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Authors: Jason Goodwin

Tags: #Historical mystery, #19th c, #Byzantium

The Bellini Card (40 page)

BOOK: The Bellini Card
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As the Communion approached, the signora became a little agitated.

“He must stay with the children,” she hissed.

They shuffled forward to the altar rail. Palewski knelt between Signora Contarini and Maria to receive the host.

“In nomine Patris, et filii, et spiritus sancti.”

“Amen.”

Palewski lifted the wafer to his mouth.

Maria nudged him. The signora was putting the wafer in her mouth, and beyond her knelt the speechless young man.

Palewski glanced sideways. The man’s face was transfigured by an expression of—what, exactly? It was the expression worn by an apostle in a medieval Assumption. Amazement? Fear?

Signora Contarini’s head jerked with impatience when she saw the man.

“In nomine Patris, et filii, et spiritus sancti,”
Father Andrea murmured, holding out the wafer.

The man reached up. He took the priest’s hand in his and brought it to his cheek.

Father Andrea murmured a blessing. He made to move on, but the man seemed unwilling to let him go.

As he stooped to say something in the man’s ear, Palewski saw a look of confusion cross his face. Then the color drained from his cheeks.

 

T
OUSLE
-haired from sleep and looking lovelier than ever, Carla entered the salon to find Yashim asleep with his forehead against the windowpane.

She gave a small cry of surprise, and Yashim opened his eyes. She was dressed in her nightgown, under a long embroidered coat whose sleeves were slashed to dangle at the elbows.

“I thought you were dead,” she breathed.

“That was another man,” Yashim answered, rubbing his eyes. “He came to kill you.”

She took his hands. “Tell me what happened.”

He told her, almost reluctantly, and when he had finished she said, “Yesterday I thought you had come to kill me, Yashim. Instead, you saved my life.”

“Will you sell me the Bellini?”

“You?”

“The sultan.”

She drew herself up to her full height. “The money, you understand. It’s not for me.”

“I didn’t think so.”

“No, of course not.” She bent forward and kissed him, softly, on the lips. “But I wanted you to be sure. In Venice, Yashim, honor is all that’s left.”

Then the door opened, and two white-jacketed soldiers came in.

Behind them followed Sergeant Vosper and finally, looking stout in his uniform, the stadtmeister himself.

At the door he checked himself abruptly. “Contessa?”

He bowed and clicked his heels.

“I regret intruding upon you, Contessa, in this manner,” he said, “but it is a matter of urgency.”

“Urgency?”

“Indeed. You will be so kind as to give me the papers.”

And he held out his hand, as if the contessa were holding them in hers.

 

“N
IKOLA
!”

The young man gave a birdlike cry, and then he was gobbling, and grinning, and nodding his head in an ecstasy of pleasure, patting Father Andrea’s hand to his cheek.

In the midst of his astonishment, Palewski still wondered what, exactly, was the liturgical form. Could Communion be interrupted? Father Andrea seemed to have little choice: the man—Nikola—was not going to be parted easily from him.

In the end the priest solved the problem by lifting the altar rail and bringing Nikola to stand beside him like an acolyte. While he grinned and nodded, Father Andrea continued with the wafer and the wine, smiling broadly all the while.

After the service the priest and the speechless man came back to the Contarini house together, hand in hand. Commissario Brunelli was there already, telling Signor Contarini about an extraordinary accident that had occurred on the Grand Canal only that morning.

Over breakfast Nikola’s story emerged.

“Nikola,” the priest explained, leaning back to look at him more carefully, “is my old friend. We were in Croatia together, Nikola and I. But one day, he disappeared.”

The young man pulled a long face and solemnly shook his head.

“No? Well, I expect we’ll learn something about that, by and by. Everyone searched for him. In the end, we discovered that he had been seen getting into a coach, with a stranger, bound for Trieste.”

The young man, Nikola, nodded again, but this time he slid from his
chair and began rifling through the pictures he had drawn. He found the one he wanted and laid it on the table.

Everyone craned for a better look. It was a charcoal sketch of a man sitting in a hard chair. He was solidly built—a strong man gone to seed, one would have said—his eyes were cast down, almost modestly, looking at a picture or book on his lap.

“Yes,” the priest said slowly. “That’s the man. I knew it! He called himself Spoletti. From Padua.”

“It’s Alfredo!” Palewski cried.

Brunelli leaned forward. “You’re both wrong,” he said, shaking his head. “That’s Popi Eletro.”

 

C
ARLA
gave a shaky laugh. “The papers? I don’t understand.”

The stadtmeister curled his lip. “Please don’t joke with me, Contessa.”

Carla’s chest lifted. She half turned her head. “I have nothing whatever that belongs to you, Stadtmeister. Nothing at all.”

The stadtmeister’s eyes were like currants. “To me, no. But I will see to it that you get a receipt from the relevant authorities.”

“Ah, the authorities.” Carla took a deep breath. “But what, exactly, do the authorities seek?”

Finkel’s jaw was working. “We both know exactly what you need to produce. Let us not delude ourselves, Contessa. You have a note of hand, signed by the Duke of Naxos. You also have a proscribed artwork by Gentile Bellini.”

“Proscribed? What does it mean?”

“It means, Contessa, that the state has seen fit to confiscate the said
work in its own interest. I hold a warrant, signed by Vienna. A certain compensation can be agreed,” he added.

“A warrant! How alarming.” The contessa sounded less alarmed than furious. “And when did you receive this warrant?”

The stadtmeister looked uncertain. “Receive it, Contessa? Why, I’m not sure. A week or so ago. Of course,” he added, running a gauntleted hand over his whiskers, “I shall be delighted to discuss the, ah, compensation due at any time that suits you. You will find the authorities can be I’m sure.”

Yashim’s mind was racing ahead. His curious gift for self-concealment might just allow him to get out of the salon by the end door. Beyond, he imagined, there would be a staircase to the second floor. With luck, and time, he could then come down to the contessa’s room. Take the picture.

It was the contessa herself, unfortunately, who broke the spell.

“You are a witness to this insult, Yashim Pasha,” she said, switching to Italian.

The stadtmeister’s eyes swiveled toward the window.

“Der Teufel!”
he muttered.

Yashim inclined his head. “I am sure the stadtmeister has no intention of insulting you, Contessa. He has done his duty, as I have done mine.”

He salaamed politely. “A thousand pardons, Herr Oberst, if my presence surprises you. Allow me to introduce myself. Yashim Pasha, of the sultan’s household, making a purely private visit to your city.”

The stadtmeister clicked his heels, but he looked extremely wary.

“A private visit? Where’s Brunelli? Vosper!”

Sergeant Vosper shuffled his feet and said nothing.

“The amiable commissario,” Yashim went on, “is a credit to your office.” He took a few steps into the room. “I regret that my understanding of German is only limited, but I think the contessa is mistaken if she thinks you have been insulting her. I am sure you mean nothing of the kind.”

“No, no, of course not,” the stadtmeister replied, sounding nettled.

“Forgive me, but it seemed to me that you were talking about a portrait—and a note.”

“That’s right.”

“But perhaps there has been some misunderstanding,” Yashim pressed on. “After all, it was for the sake of this same portrait, and the note, that I came to Venice.”

The stadtmeister’s face darkened.

“But that—that’s not possible,” he growled.

“The contessa and I made the arrangements yesterday,” Yashim continued imperturbably. “At this moment, Herr Stadtmeister, the portrait is on its way to Istanbul, via Corfu—the ship left Trieste last night. Of course, I will take the matter up on my return to Istanbul. I shall speak to Pappendorf myself. If there is any need to adjudicate a claim, then you will appreciate, sir, that the Ottoman government of Sultan Abdülmecid stands by its international treaties and obligations.”

The stadtmeister opened his mouth to speak, then shut it again.

“But the note!” His voice was almost a squeak.

Yashim had certain ideas about the note, which did not include a fiction of having it shipped to Istanbul.

“I had no difficulty in destroying it, Herr Stadtmeister. You may rest quite easy on that score.”

The stadtmeister gaped. “Destroyed it!
Der Teufel!

It was Yashim’s turn to look surprised. “But surely, Herr Stadtmeister, it was to our mutual advantage that the note should cease to exist?”

The stadtmeister merely gurgled.

Without the slightest attempt at a bow, he turned on his heel and left the room. Vosper shuffled off after him. Only the two soldiers clicked their heels, shouldered their rifles, and with immaculate nods toward the beautiful contessa retreated backward through the door, closing it gently behind them.

Carla turned to Yashim with an expression of amusement.

“Very neat, Yashim Pasha. Very neat, indeed.”

“Oh, it was nothing,” said Yashim carelessly. “I just followed the diagram, that’s all.”

 

H
E
glanced through the window in time to see the stadtmeister sitting rigid in his gondola, mopping his brow with a handkerchief. Opposite sat Vosper, his shoulders hunched.

The gondola moved off with a lazy flourish.

Had Vosper been less downcast, or the stadtmeister less rigid in defeat, they might have seen another gondola sweep up to the steps of the Palazzo d’Aspi. They would not have recognized Palewski, but they would have known the man who sat beside him.

BOOK: The Bellini Card
4.51Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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