Ring of Fire (15 page)

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Authors: Pierdomenico Baccalario

BOOK: Ring of Fire
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On the fourth floor, a tiny window looking out onto the street lets in a faint glow, barely strong enough for them to read the sign on the only door to be found:
PROF. A VANDER BERGER
.

“So he really was a professor,” says Sheng.

Elettra rings the doorbell. A low-pitched sound echoes through the deserted building. A few seconds later, the girl slides the key into the lock and opens the door. Wafting out of the apartment is the strong smell of tobacco and paper. Flicking the switch, she finds that the lights work. “Thank goodness,” she sighs.

But her sigh of relief is cut short the moment she steps inside.

It’s frightening.

SECOND STASIMON

“Hello? Vladimir? They’ve killed Alfred.”

“Are you joking? No … That’s impossible!”

“But it happened, I tell you. It’s in the papers, on the front page.”

“All he had to do was set things up. That was the easiest part! Of course, he was the … the weakest of us all.”

“Alfred wasn’t the weakest.”

“Yes, he was. And you know it. Do you remember the wolves? He was convinced he was being followed. He was obsessed with the idea that he was being followed.”

“It seems he was right.”

“Did he at least manage to …?”

“He delivered the briefcase. He was killed right after that.”

“Do you think that’s what they were looking for?”

“I’m certain of it. Someone is after that briefcase. But who?”

“Not me. And not you.”

“There are three of us, Vladimir. …”

“Then you’ve just answered your own question.”

“Can’t we get in touch with her?”

“The last time I heard from her she was in China. Two years ago.”

“If what you’re saying is true, it means she talked.”

“Yes, she talked.”

“But who did she tell? And why? Even she knows that once it begins no one is to interfere. … Who’s behind this, Vladimir?”

“I don’t know, believe me. Things have gotten out of control. …”

“Are the children in danger?”

“I don’t know. I need … I need to check. Maybe I could make a phone call.”

“Make a hundred of them, then. Otherwise, I’ll find a way to stop everything.”

14
THE APARTMENT

T
HERE ISN’T ANY FURNITURE OR PICTURES OR CARPETS.
A
LL THERE
is on the other side of the door leading into Alfred Van Der Berger’s apartment is a hallway lined by two tall walls of books stacked all the way up to the ceiling. And in the middle of the hallway are other books, arranged one atop the other to form columns, stools, tables, shelves. Magazines, newspapers, pamphlets and notebooks fill every square centimeter of the apartment. Some of the columns are low, others taller than a meter high, while still others reach the ceiling. The piles of books only leave room for a single narrow passageway, barely wide enough to walk through.

“Man …,” whispers Sheng.

There isn’t even space to put down the bags they picked up from the newsstand. The air is stale and musty. The ceiling light seems totally incapable of illuminating the chaotic mass of papers.

“If you ask me, he could’ve used a bookcase,” Sheng adds.

“If you ask me, he was totally crazy,” mutters Harvey.

Mistral shakes her head, flabbergasted.

Elettra takes a few steps into the hallway and feels the floor tremble beneath her feet. “Oh, man …,” she murmurs, staring at
the masses of books. “There are so many of them!” There’s dust everywhere. She runs her fingers over the spines of the books. Old leather-bound volumes, economic textbooks, paperbacks, titles in Italian, English, Russian, Portuguese. Light covers, dark covers, photographic books, lettering in gold and others as black as pitch. “It can’t be …,” she murmurs, delving into the jungle of books. “The whole apartment’s like this.”

The hallway leads into two rooms, both completely packed with books. There isn’t even any furniture, just narrow passageways between the publications, which all come together to form one massive maze.

Mistral follows behind her friend slowly. All around them is the stagnant odor of dust mixed with paper and tobacco. “Don’t touch anything …,” she whispers. “Don’t touch a single thing.” She’s afraid that the flimsy construction might collapse on top of her at any moment.

Harvey is about to shut the apartment door behind him when Mistral begs, “No! Leave it open. Otherwise we’ll suffocate!”

Harvey nods.

“Let’s leave these bags outside,” suggests Sheng. “I mean, I don’t think anybody is going to steal them from us. …”

“What’s this?” asks Harvey, stepping into the hallway.

Hanging beside the door is a little board, written on which are two columns of numbers that have progressively been crossed off.

“That looks like the professor’s handwriting …,” remarks Sheng. “But what does it mean?”

“I have no idea,” mumbles Harvey. “Bills to be paid, maybe? Or the number of books in here?”

“It looks like a couple of countdowns.”

“But the second column goes up and then down again.”

“It might be some sort of diet,” Mistral guesses, slowly walking back to them. “My mom keeps a chart like that on the fridge.”

“You think the professor was on a diet?” Harvey grumbles dubiously.

“The woman at the newsstand said he was really thin …,” Sheng remembers. “All skin and bones. I mean, even when he was alive.”

“If I remember correctly, she said he weighed under sixty kilograms, just like this,” Mistral notes, pointing to the last number written on the board.

“And before that, he weighed sixty, sixty-five …” Harvey checks the entire column. “At most, seventy kilos.”

“So what does the first column mean?”

Mistral shakes her head. “I don’t know, but …” She pulls out her sketchbook and patiently copies down the two series of numbers.

“I think I found the kitchen!” comes Elettra’s voice from the depths of the apartment.

“Let’s go take a look,” Sheng proposes.

* * *

Elettra moves around on her tiptoes to avoid the unpleasant feeling of walking on nothingness. She’s already gone through what might be the dining room, which is filled with stacks of books and newspapers.

The kitchen is a narrow little room where the air barely circulates. There are dishes piled up in the sink and magazines stacked up on all the shelves, their pages damp. On the refrigerator is a map of Rome, stuck there with four magnets in the shape of spaceships. The professor used a red marker to draw circles around certain areas of the map. He also wrote the words:

It will begin on December 29th.
One hundred years later.

Mistral walks in, looking like a ghost as she emerges from the darkness of the dining room. The moment she steps foot in the kitchen, she feels like she can barely breathe. “What did you find?” she asks Elettra.

“Just this map,” she answers. “Rome. The professor wrote that it would begin on December twenty-ninth. Which means he knew it right down to the day.”

Mistral shakes her head. “Can we get out of here? This place scares me.”

But Elettra is still studying the map. “He circled Trastevere …” she says, pointing to the district where her family’s hotel is located. “Along with Parioli and Esquilino. Those are three of the neighborhoods that the blackout affected yesterday, on the twenty-ninth. … So did the professor know? Had he predicted it? Was that the sign that it had all begun?”

Mistral’s stare gives no answer to her questions.

“Elettra? Mistral?” Sheng calls from some other room in the apartment. “Come here. …”

“I think I found something!” Elettra cries out, taking the map of Rome off the fridge.

“Us too!” calls Sheng. “Come take a look!”

Mistral doesn’t wait for him to repeat himself. She grabs hold of Elettra’s hand and pulls her out of the room. “What did you find?”

“Stars,” replies Harvey. “Stars, everywhere.”

The ceiling of the professor’s room is covered by a map of the sky, composed of dozens of sheets of paper carefully positioned one beside the other. Dotted lines join together the brightest stars, creating glowing figures with ancient names: Draco, Orion, Hercules, Canis Major, Auriga, Ursa Minor, Polaris, Ursa Major. Some of the stars are circled in red, like boats in a game of battleship.

“It looks like the professor was studying the stars,” Harvey comments, sitting down on the mattress to stare up at the ceiling. There are slightly fewer books around the bed, and the air seems more breathable.

“Together with a million other things,” adds Elettra.

“Do any of you understand astronomy?” asks Sheng.

“Not me,” sighs Harvey. “But I can ask my dad. That’s what he teaches at college.”

“So the professor was studying the stars to discover … what?”

“The … the secret, I guess. The Ring of Fire. To find it you need to use the map, and by looking below you find it above …
or something like that,” summarizes Mistral, leafing through her sketchbook filled with notes.

“Oh, that explains everything!” Sheng exclaims ironically.

“What could be this important?” wonders Mistral.

“Something other people are looking for, too … a secret they mustn’t discover … but something that people are willing to kill for …,” Sheng murmurs.

“ ‘Search below and you shall find it above’…,” recites Elettra. “Above us are the stars, right?”

“And below?”

“The floor,” Sheng answers.

“So what’s on the floor?”

“Us. Plus tons of books.”

“And big red circles …,” Elettra notes, pointing at a series of marks made on the few areas of the floor that aren’t covered with books.

“What could those be for?”

“I don’t know,” she admits. She walks out of the bedroom to check the rest of the house. “But there are other ones in the hallway.”

“They look like circles on a treasure map,” Sheng comments. “You know, like ‘X’ marks the spot!”

“I don’t get it,” says Harvey, giving up. “I don’t get any of this. Maybe … maybe we’re going too fast. Maybe we should get the book we found in the library translated first. Or reread the professor’s journal more carefully.”

Sheng pats his backpack. “It’s all here, safe and sound.”

Mistral points out a book resting beside the bed to Harvey. “Take a look at what he was reading.”

The boy reaches over the bed and picks it up. He brushes away the dust and tells them, “I think it’s been a while since he last read this. It’s entitled
Naturales Quaestiones
. It’s about comets. And it’s by Seneca.”

Sheng snaps his fingers. “Nero’s tutor!”

“That’s the one,” confirms Harvey, thumbing through the pages. “It’s all written in Latin, in case any of you know how to translate it. …”

“So let’s summarize,” says Sheng. “We’ve got a tooth, a thing the professor calls a wooden map, four toy tops, an incomprehensible book in Greek and an incomprehensible book in Latin.”

“Very well put,” cackles Harvey.

“And finally, there are some mysterious ‘thems’ out there who’ve killed the only person who could explain how we can piece all these things together. Am I forgetting anything?” concludes Sheng.

“Apart from aliens, the American Secret Service and an island inhabited by dinosaurs, I don’t think so, Professor Sheng,” replies Harvey, shaking his head theatrically.

“All right,” breaks in Elettra. “What we do know is that we’ve wound up on the trail of something called the Ring of Fire, which seems to be really ancient … and that it’s hidden in Rome. We know that the professor had been searching for it for years and that he might just have found it in one of these places.” She shows the others the map of Rome with the various neighborhoods circled in red.

At that very moment, the phone rings.

Sheng yelps. Mistral snaps her sketchbook shut.

And an icy shiver runs down the kids’ spines.

* * *

“This must be it…” says Beatrice, pulling the Mini up to the curb.

Jacob Mahler slips out of the car door in a single nimble movement.

“Hey! Hold on!” protests Little Linch, who’s still crammed in the backseat. He grabs hold of the headrest and the roof of the car to hoist himself out. Once on the street, he uselessly tries to smooth out his rumpled suit.

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