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Authors: Iain Pears

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He did it, at least, with some grace. If Bottando could recover any part of the Italian heritage, then that must take precedence, he said somewhat pompously. The General should not even consider coming to the party. They would manage without him, and Spello would be there to answer any questions about museum security.

So he’d gone, and had slowly begun to wonder whether the museum folk were worse than the Swiss police, or the other way around. Attempts at international conversation as the large black Mercedes whistled down the autobahn were accordingly muted, and the atmosphere did not thaw until Bottando spotted his long-time French equivalent in the bank lobby.

Jean Janet was universally liked. One of the rare French protestants, he hailed from the Alsace region in the east of the country, and had headed his department
before Bottando’s position had even been a twinkle in a bureaucrat’s eye. In the early years he had been unfailingly helpful in getting the Roman sezione into working order, illicitly handing over vast files of material, introducing Bottando to influential and knowledgeable gossip-mongers in the art world, passing on advice on some of the more subtle aspects of police work in the art field. Bottando had, in turn, gone out of his way to be helpful whenever possible. Any request from Janet was treated as a high-priority matter, and the direct and easy-going exchange of material had proved beneficial to both sides.

Apart from that, Bottando genuinely liked the man’s sense of humour, and Paris had become one of the few places outside Italy that he travelled to willingly. Janet’s only real disadvantage, apart from powerful halitosis, was that he refused to speak anything but French, and this limited conversation. Especially as Bottando was an equally idle linguist – although he could become positively fluent after a good meal and a cognac.

He stumbled through his greeting, again acutely conscious of what he was sure were the contemptuous eyes of the bilingual Swiss policemen, and made up for it by wringing his friend’s hand firmly and beaming at him.

‘I am delighted to see you once more, my friend,’ said Janet. ‘What do you think of our little bit of detective work, eh? And even,’ he added, waving his hand at the still silent Swiss, ‘persuading these secretive folk to let us look in one of the vaults! Not bad for an old Frenchman.’

As they were led down the stairs and through a series of gleaming steel gates towards the deposit boxes, Bottando congratulated his colleague on his swiftness and fortune. ‘Fortune, poof! Good police work. Research, interviews, careful questioning. Well, perhaps some luck. But only a little.’

Bottando confessed that he didn’t think there would be much in the box to interest him. ‘After all, our icons disappeared nine years ago. The chances of him having kept one as a souvenir are a bit slight – even if he did take them.’

‘I, also, do not expect a treasure trove. But who knows? It is a pity he died so inconsiderately. A brief conversation would have been very interesting.’

Playing the Gallic extrovert with gusto, a role he habitually adopted when dealing with any sort of foreigner, Janet rubbed his hands together with theatrical anticipation as the heavily armed security guard took out a key and inserted it in the door of a large steel box, one of about a hundred in the room they had entered. Bottando noted that most of the owners were probably under the impression that theirs was the only key to their box, and that whatever they chose to keep in it was absolutely safe from either theft or, sometimes worse, examination. Another example of Swiss duplicity, he thought.

Morneau’s box was about two feet square and three feet long, with a door of angled sheet steel two inches thick. As one of the Swiss policemen had told them on the way down, it was one of the most expensive types he could have rented, and cost ten thousand Swiss francs a
year. That in itself, he added, suggested that there should be something interesting inside.

He was wrong. There were no stolen icons, no convenient address books containing the names of icon collectors, no sets of accounts detailing payments received, nothing at all that would get the investigation any further along. But there was a lot of money: some half million Swiss francs, at least fifty thousand dollars in small denomination notes, and the same amount again in Deutschmarks and sterling. All in all, about four hundred thousand dollars in loose currency. Apart from that, the only contents were a bundle of sketchbooks, well-thumbed and spattered with blobs of paint, bound up with a length of red tape. While the money was being taken out and counted, and sets of serial numbers taken down so that attempts could be made to trace their origin, Flavia sat down in a quiet corner – she had been largely ignored all morning and had barely spoken a word since they landed – and flicked through the sketchbooks.

Some of them were clearly many years old, and were full of details of arms and legs, different types of faces and costume, the sort of thing that every art student at one of the more traditional painting academies is required to turn out. She remembered that, in the thirties, Morneau had been at the prestigious
Académie des Beaux Arts
in Paris and had made the beginnings of a promising career as a painter before turning to the more financially rewarding business of dealing. He had also taught in Lyons before going commercial. As she looked at the sketches with a critical eye, she could see
why. He was very skilled, and the line drawings particularly were executed with ease and dexterity. But they were old-fashioned in the extreme, and almost entirely derivative. Dredging up the remnants of her education, she spotted drawings after Rembrandt, legs copied from Parmigianino, endless repetitions of fragments from the Sistine Chapel, all done with minute changes as the artist experimented to see what the painters had been doing.

Intermingled with the sketches were voluminous jottings. The notes were probably part of the dreary lectures in art history that were churned out until the riots of 1968 produced a revolution in methods. The new way didn’t produce any better painters, but it was probably less boring. Recipes for paints, quotations from artists, extracts from books on techniques, all written in a fast, ill-formed hand that was often barely legible. The other books, many in better condition than the first, were of the same type. The newest were the three at the top of the pile and, once more, followed the same pattern.

Flavia decided that recognition of painterly style was merely a matter of keeping the eye practised. In the first volume she examined she had had to concentrate hard to tell even Rubens from Correggio. Now, after only a few minutes, the recognition was coming much faster and more easily.

She looked again, concentrating hard, and then glanced up to confirm that the five men were still busy talking to each other and were ignoring her very existence. She slipped three of the books in the black leather handbag that everyone in her office always made fun of for being so absurdly large and unladylike, bound the rest in the
red cotton tape, and replaced them on the table with the bundles of money.

Forty-five minutes later, the two Italians and the Frenchman were sitting in a restaurant ordering food. Lunch had been Flavia’s idea, and it had been taken up enthusiastically by her superiors, if for different reasons. There had been a polite disagreement about where to go. Janet had suggested an Italian trattoria, Bottando had returned the compliment by insisting that they go French. Because he was very much of the opinion that this was by far the best decision, Janet had let himself be persuaded, but made up for his chauvinism by ordering a bottle of Montepulciano, which he considered one of the few Italian wines that might deservedly have been produced in his home country.

He took an appreciative sip then asked, ‘Well, my friends, and what is it that I can do for you?’

Bottando looked surprised. ‘For us? What makes you think we want something?’

‘I do apologise, but I’m sure one of you does. I am a thoughtful person, and observant. And I know you well. You are a polite man, and you were very rude in disposing of those Swiss so that you could eat alone in my company. I am flattered, and I know your opinion of our Swiss colleagues. But you could have asked me earlier and made it less obvious. So, I think to myself, you want to ask me something that has only just occurred to you. And the invitation came after that whispering in your ear from your assistant here. Therefore…’

‘Entirely incorrect. I just wanted to enjoy my lunch
rather than have to suffer through it. Although I must admit I do want to hear what you know about Morneau. He sounds a character.’

‘He was. I recommend, by the way, the trout. It comes with one of the few sauces they do here which doesn’t have too much flour. Otherwise, stick to the veal. It is very good to see you again. But, I must insist that you play fair. I will tell you about the life and secret career of Monsieur Morneau – as much as we know – if you tell me the latest goings-on and scandal in Rome. I haven’t seen you for some time. There must be a great deal I’ve missed.’

He fussed over the bread, spearing it on his fork and using it to sop up some garlic sauce from his plate, while Bottando considered whether he should break the policy of silence about the Raphael which he had so convincingly explained to Flavia several weeks back. It was about the only decent anecdote of recent vintage, and he knew Janet would appreciate it. On the other hand, he doubted the man’s ability to keep it to himself.

‘Well, then,’ Janet began, lifting his head reluctantly from his plate and wiping a dribble of gravy from his chin. ‘As you probably noticed, Morneau was an exceedingly rich man for an art dealer. He had an extravagant lifestyle, a house in Provence, a spacious apartment in Paris, and a gallery which, although successful, certainly did not generate enough income to support his expenditure. No mortgages, no debts. All his residences, incidentally, had been completely swept of any incriminating papers by the time we got there to have a look around. A very tidy man.

‘So where did this money come from? Not from legitimate activities, and not from peddling stolen icons either. We know of twenty-five he probably stole. Even if there are another twenty-five we don’t know about, that gives you, say, six or seven million francs over a ten-year period. He spent much more than that. So what else was he up to?

‘Then he disappears. This is a man who turns up at almost every gallery opening, hasn’t missed a performance of the ballet for nearly fifteen years, and is an artistic socialite of the first order. He ducks out of sight for nearly a year, and then he turns up, in an embarrassing position and dead. So where has he been, eh? Tell me that.’

He finished his little speech and smiled, as if expecting applause for the brilliance of his logic.

‘I was hoping
you
would. You haven’t actually told us anything at all. What was he doing?’ Bottando asked.

Janet shrugged. ‘There I cannot help you. Deduction can take you only so far. Any further requires more information. Now tell me. What about Rome?’

Before he could begin, Flavia, who had been staring absently out of the window, made one of her first comments of the day. She didn’t like being ignored, although she was occasionally prepared to put up with being treated as merely a decorative appendage by Bottando. He didn’t do it very often and, besides, he was old and southern and could hardly be expected to be perfect. But it was time, she decided, to make her presence felt.

‘Maybe we should test the Commissioner’s powers of deduction a little further,’ she said, smiling winsomely
at the Frenchman. She always did that when she suspected she might be being a little rude. But before she could proceed further along these lines, Bottando interrupted her.

‘Quite,’ he said. ‘But how good a painter was he? What were those fake icons he turned out like? It struck me that we might approach some of the more reputable forgers in Naples and ask a few careful questions there. Now he’s dead they would probably be more forthcoming than usual.’

Janet considered the matter for a moment. ‘As for Morneau’s qualities as a painter, he was very good indeed, but he was born too late. He disliked modernism in all its forms. Had he been born a century earlier he would have had a great success.

‘His icons were very variable. The earliest ones were good, painted on old panels, covered in dirt, quite well-executed. But once the technicians knew what they were looking for, they could easily spot them – something about paint in wormholes, which you don’t get in the real thing. The later ones were sloppy. It looks as though he realised that they didn’t really have to be that good to be convincing, so stopped wasting so much effort.

‘Technical problems aside, however, they are remarkable, even the bad ones. They have a great spiritual quality, almost as if he were painting for his own sake. I’m not really surprised the monks were taken in. Once they had been aged and covered with dirt, they looked wonderful, even better than the originals. You should see them. One always tends to assume that fakes are not as good as
the real thing. I’m not so sure. Morneau understood the paintings. That’s where most of these people fall down.’ He smiled at the two of them. ‘There. All along you suspected your old friend was a philistine, eh?’

They had reached the coffee, and the conversation showed signs of wandering off into the byways and alleyways of anecdote. Flavia stirred herself for another attempt.

‘Commissioner,’ she began. ‘The bank’s log of when Morneau opened his box. When was the last visit?’

‘I don’t know. We haven’t been able to get that out of the bank yet. However, according to his passport, he last visited Switzerland in May,’ he answered.

She smiled in quiet triumph. She must remember to point out to Bottando what an extraordinarily good employee she was. Even if she occasionally caused him a great deal of trouble and heartache. As she was about to do now. She reached into her handbag and took out one of the sketchbooks she’d purloined. Apologising insincerely for abducting evidence in such a cavalier fashion, she handed it across to the two men. ‘Have a look at that. Ring any bells?’ she asked.

BOOK: The Raphael Affair
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