“You need to hold the button for five seconds before it shuts down.”
“You mean like this?” But before Blume could make a second attempt, his cell phone rang.
“Here we go,” said Di Tivoli.
Blume fished it out of his pocket. “Yes?”
It was Gallone. He had just received a call from the questura informing him that a certain Commissioner Blume, in the company of Commissioner D’Amico, was attempting to intimidate Taddeo Di Tivoli. He hoped for Blume’s sake this was not right.
“We’re not intimidating him, sir,” said Blume.
“You will leave that house now. Both of you. You will then report directly to my office, Blume. Understood?”
“Yes, sir.” Blume looked at Di Tivoli’s smug face, and felt the muscles of his arm tighten. He imagined smashing something heavy into Di Tivoli’s womanly lips, the bright flash of joy, and the gray ashes of his career afterward.
“Nando, we’re leaving,” said Blume.
D’Amico slipped his phone into his jacket, and said, “I think we’ll stay a little longer.”
“I don’t think you realize how high I can reach if I have to,” said Di Tivoli.
“I know you move in exalted circles,” said D’Amico. “It’s fun up there, I imagine.”
“Yes, it is,” said Di Tivoli.
“Lots of swimming pool parties in Sardinia, Ischia, Elba, Portofino, lots of girls, lines of coke. Oh, and boys.”
“I don’t know what you’re talking about,” said Di Tivoli.
Blume loved hearing that phrase. People who suddenly declared they no longer understood the words being spoken to them were people who had been cornered.
D’Amico had discovered a mirror near the door and groomed himself a little before returning to the living room. “It’s all part of the privileges you enjoy,” he said. “The thing with boys, though. That’s more awkward.”
Di Tivoli whitened and sat down. “No charges have been made against me.”
“I know,” said D’Amico soothingly. “It’s just one of those silly-season stories. So far, you have been interviewed merely as a person informed of the facts. Am I right? Public Prosecutor Bernard Woodruff is conducting the inquiry. Another awkward bastard with a foreign name, like Blume here. Always a bit harder to know exactly where they’re coming from, these half-foreign ones.”
“This is still being recorded,” said Di Tivoli.
“I’d erase it, if I were you,” said D’Amico. “Here, let me give you a sneak preview of something even you might not know about. I hear the villa owned by that Sicilian reporter, Nicotra, is going to be sequestered by the Finance Police acting under the direction of the DIA. Nicotra has the odor of Mafia about him. Now you and Nicotra, apparently…”
“All right, all right, that’s enough,” said Di Tivoli.
D’Amico looked over at Blume and said, “I knew I’d heard this idiot’s name recently for some reason.”
“So you know stuff,” said Di Tivoli. “But it’s not as if you can do anything about it.”
“You’re probably right that I can’t make it go away, nor would I want to; but I think I could make it worse. Look, all we need is a nice, short, friendly interview, then we’re out of here. How about a little bit of mutual understanding? No more filing complaints about my colleague, that sort of thing.”
Di Tivoli nodded.
Blume clapped his hands together. “Excellent. Now, where were we? Sex-boys? Che combinazione. That reminds me, do know who your friend Clemente was sleeping with?”
Di Tivoli tapped the hollow of his cheek with his thumb, still weighing up his options. Finally he said, “I know he had another woman. She came with him to my country villa in Amatrice. Her name was Manuela. She was very plain. Ugly, even. Aging, vulgar- looking, though surprisingly educated in speech. But I don’t know who she was. Why, was she somebody important?”
“Well, yes. She’s daughter of Rome’s second biggest criminal. It’ll be fun mixing this fact up with Woodruff’s investigation.”
“I didn’t know anything about that!”
“We believe you. Don’t we, Nando?” D’Amico nodded solemnly. “It’s the fickle public you need to worry about. The Italians love a good conspiracy theory. Now I want to talk to you about the dog meets you saw.”
Around a month ago, Di Tivoli could not say exactly when, Arturo Clemente and he had gone down to the very end of the Via della Magliana, beyond the warehouses selling building materials and bathroom fittings to where the road, after five kilometers of potholes and crumbling embankments, gives up pretending to be fit for ordinary cars. Out to the place where all the bushes had strips of plastic shopping bags clinging to them, but even further than that, past the gypsy encampments nestled under the bridges carrying the ring road that marked the end of the city boundaries.
“Where out there?”
“To a field, about three kilometers beyond the ring road. Off the Via della Magliana, to the north. There’s a fence with two, no three, strands of barbed wire. Clemente stopped at the corner, pulled up the last post, walked into the field with it, making a gap, drove in, got out, closed it again. At the far end of the field were a few rotting sheds, a row of things that look like chicken coops, except turns out they’re for dogs, and off to the right, a bit uphill, a warehouse or distribution shed with tarmac and parking.”
“Wait, that doesn’t make sense,” said Blume. “You cross an open field to get to a distribution warehouse?”
“Yes, a warehouse with tarmac parking and no connecting roads. Totally invisible to the authorities. Great country we live in, isn’t it?”
“Would you be able to find this place again?” asked Blume.
“Yes, I should think so.”
“The cars in the car park, how many?”
“I’d say about thirty.”
“What sort of cars?”
“Almost all of them SUVs and Jeeps, but I remember seeing one or two really old white Fiat Unos.”
“The vehicles, they were clean or dirty?”
“They were dirty. Everything was dirty,” Di Tivoli shuddered at the memory. “It had been raining a few days before.”
“So what happened there?”
“Clemente parked the car, we went in.”
“You went in, just like that?”
“We were undercover, obviously. What I mean by that is we weren’t there as an activist and a reporter.”
“OK, so these guys have never seen you on TV, or YouTube. I can believe that, but the people there must have known Clemente if he had been busting their balls.”
“He was disguised.”
Blume glanced sharply at Di Tivoli, but the man was apparently being serious.
“Disguised as what?”
“Not as anything in particular. He had on this little blonde moustache; he’d dyed his hair, and was wearing a long leather coat, a Roma AC cap, and hide ankle boots. The outfit almost did his head in.”
“He supports Lazio?”
“Not the football cap-the hide boots and the leather coat. He wouldn’t even wear leather shoes in real life. Never ate an egg. He was deadly earnest.”
“Never ate an egg?”
“No. He had no limits. Or too many, depends how you look at it.”
“Going back to the meet, no one checked you two out?”
“It’s not as if anyone was really that bothered. People would look at you a bit, but no one was checking. People milling about and dogs snarling and… Jesus.” Di Tivoli shook his head.
“What?” Blume leaned forward.
“The smell. The smell of that place is something I’ll never forget.”
“What was the smell?”
“Mud, blood, alcohol, cigarette smoke, but most of all dogs, dog shit and fear.”
“Sounds heavy.”
“You’ve no idea.”
Blume said, “The two of you just walked into this den of horrors?”
“There was a thug of some sort at the door, but I don’t know if he was supposed to be a bouncer. I thought he might try to stop us, but he didn’t.”
“How many fights did you watch?”
“Two, but I wasn’t really watching them, I was looking at the locale, working out the lighting and figuring where to put cameras for when we filmed the raid.”