a backward glance, leaving me to keep up the best I could in the burgeoning crowd, passing the magnificent Basilica di San Marco before turning into the Piazzetta dei Leoncini. There I lost him in the throng, then caught sight of him again as he was leaving the square, striding east along Calle de Canonica toward the canal.
He stopped abruptly before an open doorway and stood absolutely still, a striking image after the fury of motion, now as motionless as a statue in the velvet dusk. I heard him murmur, “I wonder if… How long has it been?” He looked at his watch, snapped it shut, and motioned for me to follow him inside.
We entered a dimly lit low-ceilinged room crowded with wooden tables, mostly unoccupied, at the rear of which was a small stage. The platform was bare except for an ancient upright piano pushed against the wall. The doctor sat down at a table close to the stage, beneath a dance hall poster that somehow managed to cling to the crumbling plaster of the wall. A basset-hound-faced middle-aged man wearing a stained apron asked us what we wanted to drink. Warthrop ordered another
The doctor settled into his chair and leaned his head against the wall. He closed his eyes.
“Dr. Warthrop?”
“Yes, Will Henry.”
“Shouldn’t we be getting back to the station now?”
“I am waiting.”
“Waiting?”
“For an old friend. Actually, three old friends.”
He opened one eye, closed it again. “And the first has just arrived.”
I turned in my chair and saw a hulking, slump-shouldered man filling the doorway. He wore a rumpled overcoat that was much too heavy for the clement weather, and a battered felt hat. It was not by his hair—the hat hid most of that—but by his eyes that I recognized him. I gasped and blinked, and he was gone.
“Rurick!” I whispered. “He followed us here?”
“He has been following us since we left the station house. He and his hairless cohort, the diminutive
“What should we do?”
His eyes remained closed, his expression serene. He hadn’t a care in the world. “Nothing.”
What was the matter with him?
“That’s two old friends accounted for,” the doctor said. “Rurick is in front, so Plesec must be watching the back.” He opened his eyes and sat up straight. Bits of plaster from the crumbling wall rained to the floor behind his chair.
“And here comes the third!” He leaned forward, resting his forearms on his knees. His eyes gleamed in the shivery flicker of the gas jets.
A man in a wrinkled white shirt and black vest emerged from the doorway beside the stage, dipped slightly at the waist toward the meager audience, and sat down at the piano. He raised his hands high over the keys, held them suded there for a dramatic moment, and then brought them smashing down, launching into a rollicking rendition of “A Wand’ring Minstrel I” from
Abruptly, with no bridge whatsoever, he switched to Violetta’s aria from
He pounded on the table at the conclusion of the song, shouting “Bravo!
“Pellinore! Dear, dear, Pellinore!” She kissed him lightly on both cheeks.
“Don’t you like it? I think it makes me look distinguished. Veronica, this is Will Henry, James’s son, and my latest
“It is always a pleasure to be in Venice,” the monstrumologist answered. He lifted his glass to salute her but did not take a sip.
She turned those laughing eyes back to me and said, “The looks of a