Authors: Edward Sklepowich
The Palazzo Pindar was located in the part of the Santa Croce district embraced by a long curve of the Grand Canal. The baroque building had an almost abandoned air. Thick chains secured two large rusted metal doors in front of the broad water steps. The shutters on the windows had long since passed the time when they needed to be repaired or â in most cases â replaced. Patches of stucco had detached themselves, exposing the bricks beneath. The glass in one of the bull's-eye windows was cracked. The buildings on either side of the huge tumbledown palazzo were in good condition and only served to make their neighbor look more dilapidated.
But the Palazzo Pindar was magnificent in its neglect, and its shimmering reflection in the greenish-gray waters of the small canal deceptively restored much of its former beauty.
A tall woman emerged from the mouth of the
sottoportico
beside which the gondola had come to a halt, and walked briskly along the embankment toward the palazzo. At first Urbino thought that it was Eufrosina, because of the figure's height. But it was Olimpia, her cousin. She was wearing a knee-length ocelot coat and a red-and-black cloche hat.
She had her eyes cast down. When she reached the small wooden door that the Palazzo Pindar now used as its entrance, a voice called out her name loudly from the direction of the bridge at the other end of the canal. A middle-aged woman in an alpaca poncho with purple and lilac stripes stood on the parapet of the bridge. Urbino recognized Nedda Bari, who did local charity work.
Olimpia had started slightly at the sound of her name, but she didn't acknowledge the greeting. She went inside the building, without having to ring or use a key, for the door, as was the custom of the Palazzo Pindar, wasn't locked.
With an irritated expression on her face, Nedda Bari stared at the building for a few moments before leaving the bridge and disappearing from view down a nearby
calle
.
âAll right, Gildo,' Urbino said. âThe Danieli.'
Before seeing the contessa at the Ca' da Capo-Zendrini as they had agreed, Urbino needed to make arrangements at the Hotel Danieli for a visitor. It was his ex-brother-in-law, Eugene Hennepin, with whom he would leave for America next month. Eugene preferred to stay in a hotel and wanted to return to the Danieli, which he had been pleased with during his first visit to Venice ten years ago.
Gildo started to manoeuvre the boat in the direction that would take them back into the Grand Canal.
Two
The contessa checked the clock on the mantle of the morning room. Urbino should be coming in less than an hour. A strong fire crackled in the fireplace with wood from Asolo where the contessa had a villa.
âTell me again, Mina,' the contessa insisted. âExactly what did Signorina Gaby say to you?'
The contessa wanted to be sure of what Mina had told her. Urbino would want every detail.
A look of impatience, touched with irritation, passed over the pretty features of the contessa's personal maid, but they were quickly banished. Mina, slim and dark-haired, with delicate, porcelain features, had just celebrated her twenty-fifth birthday. The contessa always tried to be careful of Mina's feelings, knowing how high-strung she was. The palazzo staff thought that she favored Mina. She supposed she did. It was a weakness she usually succumbed to with her personal maid, whoever she was. In the case of Mina, the habit was more pronounced. The girl was as endearing as she was efficient, and she had a quick intelligence and a light sense of humor, although none of the latter was in evidence on this occasion or, for that matter, the contessa realized, had been for the past few months.
âShe said that someone was trying to kill her.' Mina, whose Italian was marked by a Sicilian accent, lowered her voice when she said âkill'. She stared at a small table with a collection of ceramic animals as if she were studying them. âI didn't believe her. But she seemed frightened.'
So did Mina. When she turned her eyes to the contessa, they were wide and unblinking.
âWhen did she tell you this?'
âLast week when I brought Signorina Olimpia the dress material from you.'
Whenever Mina spoke with the contessa about Olimpia Pindar she was always formal even though the relationship between the two women was intimate. The contessa pretended she did not know the particular nature of the relationship even though Olimpia had confided in her and even though it was evident to most people who had even limited contact with the two of them. It had begun about seven months ago. The contessa feigned ignorance for Mina's sake, and not because she disapproved of the relationship although, in her mind and in conversations with Urbino, she called it a âromantic friendship'. Mina had never given the slightest indication that it was something she would like to have directly acknowledged.
âDid you mention it to her?'
Mina did not respond right away. When she did, it was in a rush of words.
âI told her the same day. She wasn't surprised. She said that I shouldn't worry about it, that her sister was strange, and that she imagined things. Signorina Gaby is strange, contessa. She never leaves the house. I don't think she even looks out the window. And she sometimes just stands at the door of the museum with a sad expression on her face, staring at nothing. She frightens me.'
âMany unfortunate people have her kind of problem. There's no harm in it to you or to anyone else. But why did you decide to tell me what she said?'
âBecause I'm afraid that Signorina Olimpia is wrong! Sometimes when we are close to someone, even living in the same house day after day, we can't see what other people can see. Do you understand?'
The contessa did, and she knew why Mina said this. From what the contessa had learned about her from the young woman's cousin in Venice, she had suffered from emotional problems when she was an adolescent, and her large family in Palermo had neglected her. The cousin, now dead, had agreed to take Mina in nine years ago.
âShe is very upset,' Mina went on. âI felt it even before she said anything to me.'
Mina touched the region of her heart. In the year that she had been working at the Ca' da Capo-Zendrini, she had given the contessa several examples of her sensitivity to the feelings of others. She could easily identify delicate shades in the contessa's moods and would respond accordingly.
âHas she spoken to you again?'
âNo, but when I see her she looks at me in a pitiful way, as if she wants me to help her. I don't know why she told me! I'm afraid she will give me the evil eye. You are relatives, contessa. Relatives must help each other. You are a kind lady. Maybe you can do something. But please do not tell Signorina Olimpia that I told you. She might be upset with me.'
âI'm sure she wouldn't be, Mina. She would understand that you've told me because you're worried for her sister. But I won't say anything to her.'
The contessa considered this to be promise enough. It did not include Urbino. Mina showed a reluctance to pursue the topic and asked to leave shortly afterward. She said that she would take Zouzou out for a walk although she had walked the cocker earlier that morning.
When the contessa was alone, she sat on the sofa staring at the painting on the opposite wall, going over what Mina had just told her. In substance, it was exactly what Mina had told her before. The contessa went over to a lacquered cabinet. She took out an old photograph album that was piled with others on the bottom shelf. She returned to the sofa and paged through the album until she reached a section devoted to the Pindar family.
She looked at a photograph of Gaby. It was one of the few photographs of her cousin in the album, and it had been taken more than twenty-five years ago. It showed a pretty, bright-eyed young woman standing in front of the Basilica arm in arm with her older brother Ercule. She seemed so happy, but this had been before her illness descended on her. She had little joy in life these days. But beneath all her fears and confusions must lie the Gaby that used to be. If only she could be released from the prison of her dark thoughts and emotions.
âYou obviously don't want to believe she's in danger,' Urbino said half an hour later as he stood in front of the fireplace warming himself. âAnd I know why.'
âWhy?'
But the contessa did not need to ask. She knew what he was going to say but dreaded hearing it put into words.
She cast her eyes down at one arm of her chair, as if she were intent on examining the spot where Zouzou had ripped the Fortuny fabric.
âBecause if there's any basis to Gaby's fears,' Urbino responded, âit means that the danger will come while she's in the house. She hasn't left it in years, and she's unlikely to do it now, not unless she seeks help. If she's afraid, she's afraid of someone in the house. And
that
means,' he emphasized as he seated himself in the armchair across from the contessa, âthat she's in danger from someone in her own family, someone in
your
family.'
The contessa was caught out. Urbino had quickly seized upon the main reason for her reluctance to believe Gaby was in danger. The probability was that harm would come to her from someone in the family. And it had become clear to the contessa, after many years of Urbino's sleuthing, that people were most often in danger from those closest to them.
âYou're right,' she admitted. âMy family.'
The contessa felt a sharp, familiar ache as she said the word. She and the conte had not been able to have any children, something they both had greatly hoped for. It made her value what family she did have, even family as remotely related â and uncongenial as they sometimes could be â as the Pindars.
âBut there's a big flaw in your reasoning,
caro.'
She turned to him with an air of triumph. She had been caught and now she was catching him out, and enjoying it. âYou know how ridiculous they are in that house â or should I say how foolish â the way they leave the front door unlocked during the day. They are so infuriating, so perverse! She could be afraid of someone from outside harming her. It would be all too easy to get inside, at least during the day.'
The contessa had little patience with the Pindar custom. It went back to one of the earliest Pindars who had been a monk and insisted that the building be kept open for anyone who needed food or shelter. However did Gaby put up with the arrangement? But perhaps she was out-voted by her sister and brother.
Urbino nodded. âTrue. But logic may be of little help in trying to figure Gaby out â or any others among your distant relatives. And without logic I'm almost at a loss. Actually, I have never been able to fix the Pindars clearly in my mind â their history, I mean. I suppose I've had no need to before now. I know things in bits and pieces, and I certainly have my impressions, but it would be helpful to have the whole picture, or as much of it as you can give.' He played a few random notes on the
fin de siècle
Viennese piano. âWhy not tell me what you know and not leave anything out because you assume I know it? Even with that, there will be holes that we'll probably have to fill in later, but we don't know what those holes are now or where they are.'
âThat's the problem with holes much of the time, isn't it? You don't know where they are until you fall into them. Oriana might be able to help us with some of them.' She was referring to her friend Oriana Borelli, who seemed to know more about the private lives of others than anyone else in the contessa's or Urbino's circle. Oriana's knowledge, in which romantic and sexual intrigues played a prominent role, had come to their aid before. âBut she won't be back from Cortina for about two weeks.'
âIs she there with Filippo?'
The contessa smiled. Oriana had a well-earned reputation â as did her husband Filippo â for an ongoing series of affairs that did not weaken their marriage but somehow strengthened it. âLet's say that the two of them went there together. Whether they went their separate ways once they got there, I have no idea.'
Urbino reseated himself. âSo what do you know from your own chaste perspective?'
âThere is a lot of territory between the chaste and Oriana,' the contessa observed. âI can speak to the family relationships involved. They are always important when you want to understand people. It's a longish story. Well, as you know, the Pindars and I are related through my mother's side of the family. Her mother â
my
grandmother â had a sister named Isabel. She came to visit American friends who had rented a palazzo by the Accademia Bridge. Like you and me, Isabel never left. She met Federico Pindar, the only son of a family that had made a fortune from shipping in the eighteenth century. They had their own shipping company, Pindar Lines. It doesn't exist anymore. Like much of what the Pindar family had back then, it's disappeared. Federico swept her off her feet. He was almost twenty years older than she was, and everyone thought he was never going to marry. When I met Alvise, my mother said that I was following in the footsteps of her aunt, since Alvise was twenty years older than I was. Alvise â' The contessa broke off. Her mood, which had been vivid and gay with the story she was telling, darkened. Tears welled in her eyes. âListen to me! This is not about Alvise, but the Pindars.'
âI understand. Your wedding anniversary is coming up. He's on your mind.'
âI wish you had known him,
caro
.'
Alvise had died three years before she had met Urbino.
âI feel as if I know him well. Through you. And everyone who speaks of him has a high regard for him and his memory.'
She gave Urbino a smile of gratitude. âAlvise knew the Pindars before we married. He called them the “merchant family with the soul of poets.” Because of their name. The family has always claimed they are related to the Greek poet, but I doubt that. Their name used to be Pindaro but the “o” got lost somewhere back in the eighteenth century.'