousers. He turned his gray eyes to Sokolov’s face, looking at the man, into him. What he saw made him sick. The words were whispered and came out one at a time. “Sit. Down. Please.” The mobster’s eyes were hard and cold and Julian held the man’s gaze relentlessly.

  “You have two men standing outside your office door. Send them away. You won’t need them and they can’t help you anyway,” Julian said.

  Sokolov smirked and moved his head slightly indicating his men should move along. “Both men,” Julian said with a slight smile, a smile he did not enjoy.

  With nearly painful slowness, the Russian said, “You are more trouble than you are worth, Blessing. I kill you now.” The man swiveled his chair to the right. Before he could reach for the top desk drawer, Julian said, “Are you thinking of taking notes?” Sokolov looked up, consternation etching his forehead, drawing his eyebrows together.

  The Russian looked at Julian. Everything was wrong with this man. “What are you talking about?” the big man said.

  “You’re reaching for a pistol in your right hand drawer. In that drawer, there are pads of paper and a porn magazine. The thing you’re looking for is in the upper left hand drawer. For now,” Julian said and smiled a smile he did enjoy this time.

  Sokolov tore the right hand drawer open. Pads of paper and a copy of Babes Over 40 magazine. The man, demented with rage, looked up at Julian. Turning to the left upper drawer, the Russian found more pornography and his coffee cup.

  The mobster felt the words and looked up to see Julian looking at him, head canted to one side. “I lied, sorry. Couldn’t resist. Next drawer down,” Julian thought. The Russian’s shock was soon replaced with nostrils flaring and eyes narrowed into hard slits as he considered using his hands to murder Julian.

  Sokolov reached slowly down one drawer, never taking his eyes off of Julian. Without looking, he reached into the drawer and felt the familiar frame of the small Sig P290, 9mm pistol. He left it where it was, but left the drawer open in case a change of heart came upon him.

  It is a good policy to be wary of strangers who appear out of thin air, know things they shouldn’t, and drop words inside people’s heads. Culturally steeped in superstition, the Russian’s wariness quadrupled.

  Sokolov smiled a smile that never reached his cold, dead eyes. “I start to like you, Blessing. We do business, eh?”

  “Oh gosh! Can we?” Julian said and the sarcasm ran in rivulets across the Russian’s desk. “Let’s just move along, shall we? Do you have Doctor Dwyer? I only require a yes or no answer.” Julian raised his eyebrows and looked expectant.

  A mocking smile appeared on Sokolov’s face and Julian had to increase his concentration to stay focused. If he allowed it, his mind would turn to speculation-fueled sickening images of Ailís. He knew if left unchecked, he would obliterate the Russian without a single thought beyond rage if anything happened to her.

  Sokolov swiveled and removed a large envelope from his credenza. He emptied the contents on his desk.

  Julian recognized Ailís’ purse. He bought it for her on a trip to Dublin. There was no need to open the Irish passport or to go through the wallet. They were Ailís’ and he knew it, felt it. He knew something wasn’t right too. Knowing what, would be something he would work on later. Now it was all about the man sitting across from him.

  He watched Sokolov with infinite care. He followed the Russian’s eyes every time he looked away. Julian refused to let the man escape his stare until he knew everything about Sokolov’s signature.

  “I’m still, waiting. Yes or no?”

  “What do you think, Blessing?” Sokolov asked. “There are your woman’s things. You tell me.

  “Now, I think we make deal, eh? You could have value to me. You do a few things for me and I give you back your woman. Is simple, no?” Sokolov concluded with a shrug.

  Julian looked thoughtful and then smiled. “I’ll think about it. Well, this has been a pleasant chat, but it’s time for me to go.”

  The Russian looked astonished. He had seen this kind of swagger before but never from someone like this. His hand moved slowly across the desk to the left.

  Julian stood then turned his back on Sokolov. Without turning back he said, “Leave the weapon where it is. As I said, I will think about your offer. Right now, I don’t think much of it, but that may change.”

  “You do more than think about it,” Sokolov derided. “You do some things for me or I enjoy your woman until you do. Maybe I sell her to someone later. Is simple, no?”

  Julian turned and, looking at the floor, walked back to the desk. He looked up and found a spot on Sokolov’s forehead. The big Russian had seen a lot and done a lot and all of it was bad. He had looked at men who wanted to kill him and he had laughed.

  He now looked at Julian Blessing and the hairs on the back of his neck stood on end. He began to lick his lips and blink rapidly. His breathing increased and perspiration broke out on his scalp and ran down his back. He managed to press a button under his desk.

  Julian smiled slightly, left the spot on the man’s head and sought out his eyes. With a terrifying intensity, Julian thought and Sokolov suffered. “Feeling a bit warm are you? You should because I am boiling your brain right inside your head. And I am the only one who can make it stop. Keeping me alive and safe and happy had better become your second priority in life. I’ll get to your first priority in a minute. Is simple, no?

  “You have made me unhappy with your whole ‘fate worse than death’ routine. Let me turn up the heat, and I’ll show you what could be worse than death,” Julian said.

  Sokolov began to drool and sweat coursed down his face. Julian’s breathing was slow and his heartbeat was steady. The Jesuit Book had taught him to eliminate everything that got in the way of achieving absolute focus. He wondered how long he could keep it up. He walked around the desk and sat on the edge next to the man who had threatened Ailís. Julian knew he would keep that focus forever if he had to.

  The big man’s throat began to constrict his airflow and he started to choke. His eyes began to bulge as his body started to shut down non-essential systems.

  “Here.” Julian reached into the desk drawer and took out the pistol. He placed it in the Russian’s hand. “That is your idea of power. Your brain is on fire and you can’t even wrap your fingers around that thing. How much good is your power doing you now?

  “You think there is hope, don’t you? Your men are running this way right now. Each of them would kill on your orders and most have. I’ve closed the door, but didn’t even lock it. A closed door. That’s all that is keeping them out.

  “You know why all of them will stay on the other side of the door? Because they hope I kill you.” He leaned next to Sokolov
’s ear. “For them, it’s called career advancement.

  “Listen to me, you pig. It is possible you have the doctor. It is possible you only have her purse. I could tell you to release her if you have her at all, but you may have some failsafe in place that would cause her harm. Maybe you don’t.

  “It is all about probabilities, possibilities and outcomes. I could ask if you had her and you would answer. You would probably tell me the truth, but there is always that tiny possibility you would not and a smaller possibility I would not detect your lie. Her life is not something I will gamble with.

  “Because of that slight uncertainty, I’m not going to kill you. Right now. You had better hope I do not get the feeling something has happened to the doctor. The moment that thought comes to me, you will be dead a nanosecond later.

  “Here is a little something to remind you never to threaten me. It might give your troops out there a little something to think about too.” Blood began to run from Sokolov’s ears as the veins in his neck distended while his body tried to replace the blood it was losing.

  Julian took the Russian’s pistol and threw it into a drawer. The drawer closed without Julian touching it. He left the desk and walked slowly to the office door. “Probabilities, possibilities and outcomes, Sokolov.

  “If you have her, keep the doctor safe and comfortable. That is your first priority. Is simple, no?”

  Before reaching the office door, Julian closed his eyes and concentrated. Two blocks away, he stepped back into normal time and began looking for the inspector and her sergeant.

  ***

  Fr. Dominic stood respectfully at Cardinal Luciano’s office door. There was no reason to knock.

  “Come in, Dominic,” the cardinal thought and the priest, still unsettled by the fact, felt it. He entered and stood before the massive carved desk, a desk that had been in this room for over three hundred years. The cardinal looked up, his eyes cold, gray and remorseless.

  “Eminence, I trust you are having a productive day.” Fr. Dominic didn’t use the words ‘good day’. In the cardinal’s residence, no one had a good day. Ever.

  The cardinal brushed aside the question. “I trust you would not be here without having something for me.”

  “Indeed, Eminence. The American, Blessing, has been to see Sokolov. Our contact within the Russian’s organization could not, or would not, provide details beyond two.

  “He said Sokolov met with Blessing and at the conclusion of that meeting, blood was running from the Russian’s ears. The second detail was that Mr. Blessing disappeared.”

  “Disappeared? The blood from the Russian’s ears was a nice touch,” the cardinal said and smiled.

  “Yes, Eminence. Apparently, Mr. Blessing was in Sokolov’s office one moment and not there the next. No other information was forthcoming beyond the fact a doctor was called to the office.”

  The cardinal looked at his tooled leather desk blotter and suppressed a grin. “Interesting news. Anything else?” the cardinal said.

  “Yes, Eminence. Our test appears to have been successful. A new, far larger amount has been withdrawn from the IOR.” The priest used the initials of Istituto per le Opere di Religione – the Vatican Bank.

  “This was planned, so it is not news,” the cardinal said.

  “True, Eminence. The withdrawal comes as no news to you, however, the amount might.” The priest smiled, proud of his handiwork. He continued before he irritated his boss. “Two million, three-hundred thousand euros or,” Fr. Dominic consulted the file folder he carried. “that would be nearly three million dollars as of fifteen minutes ago.”

  The cardinal sat back in his chair, looked at his assistant and said, “Nicely done, Dominic. If there isn’t anything else…?” Cardinal Luciano left the sentence unfinished. This interview was over. Fr. Dominic bowed slightly and left the office.

  The priest walked to his office, deposited his folder in a safe and went for a walk. “Nearly three million dollars stolen undetected and he calls it nicely done,” Fr. Dominic smirked and shook his head.

  Chapter Eleven

  “I should be angry with you. I should be so angry with you that I ask Enrico to give you a good beating. I will dismiss my anger if you have something useful to report,” the inspector said. “By the simple fact that you are alive, we can assume you did not see Sokolov or you pulled some more of your wizard-y shit.”

  Julian considered his options. Nothing useful = beating. Something useful = no beating. Seeing very few options to consider, he moved along.

  “I believe Sokolov is a bad man and that he is laundering money and he may or may not have the doctor.” Julian stood as though he expected a reward.

  At the words, ‘bad man’ the inspector closed her eyes and began to rub the middle of her forehead. “Enrico,” she said softly. “Beat this man, but only until your arms get tired.”

  “Oh, yeah, I nearly forgot. I got this for you,” Julian said and tried to suppress a grin. The inspector looked up to meet Julian’s cool gray eyes, alive with mischief. He reached into the pocket of his sport coat and withdrew a sheaf of documents for her.

  With eyes like slits, the inspector took the papers. She didn’t expect much. She unfolded them, took a bored breath and began to examine the first document – a spreadsheet. She took a second breath and this one she held for a very long time as she scanned the column headings, headings written in Italian. She began to look at the numbers and made quick work of looking through the other papers, handing them off to her assistant as she went.

  The sergeant scanned the first paper, looked up with a hard expression and stared at Julian.

  The inspector looked kind when she smiled and said, “Signore Blessing, do you mind if I call you Julian? Julian, where did you get these documents?” she asked sweetly.

  “I got them from Sokolov’s desk. I figured while I was there I should probably bring something back for you two,” Julian said as sweetly.

  The sergeant said, “Can I beat him now?”

  “Sushhh, Enrico. Can’t you see? We are talking with a foreign national, a tourist and a guest of our country. You can beat him later. I will help.”

  The inspector smiled more sweetly still and said, “Julian, you went to see the Russian and he gave you these papers, yes? Is that what you would like us to believe? Or you found yourself in Sokolov’s office.”

  She continued. “You saw a stack of the most damning spreadsheets and memos imaginable and that Russian pig said, ‘I’ll bet your friends Bella and Enrico would find these interesting.’ Is that what happened?”

  Julian looked thoughtful. “Bella, Enrico,” Julian began. The inspector’s nostrils flared at the use of her Christian name. Her assistant put the papers under his arm and began bunching and unbunching his fists. Informality begged to be punished.

  “I know something about finance. I used to be in that business. While I was doing my wizard-y shit, as you say, I saw the papers in Sokolov’s drawer. I figured you could use them in your investigation, although how you got them would probably fall into the not-admissible-in-court category.” Julian trumped the inspector’s smile.

  ***

  “Eminence, the bank has sustained another loss. This time the amount is substantial,” a quintessentially average man in a black suit said.

  Cardinal Manning drew a breath before he looked up. “You are saying the first loss of three quarters of a million was not substantial? Or the one before that? Tell me, what constitutes a catastrophic loss?”

  “$2.9 million was the size of this loss, Eminence.”

  The cardinal inspected the man standing in front of his desk and did so for a full minute, a minute during which the man looked through his file folder.

  “Signore, our losses so far are well over four million dollars. This is starting to look like carelessness and…” Manning stopped. Something about this unremarkable man’s face had changed and not for the better.

  “There is more,” the cardinal said and his t
one was flat and unfriendly.

  “Eminence, I cannot say. The director general is coming to see you in a few moments. He will have all the information you request. The director sent me ahead to tell you what I know. That, Eminence, is all I know.” Perspiration had erupted from the man’s scalp and coursed down his cheeks and back.

  A knock on the door preceded the entrance of the Vatican Bank’s director general. The man jerked his head and the unremarkable man left the office.

  “Cardinal Manning,” the director said. “I have just come from a meeting of the bank’s auditors. I must tell you the news could not be worse.” Manning’s polar stare over his half glasses had the president swallowing hard.

  “Continue,” the cardinal said.

  “While trying to strengthen our electronic and physical security, at my instructions, the auditors began an examination of prior transactions. Their audit continues, but they feel they have found all past and present losses.”

  “Signore, you are doing yourself no favors by trying to free yourself from blame. The amount of the losses, if you please.”

  “Eminence, our losses to date amount to almost half a billion dollars.”

  The clock in the office pounded in the bank director’s ears. Each tick was another nail in his professional coffin.

  “Do you feel our security procedures have been increased sufficiently to assure there will be no further losses?” the cardinal asked in a whisper the president strained to hear.

  The man licked his lips, took in a breath that might as well be his last and said, “I can only tell you, everything that can be done to safeguard the IOR has been done.”

  Another whisper passed Cardinal Manning’s lips. “Get. Out.”

  The cardinal looked at the telephone on his desk. It was an instrument he would have to use very soon. The call he would make would wound his papal aspirations, but not kill them entirely.

  He picked it up, touched one number on the phone and waited. “This is Manning. It is necessary for me to see His Holiness. Yes, thirty minutes will suffice.” He hung up the telephone and considered a lifetime’s scrambling, maneuvering, plotting, betraying and planning. Very careful planning.

 

‹ Prev