Cabal - 3

Free Cabal - 3 by Michael Dibdin Page B

Book: Cabal - 3 by Michael Dibdin Read Free Book Online
Authors: Michael Dibdin
of the creamy coffee and got out his cigarettes.
    ‘They didn’t. He did.’
    Lamboglia merely stared.
    ‘This is just a guess,’ Zen admitted as he lit up, ‘but they probably tied him up with a slippery hitch and looped the free end around his wrists. The family said that Ruspanti suffered from vertigo, so when he came round from the chloroform to find himself suspended two hundred feet above a sheer drop to the floor of the basilica he would have panicked totally. The witnesses all talked about the terrible screams which seemed to start several seconds before the body appeared. During those seconds Ruspanti would have been desperately struggling to free his hands so that he could reach the railings and pull himself to safety. What he didn’t realize was that by doing so, he was clearing the hitch securing him to the gallery.’
    Lamboglia stuck one finger between his teeth for a single moment which revealed him to be a reformed nail-biter.
    ‘You should have informed us.’
    Zen shrugged.
    ‘The way I read it, you either knew or you didn’t want to. Either way, it was none of my business to tell you.’
    Lamboglia stood up. He switched off the tape-recorder and replaced it in his briefcase.
    ‘Look, there’s no problem,’ Zen told him, getting up too. ‘Just deny everything. I’ll back you up. Without hard evidence, the media will soon drop the case.’
    Lamboglia buttoned up his coat and took his hat.
    ‘There is also the question of the mole.’
    ‘You want me to tackle that?’ offered Zen, eager to show willing. ‘Someone must have supplied Ruspanti’s killers with keys to the galleries. I could make a start there.’
    Lamboglia stared at the wall as though it were an autocue from which he was reading a prepared text.
    ‘The matter of the keys can be left to our own personnel. As far as the mole is concerned, we already have a suspect. The anonymous letter was faxed to the newspapers from a machine in the offices of Vatican Radio. At ten in the evening, there is only a skeleton staff on duty, and it was a fairly simple matter to eliminate them from suspicion. The only other person who had access to the building that evening was the duty security officer, Giovanni Grimaldi.’
    Zen let his cigarette fall to the floor and stepped on it carefully.
    ‘The man who showed me round on Friday?’
    Lamboglia inclined his head.
    ‘He was at the scene when Ruspanti fell, wasn’t he?’ Zen demanded. ‘Was he already involved in the case in some way?’
    The cleric looked at him blankly.
    ‘That is neither here nor there. We are concerned to determine whether or not he sent that letter to the press, and if so to prevent it happening again. The problem is that Grimaldi is himself a member of the force which normally undertakes operations of this kind.’
    ‘ Quia custodet ipsis custodies ,’ murmured Zen.
    ‘ Quis custodiet ipsos custodes , actually. But you’ve got the right idea. Who is to investigate the investigators? We normally have every confidence in our staff, but in this case it is simply too much of a risk to expect Grimaldi’s colleagues to act against him. It is essential that the mole shouldn’t be tipped off before we can act.’
    He looked at Zen.
    ‘Which is where you come in.’
    Zen returned his stare.
    ‘You want me to … “act”?’
    Lamboglia placed his hands on the table, fingers splayed as though on the keyboard of an organ.
    ‘A positive and decisive intervention on your part would contribute greatly towards bringing this unfortunate episode to a mutually satisfactory conclusion,’ he said.
    Zen nodded.
    ‘But this time, perhaps you’d better tell me exactly what you want done,’ he said. ‘Just to avoid the possibility of any further confusion.’
    ‘The first thing is to search Grimaldi’s room. With any luck, you might find some incriminating material which we can use. He’s on duty this afternoon, so you won’t be disturbed.’
    He handed Zen a brown

Similar Books

Blood On the Wall

Jim Eldridge

Hansel 4

Ella James

Fast Track

Julie Garwood

Norse Valor

Constantine De Bohon

1635 The Papal Stakes

Eric Flint, Charles E. Gannon