suspect the involvement of the Sicilian Mafia. '
'The Mafia?' What was it that Tony had said about the Mafia being a thing of the past?
'The Sicilian Mafia. The
'But . . . why are you here, then? In Bologna?'
'You have a great many questions,
That, I said with commendable restraint, depended on who was setting priorities. It was high enough to me.
He stared at me without smiling; without anything to suggest that a human being might live somewhere beneath that dusty exterior at all. 'Dr. Norgren,' he said, 'I am a deputy commander of the
'Of course. The command for the protection of Italy's artistic patrimony. Its heritage.'
'Correct. Recovery of our stolen heritage. That is our first goal. We do not overly concern ourselves with the apprehension of criminals.'
'I would have thought the two might be related.' Sarcasm is not something I use often, particularly with public servants who are doing their jobs, and especially with policemen. But Antuono was giving me a pain. And I had my doubts about how well he was doing his job.
He looked at his watch; studied it, in fact, as if to determine just how much of his invaluable time could be squandered on me. Apparently, he decided there was a little more to spare. 'I want to explain to you something of the way we work.' He cleared a space on the table and leaned forward to rest his elbows on it, his hands steepled beneath his sharp chin. He pursed his small mouth pedantically.
'In many ways we are like narcotics agents. Most of our work is undercover. Our men use disguises—false mustaches, invented identities. We pretend to be buyers, and arrange false purchases. We make use of crooked dealers, petty criminals, and informers—they are much the same people—to help us, and when they do, we protect them. They may help us another day.'
'They may also steal some more paintings another day.'
'Let me ask you something. When a seller of narcotics hears the police pounding down the door to his apartment, what does he do with the kilo of cocaine in the closet?'
I shrugged. 'Flushes it down the toilet, I guess. Or throws it out the window.'
'Very good. He destroys the evidence. A criminal with stolen art does the same thing when the police are about to close in. He does not flush it down the toilet, of course; the circumstances are different. But he tries to destroy it. Now: If it is cocaine, the world is better off for its loss, no?' He leaned back and economically crossed one knee over the other in the cluttered space beneath the table. 'But what if it is a Tiziano, a Raffaelo? Should I risk the destruction of an irreplaceable work of art for the satisfaction of seeing a thief in jail for a year? For two years, if the courts are feeling particularly stern?'
He knew how to hit an art curator where it hurt; talk about the destruction of Old Masters. 'I guess you have a point,' I said.
The telephone buzzed. Antuono picked it up. '
Most of what he had explained to me I had already known. The
Antuono emitted a final '
I looked up at him, surprised. 'Don't you want a report on what I've been hearing?'
'To reply with perfect frankness, no.'
'But I thought—'
'May I speak directly? This matter of your running to me with tidbits of gossip—'
'Look, Colonel,' I said hotly. I was feeling distinctly ill- used. 'It wasn't my idea in the first place. If you —'
'Nor mine. It was a suggestion made by your FBI, and I have no doubt it was well-intentioned. I felt it was best to accept the offer of your services. But between us, signore, truly, it's not necessary. We are well able to gather our own information '
'The FBI?' I stood up too rapidly and winced, barely managing not to groan as my knees straightened out for the first time in fifteen minutes. 'How could they offer my services? How could they know I was coming?'
'I believe the original idea came to them from a Mr. . . . Let me see. . .'
'Let me guess,' I said. 'Whitehead.'
'Ah, yes, I think so. Whitehead. Exactly.'
It figured. Tony Whitehead's belief in the virtues of publicity was every bit as unequivocal as Mike Blusher's, even if more sophisticated and of purer intention. If his curator of Renaissance and Baroque art could have some part in the recovery of the Bolognese art thefts, so Tony's reasoning would run, then publicity for the museum would result. And that would of necessity be good for the museum.
I wasn't so sure. I also wasn't so sure about my obligation to stay in touch with Antuono. Tony's agreement to fund the purchase of Ugo's Boursse was contingent on my continued reporting. But the Eagle himself had just made it amply clear that he had better things to do than listen to my 'tidbits.' Could I therefore consider my obligation fulfilled? Could I go ahead and buy the Boursse with a clear conscience? A moral dilemma.
I knew what I was going to do, of course, but how was I going to rationalize it? We ethical people are very fastidious about our rationalizations. It was going to take some thought.
After leaving Antuono's hodgepodge of an office, I stopped at a coffee bar for a lunch of cheese and tomato
Twenty minutes later I was roused by a telephone call from the
When I looked at the transcript, I was astonished to find it lucid and complete, with the remarks I made while I was unconscious being, if anything, marginally more coherent than what I said after I woke up. I signed it, then leafed through a few thick loose leaf books of photographs, but was unable to find either of the thugs. The two policemen accepted this fatalistically, then shook my hand with expressions of gratitude. I was courteously taken back to the Hotel Europa, where I went back up to my room to try to sleep again. I napped for almost two hours, and woke up at 3:30, feeling better and worrying about Max. I caught a taxi at the stand in front of the hotel and headed for the hospital, this time without calling first.
Chapter 7