“Of course. The desperate have no agenda except to eat. Look, can I be frank with you? I can’t stand another day of these Vatican-financed apes clogging up the place and oiling their blessed guns.”
“Where are you?”
“Not within range of your fire stick, you can be sure of that. Do you think it’s possible that Judas Iscariot did have God on his side? If so there might be hope for you.”
Michael looked round the palatial room — the thick, four-meter-high curtains in the windows, the wainscoting, the rough gray floors without a speck of dust.
He touched the long, warmed barrel of the gun against his leg.
The voice kept talking: “See the mirror at the other end of the room?”
“Yes.”
“Walk towards it unless you’d rather be gunned down like a wild hog by O’Hara’s people.”
“I thought all these men were your security people?”
“Oh dear Lord, no. They’re Vatican personnel sent by O’Hara to finish you off, or both of us. It’s a classic technique. Think of Lee Harvey Oswald — first kill the target. Use a simple guy; dupe him or threaten him in some way, then once the job’s done get some deranged footman to bump him off.”
“Why should I believe you?”
“You believe the one who tells the truth,” came the answer. “‘Multi multa sciunt et seipsos nesciunt.’ It’s Pseudo-Bernard: ‘Many know many things yet know not themselves.’ Very true, particularly of you, Michael.”
“Now what?”
“Turn round, go back towards the doors. Stop by the first window. Good. Now look to your right. See that little painting of Joseph and Mary? Go there. Move yourself! Press the frame on the top left side.”
Michael hurried over, pressed the frame and heard a click as the outline of a door revealed itself.
“Go through and close it behind you. They’re coming through now.”
At the other end of the room, a key was turned in the lock and the double doors started swinging open.
Michael slipped inside and pushed the secret door into place behind him as quietly as he could.
25
“I should introduce myself. My name is Wizard. That’s the short version. My full name is Wizard of Oz.”
Abbot Giacomo leaned back in an ergonomic office chair and seemed to be enjoying his own joke. He was a portly man dressed in a beige, rough-spun alb girded with a cincture, the whole thing spectacularly stained with specks of oil and tomato sauce. His delivery was rapid and witty, like a forties movie star.
“Let’s see, first things first and last things last. You’ve brought a weapon, I assume? Otherwise what the hell are you doing here?”
Awkwardly Michael got out his gun and put it on the table. He felt ashamed of himself.
Giacomo’s eyelids fluttered disapprovingly. “You poor little dumb shit running round the world doing the bidding of disgusting flesh-heads.” Using a small paper knife, Giacomo slit his skin enough to show a seething mass of maggot underneath, then said: “I am maggot. O’Hara isn’t maggot. Do you understand?”
“Why would he do that? Come to St. Helena and go to such extreme lengths to fool people?”
“He didn’t fool anyone. They all knew. There’s a quota. The only one who was fooled was you.”
“What quota?”
Giacomo sighed. “Where do you think St. Helena gets its money from? How much money do you imagine it takes running a place like that?”
“They sell drugs.”
“Most of their money comes from the Vatican and in return they provide a certain number of specialists to Rome every year. Mainly assassins to deal with the odd difficult banker or heads of small African states or uncooperative tribal chiefs who resist progress. O’Hara recruits for Rome. It’s generally acknowledged that maggot people make better killers. O’Hara must have liked you an awful lot, only he’s not supposed to kill off people like me. He knows that. I’ll give him a good deal of trouble for this.”
“He’ll deny it.”
“Of course he will. But he’s not the only clever bastard in the world.”
“And I hope I’m not the only stupid one.”
“Don’t be so hard on yourself. You weren’t to know.”
“He said you’d be tricky. He said you’d try to fool me.”
“Now you really are being a fool. He hates us maggots; it’s a well-known fact.” He paused. “Luckily for you, we were tipped off.”
“Who by?”
“Günter. He made contact a few days ago from Rome to tell us he’d packed you off to Janine, one of the worst ‘procurement cunts’ in Christendom. That’s in his own words, I stress. She pretends to be a drug dealer.” Giacomo looked up. “So let me ask you something; what did you think of O’Hara?”
It was the first time in a long time that Michael had been asked anything at all as if his opinion mattered.
“I thought he was an unbearable shit. I suppose I just assumed anyone who’s climbed to the top of the greasy pole has to be a bit of a bruiser.”
“Or a very devout person, has that occurred to you?” Giacomo shrugged. “Let me ask you something else. Try testing your intuition. Do you like me?”
Michael looked at him: his quick, unflinching black eyes and the enlarged pores round his nose, each with an unctuous droplet emerging from it; an oil and garlic man, quick and fierce, probably also addicted to wine and chili peppers.
“I don’t know you…”
“Ah, you know me well enough.”
“In that case yes. I suppose I sort of like you; I don’t know why.”
“Good, that’s step one. Now you have to let go of the things you learned in Sardinia. Rome makes good use of this disgusting Mama woman. I ought to do something about her. I think I will, you know.”
“A bit of rat poison in her tanks would sort her out,” said Michael, wincing with a sudden stab of pain as the words came out of his mouth.
With a frown Giacomo nodded at the overhead monitors, on which they could see groups of armed men purposefully searching the room.
“I wonder what’s going through their minds?” said Michael.
“Oh not much, just another day at work. They’re looking forward to clocking off for the day, going home, having sausages and chips. They weren’t sent primarily to kill you, of course. I was the real target, although it wouldn’t have made much difference to you — you weren’t supposed to walk out of here, either. I think we’d better get out in case they find the door.” Giacomo yawned. “Have you eaten? I’m starving.”
“I haven’t. We have to pick up a hooker I found in Barcelona. I like her very much. She’s waiting for me here in Ripoll.”
“That’s fine,” said Giacomo. “We can pick her up on the way…”
Giacomo
26
Next morning, Michael woke to the sound of eggs frying.
He could see Paolo, the monk he met yesterday, at the stove deftly manipulating strips of lard and cracking eggs into a black cast-iron pan of impressive size, where already mushrooms and tomatoes were sizzling.
Paolo was wearing baggy underpants and flip-flops. Giacomo was smoking distractedly, waiting for his breakfast and looking out of the window.
Michael yawned as he walked into the kitchen: “Where’s Honey?”
“We locked her up. She tried to leave,” said Paolo. “I gave her the rest of the heroin. She’s more sedate now.”