“Maybe they didn’t know where they were,” John suggested.
“Nah. Look, I wondered about that myself at first, but that’s not the way vendettas work. They don’t cover up their assassinations. They
“Nice people,” John said. “Salt of the earth.”
“Anyway,” Rocco said, stifling a yawn, “it’s all worth thinking about, but it’s not enough to go on. Regardless of how weird the situation was—Pietro shooting her
“Well, we tried,” Gideon said. “Look, Rocco, I really think the family has a right to know what I’ve come up with, even if it doesn’t add up to anything solid. It just doesn’t feel right to keep it from them. I mean, living there, seeing them every day—I feel like some kind of sneak. And who knows? Maybe when they hear about it they’ll come up with something more.”
“I wouldn’t count on that, but okay, sure. I wouldn’t have any right to stop you anyway. And if they do come up with anything useful, let me know, will you? I’m keeping an open mind here. I just need more.”
• • •
“KIND of a waste of time, wasn’t it?” Gideon said on their walk back toward the station.
“You’re telling me,” John grumbled. “And for that you got me up in the middle of the night.”
“John, I really don’t think six thirty qualifies as the middle of the night. I understand some people regularly get up at that time.”
“Yeah, but not on purpose. I should
“Gosh, pal, I’m really sorry. How can I ever make it up to you?”
John stopped and looked up and down the street. “Well, you could buy me a breakfast
“Tell you what,” Gideon said. “How about if I buy you two of them? That will make the grammatical niceties moot.”
TWELVE
“THIS is ridiculous,” Franco Cubbiddu said with an impatient gesture at the clock, the only infringement on the pristine perfection of the walnut-paneled walls other than the thermostat and the light switches. “Who the hell does he think he is? I’ll give him exactly two more minutes, and if he’s not here by then, this meeting is concluded.”
“Let’s not be too hasty,” Severo Quadrelli said. “I think it would behoove us to hear what he has to say.”
Franco tapped his watch. “Two minutes.”
The eldest Cubbiddu was not having one of his better days. Things had started going wrong at breakfast. When he’d come down for his latte, brioches, and fruit—a time usually given to quiet reflection—he’d found the refectory full of jabbering, cackling attendees of
On escaping he’d told Maria that from then on, until the conference was over, he would take his breakfast in his apartment. But as far as today was concerned, the damage had been done: his morning was ruined. And then an hour later had come a stupid dispute with Amerigo, his dim-witted cellar master, who was refusing to let his workers use the brand-new, phenomenally expensive, ozone-based sanitizing system because he’d heard somewhere that the ozone would get in the air and give them all cancer. Ordinarily, Franco would never have heard about it because dealing with this kind of problem was Luca’s job, but Luca was busy with his damned cooking school, and Franco had wasted half an hour of his own time setting Amerigo straight, or rather convincing him that if he didn’t stop arguing and start following orders, he’d be out of a job.
It was all too much to put up with. Never again would Villa Antica host
And then, to top it all off, into his office a couple of hours ago had walked Cesare, twitching and jittery and looking even more like hell than the last time Franco had seen him, when he had appeared, unwelcome and uninvited, at Pietro’s memorial service. He had something of importance to say to the brothers Cubbiddu, he said now, and they would be well advised to assemble at two o’clock in the small conference room to hear it. Oh, and it might be a good idea for them to have
That had been it. No explanation of the reason, no inquiry as to whether the time was convenient or whether the conference room would be free. Just be there.
So here they were, gathered around their glossy new conference table in their new, mesh-backed, seven- hundred-euro Aeron chairs, watching the clock’s minute hand slowly stutter its way toward 2:06.
“If he doesn’t show up pretty soon, I’m out of here too,” Luca said. “Afternoon break is over at two thirty. I have to be back with my class.”
At 2:10 Cesare finally shuffled in accompanied by a gray-haired, square-built woman well into her seventies carrying a worn, old-fashioned, brown briefcase with straps, and dressed in a blue velour tracksuit and bulky, clacking Birkenstock sabots. No socks. On Cesare’s face was a smug, self-satisfied look, a cat-that-was-about-to- eat-the-canary expresssion that raised alarm bells in Franco and Luca. What was their little turd of a stepbrother up to now?
Even Nico, who was the closest thing Cesare had to an ally, didn’t like the looks of it. He didn’t like Cesare’s looks either. The previous weekend he had driven to Florence for the sole purpose of having a heart-to-heart with Cesare, toward the end of getting him to sign up for (yet another) drug rehab program before he was too far gone altogether. Nico had offered to cover all expenses. Cesare had said he’d think about it, but from appearances, it didn’t look as if he intended to take the advice. He was stoned. Nico’s heart sank to look at him.
“Hoo-hoo, what do you know, the whole family’s here,” Cesare said. “I’m flattered.”
“You asked us to be here,” Franco told him coldly.
“No, I asked
“No, you asked—”
Luca began gathering himself to rise. “Good, if I’m not needed—”
The woman with Cesare interrupted. “You gentlemen are the family? The brothers? I think it might be better if you remained.” She had a surprisingly resonant voice, straight from the chest and almost as deep as Quadrelli’s basso.
Quadrelli now donned his mantle as Protector of the Clan. “I don’t believe we know this lady?” he said to Cesare with rising inflection.
“This is my lawyer, signora Ornella Batelli.”
The three brothers exchanged glances. A lawyer? Now what?
“Please sit down,” Franco said, gesturing at the two empty chairs. He was coldly polite. “I’m Franco Cubbiddu, signora, and these are my brothers, Nico and Luca. That gentleman is
Cesare answered. “I’m suing you,” he said breathlessly. “That’s right, I’m suing the shit out of you. Ha. Ha- ha.”
Another shared, wary glance between the brothers. This was not going to go well.
“Now take it easy, bro,” Nico said with his easygoing smile. “Let’s not get carried away here.”