Messina nodded at the two small excavators that had been brought there on his personal orders. “From what I’ve seen of the map, we can lift the lid off the whole thing in thirty minutes. Like taking the roof off an ants’ nest. We could see right inside.”
Falcone had been hoping it wouldn’t come to this.
“It’s not that simple. This is a protected historical site. It was even before anyone knew the full truth about what Bramante found here. Now they understand that… The city authorities would have to give permission. Bramante himself would be involved.”
“There’s a child’s life at stake here! And you’re talking about paperwork again?” Messina glowered at him.
“I’m merely reminding you of the facts.”
“Really. Go get me Giorgio Bramante. Now!”
It took fifteen minutes, during which Falcone received a phone call he’d been half expecting. Bramante was with a team of uniformed officers and civilians combing the grass verge of the rough field that fell down from the Orange Garden towards the winding road that led to the Tiber. He came without a question, without protest. He had a dark, bleak look on his face. It didn’t stop him staring at the photographers when they found him, or pausing briefly to talk to the reporters to make another plea for assistance from the public. The gash on his forehead seemed a little less livid. Soon it would look like a mere bruise.
Falcone waited until this brief interview was over, saying nothing in response to the reporters’ questions, wishing more than ever that he could get Bramante alone in a room to himself for a little while. Then they walked to join Arturo Messina, who still stood above the entrance to the excavations, staring down at the culvert with its old iron gates, now unlocked. This was a small indentation in the Aventino, almost like a bomb crater, a pocket of flat land on the hill which was reached by a little path that wound down from the park. The miniature excavators had made their way along it. Their operators now sat on the machines which rumbled in the warm late afternoon air, like iron beasts of burden resting before the exertions they knew were to come.
“There’s news?” Bramante asked the moment they joined him.
“No—” Messina began to say, then Falcone interrupted him.
“We have Ludo Torchia, sir. He was picked up in a bar the students use in Testaccio. Somewhat drunk. He’s at the Questura now.”
An unexpected grin lit Messina’s gloomy features. “See, Giorgio! I told you. We make progress.”
The man wasn’t paying much attention. He was staring down at the excavators. “So what are you doing?” he asked warily.
“Nothing,” Messina answered. “Without your permission.”
Bramante shook his head. “This is…” The digger drivers were looking up at them in anticipation. “A historic site. You can’t just destroy it…. Not again.”
Messina put a hand on his shoulder. “We can’t go any further down there without those machines. If the boy’s still inside, we could lift off the roof and see a hell of a lot more than we can now.”
“It’s irreplaceable.” Bramante shook his head again. “I suppose it’s too much to expect the likes of you to appreciate.”
Arturo Messina blinked, clearly taken aback by this vacillation. Then he said, “You’re exhausted. It’s understandable. You don’t have to be here. Go home to your wife. You’ve done everything you can. This is our job now. I’ll send someone to be with you. Falcone. Or someone less miserable.”
Bramante glanced at them and licked his lips. “You’ve got Ludo,” he said quietly. “I know him. If I speak to him, perhaps he’ll see sense. He wouldn’t want this place damaged either. Just give me some time.”
Falcone was shuffling from side to side, frantically coughing into his fist. Interviews in the Questura were for police officers, lawyers, and suspects. Not the desperate parents of missing children.
“Let me think about this,” Messina replied. “Falcone. Take Giorgio back to the Questura with you. I’ll be along very shortly. I want to see what happens here. And I begin the questioning. No one else. Well?”
Falcone didn’t move. He said, “An interview conducted in the presence of a potential witness, as Professor Bramante undoubtedly is, would be… rather unorthodox. It could cause problems with the lawyers. Immense problems.”
Messina smiled, then put his hand on Falcone’s arm and squeezed. Hard.
“Fuck the lawyers, Leo,” he said cheerfully. “Now off with you.”
Falcone caught the expression in his superior’s eye. Messina wanted the two of them out of there. The commissario wasn’t waiting for anyone.
“Sir,” Falcone replied stiffly, then led Giorgio Bramante to a squad car, closed the door on him, and ordered the driver to take the man to the Questura to await his arrival.
After which, he lit a cigarette, took two rapid draws from it, then threw the thing beneath one of the parched orange trees.
The relationship was damaged already, Falcone decided. There was no more harm to be done.
He walked back and joined Messina, who glared at him, furious.
“You’re disobeying my orders. How do you think that will look on the report sheet when it comes to the promotions board?”
“There’s something wrong here,” Falcone replied. “You know it. I know it. We have to—”
“No!” Messina barked. “That child is missing. Once those machines go in, I could turn him up at any moment. Until we do that, I don’t give a shit what you think, or what Giorgio Bramante gets up to. Understood?”
The older carabinieri officer laughed. It wasn’t an entirely unpleasant sound.
“You think we don’t know who Giorgio Bramante is?” he asked Costa. “We work the Aventino. We’re not strangers here.”
“So you’ve seen him?” Costa asked.
The two uniformed officers exchanged sly glances. It wasn’t supposed to happen like this. They were rival forces — one civilian, one military. Not exactly at loggerheads, but rarely bosom friends either.
“Listen,” Peroni said in his best charming voice, one that was at odds with his thug-like appearance, “we can either play the game and pretend we don’t exist. Or we can have an easy, amicable chat and then go our own ways. I won’t tell if you won’t. Where’s the harm in that?”
“He came here two or three weeks ago,” the older officer said, and got a filthy look from his colleague for his pains. “He put some flowers down in the park over there. Where the kid went missing, I guess.”
“No one ever said he was a bad father,” Peroni agreed sweetly.
That got the young one going.
“He was the best kind of father you could get, wasn’t he? Some scum went and killed his kid like that! What the hell do you expect? If you’ve got kids—”
“You’ve got kids?” Costa interrupted.
“No…” the young one answered with a surly expression.
“Then—” Costa said. A painful dig in the ribs from Peroni stopped him.
“I’ve got kids,” the big man said. “If anyone touched them…”
“Quite.” The young officer nodded.
“Professor Bramante never came back?” Costa asked.
The two Carabinieri glanced at each other again.
“The wife did,” the older one replied. “We didn’t even know who she was until one of the mothers from the school pointed her out. No one gets to keep any secrets around here. It’s that kind of place.”
“What did she do?” Peroni asked.
The Carabiniere grimaced. He seemed a decent man.
“She put down some flowers, too. Then she sat in that park for hours. It got so late I wondered if I shouldn’t have gone and talked to her. It was freezing, for God’s sake. But she left, in the end.”