Read A Dark Song of Blood Online

Authors: Ben Pastor

A Dark Song of Blood (39 page)

The armored cars went by, so dusty as to be soon indistinguishable from the hillside as they rumbled on. Dollmann lowered his eyes, rubbing his fingers to dust the cigarette ash off them. “What would Wolff think? I have pangs of remorse about him.”

“It was Wolff who to please the Pope released Vassalli from jail, with all that he's a socialist and a Resistance leader. It seems to me we make our own laws as we go along.”

Dollmann put the car in gear and started on the road again, and Bora squared an amused look at him. “I will not turn
you
in, no matter what.”

They did not come back to Rome until the morning of Sunday, the 23rd, when Gaeta had already fallen to the American troops and the Aquino airfield had been taken – and lost – by the British. Bora skipped lunch to telephone
Ras
Merlo at the detached office of the National Confederation of Fascist Professional and Artistic Unions.

Merlo recognized him at once. A confused background noise might have meant he'd gone to close the door, and he
followed his greeting with an anxious, “So, Major, have you caught Magda's killer?”

“I am trying to.” And though Bora knew he should have added some form of deferential address, he didn't. “There's a delicate question I must ask, regarding the matter at hand. No, unfortunately I have no time to meet you in person; the telephone must do.” As he spoke with the receiver cradled between neck and shoulder, Bora undid the brown paper package containing the objects Guidi had recovered from the garbage collector. Setting aside the can opener, he fingered the folded army blanket. “No doubt,” he said, “you perceive the importance of your sincerity in answering me.”

“Well, of course I do!” Merlo sounded uneasy at the other end of the line. “What is the question?”

“Did you give the following gift to Signorina Reiner...” Inside the blanket, Bora had found the pair of women's underwear. Unwilling to touch them, he stared at them as he gave a description. “Silk briefs, off-white, with a double row of gray lace...” but then he had to handle them to look if there was a label. “No label. They were made to measure, as it seems.”

A dead silence followed on Merlo's part. Bora kept his eyes on the delicate cloth, meticulously stitched, and as extraneous to the severe top of his desk as he could think of. He had, in truth, a great desire to pass his fingers over the silk, to feel the finely knotted grain of the lace, but it was neither the time nor the place. He was about to insist on an answer when an irate question from Merlo came hissed in return. “Where did you find them? I demand to know.”

Perhaps because he was aroused, Bora's irritation followed. “You're hardly in the position to demand anything, Secretary General. Did you buy this undergarment or not?”

Merlo snorted into the phone, impatiently. “And what if I did? It's not a crime to give a gift.”

“That's true. Did you?”

“Yes. I had a set of them made for her after she'd chosen the silk on Via Tritone, at ISIA. This –
that
pair – she was wearing on the day she died. We... well, suffice it to say I know she was wearing them, Major. And this outrage had better lead somewhere.”

Magda Reiner was not wearing them under her nightgown when she died. “It will,” Bora said, and put the phone down.

A few streets away, Francesca told Signora Carmela she did not feel well.

Guidi was returning from buying the Sunday edition of the newspaper when to his surprise it was Pompilia who rushed out of the Maiulis' apartment. “Have you got your car out there, Inspector?”

“Yes, why?”

“You've got to take Signorina Lippi to the doctor, quick. Her sac has broken already!”

“What sac?” Guidi reached for the keys in his pocket.

“Never mind, just get the car to the door!”

“Where's Signora Carmela?”

“In the parlor, praying to St Jude, the goose.
Will you get the car
?”

Francesca was doubled on the edge of the bed in her room. Pompilia hovered in front of her, and all Guidi could really take in was that the bed was soaked with liquid, and the floor, too, but there was no blood. Francesca fought back help with one hand, and rocked back and forth without straightening up, letting out throaty cries in between the words she moaned: “I'm dying... I'm dying... I'm dying...”

“You're not dying.” Pompilia raked back the hair from Francesca's face as she leaned forward. “You're just paying back the fun you had.” And to Guidi, who stood, seemingly incapable of getting started. “Grab a quilt and help me take her outside.”

It was difficult to sustain Francesca, who had to be all but dragged through the hallway and past the parlor where Signora
Carmela covered her ears with her hands. It was even more difficult to pass through the front door, so Guidi went first, sideways, then Francesca, knees bent, her great body rubbing against the stationary leaf, and finally Pompilia. The neighbors were strung along the ramp of stairs, and their presence only elicited a more clamorous display from Francesca.
She is doing it on purpose
, Guidi thought stolidly.
It's just like her. Or else she's really in pain.

“How long do I have to take her there?”

“You'll get there all right – just don't stop on the way.”

They placed Francesca on the front seat, and covered her with the quilt. She was sweaty and red-faced with strain, but the neighbor said, “As long as she moans like that you're fine. If she starts holding her breath in to push, you'd better step on it.”

The Square of St John Lateran was divided into light and shadow by the great masses of the basilica and its annexes. Hopeful pigeons speckled the sky over it in search of food. Two German soldiers sat on a green wooden bench, young and lost in their oversized, faded field-gray uniforms. An old priest, looking like a black mushroom under his wide-brimmed hat, climbed the steps to the church. Enormous apostles perched in two rows as frozen suicides on the edge of the awesome facade, at the sides of a titanic cross-bearing Christ.

Bora had left his car at the corner of Via Emanuele Filiberto and walked into the blue shadow projected by the Lateran Palace to wait. He was efficiently not thinking of things at hand. He enjoyed the morning, the city. He felt a brimming love for the city today, a juvenile irresponsible romantic love for it. There was the narrow entrance to Via Tasso, cut through the block of buildings fencing the northern side of the square. An army truck was parked at the beginning of Via Merulana. The few soldiers in it were invisible to him. He walked out of the shade after checking his watch. His arm
ached deeply in the sling, but differently from before – the ache was fresh and crude, bearable. And the holster of his gun was unlatched already.

Guidi welcomed the emptiness of the wartime Sunday streets as he raced through them, a white handkerchief secured between the glass and the upper edge of the window to mark an emergency. He'd studied the itinerary, just in case, and confidently drove toward Via Morgagni.

Francesca did not answer his attempts to distract her. Her face was contracted and she let those deep moans out, grabbing at her body. “Hurry up,” was all she said to him in a husky voice. “It's killing me, hurry up —” and then she'd cry out and start moaning again.

They'd come halfway down Viale Liegi before Guidi saw the German roadblock ahead, barring the crossroads of Via Tagliamento and Viale della Regina. There was nothing to do but stop and frantically reach for his papers to show to the soldiers. But the soldiers did not want to see papers: they were here to keep all traffic from Viale della Regina. Guidi left the car and showed his police identification, which did not impress them.
Polizei
, it was all very well. But even the police couldn't go through,

“I have a woman in labor in the car!”

At his gesticulations the Germans grew wary and lowered the guns from their shoulders. One of them shoved Guidi toward the car and Guidi answered in kind. The muzzle of the gun found the pit of his stomach, and then an army lieutenant came from across the street to see what was going on. Guidi tried to explain. The lieutenant understood and spoke back in heavily accented Tyrol Italian. “These are all excuses – we've seen plenty of women pregnant with pillows. Go back, go back.”

“Will you take a look at her?”

“No, go back.”

“If you don't let me through she'll have the child right here!”

An acute cry from Francesca drew Guidi back to the car, and the lieutenant too, but warily. She cried out, “Ooooh, it's coming, it's coming...” and the German was less rigid, but still unconvinced. Then she did the unthinkable, lifting up her nightgown and exposing the dome of her belly. The German turned crimson.

“I'm sorry...” he stammered. “Get going, then, get going!” And to the soldiers, “
Nur heran
!” to make them get out of the way.

It was under the unlikely escort of a German army motorcycle that Guidi drove Francesca to the Raimondis' home. Things moved quickly upon their arrival. The doctor and his wife helped Francesca in, to a room already prepared for her. “Is it almost time?” Guidi anxiously asked.

“Not quite.”

“But she said...”

“She said you had to get out of the jam with the Germans. She's definitely in labor, but it's going to be a few hours yet.”

Guidi couldn't help thinking that Clara Lisi, in Verona, might be going through the same ordeal now, bearing her executed lover's child. Another criminal case, another disappointment in finding out what the truth was. How foolishly close he'd been to falling in love then, too. “Should I wait?” he asked Dr Raimondi.

“No reason for you to stay. She's in good hands. We'll call when the birth occurs.”

Eugene Dollmann sprang to his feet when Bora walked into the lonely back room of the Birreria Albrecht on Via Crispi, so calm in appearance that the colonel thought him successful.

“The routine has been broken,” Bora said. “The informer did not show up. I waited close to one hour and I had to move eventually. Are you sure Kappler is not on to this?”

“I'm sure of it. I can't understand what happened.”

Bora would not take a seat. “I'm due at Soratte all day tomorrow,” he said. “Unless there are unforeseen developments, I will be at St John's again next Sunday.”

Letting him into her venerable parlor, Countess Ascanio said he looked pale. Bora was in fact starting to let go of the tension accumulated while waiting in the square, and felt numb. He undid his tunic without removing it. Seated in his favorite chair, he let the cats come to rub against his boots and seek his lap. On her invitation, he kept some of his clothes here, and now, without giving her time to ask questions, he said, “Please help me change, Donna Maria. I'm in haste, and will need help with my shirt and tie.”

And he was in civilian clothes when Mrs Murphy saw him at the Santo Spirito infirmary at half past four on Sunday. He wondered whether she spent any time with her husband. She knew he'd asked to see Cardinal Borromeo, but still, she walked out of a doorway to ask, “Whom are you waiting for?” Bora stood up to answer her, and she listened, with that open way of looking at him, saying, “When was your arm worked on? You shouldn't be up running errands.”

“It doesn't really matter, does it?”

“No, except that it fits your government-sponsored childish hero routine.”

Bora would have grown irritable had anyone else spoken the words. “It has more to do with work than heroism,” he grinned back.

“As you wish. The cardinal will be here momentarily – you'll have to wait.”

“I'll wait.”

Slim and secure in her springtime frock – how well Bora knew that beautiful women are secure with men who like them – Mrs Murphy leaned against the frame of the door. “We have Gaeta, have you heard?”

“I heard.”

“How long before Rome's turn comes?”

His security, too, rose a little. “I wouldn't know. So far the speed from the shore has been about 0.3 miles a day. The Melfa River is at least four times the distance from Anzio. Could be a year and a half.”

She smiled and drew back from the doorway. “You don't lie well in English.”

“I lie even worse in German.”

“I'll tell the cardinal you're here.”

Guidi picked up the phone when the call came. It was some time after six o'clock, and he had spent the past seven hours in the parlor, which at last Signora Carmela had deserted to try the saints in her bedroom. “Francesca had the baby ten minutes ago,” the delighted voice of Signora Raimondi came. “It's a beautiful boy, at least four kilos. She's fine, fine. Everything is fine. If you forgive me, I have to go help my husband. Good night.”

9

22 MAY 1944

On Monday, the success of the French advance was a blow even for the hard-bitten Kesselring. No overt dismay was spoken as long as all the officers were together. In private Westphal said, “Bora, it's a disaster. We can't hold water with a sieve. As soon as you return to Rome, start implementing the first stages of detachment. Run to Frascati then – see for yourself what the latest news is. Cisterna especially, see what's happening there. They'll try to join in the Reclamation Land. Call from Frascati. After that, stay in Rome until I get back.”

Other books

Cry Uncle by Judith Arnold
Healing Melody by Grey, Priya, Grey, Ozlo
Crash - Part Four by Miranda Dawson
Suspicions by Christine Kersey
City of Promise by Beverly Swerling
Death Run by Jack Higgins
Ring of Flowers by Brian Andrews
Home is Goodbye by Isobel Chace