“Yes. She did that sort of thing.”
“Always?”
“Always.”
Blume looked back over his notes, and started asking the same questions again. When he asked her again about Arturo’s enemies, she said, “What? Weren’t you listening before? I’ve already told you all I remember.”
“Just in case you forgot someone.”
“I’m not going to repeat myself. If you weren’t listening, maybe your colleague was.” She nodded at D’Amico, who bowed his head slightly lower.
Blume stood up. D’Amico did the same and, a moment later, so did Romagnolo.
“Frankly, the political aspects are outside my competence,” said Blume.
“All I can say is that I shall be vigilant and keep you completely informed.”
Blume stuck out his hand, which she took very lightly and briefly. “I am sorry for your loss.”
“Thank you.”
She accompanied them back in silence through the spacious living room, empty of grieving relatives and friends.
16
SATURDAY, AUGUST 28, 6 P.M.
When they got downstairs, D’Amico opened the door and they walked out into a blare of cicadas. The shadows had lengthened and the light had faded, but it was still hot.
Blume looked at the cars parked on the road outside and asked D’Amico, “The Holy Ghost was not transported here by an official car, was he?”
“I hope not, because if he was, we’re not the most observant policemen in the world. He can’t have used a car from the pool, either, or you’d have recognized it.”
“You’d have recognized it, too,” said Blume, pulling out his cell phone. “I think they’ve replaced maybe two vehicles since you left.. Ferrucci?” he said into the phone. “Yes, it’s me. I need you to get me the address of Di Tivoli, Taddeo-yes that’s the one, the guy on TV
… Hold on, I’ve got D’Amico here, he can write it down for me. Via Alcamo, six. Yeah, I know the street. Thanks.”
D’Amico was looking at the address he had just written down. “Can’t say I know this street.”
“I only know it because it’s near where I live,” said Blume. “It’s a short street. A dead end, if I remember right.”
It occurred to Blume that in the three years D’Amico had been his junior partner, not once had he invited him back to the house. D’Amico was married, had two kids of indeterminate age.
They climbed into the car.
“So now we go to Di Tivoli?” asked D’Amico.
“He’s the one who made the documentary with Clemente about the dog fighting,” said Blume. “He seems like an obvious person to talk to. Unless you can think of something better.”
“Maybe we should report back to the vicequestore first,” said D’Amico.
“Sure. You do that. But first drop me off at Di Tivoli’s.”
“If I bring you there, I may as well stay.”
“So stay,” said Blume, without much enthusiasm.
D’Amico drove all the way down Via Cristoforo Colombo with his brow furrowed as if he was trying to remember something. As they passed Via Appia Antica, his countenance cleared and he said, “I know who Di Tivoli is.”
“I just said, he’s the guy made the documentary-”
“No. Before that. I remember Di Tivoli got kicked off the air around 2001 because… I don’t know, he was annoying or something.”
Blume said, “Yeah. It’s good the way there are no annoying people left on TV anymore. You sure he didn’t get kicked off air because Berlusconi and his minions came to power?”
“No, he slapped a guest or something. It’s probably on YouTube.”
“I think I might remember,” said Blume, who never watched television. “He was gay or something, wasn’t he?”
“Who? The guest? I can’t remember. Good reason for hitting him, though.”
“I meant Di Tivoli,” said Blume. “Maybe not gay, but a bit camp. Used to march around the studio trying to be outrageous.”
“No,” said D’Amico. “You’re thinking of that curly-haired queen on Canale 5. The one who’s an expert on everything. Di Tivoli is the one with the sexy girl co-host.”
“That hardly narrows it down.”
“Sexy girls with glasses,” amended D’Amico. “Leftists.”
“By leftist you mean they have brains?”
“Just glasses. Myopia, money, and attitude. But there was something else… This is it.” D’Amico parked in front of a No Parking sign attached to automatic gates.
“He’s got a garage,” said Blume. “Jesus, I’d give my right arm to have one of those.”
The main door to the building was open, and they went straight in, nodding curtly to a porter who almost challenged them. The man who answered the apartment door had ginger hair fading to gray, but a lot of it.
An unkempt tuft fell over his forehead, and he kept pushing at it with the palm of his hand, as if checking it was still there. He was wearing a blue corduroy suit, such as only a slim person should ever wear, and it looked good on him. The frames of his glasses were white. He wore suede desert boots. He was not the host Blume had been thinking of, but he was camp enough, thought Blume. It was probably a job requirement.
He did not invite them in, merely walked away leaving the door open.
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.