Blume did not like the lifeless beige and grays, birch, pine, and cork in Di Tivoli’s apartment. But it was no doubt a classy place in a glossy-magazine sort of way. Di Tivoli picked up a remote control, pressed a button, then shook his head and put it down. He picked up another, did the same, and Blume heard the soft whistle of an air conditioner start. A few seconds later, he felt cool air waft by his face. He could do with one of those almost as much as a garage.
“This heat is killing me,” Di Tivoli said. He spoke with the relaxed slightly sing-song honest-to-goodness accent of Bologna. A smug, self-regarding town if ever there was one.
Blume looked around. Di Tivoli had brought the trappings of his trade into his home. A bank of high-tech and hi-fi equipment occupied two built-in shelves. A boom microphone stood on a stand. Behind it was an expensive but outmoded reel-to-reel recorder from the 1970s. A higher shelf held a wooden bust of a very ugly old man.
Blume sat on a sofa, put his bag down, unclipped the flap, unzipped the top, and pulled out a pocketbook. Di Tivoli perched on a matching armchair opposite.
“Nice place you’ve got here,” said Blume.
Di Tivoli scowled.
“You know, we’re practically neighbors. I live on Via La Spezia. Know it? On the corner of Via Orvieto, the one with the fish market?”
Di Tivoli continued to scowl.
D’Amico made himself comfortable on a sofa with square cushions speckled like a sparrow’s eggs. He stretched his legs out and examined the fit of his socks over his tibia. It would be up to Blume to do the talking.
“Tell me, how well did you know Arturo Clemente?”
“Since university days. Off and on over twenty-five years,” said Di Tivoli.
“Did you also know Sveva Romagnolo back then?”
“Yes. And Questore Gallone,” said Di Tivoli.
“Vicequestore Aggiunto,” corrected Blume.
“The minor gradations of rank in the police are not of great interest to me. All I know is that he’s your superior.”
“He most certainly is,” said Blume. “So you’ve always known Clemente?”
“No, we fell out of touch until this dog-fighting campaign.”
“Did Clemente come to you with the idea for a documentary?”
“Actually, it was Sveva’s idea. To help his campaign and my career,” said Di Tivoli. “Part of being a journalist in Italy is you go in and out of favor. I had been out for a while since, well, it was a famous moment on TV when I slapped that hick from the Northern League. I’m sure you’ve both seen it.”
“No,” said Blume. “I don’t watch TV.”
“It’s on YouTube now. Millions of hits,” said Di Tivoli.
“Told you,” said D’Amico, and nodded, pleased with himself.
Blume shook his head. “Don’t visit YouTube either.”
“Well, perhaps you should learn to,” said Di Tivoli. “Anyhow, this documentary was a comeback. I’d secured a commitment from the director of RAI 2, Minoli, who’s a friend of Sveva. The idea was to make a documentary with a thesis everyone agreed with, regardless of political persuasion.”
“Everyone loves a dog,” said Blume. “Except me, perhaps.”
“I can’t stand the filthy creatures, either, but, yes, that was the idea. Hard-hitting, tough scenes, good investigative journalism, scandalous discoveries, but no political party feels alienated. Do you follow politics?”
“No,” said Blume.
“You don’t seem to have many interests, Inspector.”
“Commissioner,” said Blume.
“You realize one phone call and you’re out of here,” said Di Tivoli. “I could start with Gallone, and work my way up the hierarchy to Manganelli if I wanted.”
“We police have all sorts of little tricks for bringing people like you down to earth,” said Blume. “Don’t we, Nando?”
D’Amico looked uncomfortable.
“Oh, I realize that,” said Di Tivoli. “Which is why I want you to look at that box over there.”
Blume looked at what he had taken to be an ordinary stereo. He now saw it was a small black computer box with the letters XPC printed on it, sitting next to a wide flatscreen TV.
“See the orange light? That means it’s recording. I have been recording everything you have said since you came in. You never know, you two might give me material for an exclusive.”
D’Amico looked even more uncomfortable, and half made to rise, as if to switch the machine off, but Blume caught his eye and shook his head. It was probably a bluff. Surely the guy didn’t have microphones planted around the room. Then he looked again and realized that the microphones were not hidden. A great big boom mike was standing there right in front of them. He had assumed it was a fashionable retro prop, like the 1970s reel-to-reel next to it. Then he remembered how Di Tivoli had picked up a remote control then put it down again before turning on the air conditioning with a second one.
“That’s fine, Di Tivoli,” said Blume, opening his pad and taking out a pen. “Nothing bad has been said by anyone here. I am assuming that what I say now is going on to a tape?”
“A hard disk, Inspector. Sorry-Commissioner. You’re not very knowledgeable about these things, are you?”
Blume looked across at the black box, which winked an orange light in his direction. “Let’s move on,” said Blume. He stood up and began walking around. He went over to the bookcase where the machine with the orange light was humming. On the shelf above was the shining old wooden bust of the bald middle-aged man that he had noticed as he came in.
“Who’s this, Buddha on a bad day?” Blume reached out his hand and lifted the head from the shelf. The lips were carved into a snarl, the nose was large and bent. A missing section from the top of the forehead added to the belligerent effect. It was heavier than he had expected, and he had to grab hold of it with his other hand.
“Leave that alone!” Di Tivoli showed surprising speed in getting up and across the room. “No one touches that.”
“OK, OK,” said Blume. Di Tivoli stroked the top of the bald wooden head before returning it reverentially to its shelf, then going back to his seat. Blume wondered if he talked to it.
“It’s very old,” said Di Tivoli.
“A museum piece?”
“Etruscan. From Veio. More than two thousand years old.”
“And why isn’t it in a museum?” asked Blume.
“Because it’s ours. Legally. The question was settled a long time ago.”
“Ours? Yours and whose?”
“Ours. My family’s. My great grandfather, who was from Veio, bought it in London in 1902 and brought it back to where it belongs.”
“This isn’t Veio,” said D’Amico from the sofa.
Blume leaned against the shelves, inches from the black box with the orange light.
“Don’t even think of touching the computer,” said Di Tivoli.
“I wouldn’t dream of it,” said Blume, then leaned down and pressed the off switch.
17
For a moment, it seemed that neither Di Tivoli nor D’Amico had quite realized what Blume had done.
Di Tivoli leapt up quickly and banged his leg against the corner of the Indian teak coffee table in the middle of the room, causing a slight tingling from the silverware in the dresser on the far side of the room.
The sudden flash of fear Blume saw in Di Tivoli’s face had already resolved itself into pious outrage once he realized Blume was not about to attack him physically. Then, he pulled out a thin black phone, and the look of outrage was slowly replaced by a smirk. Blume heard his name mentioned twice.
D’Amico meanwhile pulled out an even thinner phone and went to stand by the front door, murmuring something. Blume stood there in the middle of the room between them, watching one, then the other.
Moments later, Di Tivoli was back, a swagger in his step. He stood in the middle of the room, adjusted the gray curls on his head and smiled at Blume.
“Look at the computer, Inspector.”
Blume looked. The orange light was still winking away.