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IM9 The Paper Moon (2008)
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THE PAPER MOON
ANDREA CAMILLERI
Translated by Stephen Sartarelli
PENGUIN BOOKS
PENGUIN BOOKS Published by the Penguin Group Penguin Group (USA) Inc., 375 Hudson Street, New York, New York 10014, USA Penguin Group (Canada), 90 Eglinton Avenue East, Suite 700, Toronto, Ontario M4P 2Y3, Canada (a division of Pearson Penguin Canada Inc.) Penguin Books Ltd., 80 Strand, London WC2R 0RL, England Penguin Ireland, 25 St. Stephen's Green, Dublin 2, Ireland (a division of Penguin Books Ltd) Penguin Group (Australia), 250 Camberwell Road, Camberwell. Victoria 3124, Australia (a division of Pearson Australia Group Pty Ltd) Penguin Books India Pvt Ltd, 11 Community Centre, Panchsheel Park, New Delhi--110 017, India Penguin Group (NZ), 67 Apollo Drive, Rosedale, North Shore 0632, New Zealand (a division of Pearson New Zealand Ltd) Penguin Books (South Africa) (Pty) Ltd., 24 Sturdee Avenue, Rosebank,Johannesburg 2196, South Africa
Penguin Books Ltd, Registered Offices: 80 Strand, London WC2R 0RL, England
First published in Penguin Books 2008
Translation copyright (c) Stephen Sartarelli, 2008 All rights reserved
Originally published in Italian as La luna di carta by Sellerio Editore, Palermo. Copyright (c) 2005 Sellerio Editore.
Publisher's Note
This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are the product of the author's imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, business establishments, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.
ISBN: 1-4362-0783-5
CIP data available
Set in Bembo Designed by Jaye Zimet
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1
The alarm rang, as it had done every morning for the past year, at seven-thirty. But he had woken up a fraction of a second before the bell; the release of the spring that set off the ringing had sufficed. He therefore had time, before jumping out of bed, to look over at the window and realize, from the light, that the day promised to be a fine one, without clouds. Afterwards he just barely had time to make coffee, drink a cup, do what he needed to do, shave and shower, drink another cup, fire up a cigarette, get dressed, go outside, get in his car, and pull up at the station at nine--all at the slapstick speed of Larry Semon or Charlie Chaplin.
Up until one year earlier, his morning wake-up routine had followed different rules, and, most of all, there was no rush, no hundred-meter dashes.
First, no alarm clock.
Montalbano was in the habit of opening his eyes naturally after a night's sleep, with no need of external stimuli. He did have an alarm clock of sorts, but it was inside him, buried somewhere in his brain. He merely had to set it be-fore falling asleep, telling himself,Don't forget you have to get up tomorrow at six,and the next morning his eyes would pop open at six o'clock sharp. He'd always considered the alarm clock, the metal kind, an instrument of torture. The three or four times he'd had to use that drill-like noise to wake up-- because Livia, who had to leave the next morning, didn't trust his inner alarm--he'd spent the rest of the day with a headache. Then Livia, after a squabble, bought a plastic alarm clock that instead of ringing made an electronic sound, a kind of unendingbeeeeeep,rather like a little fly that had found its way into your ear and got stuck inside. Enough to drive you crazy. He'd ended up throwing it out the window, which triggered another memorable spat.
Second, he would wake himself up, intentionally, a bit earlier than necessary, some ten minutes earlier at the very least.
These were the best ten minutes of the day ahead. Ah, how wonderful it was to lie there in bed, under the covers, thinking of idiocies!Should I buy that book everybody's calling a masterpiece, or not? Should I eat out today, or come home and scarf down what Adelina's prepared for me? Should I or shouldn't I tell Livia that I can't wear the shoes she bought me because they're too tight?That sort of thing. Poking about with the mind. While carefully avoiding, however, any thought of sex or women. That could be dangerous terrain at that hour, unless Livia were there sleeping beside him, ready and happy to face the consequences.
One morning a year earlier, however, things had suddenly changed. He had barely opened his eyes, calculating that he had a scant fifteen minutes to devote to his mental dawdlings, when a thought--not a whole one, but the start of one-- came into his mind, and it began with these exact words:
"When your dying day comes..."
"What was this thought doing there with the others? How gutless! It was like suddenly remembering, while making love, that he hadn't paid the phone bill. Not that he was inordinately frightened by the idea of dying; the problem was that six-thirty in the morning was hardly the proper time and place for it. If one started thinking about death at the crack of dawn, certainly by five in the afternoon one would either shoot oneself or jump into the sea with a rock around one's neck. He managed to prevent that phrase from proceeding any further, blocking its path by counting very fast from one to five thousand, with eyes shut and fists clenched. Then he realized that the only solution was to set about doing the things he needed to do, concentrating on them as though it were a matter of life or death. The following morning was even more treacherous. The first thought that entered his mind was that the fish soup he'd eaten the night before had lacked some seasoning. But which? And at that exact moment, the same accursed thought came back to him:
"When your dying day comes..."
As of that moment, he realized that the thought would never go away again. It might lie buried deep inside some curlicue in his brain for a day or two only to pop back out into the open when he least expected it. For no reason he became convinced that his very survival depended on preventing that sentence from ever completing itself. For if it did, he would die when the last word came.
Hence the alarm clock. To leave not even the slightest fissure in time for that accursed thought to slip through.
"When she came to spend three days in Vigata, Livia, as she was unpacking, pointed at the nightstand and asked: "What's that alarm doing there?" He answered with a lie.
"Well, a week ago I had to get up really early and--" "And a week later it's still set?"
When she put her mind to it, Livia was worse than Sherlock Holmes. Slightly embarrassed, he told her the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth. Livia burst out:
"You're demented!"
And she buried the alarm clock in a drawer inside the armoire.
The following morning it was Livia, not the alarm, that woke Montalbano. And it was a beautiful awakening, full of thoughts of life, not death. But as soon as she left, the clock was back on the nightstand.
"Aahh, Chief, Chief!" "What is it, Cat?"
"There's some lady waiting for you." "For me?"
"She din't say what it was f'you poissonally in poisson, she just said she wanted a talk to somebody from the police." "So why couldn't she talk to you?"
"Chief, she said she wanted a talk to somebody superior to me."
"Isn't Inspector Augello here?"
"No sir, he called
to say he was comin' in late 'cause he's runnin' late."
"And why's that?"
"He says last night the baby got sick, and so today the medical doctor's gonna come by."
"Cat, you don't have to say 'medical doctor'; just 'doctor' is more than enough."
"Iss not enough, Chief. Iss confusing. Take you, f'rinstance. You's a doctor, but not o' the medical variety."
"What about the mother, Beba? Can't she wait for the med...the doctor herself?"
"Yessir, Miss Beba's there, Chief, but she says she wants him to be there, too."
"What about Fazio?"
"Fazio's with some kid."
"What did this kid do?"
"Didn't do nothin', Chief. He's dead."
"How'd he die?"
"Doverose."
"Okay, tell you what. I'm going into my office now. You wait about ten minutes, then send in the lady."
The inspector felt furious at Augello. Ever since the baby was born, Mimi hovered over the kid as much as he'd hovered over women before. He was head over heels in love with his young son, Salvo. That's right: Not only had he called upon the inspector to baptize the kid, he'd also given him the wonderful surprise of naming him after him.
"Can't you give him your father's name, Mimi?"
"Right! Imagine that, my father's called Eusebio."
"So then name him after Beba's father."
"That'd be even worse. His name's Adelchi."
"Tell me, Mimi. So the real reason you're naming him
after me is because all the other available names seem too bizarre to you?"
"Cut the shit, Salvo! First of all, I'm very fond of you, you're like a father to--"
A father? "With a son like Mimi?
"Oh, fuck off!"
Livia, on the other hand, upon learning that the new-born would be called Salvo, burst into tears. There were certain special circumstances that moved her deeply.
"Mimi loves you so much! "whereas you--"
"Oh, he loves me, does he? Do the names Eusebio and Adelchi mean anything to you?"
And ever since the kid was born, Mimi would appear at the station and disappear just as fast: One minute Salvo (junior, of course) had the runs, the next minute he had red spots on his bottom, the next he was throwing up, the next he didn't want to suckle . . .
He'd complained about it, over the phone, with Livia.
"Oh, yeah? You've got a problem with Mimi? All that only means he's a loving, conscientious father! I'm not so sure that you, in his position--"
He'd hung up on her.
He looked at the morning mail that Catarella had left on his desk. By prior agreement with the post office, the private mail addressed to his house in Marinella was being forwarded to the station, since sometimes he went a couple of days without returning home.
There were only official letters, which he set aside, not feeling like reading them. He would hand them over to Fazio as soon as he got back. The telephone rang.
"Chief, iss Dr. Latte wit' an 's'at the end."
Lattes, that is, chief of the commissioner's cabinet. To his horror and shock, Montalbano had discovered a while back that Lattes had a clone in a government spokesman who frequently appeared on TV: the same air of the sacristy, the same porky-pink, beardless skin, the same little asshole-like mouth, the same unctuousness. An exact replica.
"My dear Montalbano, how's it going?"
"Very well, Doctor."
"And the family? The children? Everything all right?"
He'd told him a million times he neither was married nor had any children, legitimate or illegitimate. But it was hopeless. The man was obsessed.
"Everything's fine."
"Good, thank the Lord. Listen, Montalbano, the commissioner would like to talk to you at five o'clock this afternoon."
Why did he want to talk to him? Usually Commissioner Bonetti-Alderighi carefully avoided meeting him, preferring to summon Mimi instead. It must be some tremendous hassle.
The door flew violently open, crashed against the wall, and Montalbano jumped out of his chair. Catarella appeared.
"Beck y'pardon, Chief, my 'and slipped. The ten minutes passed just now, just like you said."
"Oh, yeah? Ten minutes have passed? What the hell do I care?"
"The lady, Chief."
He'd completely forgotten.
"Is Fazio back?"
"Not yet so far, Chief."
"Send her in."
A woman just under forty, who looked, at first glance, like a former Sister of Mercy: downcast eyes behind her glasses, hair in a bun, hands clenching her purse, the whole wrapped up in a broad gray sack of a dress that made it impossible to tell what lay beneath. Her legs, however--despite thick stockings and flat shoes--were long and beautiful. She stood hesitantly in the doorway, staring at the strip of white marble separating the floor tiles of the corridor from those in Montalbano's office.
"Come in, come in. Please close the door and make yourself comfortable."
She obeyed, sitting down at the very edge of one of the two chairs in front of his desk.
"What can I do for you, signora?"
"Signorina.Michela Pardo. You're Inspector Montalbano, correct?"
"Have we met?"
"No, but I've seen you on television." "I'm listening."
She seemed even more embarrassed than before. Settling her buttocks more comfortably into the chair, she stared at the tip of one of her shoes, swallowed twice, opened her mouth, closed it, then opened it again.
"It's about my brother, Angelo."
And she stopped, as though the inspector needed only to know the name of her brother to grasp the whole problem in a flash.
"Signorina Michela, surely you realize--"
"I know, I know. Angelo has ...he's disappeared. It's been two days. I'm sorry, I'm just very worried and confused and... "
"How old is your brother?"
"Forty-two."
"Does he live with you?"
"No, he lives by himself. I live with Mama."
"Is your brother married?"
"No."
"Does he have a girlfriend?" "No."
"What makes you say he disappeared?"
"Because he never lets a day go by without coming to see Mama. And when he can't come, he calls. And if he has to go away, he lets us know. We haven't heard from him for two days."
"Have you tried calling him?"
"Yes, I've tried his home phone and his mobile. There's no answer. I even went to his house. I rang and rang the doorbell, then decided to go inside."
"You have the keys to your brother's place?"
"Yes."
"And what did you find there?"
"Everything was in perfect order. I got scared."
"Does your brother suffer from any illness?" "Not at all."
"What does he do for a living?" "He's an informer."
Montalbano balked. Had ratting on others become an established profession, with a year-end bonus and paid vacations as with Mafia turncoats, who had fixed salaries? He would clear this up in a minute.
"Is he often on the move?"
"Yes, but he works within a limited area. Basically he doesn't go beyond the boundaries of the province."
"So do you want to declare him a missing person?" "No... I don't know."
"I should warn you, however, that we can't get moving on it right away." "Why not?"
"Because your brother is an independent adult, healthy in body and mind. He might have decided to go away for a few days of his own accord. Understand? And, in the end, we don't know whether--"
"I understand. What do you suggest I do?"
As she was asking this, she finally looked at him. Montalbano felt a sort of heat wave run through his body. Those eyes were exactly like a deep, violet lake that any man would gladly dive into and drown in. It was a good thing Signorina Michela almost always kept those eyes lowered. In his mind Montalbano took two strokes and swam back to shore.
"Well, I woul
d suggest you go back to your brother's place and have another look around."
"I already did, yesterday. I didn't go inside, but I rang the doorbell for a long time."
"All right, but maybe he's in no condition to come to the door."
"Why would that be?"
"I dunno ...maybehe slipped in the bathtub and can't walk, or has a very high fever--"
"Inspector, I didn't just ring the doorbell. I also called out to him. If he'd slipped in the bathtub, he would have answered. Angelo's apartment is not that big, after all."
"I'm afraid I must insist you go back there."
"I won't go back alone. Would you come with me?"
She looked at him again. This time Montalbano sud-denly found himself sinking, the water coming up to his neck. He thought about it a moment, then decided.
"Listen, I'll tell you what. If you still haven't heard from your brother by seven o'clock this evening, come back here to the station, and I'll accompany you."
"Thank you."
She stood up and held out her hand. Montalbano took it but couldn't bring himself to shake it. It felt like a piece of lifeless flesh.
Ten minutes later Fazio appeared.
"A seventeen-year-old kid. Went up to the terrace of his building and shot himself up with an overdose. There was nothing we could do, poor guy. When we got there, he was already dead. The second in three days."
Montalbano looked at him dumbfounded.
"The second? You mean there was a first? "Why didn't any one tell me about it?"
"Fasulo, the engineer. But with him it was cocaine," said Fazio.
"Cocaine? "What are you saying? Fasulo died of a heart attack!"
"Sure, that's what the death certificate says. It's what his friends say, too. But everybody in town knows it was drugs." "Badly cut stuff?" "That I can't say, Chief."
"Listen, do you know some guy named Angelo Pardo, forty-two years old and an informer?"
Fazio didn't seem surprised at the mention of Angelo Pardo's profession. Maybe he hadn't fully understood.
"No, sir. "Why do you ask?"
"Seems he disappeared two days ago and his sister's getting worried."
"You want me to--"
"No, but later, if there's still no news, we'll see."