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Authors: Maurizio de Giovanni,Antony Shugaar

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BOOK: Vipers
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“Enter. Someone murdered Viper.”

 

When he first joined the force, he'd often found himself rushing with his fellow officers to one house of ill repute or another, which were regularly the site of brawls, serious injuries, or cases of aggravated assault.

It was normal practice for every bordello to arrange for its own security force, usually consisting of one or two ex-cons who were willing, in return for a hot meal and a few bills, to shove their battered features and their tattoos into the faces of would-be troublemakers; that was usually enough to restore calm in a place made for pleasure not bloodshed.

Still, pleasure is a passion, and one passion tends to trigger others. Sometimes the hired guard wasn't enough and, in fact, when the custodians of law and order had to be summoned, this guard would frequently be among the injured parties, punished for his belief that he could talk reason into someone holding a knife.

Those bordellos, at least the ones that Ricciardi remembered, were tucked away behind the crumbling facades of old buildings; the way in was up a steep dark staircase, at the top of which was a room with a woman seated at a small table, with a padlocked strongbox where the money was kept. Along the walls were wooden benches, where factory workers, soldiers, and students sat waiting silently—staring into the middle distance, uninterested in conversation.

Another set of stairs led to the rooms, and in the rooms were the girls, who were often anything but. Ricciardi remembered one woman with a bloody gash on one cheek who was fifty if she was a day, and had no more than ten teeth: she'd inspired some eighteen-year-old customer to pull out his knife when she asked for more money than she was strictly due. In those poor, cheap whorehouses, the customers lined up on the steps in single file, letting those who were raring to go cut ahead because there was a time limit on every trick, and if you went past the few minutes allotted there was a surcharge.

The place that met Ricciardi's eyes, once the old woman had made her dramatic announcement and stepped aside, was quite another matter. First they made their way down a hallway furnished with chairs, their seats upholstered in satin, their backrests gilded, a large, elaborately-framed mirror, and red silk wallpaper. A sign invited guests to leave their umbrellas and walking sticks on a rack. At the far end there was another door, and as she neared it Marietta came to an abrupt halt: clearly, this was the far boundary of the territory under her jurisdiction.

The drawing room was large, the size of a ballroom, and it was cloaked in shadows. Heavy curtains hung over the windows and the enormous crystal chandelier was dark, as were most of the dozen or so sconces lining the walls. A tapestry on which naked nymphs and satyrs chased one another gleefully through the woods dominated the room.

But the atmosphere was anything but cheerful. The sofas and armchairs sat empty, the grand piano had fallen silent; the wall hangings and the thick carpet muffled the murmers emanating from the small knot of people at the far end of the room; a woman broke away and came toward them.

This was no ordinary individual. Her imposing stature and physique were only enhanced by a black plume that rose above a sort of tiara in her hair; her dark dress fluttered delicately, a yard-long train rustling behind her over the carpet. Before the policemen, she stopped demurely: her heavy makeup could not conceal the grief-stricken expression and the bloodshot eyes.

She turned to Maione:

“Brigadie', you're here. How sorry I am to meet you again on this sad occasion.”

Camarda and Cesarano exchanged a smirk that eluded neither Ricciardi's nor Maione's notice. The brigadier glared at them, and both policemen immediately bowed their heads.

“Signora Yvonne, the proprietor of this establishment; Signora, Commissario Ricciardi. We came as soon as Marietta summoned us, but you could have telephoned and we'd have saved a little time.”

The woman waved one hand distractedly in the air, and a dozen or so rings sparkled.

“That didn't occur to me, my first thought was to send Marietta. What happened seemed so ridiculous to me, and it still does. This misfortune. This terrible thing.”

Ricciardi had the impression that the woman was playing a part. Her exaggerated gestures, the artificial voice, the way she'd crossed the center of the room, as stately as an ocean liner sailing into port: everything about her seemed theatrical, designed to impress and intimidate.


Buongiorno
, Signora. Your real name, if you please?”

He took it for granted that the name she'd given Maione was a professional pseudonym, and he wanted to invite the woman to be more forthcoming. The self-proclaimed Yvonne took his point. She fluttered her eyelashes, heaved a sigh, and focused her attention on Ricciardi.

“Lidia Fiorino, at your service. But everyone knows me as Madame Yvonne; I doubt anyone will be able to give you any information about me if you use my maiden name.”

Ricciardi hadn't stopped staring at the woman.

“I like to know the name of the people I met, that's all. The legal name. Now, tell us exactly what happened.”

Madame Yvonne shot a guick glance over her shoulder, toward the group of people by the piano. In the half-light, it was just possible to glimpse women in dressing gowns and one could hear muffled sobs.

“One of my girls . . . my dearest girl, she was like a daughter to me . . . the prettiest one, the sweetest one . . .”

She loudly blew her nose into a handkerchief pulled from the sleeve of her dress. Ricciardi waited, Maione sighed and raised his eyes to the ceiling.

“One of my girls is . . . Virgin Mary, Mother of God, I can't bring myself to believe it, right here, in my own home . . . where love, peace, and pleasure reign supreme . . .”

Ricciardi shot Maione a meaningful glance, and the brigadier stepped in.

“Signo', please. We know perfectly well where we are and what goes on here. In other words, there's no need to explain. Please, just do us a favor and of tell us, in short, what happened.”

Yvonne dried her tears and assumed a vaguely resentful tone.

“Brigadie', you must understand what this means for me, for all of us. It's a tragedy. Viper is dead.”

It was the second time he'd heard that word uttered; Ricciardi decided it was time to clear things up.

“Her real name, please. And let's start from the beginning: who found her? When? And where is she now? Has anyone moved anything?”

The woman turned her head toward the group at the far end of the room and gestured; then she turned back to Ricciardi.

“Viper is the name by which, throughout Naples, the best, the most beautiful of all the working girls, as we like to say, was known. The name is Rosaria, Maria Rosaria Cennamo. But she was Viper to everyone. No one's moved her, she's in the bedroom, the bedroom where . . . well, where she worked.”

The other question went unanswered, until finally Ricciardi made up his mind to ask it again.

“I asked: who found her?”

Madame hesitated, then she turned to the girls and called out:

“Lily, come over here. Don't pretend you don't understand me.”

A young woman broke away from the group, reluctantly, and came toward them. Her halting gait was quite different from Yvonne's majestic stride, and the older woman introduced her:

“This is Lily. Bianca Palumbo, to be exact: our clients, you know, like names with an exotic flavor. She's the one who found Viper.”

The girl was fair-haired. Her features were soft and rounded, her face marked by horror and fright. She was clutching the edges of a flowered nightgown to her chest, which was quite prominent, disproportionately so, given her height. Cesarano let a faint whistle escape him, which earned him a furious glare from Maione.

“Now then, Signorina: you're the one who found the corpse?”

Lily looked at Madame, almost as if she were asking permission to answer; the woman nodded her head slightly, and the girl turned to Ricciardi.

“Yes. I went past her door, I'd . . . I had finished, and I was going to the balcony. And Viper's door was open, just a little, it was, what's the word . . . ajar. And she was on the bed, and I noticed her leg, dangling over the side . . .”

She reached a trembling hand up to her face, as if to chase the image away. Her voice, deep and mature, clashed with her evident youth and her delicate features.

Ricciardi asked:

“And you, what did you do?”

The young woman hesitated, glanced again in her madam's direction, then decided to answer.

“I stuck my head out the door and called Madame.”

Maione broke in:

“And how did you know that Cennamo—I mean, Viper—was dead?”

Lily shrugged.

“There was a pillow on her face. And she wasn't moving.”

What Ricciardi sensed in the girl's voice, and even more in her reactions, wasn't grief, only fright. He decided to get confirmation of that impression.

“Were the two of you friends? Did you get along with Viper?”

This time it was Madame Yvonne who replied:

“Of course! We're like a big happy family here, Commissa'. The girls are all like sisters, they spend all their time together, and they love one another, both the girls who come here to work for a couple of weeks and then go away and the ones who're here permanently. And Lily, just like Viper, is here to stay, she's not one of the girls on rotation, and so they're . . . they were even closer. Isn't that true? Answer me!”

Suddenly called upon, Lily stared at her employer and slowly nodded. Ricciardi's first impression remained unshaken: the relationship between Lily and the late Viper would need closer examination.

“And then you, Madame, sent Marietta to get us. All right. And who was here, besides you and the girls I see over there?”

Yvonne spread her arms wide.

“Commissa', of course, there were the clients. Amedeo over there, our piano player, was entertaining them while they waited, and the waiter was serving drinks. The usual afternoon activity.”

“So these customers, what happened to them?”

The woman shook her head.

“I'm sure you can imagine it for yourself: the minute they heard Lily crying and screaming, they vanished. I certainly don't have the authority to stop them and tell them to wait for you all, do I?”

Ricciardi nodded.

“Certainly not. But you must remember at least your regular customers, and you can tell us their names, I believe. Just so we can check them out.”

Yvonne exchanged a look with Lily that didn't escape the commissario's notice.

“Of course. Though I might have overlooked a few, in all the chaos. This kind of terrible accident, it doesn't happen every day.”

“No, luckily, this sort of thing doesn't happen every day. Signorina, earlier you said: I had finished, and I was going to the balcony. What did you mean?”

Lily answered:

“Do you see that passageway up there, with the railing? We call that the balcony. When we're done working with a customer, after we've washed up and straightened up the room, then we go up there, where they can see us, that way the customers here in the waiting room know that we're free and that they can pick us. The one they like best.”

Camarda sighed, earning himself an elbow in the ribs from Cesarano. Ricciardi decided to overlook it.

“All right, I understand. I may need to ask you a few more things later. Now, if you don't mind, take us to Viper's room.”

III

W
hat is this breeze on my face?

What are these scents, the flowers and the sea?

What does springtime want from me, why doesn't it go back where it came from?

I'm a dead man, don't you understand that, springtime? I'm a dead man.

I've been dead for years and years, even though I breathed, worked, ate, and slept. I talked to the people I met, and maybe to be polite I even laughed, pretended to be interested: but I was dead.

If your heart doesn't beat in your chest, then you're dead. And my heart wasn't beating. Not anymore.

It's better to be born blind. You can't remember colors if you've never seen them before. If you're born blind, then the sun is nothing more than warmth on your skin and the sea is just water on your feet; you can't imagine how the light shimmers against the blue, while clouds scud across the sky, creating and erasing shadows. It's better, if you're born blind.

But if you've seen the light and then they take it away from you, all you can do is remember. You just remember, you don't live anymore: you're dead.

Curse you, God, why did you force me to be reborn? Why did you give back the sight that you took away from me, and the hope that I'd long since forgotten? God, you coward, why did you make me breathe again, and laugh again, and make my heart beat again, wasn't the suffering you'd already inflicted on me enough? Did you know that you would kill me a second time? You know everything, so why? Damn you to hell: you sent me to the inferno, you pulled me back out, and in the end you locked me in there forever.

Leaving my soul trapped in a bedroom at Il Paradiso. Motionless, breathless, awaiting a word that will never come from her mouth.

From her dead mouth.

IV

A
t the far end of the shadowy drawing room there was a podium, and on it stood a sort of lectern made of dark wood, behind which sat a very high-backed chair, giving the impression of a throne.

Madame Yvonne, sailing toward the podium, said with undisguised pride:

“That's where I sit. That's where I greet our customers.”

Ricciardi glimpsed money on the counter, a pad of printed forms, and an open fan. Behind the desk, stuck to the wall, was a sign displaying the prices.

 

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