walking the couple of miles into town yet. Besides, I was naturally curious to see where further conversation with him might lead. Resolving not to let him irritate me, I got in. The interior smelled faintly of cloves, as had Antuono himself the other day, now that I thought about it.
Although he might smell the same, however, he didn't look the same, or even seem like the same person. It was amazing what a well-tailored uniform could do. Now his 135 pounds or so looked spare, not scrawny. His arid, whispery voice no longer seemed beaten-down and querulous, but self- assured and reserved, even commanding.
'Alberto? ' he murmured to the carabiniere who had been standing at attention and now managed to stiffen even more alertly in preparation for the colonel's next words.
There were no words. Antuono merely nodded his head faintly toward the open door. The carabiniere closed it. Antuono tipped his head minutely toward the driver's seat. The carabiniere quickly trotted around the back of the car, got behind the wheel, and started the engine.
This was fascinating. Obviously, Antuono had considerable cachet, at least with the rank and file. During the recovery of the two pictures, he had remained outside, like a soldier-king, while his minions carried out the operation. And just now the carabiniere had waited, practically quivering, for his command, then jerked like a mechanical soldier at his delicate gestures. What was more, Antuono was very clearly used to this treatment. Yet the higher-ups had assigned him to a disgraceful mole-burrow of an office—an old storage area, as he himself had said—and left him to spend his time riffling through the papers in his precious cardboard boxes like Silas Marner with his hoard. And Antuono seemed quite used to
So who was he, really? How much weight did he carry? Or was I making too much of what were simply the concomitants of rank? When colonels spoke, corporals jumped. And when generals decided, colonels concurred. The carabinieri were, after all, not a civilian police force but a military body. Most of the corps still lived in barracks.
Antuono had wedged himself up against the far side of the car and sat holding on to the strap above the door, his doleful, droop-nosed profile backlit by the window, his tunic buttoned across his narrow chest. He looked out the window and sighed, his mind somewhere else. For someone who had just executed the recovery of two stolen, reasonably valuable paintings, his spirits hadn't been perceptibly raised.
'Congratulations, Colonel,' I said as the car slipped out into the traffic. I was determined to get us on a better footing.
'On?' he said absently, still looking out the window.
'Retrieving the Carra and the Morandi.'
He gave a deprecatory shrug. '
I understood his feelings. It was hardly the same thing as finding, say, a couple of missing Raphaels. Another bit of data about Antuono registered. He knew something about art, which isn't necessarily true of art cops: enough to know the term
'In any case,' he said, 'locating them was little more than luck.'
'But your men walked in knowing what they were looking for. How did they know where to find them?'
'In the usual way,' he said, covering a yawn as he watched the traffic. 'An informant. A dealer from Ferrara, new in the area. '
'Filippo Croce?'
He kept looking out the window, but I saw his eyelids whirr briefly. 'You know Filippo Croce?'
'I just met him yesterday. At Clara Gozzi's house. '
'I see. Yesterday.'
One more mark in Antuono's mental black book. Christopher Norgren, perpetrator of unlikely coincidences. Still, I had to admit to myself that I did seem to be in the thick of things. If I were Antuono, maybe I'd have been wondering about me, too.
'And just why did you assume it was to this gentleman I referred?' he asked.
'Well, he's a dealer from Ferrara, and he mentioned being new, so I just, uh, took a stab.'
'Sheer coincidence.'
'That and the fact that I didn't trust the guy.'
He turned to regard me keenly. 'And why not?'
'For one thing, he was pushing Clara to buy some paintings against her better judgment.'
'And trustworthy dealers do not do this?'
'No, they don't. And for another—' But how could I tell the Eagle of Lombardy that my suspicions had been aroused by his pointy-toed shoes and polka-dot bow tie? 'It's hard to say, Colonel. There was just something that didn't seem right.'
'You think not? And yet his information was reliable, as you saw for yourself.'
'How did
'On that, he provided great detail. He was seated near two men talking in a bar on the Piazza Garibaldi in Parma. He heard them mention the name of Morandi. As an art dealer who had heard about the theft from Cosenza, he was naturally curious and listened more closely. They began whispering. He tipped his head closer still. And eventually he heard them say `Trasporti Salvatorelli' and 'Lot 70.' Thinking it might be important, he wrote it down. He also tried to see the speakers, but they were seated behind him and he was unable to do this. Afterward, he came immediately to us with the information. Do you see anything untrustworthy in that?'
I was flabbergasted. I hadn't expected any substantive answer at all to my question, let alone this torrent of particulars. Why all the information? Was he testing me to see how much I knew about this kind of thing? As it happened, this was a quiz I thought I could pass; I knew, or thought I knew, most of the usual ways art thieves conducted their business.
'He'll get a reward, won't he?' I asked.
'Certainly. Twenty million lire has been offered, and signor Croce has expressed interest.'
Twenty million lire. Roughly thirteen thousand dollars. Not quite the same league as the reward for missing Rubenseses. That was a relief anyway, an indication that some things were still right in the world.
'And you find something improper in this?' he prompted.
'Colonel, I'm sure it's occurred to you that his story is a little pat. I mean, he just happens to be in a bar where he just happens to overhear the name of an artist that not one person in ten thousand would recognize, coupled with a few words that pinpoint an exact location. . . . Doesn't it strike you as too much of a—'
'Coincidence?' Antuono said with the most meager of smiles. Not playful, exactly. Not even chaffing. But all the same a smile.
What do you know, I thought. Does a sense of humor lurk in there somewhere?
'And your conclusion?' he asked, turning again to the window. We were now on the trafficky Via Mazzina, swinging around one of the half-a-dozen grandiose gates on the perimeter of the Old City; all that was left of the thirteenth- century city walls.
'My conclusion is that there never were any talkative, careless thieves—they were careful enough to be unseen, you notice—in any bar, and that Croce either stole the paintings himself or he's in league with the people who did. He comes to you with this story, which was probably part of the plan from the beginning, and he and his friends collect the reward. Croce gets commended as a public-spirited citizen, winds up a lot richer, and nobody at all gets arrested or even accused. My conclusion is it's a scam, a hoax.'
This succinct description of a hoary and often-used scheme was received-in moody silence, with Antuono hanging on to the strap and staring out the window, nodding rhythmically as I spoke. When we stopped at a traffic light, he swung around to look at me again with an expression that told me I 'd passed the test; I wasn't quite the naive academician he'd supposed me to be on first acquaintance. I got the impression it didn't make him like me any more.
'Of course it's a hoax,' he said abruptly. 'It's more of a hoax than you realize. Would you like to know what I think our friend signor Croce is up to?'
I said I would.
'I think these two paintings, the Carra and the Morandi, are not in themselves significant; I think they function as an advertisement.'