Read A Venetian Reckoning Online
Authors: Donna Leon
Without turning to him, Mara took off
her jacket and hung it carefully over the back of one of the chairs. She sat on
the edge of the bed, bent down and unstrapped her shoes. Brunetti heard her
sigh with relief as she kicked them off. Still not looking at him, she stood,
unbuttoned her skirt, removed it, and folded it carefully over the jacket.
Beneath it, she wore nothing. She sat, then lay, on the divan, still not bothering
to look at him.
'It's extra if you want to touch my
breasts,' she said, then turned to one side to straighten out the cover, which
was bunched up under her shoulder.
Brunetti walked across the room and
sat on the other chair, not the one holding her clothing. 'Where are you from,
Mara?' he asked in his normal voice, speaking Italian, not dialect.
She looked up at him, surprised
either by the question or by the completely normal conversational tone in
which it was asked. 'Look, Mr Plumber,' she said, voice tired rather than
sharp, 'you didn't come here to talk, and neither did I, so let's do this and I
can get back to work, all right?' She turned fully on to her back and opened
her legs wide.
Brunetti looked away. 'Where do you
come from, Mara?' he asked again.
She pulled her legs together and put
them over the side of the bed, sitting up to face him. 'Look, you, if you want
to fuck, then let's do it, all right? I haven't got all night to sit here and
talk. And it's none of your god-damned business where I come from.'
'Brazil?' he asked, taking a stab at
the accent.
She made an angry, disgusted noise,
pushed herself to her feet, and reached for her skirt. She held it low and
stepped into it, pulled it up, and yanked angrily at the zip. With one foot,
she began to feel under the bed for her shoes, which she had shoved under there
after she took them off. She sat back down on the edge of the bed and began to
strap her shoes back on.
'He can be arrested, you know’
Brunetti said in the same calm tone. 'He let me give him the money. That's good
for at least a couple of months inside.'
The bands that held her shoes to her
ankles were both securely buckled, but she didn't look up at Brunetti, nor did
she make any move to get up from the bed. She sat with her head lowered,
listening.
'I don't think you'd want that to
happen to him, would you?' Brunetti asked.
She gave a disgusted, unbelieving
snort
'Then think about what he'd be likely
to do when he got out, Mara. You didn't spot me. He's bound to blame you for
that'
She looked up at him and put out her
hand. 'Let me see some identification.'
Brunetti gave it to her.
‘What do you want?' she said when she
handed the warrant card back to him.
'I'd like you to tell me where you
come from.'
'Why, so you can send me back?' she
asked, meeting his eyes.
'I'm not from the immigration police,
Mara; I don't care whether you're here legally or illegally.'
Then what do you want?' she asked,
voice sparked with anger.
‘I told you. I want to know where
you're from.'
She hesitated only a moment,
examining the question for peril and, seeing none, answered him. 'Sao Paula'
He was right; the faint accent was Brazilian.
'How long have you been here?'
Two years,'she said.
'Working as a prostitute?' he asked,
trying to pronounce the word as definition, not condemnation. ‘Yes.'
'Have you always worked for that
man?' She looked up at him. ‘I won't tell you his name,' she said.
'I don't want to know his name, Mara.
I want to know if you've always worked for him.'
She said something, but her voice was
so low he couldn't hear her.
'Excuse me?' he said.
'No.'
'Always in that bar?' 'No.'
'Where did you work before?'
'Somewhere else,' she said evasively. 'How long have you worked in the bar?'
'Since September.' 'Why?' 'Why what?'
'Why did you move to the bar?'
'The cold weather. I'm not used to
it, and I got sick last winter, working outside. So he told me I could work in
the bar this winter.'
'I see,' Brunetti said. 'How many
other girls are there?'
‘In the bar?'
'Yes.'
'Three.'
'And on the street?'
'I don't know how many there are.
Four? Six? I don't know.'
'Are any of the others Brazilian?'
'Two of them are.' - 'And the rest,
where are they from?'
'I don't know.'
'What about the telephone?'
'What?' she asked, looking up at him,
eyes narrowed in what might be honest confusion.
'The telephone. In the bar. Who gets
calls there? Does he?'
The question clearly puzzled her. ‘I
don't know,' she said. 'Everybody uses the phone.'
'But who gets calls on it?'
She thought for a moment. 'I don't
know'
'Does he?' Brunetti insisted.
She shrugged, tried to glance away,
but Brunetti snapped his fingers in her face, and she looked back at him.
'Does he get calls?'
'Sometimes,' she said, then glanced
down at her watch and up at him. 'You should be finished by now.'
He glanced at his own watch; fifteen
minutes had passed.
'How much time does he let you take?'
'Usually a quarter of an hour. He
lets the old ones take longer if they're regulars. But if I'm not back soon, he’ll
ask questions, make me tell him why it took so long.'
From the way she spoke, it was
evident to Brunetti that any question the man asked, the woman would answer.
For a moment, he debated whether it would be better to let the man realize the
police were asking questions about him. He studied the woman's lowered face,
trying to determine how old she was. Twenty-five? Twenty?
'All right,
’
he said,
getting to his feet.
At his sudden motion, she flinched away
and looked up at him. 'That's all?' she asked.
'Yes, that's all.’
'No quickie?'
'What?' he asked, lost.
'A quickie. Usually, when the cops
pull us in for questioning, that's what we have to do.' Her voice was neutral,
non-judgemental, tired.
'No, nothing like that,' he said,
moving towards the door.
Behind him, she got to her feet and
stuffed one arm, then the other, into the sleeves of her jacket. He held the
door open while she left the room and then followed her out into the hall. She
turned and locked the door, started down the single flight of steps. She shoved
open the front door of the building, turned to the right, and was gone, back in
the direction of the bar. Brunetti turned the opposite way and walked to the
end of the street, crossed it, and stood under a street tight until, a moment
later, della Corte’s black car pulled up beside him.
17
'Well?' della Corte asked as Brunetti
slid into the front seat of the car. Brunetti liked the fact that there was no
suggestion of a leer in the question.
'She's Brazilian, works for the man
who was with her in the bar. She says he's received calls on the phone.'
'And?' della Corte asked, slipping
the car into gear and heading slowly back towards the railway station.
'And that's all,' Brunetti answered.
'That's all she told me, but I think we can infer a lot more from that,'
'Such as?'
'Such as she's illegal, has no
residence permit, and so doesn't have much of a say in what she does for a living.'
'She might do it because she likes
it,' della Corte suggested.
'You ever know a whore who did?'
Brunetti asked.
Ignoring the question, della Corte
turned a corner and slowed to a stop in front of the train station. He set the
brake but left the motor nmning. 'Now what?'
'I think we've got to get the man
with her arrested. At least that way we can find out who he is. And maybe talk
to the woman again while we've got him.'
'You think shell talk?'
Brunetti shrugged. 'Maybe, if she's
not afraid that she'll be sent back to Brazil if she does.' 'How likely is that?’
'Depends on who talks to her.' 'A woman?’ della Corte asked. 'Probably be
better.' 'You got one?’
'We've got a psychiatrist who does
consulting for us every once in a while. I could try to get Mara to talk to
her.'
'Mara?' della Corte asked.
'That's what she told me. I'd like to
think she was allowed to keep at least that much, her own name.'
'When will you move on the man?'
'As soon as possible.'
'Any idea of how you'll do it?’
'Easiest way is to pick him up the
next time he has one of Mara's clients put the money on the bar for him.’
'How long can you keep him on that?'
'Depends on what we find out about
him, if he has a record or if there are any warrants out against him.’ Brunetti
thought for a moment. 'If you're right about the heroin, a couple of hours
ought to be enough.'
Della Corte's smile was not pretty. ‘I’m
right about the heroin.' When Brunetti said nothing, della Corte asked, 'Until
then?'
'I'm working on a few things. I want
to learn more about Trevisan's family and whatever I can about his practice.'
'Anything in particular?'
'No, not really. Just a couple of
things that make me uncomfortable, little things that don't add up.' That was
all Brunetti was prepared to say, and so he asked, 'And you?’
'We'll do the same with Favero, but
there's an awful lot to check, at least as far as his business is concerned.'
Delia Corte paused a moment and men added, ‘I had no idea these guys earned so
much.'
'Accountants?'
'Yes. Hundreds of millions a year, it
seems. And that's just his declared income, so you can imagine how much more
he's making under the table.' Brunetti had but to recall some of the names on
the list of Favero's clients, and he too could imagine the extent of his
earnings, both declared and undeclared.
He opened the door and got out of the
car, then came around to della Corte's side. 'I'll send some of our men out
here tomorrow night. If he and Mara are working the bar, it ought to be easy to
bring them in.’
'Both?' della Corte asked.
'Yes. She might be more willing to
talk after she spends a night in a cell’
'I thought you wanted her to talk to
a psychiatrist,' della Corte said.
'I do. But I want her to have had a
taste of gaol before she does. Fear tends to make people more talkative,
particularly women.'
'Cold-hearted bastard, aren't you?'
della Corte asked, not without respect.
Brunetti shrugged. 'She might have
information about a murder. The more scared and confused she is, the more
likely she is to tell us what she knows.'
Della Corte smiled and released the
brake. 'For a minute, I thought you were going to start telling me about the
whore with the heart of gold.'
Brunetti pushed himself back from the
car and started towards the station. He took a few steps and then turned back
towards della Corte, who was rolling up the window as the car pulled slowly
away. 'No one has a heart of gold,' he said, but della Corte drove away without
giving any sign that he had heard.
Next morning, Signorina Elettra
greeted Brunetti by telling him that she'd managed to find the story about
Trevisan in the
Gazzettino
but that it was an entirely innocuous account of
a joint venture in tourism which he had organized between the chambers of
commerce of Venice and Prague. Signora Trevisan s life, at least according to
the society columnist of that newspaper, was equally bland.