Forty-Five
A noise woke her: the sound of a dog barking from some distant farm.
He stood at the window, with his back to her, staring out into the blackness of the night, silhouetted against the moon. She glanced at the clock on the stand. It was nearly two.
“What’s wrong?” she asked softly.
He didn’t even turn around.
“Nic? Look at me.”
He sighed and returned to sit on the bed. In the cold light that fell through the window his face wore the same hard expression she had seen when they first met. This was serious Nic, tough Nic, a man who preferred duty over passion. A man who feared anything that might disrupt an ordered, logical world.
“I’m sorry,” she said. “It was too soon. I should have stopped myself.”
He stared down at the sheets and said nothing.
She took his chin with her hand, made him look at her. “Don’t sit in judgment on me.”
He scowled. “I didn’t want this to happen. I promised myself I wouldn’t allow it.”
“And I made you? Is that it?”
“No. Of course not.” He meant what he said, although there was no comfort in his sincerity. “But that doesn’t make it right.”
“It felt right to me,” she replied icily.
That touched him. He reached out and held her hand. “It felt right to me too. But Sara…”
The words ran dry. His reticence annoyed her. “What?”
“I don’t know you. Not really. Just a side of you. There’s still something missing, something important in your life you don’t want me to see.”
She withdrew from his grasp. “Haven’t you seen enough?”
“No. Because what I know doesn’t add up and that just makes everything worse. There’s something else. Something you won’t disclose. Something you’re keeping from me, still, and I can’t bear the thought because without that piece of knowledge I feel I don’t really know you at all. It just… tortures me.”
“Listen to the cop inside you talking. Am I supposed to be more frank after you’ve screwed me?”
“No!” His voice almost broke. She recognized the truth in what he said and despised herself for doubting him. Nic was honest, too honest perhaps.
She came closer to him, put her hand to his face, stared into his eyes. “I’m sorry. That was just the fear in me talking. This is hard for me too, you know.”
“Is it? You’ve a capacity for keeping things inside. I never learned that.”
“I asked if you’d come off this case for me. I begged. You still can.”
“It’s impossible. This is my job. It’s what I do.”
“Then maybe this is what I do too. Maybe this is who I am. Just someone who sleeps around and then goes on somewhere else, not remembering, not caring. What’s wrong with that? Is it a sin just because you don’t think that way?”
He shook his head. “No. It’s a sin because you don’t. This person you’re trying to paint for me is someone you created and I need to know why.”
“Trust me. You don’t need that.”
He put his arms around her shoulders. He kissed her lightly on the mouth, then stroked her hair. “I woke up with the taste of you. I can smell you in my head. Don’t take this lightly. It doesn’t happen to me.”
The first sign of dampness appeared at the corner of her eye. He wiped it away with a finger and placed the tip in his own mouth, tasting the salt of her, as if it were some precious fluid.
She closed her eyes. The tears ran freely down her cheeks.
“Tell me,” he murmured.
She wiped her face with her arm, then gathered up the sheet around her, ready to leave the room.
“Tell you, Nic? I’ll tell you. I promise. When Michael Denney is out of the Vatican and gone from Italy. There. Is that what you want to hear?”
It was the last response he was expecting. No words formed in his head, only thoughts and images of Sara with the old, gray man trapped behind those distant walls in the ancient city.
“No,” he said finally, with a bitterness which surprised him.
She got up from the bed, clutching the sheet to her body. “Then I’m sorry but it’s true. And you’ll hear nothing more from me, not a word, until that’s happened.”
He gripped her arm, refusing to let her go. She forced his fingers from her wrist. His head was working overtime, a whirl of ideas, connections.
“Is that all I am?” he spat, shocked at his own unfamiliar fury.
“Just another random fuck in the night like the rest?”
There was the coldness in those green eyes again. Nic Costa knew he’d broken the spell with his own stupidity.
“You sound like you’re back on duty,” she whispered.
He wanted to strike her. “Maybe I am. Maybe I should have stayed there all along.” The cop in him was waking. He took her by the arms and forced her into the bedside chair. “Let’s talk, then. Like we’re supposed to. Did you sleep with Rinaldi to get that expert opinion to go Denney’s way? Did Denney ask you to do that?”
Her eyes were fixed on the floor.
“Okay. Don’t answer. Either way, it doesn’t matter. It explains something. And the American, Gallo. He never knew Denney at all. We found nothing to link them. What happened there?”
His mind raced in the silence. “You used him. Denney needed something. A messenger perhaps. Someone to take a package someplace, pay someone off maybe. You slept with Gallo to get him to do favors. Denney didn’t even specify him by name. He just asked you to find the right person. Was that what happened with the Englishman too? He was something big with the EU. Did that make him useful to Denney as well?”
“Hugh Fairchild was my lover,” she whispered. “He came to me for what I am. Don’t judge me with your guesswork.”
“Fairchild was a married man looking for a warm bed in a strange town. I’m not guessing. I’m just working my way toward something that makes sense. I believe—”
“Believe what the hell you like.”
She got up, pushed brusquely past him. He watched her slim figure disappear through the doorway, into the corridor, toward the room at the end of the house, torn by his own warring emotions. He wanted to know; he didn’t. She was right. This was all guesswork. It left so many questions unanswered.
Nic Costa lay back on the crumpled bedclothes, still damp from their bodies, and closed his eyes, wondering if he could sleep. His head filled with such possibilities. His mind ran with images he never wished to imagine. Beyond the window, in the hot darkness, owls called through the night. He could hear, far off, the chatter of the men on the gate, their radios crackling in the darkness, alive with some news from beyond this small, cherished haven. He felt a fool.
He’d let Marco’s magic, and Sara’s sudden gift of a startling, physical ecstasy, steal away his concentration. Gino Fosse would surely not be sleeping. There was a cycle in motion beyond this fleeting sanctuary his father had tried to create. It would not be broken yet.
He thought of Michael Denney again, pushing aside the insidious vile images that wanted to rise inside his imagination.
Then, after a fashion, he slept until the phone woke him with a start.
He looked at the clock. It was now nearly six. Almost three hours had disappeared in the jumble of some half-waking nightmare.
He listened to the voice on the phone, Falcone’s familiar cold monotone, and was immediately dragged from his anguished reverie, back to reality.
The livid stain of a new dawn was breaking over Rome as Nic Costa drove along the deserted road, toward the looming, illuminated shape of the gate of San Sebastiano. There was scarcely a soul on the streets. The city seemed to have died in the dry August heat. It was hard to imagine life ever returning.
Then he pulled onto the main road that led through to the Lateran and on to the police station. As he did so the phone rang.
“Where are you?” Falcone barked.
“On my way to the Piazza Navona.”
“Don’t bother. He’s been busy again. Meet me in the Via Corso, the church on the little piazza, halfway along. You know it?”
“Yes.”
Falcone paused for a moment. Then he asked, “Did you get anything out of her? Anything we can use?”
“What?”
“The woman. That was the idea. Remember?”
“No,” Costa said, wondering how much Falcone could hear inside his voice. “I got nothing.”
He heard the familiar bitter sigh.
“Oh, well,” said the voice on the line. “And me with two men dead. The bastard’s going to pay for that. Nobody kills cops in this town. Not my men.”
“He was my friend,” Costa said. “He…” The words wouldn’t come out. Falcone seemed more offended by the personal affront than the loss of Rossi and Cattaneo. Costa had to fight to stop himself from pulling onto the side of the road and falling apart.
“I know,” Falcone acknowledged. “He was a good guy underneath it all.”
Even at that point Falcone had to make some judgment. Costa wondered why he worked with the man, why he did as he was told.
“One more thing,” Falcone ordered. “Don’t eat breakfast. Even Crazy Teresa couldn’t smile through this one.”
Nic thought about that, recalling the evening the three of them had spent together in the restaurant in Testaccio, in what seemed like another lifetime. There were other reasons, ones Falcone couldn’t imagine.
“Hey. A question,” Falcone added. “You come from farming stock. How many brothers and sisters you got?”
“Two.”
“You ever meet another peasant family smaller than that?”
Costa was baffled by the question. “I don’t recall.”
“Think about it. Farmers breed kids like they breed livestock. They need them to make the whole thing work.”
“So?”
“So where’s Gino Fosse’s siblings, huh?”
“Fosse didn’t have any. He was an only child. Maybe the mother had a medical problem or something?”
Falcone’s dry laugh echoed in his ear. “We got someone to talk to the local doctor about that. You’re right. According to him she was barren. So what happened there? A miracle?”
He was headed for the big junction in the Lateran square. Here the traffic was starting to get heavy: Trucks and buses hustled each other for position at the lights. He felt his concentration fading.
“No such thing,” he said, then turned off the phone. He didn’t want to hear Falcone anymore. He didn’t want to think about Gino Fosse’s family background. There was a picture in his head: of Sara beneath him, naked, a half-musical sigh emerging from her lips. The taste of her returned. Somehow, and this made him feel ashamed, it even obscured the image of Luca Rossi, the big man, now dead on some slab in the morgue.
He stopped a little way off from the church and watched the circus growing in the piazza. The media pack was out in force beyond the railings. Who could blame them? Valena was a celebrity, a fading one too, which, in some strange way, made the story even better. He was beginning to recognize the reporters now. These were some of the people who’d staked out the farm until the hunt had moved on. One, a woman with one of the seedier dailies, caught sight of him and walked over. She was about thirty, pretty, with fiercely hennaed hair and a determined face.
“How’s the back?” she asked him. “I heard he cut you up pretty badly.”
“You heard wrong,” he snapped.
“Look,” she said, unmoved by his aggression. “It’s just a job. You’re doing yours. I’m doing mine.”
“They don’t match.”
“Really? How many hacks have you seen up on corruption charges recently? Nothing personal, but we’re just looking for some socially acceptable reasons to justify felling a few trees. We tend to hunt as a pack and it’s not a pretty sight, I know. To be honest, it’s a little like attending a meeting of Gargoyles Anonymous most days. We’re not crooked. Neither are you from what I hear but you’re not exactly standard issue. “Greta Ricci,” she said, extending a hand. He shook it.
“I’m sorry,” she went on, “mornings are not my time. This is the big one, isn’t it? Arturo Valena. What a way to go. And those two poor cops last night.”
“There’s no point in asking me. You probably know more anyway.”
She lit a cigarette. “No problem. I wasn’t after anything. It’s all running away from me anyway. One of those TV bastards has got something up his sleeve. I can tell from the smug look on his face. One more fuckup and they’ll have me off crime altogether and writing makeup advice or some such shit. I have this anarchical idea that somehow reporting’s all about digging stuff up. Whereas what you’re really supposed to do is suck up to the big people, your people, the politicians, then take down notes when they feel like leaking something. If I’d wanted to be someone’s secretary I’d have worn a shorter skirt and learned how to type properly.”
Costa was interested. “What do you think he might have?”
“Search me. The way this story’s been running it could be anything. Craziest job I’ve ever worked on. But I’ll tell you this. There’s something up with the Vatican. I heard him calling the media people there, all quietly so he thought none of us could hear. He’s asking for something from them. God knows what. I mean, this Fosse guy was a priest, sure. All the same, you can’t blame them for what he’s done, can you?”
He shrugged. “I can’t imagine the connection.”
She sucked on the cigarette, stared at him, knowing he was lying, then handed over a card. “Listen. If you ever feel like leaking something…”
He put it in his pocket. “I thought you were against that.”
The woman looked him up and down. “From you I think it would be different.”
He nodded and said, “I have to go. Ciao.”
Then he crossed the piazza, pushed his way through the crowd, ignoring their questions, showed his ID to the uniformed men on the gate and walked into the church.
There was a stink there, an odd mixture of burnt wood and meat. The forensic team was clustered around a low metallic object upturned on the floor, next to a pile of ashes. A thin wisp of gray smoke still worked its way upward from the embers in the middle of the nave. The corpse was gone. He was glad of that, after Falcone’s warning. In the far corner of the church, penned in by two uniformed cops, stood a straggle of dogs undergoing slow and careful examination by another of the forensic team.
Teresa Lupo sat on a bench not far from the metal grill, her back to him, hunched, miserable. Nic Costa walked over and sat by her side. She’d been weeping.
He took her hand. “I’m sorry, Teresa. I should have been there.”
Her damp eyes turned on him, full of grief. “Why? So you could die too? What’s the point of that?”
“Maybe… I don’t know.”
Her mood changed from grief to fury in a second. “Maybe it would have been different? Is that what you mean? Don’t fool yourself. I talked to people who were there. This… monster just popped them, as if he were putting down an animal. He’d have killed you. He’d have killed anyone who stood in his way. Killing doesn’t mean anything to him. None of this does. It’s as if it’s all a game. Or as if he’s in Hell already and thinks this is the way he’s supposed to behave, like he’s handing out punishment to anyone who deserves it.”
“Luca didn’t deserve it. He was a good man. He was…” His own eyes began to sting. “I could have learned a lot from him.”
She pummeled at her nose with a handkerchief, then squeezed his hand.
“He’s in the morgue right now. I’ve got to go back for the autopsy after this.”
“You don’t have to do that.” This sudden practical turn shocked him. “Get someone else.”
“What?” She looked surprised. “Nic, this is my job. In any case, what’s on that slab isn’t him. Not anymore. I’ve dealt with enough bodies over the years to know that. When they’re gone they live just one place. Here…” She tapped her lank, dark hair with a strong finger. “He’ll be there a long time. I liked the stubborn old bastard.”
“He felt the same about you.”
“Yeah,” she said, with the hint of a smile. “I think he did too. He didn’t call me Crazy Teresa, did he? Not behind my back.”
“Never.”
“Liar.”
He grimaced. It was hard to shrink from the truth when she turned on the heat.
“It was just that you scared him sometimes. Not because of who you are but because of him. Because he didn’t like…” He fell silent.
“What?”
“He didn’t like having those feelings. They disturbed him.”
“Seems to go with the job,” she replied, staring at him. “Tell me. Is that why you all do this? To get the excuse you want?”
“I don’t follow.”
“Oh, I think you do. You tell yourself you’re like this because of what you do. But is it just faintly possible there’s another reason? That you picked this stupid profession because it allows you to be what you are and never have to take the blame?”
“Yeah,” he replied, thinking that she could have been talking of herself. Teresa was a quasicop. That much had become obvious over the past few days. What turned them on, turned her on too. “That’s right. You see through us all.”
Her hand touched his knee. The tears stood big in her eyes now. “I’m sorry, Nic. I’m so sorry. I’m just lashing out because it feels good, except it doesn’t. I didn’t mean it.”
He folded his arms around her, felt her overlarge body press against his. “Don’t apologize,” he said. “Anyway, you’re right.”
She wiped her streaming nose with her sleeve. “Maybe for Luca. You… I don’t know. You want to do something, don’t you?”
“Do I?” he asked mournfully, not wanting an answer. He nodded at the activity across the nave. “What happened here?”
“Someone had a barbecue. Let the dogs in to clean up afterward.”
“Jesus.”
“It was that TV creep, Valena. Falcone’s livid, which I guess ought to impress me, except that it’s weird. You’d almost think this was about him, not two dead cops and God knows who else. Seems to think he knows all the answers too. When this is over, Nic, I’m taking a break. Maybe I’ll go back to the university, teach for a while. I don’t mind the work. Truth is, it’s the best there is. It’s just the people. Falcone in particular. He’s… I don’t know. Luca loathed the man and I trust his judgment. Let’s leave it at that.”
He said nothing. It was unwise to respond.
“How’s she doing?” Teresa asked.
“Who?”
“Sara Farnese. She’s still staying with you, isn’t she?”
“She’s fine,” he said automatically.
“Fine?”
He wilted under the ferocity of her gaze.
“Nic. Whatever she is, and I sometimes wonder if you’re even mildly qualified to judge, she is not ”fine.“Look at what’s happening here. Look at what someone’s doing because of her.”
“You sound like Falcone. It doesn’t mean it’s her fault.”
She sighed, exasperated. “I didn’t mean it was, not for an instant. I meant that she knows this is to do with her. She feels responsible to some extent, however much she may try to hide it. She’s not ”fine.“And one other thing. She apparently slept with Valena. She never told us about that.”
“She said there were some others. She just didn’t know the names.”
The look on her face was just inches short of contempt. “She didn’t know the name of Arturo Valena? The moron was on the box every night. In the papers too. Where does she live, this woman of yours? In a convent? Except when she’s out screwing?”
She waited for an answer. Nothing came. Then she watched the team working on the iron grill, watched the men examining the dogs for traces of Arturo Valena’s flesh. It was all pointless. Everyone knew what had happened. A lunatic had stepped out of the dark and death followed in his shadow.
“I’ve got work to do,” she muttered, and joined the team with the dogs.
Nic Costa felt as if his head would burst. He was exhausted. He was confused. Then he heard a commotion at the door. Falcone walked in, flanked by some cops Costa recognized only by sight. Costa knew the investigation was moving away from him. Now that the big man was gone, now that he was reduced to little more than a bodyguard for Sara, Falcone had brought in a larger, more experienced team. Costa wondered what could be left for him to do.
Falcone waved him over. He was carrying a briefcase and Teresa Lupo had been right. His eyes refused to meet Nic Costa’s at first. He looked lost, distraught, furious.
“How’s she doing?” he asked. “Crazy Teresa. I heard they were an item.”
“She’s pretty cut up.”
“Join the club. Jesus. How dare this asshole touch my men? Does he think there’s some kind of equivalence between them and dirtbags like Valena? I’ll put the fucker down myself if I get the chance.”
“Wouldn’t help.”
Falcone glowered at him and there was a little of his old self in the expression, asking: Is that so? He took Costa to one side. “You watch TV?”
“Not a lot.”
“You should. It’s good sometimes. Going to get better too now that that fat jerk’s not preaching at us every night.”
Falcone barked at the team to start questioning forensics and anyone they could find living in the vicinity. Then they walked outside, into the fast-rising heat and Falcone opened the door of the police Mercedes, ushering him into the passenger side and sitting next to him.
“Where are we going?” Costa asked. “Do you know where Fosse is?”
“No idea. Be patient.”
Costa nodded at the church. “No time for patience.”
Falcone shrugged. “Show a little trust, kid, we’re almost there. Remember what I asked you? About Gino Fosse’s family?”
“Of course.”
“Yeah.” Falcone looked at his watch. It was just coming up to six.
Then he flipped open the cover of the little LCD screen in the dashboard, switched off the navigation system and tuned in to the TV channel. “Well, watch. After that you can go and see Rossi’s sister. Act sympathetic. We don’t want to get sued.”
“His sister?” Costa asked, furious with himself that he didn’t even know Rossi had a relative in the city.
“He didn’t tell you? They lived together in some apartment out near Fiumicino. Go talk her down from whatever state she’s in. Tell her I personally guarantee the bastard who did this is going down for good. After that… take the day off. Go spend some time with that father of yours. Go fishing. I don’t care. You’re not going to be around when Denney runs. I want people with some real time under their belt.”
Costa said nothing, hating himself for the way he took this. Then the news came on. Valena’s dreadful death led the newscast. Costa listened to the details they gave.
“Is that right?” he asked Falcone.
“Should be. I gave them the briefing myself.”
“You didn’t hold anything back?”
“What’s the point? We know who we want. I could put him in the dock today without a scrap more evidence.”
“But we don’t know why.”
Falcone put a finger to his lips, gave him that cold smile, then pointed to the screen. There was a stock picture of Michael Denney on it, and a recent photo of Gino Fosse too. Costa listened to the newscaster, amazed. Then he turned to Falcone.
“The DNA? That’s why you wanted something from his apartment? To prove this?”
“The DNA report doesn’t come back until this morning. That was the idea but I didn’t need it anyway. A little bird behind the Vatican walls started to sing for me. I’ve got documents. I’ve got pieces of paper that are proof, just as much as some stupid lab test.”
Falcone smiled. “Gino Fosse is Denney’s son. We still don’t know who the real mother was. But he was taken from her at birth, given to that couple in Sicily. Denney’s managed to hush it up for years.”
Costa found it impossible to think. Nothing made sense. “Why leak it to the media? What does it mean anyway?”
“I want that crooked bastard. I want him out of that place where he’s sitting pretty, looking out of his window, thinking nothing can touch him. If we let him run from there, anything can happen. If we cut a deal, I’ll stick to it. As long as the rules stay the same. But if the son comes in, that’s different. We get him too and take the father in for protection. Because that’s what this is all about. That’s what Gino Fosse is trying to say. That he keeps on killing until he gets the one he wants. His old man.”
It was wrong. It was impossible. “But why? Because he was fired from his job?”
“Are you serious? Sara Farnese was the old man’s woman. She slept with these people—Vaccarini, Valena, the others, because Denney told her to. It was her attempt to get him safe passage out of that papal prison of his. She slept with Rinaldi. He tried to fix the judicial commission. Vaccarini the same. She slept with Valena. Four months ago he came out on that show of his arguing for wider diplomatic immunity in the Vatican on the grounds—get this—that the Church needs protecting in a godless world. You think maybe Sara Farnese performed a few favors on the fat fucker afterward? The Englishman… I don’t know. Maybe he was trying to swing something for Denney with the EU.”
Nic remembered her insistent denial of just a single accusation. The Englishman was her lover, he realized. A liar and adulterer. But Fairchild was unlike the rest. That much, Nic Costa now believed, was true.
“Maybe he was just standing in the wrong place at the wrong time,” he said.
Falcone nodded, surprised that Costa agreed with him so readily. “It doesn’t matter anymore. If Denney runs, they’re both out in the open, father and son. Maybe I’ll let the Cardinal get on the plane, maybe not. Doesn’t matter. If he makes it to America, we extradite him anyway.” He shook his head, as if the game were already won.
“And Gino Fosse, he stays here. He’s ours the moment he steps out into the sun and if he so much as sneezes, I’ll shoot the bastard myself.”
Falcone waited for Costa’s reaction, then said, “You’re quiet. Aren’t you going to tell me I’ve got her all wrong? That she didn’t know Michael Denney? That can’t be true?”
“I don’t know anything anymore.”
There was a pained grimace on the inspector’s tanned face. “Say that again. You should watch the eight o’clock news. Take a break. Buy yourself a coffee and enjoy the fun. You have to stage these things with the media. You don’t give them it all in one chunk or it just goes to waste. Come eight they’ll have another little item to add to the public’s knowledge about His Eminence Cardinal Denney.”
The triumph in his voice was muted. Nic heard a despairing note of bitterness behind it. Leo Falcone felt the loss of Rossi and Cattaneo, more deeply than Costa would have expected. “What else?”
Falcone reached for his briefcase and took out an envelope. He opened it and thrust the contents onto Costa’s knee. It was a black and white photograph of dubious quality, taken from some distance judging by the flatness and the grain of the picture. A telephoto lens from slightly above the subject, perhaps, shot through a window. It showed Denney in a grand apartment, the one, Costa guessed, he used to occupy by right, before they threw him into the rat hole where he sweated now.
Denney stood with his back half turned to the camera. He wore a white shirt and dark trousers. His gray hair was neatly groomed. Sara Farnese faced the lens, smiling, a wonderful, open smile, full of love, an expression he’d seen for himself the previous night. Her arms were around Denney. She was coming forward as if to kiss his cheek or his neck. She held him, tightly, in a way which brooked no mistake. It was impossible to fake. This was the two of them engaged in a loving, close embrace. A prelude to what? Costa looked again and knew. Denney’s right hand was already reaching for the curtain at the apartment window. In a few seconds the two of them would be snatched from sight.
The photo had the same grainy quality as the ones in Fosse’s flat.
It wasn’t hard to guess where it came from.
“Where are the rest of the pictures?” he asked Falcone.
“That’s all I have. Look for yourself. He’s getting himself a little privacy. This is the Vatican, after all. What do you want? To see them in bed?”
Something still nagged at him. “Where did it come from?”
Falcone scowled again and looked at his watch. “You’ve figured that out, surely?”
He had. He just didn’t want to admit it. “Fosse took it. Just like he took the others. He kept the ones of Sara, of the other women, for his own purposes. He was really there to provide backup. To make sure that if they didn’t bend from the favor, they’d bend from a little blackmail.”
“Precisely,” Falcone said, pleased with Costa’s analysis. “Fosse drove for Denney. He was the chauffeur on these little nighttime escapades. For the Farnese woman. For the more conventional hookers Denney used too. He hung around peeking through the curtains with his lens while they got on with their work.” He paused for effect.
“They knew what was going on. She knew.”
Costa thought of her face in the pictures in the Clivus Scauri. The way she was looking toward the lens. Falcone was right but Teresa Lupo had seen this first: Sara was party to the trick. “She knew,” he agreed. “And Denney thought this was all his doing. He never realized Fosse was working on the side for someone else. Maybe giving them the same information. Spying on Denney as well.”
He looked Falcone in the eye. “Who was that? Who’s pulling the strings? Hanrahan?”
“Hanrahan’s just a servant. Like you and me. What does it matter? We’ve got what we need. At eight o’clock these go public. Match that up with the news about Fosse and I don’t see how the Vatican can continue to hold him. He’s an embarrassment. He’s a visible scab they’ll want rid of.”
Costa dropped the photograph back into the envelope.
The older man took it and said, “If you breathe a word of this to anyone before it appears I’ll have your hide. And I mean her in particular. This is all beyond you now. I don’t want any more accidents, understand? So you just talk to Rossi’s sister, then sit back, get some rest. You look like you need it.”
“Accidents?” he demanded, his voice rising, some red stub of anger beginning to fire in his head. “I lost a partner to this lunatic. I want to be there when he’s taken.”
Falcone looked offended. “Hey. Gimme a break here. I got two dead cops squatting on my conscience. I don’t want your skinny hide added to the pile.”
This was the limit, this was the moment. Costa reached into his jacket pocket and took out his police ID card.
“Fuck you,” he said, and threw the thing into Falcone’s lap, then walked out of the car, out into the heat of the morning.