Read The Raphael Affair Online

Authors: Iain Pears

The Raphael Affair (19 page)

BOOK: The Raphael Affair
6.99Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Flavia shook her head again. ‘No. If we go roaring up the autostrada in a fleet of armed police cars there’ll be an enormous fuss. Initially it’ll be much better to go up quietly and check the thing out. Then you can put as many armed guards around us as you like. The more the better, in fact. But if we go clomping about the place like that, someone will talk. And it’ll be all over the newspapers tomorrow morning. Just make sure you keep it to yourself.’

‘Yes. You are possibly right. What time will you go?’

‘First thing tomorrow morning. Before that I need to draw some money, make out an expenses slip to catch the deadline for the next paycheque, have a nice shower, and collect some clothes.’

‘Tell me where to find you. Oh, by the way, you might want to look at this.’ He reached into his jacket and pulled out a sheet of paper.

‘Telex from Janet. Poor man complains about having to do so much work for us, but don’t let that concern you. I’m sure he got someone else to do it for him. He’s been tracking down picture-buying. Score, Byrnes three, Morneau six, everybody else, nil.’

‘May I?’ said Argyll, reaching over to take it. He unfolded it and read the communication carefully.

‘That’s it. That must be it.’ He pointed at a line of type after a few moments’ perusal. ‘“Portrait of a lady, copy after Fra Bartolommeo.” Three thousand Belgian
francs, to Jean-Luc Morneau. Seventy centimetres by a hundred and forty. Right size, more or less, and about the right age. Right style. That would have been perfect. Your colleague didn’t send a photograph as well, did he?’ he asked hopefully.

Bottando rummaged around in his pockets once more. ‘Yes,’ he said, handing over another sheet of paper. ‘Not very good, I’m afraid. Just a photocopy from the sale catalogue. Pretty good service though, don’t you think?’

Argyll was too busy looking at it to reply. He handed it over to Flavia, a satisfied look on his face. She looked disappointed. It was, in truth, unimpressive: very dirty, a three-quarter-length of a large middle-aged woman with a prospective double chin and a few other obvious attractions. Dressed in a dark, full-sleeved dress. Black hair, as far as he could tell through the dirt, and overloaded with vulgar jewellery: a tiara, a vast necklace and a thick, intricate ring.

‘Not a great loss if it was used. The portrait of Elisabetta he put on top was much better,’ she commented.

‘True. But look at the window and external scenery in the left background. Very similar to the fake Raphael, and exactly where the tests were taken. I think that’s pretty conclusive, myself.’

Bottando nodded approvingly. ‘You’ve got a good eye,’ he said. ‘I noticed the same thing myself, with a photograph of the Raphael to help.’

‘Which proves Morneau painted it, and that lets Spello off the hook,’ Flavia added with satisfaction.

‘Alas, no. Morneau was also an advisor to the Vatican,
back in the 1940s, and he must have known Spello then. That’s one example of why these books are so useful.’

He got up and brushed breadcrumbs from his lap. ‘Time to get back to the office. I have to work even if you two don’t.’

They parted, Flavia and Argyll heading east, while Bottando walked back to the office. He was worried. He hadn’t mentioned it to Flavia, not only because Argyll was there, but also because he didn’t want to concern her unnecessarily. But he knew he was about to take a huge risk with them. And it concerned him greatly.

Less burdened with cares than Bottando, Flavia and Argyll spent a delightful evening, once the business of washing themselves and clothes, and other domestic matters had been taken care of. Flavia had put on the washing machine, opened her mail and fussed about the apartment while Argyll had read some of the books he had brought with him.

While he sat with his leg over the arm of her one comfortable seat, he read out extracts from the books he was looking through. This was a change from the plane flight home, when he had read intensely and said scarcely a word. Flavia had noticed that a guide book to the Palazzo Pubblico in Siena had been one of the volumes.

Argyll laughed. ‘Listen to this. It’s a letter from Viscount Perceval about Lady Arabella. A great diarist and observer of eighteenth-century London, that man. She gets more and more remarkable every time I come
across her. It wasn’t only husband two who had wayward habits. Number one also couldn’t keep his hands to himself either. She broke a cello over his head at a royal levee because of it. Then tried to beat him up with her fists. In public. Must have made everybody’s evening.’

Or later: ‘Another bit. Clomorton told the Duchess of Albemarle he was in love with a “dark-haired beauty”. That was a mistake, poor sod. He must have known she was the worst tattle-tale in London. Perceval says she wrote to Lady Arabella directly. That must be what she was talking about in that letter I read you in London. Think of the reception the poor man would have got. Luckily for him he dropped dead first.’

‘What are you reading this for? Does it have anything to do with Siena?’

‘No. I was just looking to see if there was any mention of Sam Paris, Raphael or whatever. A very arty man, Perceval, and a great observer of the London scene. Nothing happened without him noticing it and jotting it down in his diary. A Raphael on the market, or a scandal about one, would be in here somewhere. There isn’t, which makes me more convinced I’m right.’

‘Are you going to tell me? Or am I to be treated like the General?’

He took her hand and kissed it absent-mindedly, letting go when he realised what he’d done. ‘Silly. Of course not. After dinner you will hear all.’

They had ended up digesting their evening meal by walking blissfully around the city. Flavia pointed out to Argyll her favourite buildings and spots; they had
wandered around the old ghetto, looking affectionately at the run-down buildings, Imperial fragments and tranquil, beautiful piazzas that suddenly appear as you turn unpromising-looking corners. Argyll gave an impromptu disquisition on the beauties of the Farnese Palace. Flavia wasn’t entirely persuaded, but liked his sense of conviction. She had responded by dredging through the memories of her university days and identifying all the large medallions on the Palazzo Spada a little down the road.

‘I can do that too,’ Argyll said. ‘Come with me.’ He grabbed her hand and led her to the other side of the Piazza Farnese, down the via Giulia and then left down a side street. He pointed to an emblem above one of the large wooden gates that shut prying eyes from the courtyard beyond. ‘There. Two pelicans intertwined, surmounted by a crown and the symbol of a castle. Whose is it?’

Flavia chewed her lip for a moment. ‘Don’t know. Whose?’

‘That’s the di Parma symbol. This was their Roman palace.’

She grinned. ‘So this is where it all started. I knew the palace was around here somewhere, but I never got around to looking. What’s in there now?’

‘Just apartments, I imagine. It looks very tatty. The point is, however, that Mantini lived there, which explains why he was brought in for this job in the first place.’ Argyll pointed to a door a few yards up on the other side of the street.

‘As for the picture,’ he went on, ‘the di Parmas didn’t
have it, nor the Clomortons, nor the dealer Sam Paris. Mantini was the only man involved who was left. Lots of motive as he was always hard up. Or maybe love of the painting was more important and he didn’t want it to leave Italy and be bought by a clod like Clomorton. So he paints over the Raphael, makes a copy of the same picture which he gives to the dealer, and keeps the real thing himself.

‘He couldn’t uncover it either, because he lived almost next door to the di Parmas, who might have got upset. But there’d be no rush if he wanted the picture for itself, not the money it could bring. So it could sit there and wait until he retired back to his home town, or something.

‘But he never made it to retirement. He has a seizure and dies in 1727, at the age of fifty-two. Perfect health, just drops dead one afternoon in the street. No time, you see, for deathbed confessions or secret instructions about his picture. His daughter inherits his small fortune and remaining pictures. She returns to her father’s native
paese
, where she marries a silversmith.’

‘Siena.’

‘Quite right. And he, because silversmiths were highly thought of, gets on the town council and dies, wealthy and greatly respected, in 1782. And he leaves to the city a couple of pictures. One portrait of himself, naturally, and the other a memento of that great Sienese painter, his own father-in-law, the superlative Carlo Mantini.’

‘Very good. But how do you know it’s the right one?’

‘Because it must be. Process of elimination. It’s a ruin,
which fits in with the evidence available, and it’s the only picture which could possibly have concealed the Raphael.’

This was the weak spot in an otherwise convincing argument, the area his supervisor would have pounced on, had he been there to listen. But he wasn’t, and Flavia said nothing, so he hurried on. ‘I did about a month’s work in a day and a half. Quite a lot of shortcuts, I admit. But if no one else has it, and they appear not to, it’s the only other possibility. I hope you’re proud of me.’

Flavia patted him on the back. ‘Well done. Now all we have to do is go there and see if you’re right. Come on. Let’s go home.’

13

Flavia and Argyll set out for Siena at eight sharp the next morning, Argyll in the passenger seat, Flavia driving her old but well-maintained Alfa Spider like a banshee. In a brief moment of feminine submissiveness she had suggested that Argyll might drive. In a long-standing tradition of English cowardice, he had declined. Nothing, he declared as they forced their way onto the main northern artery, would ever get him to drive in Rome. Not after the last time.

It was a wise decision. Flavia drove with knowledge, skill and determination; Argyll would have driven with his eyes shut. The maniacal early morning traffic died away to something more human fairly quickly, and they made rapid progress north.

It’s a long, five-hour voyage to Siena, even if you drive – as Flavia did – far too fast on the motorway. It’s also a very beautiful trip. The autostrada, one of the best in the country and one of the longest in Europe,
starts outside Reggio di Calabria at the very tip of the south-western peninsula. It curls through the parched hills of the south to Naples, then turns up through the poor countryside of Calabria and Latium to Rome. Then it heads for Florence and swings east, through a series of giant tunnels and dizzying climbs, over the Apennines to Bologna. Here it splits, one arm reaching out to Venice, the other travelling on to Milan.

Even on the relatively small segment between Rome and Siena, it takes the traveller within easy reach of some of the most wonderful places in the world: Orvieto, Montefiascone, Pienza and Montepulciano; the Umbrian hill-towns of Assisi, Perugia, Todi, Gubbio. The stepped hills of vines and lowland pastures of goats and sheep mix perfectly with the rivers, the steep drops, and the dozens of often largely ignored medieval fortress-towns, perched on top of their protective hills as if the Medicis still reigned supreme.

It was wonderful. Argyll had travelled around Italy for years, had seen nearly all the major sights several times over, but never tired of seeing them all again. For a brief interlude, he forgot his woes, enjoyed the scenery and tried to pay no attention to his companion’s driving.

Five hours almost to the minute later, they swung off the motorway, paid the fee at the toll and headed down the hilly road through Rapolano to Siena, having spent their journey in a mood of cheerful contentment and buoyant optimism. Contentment on Argyll’s part, optimism on Flavia’s. Then Argyll said: ‘How are we going to go about this little expedition? After all, we can hardly wander into the palazzo, take the picture
off the wall and attack it with a knife. Curators don’t like that. It upsets them.’

‘Don’t worry. I thought about it last night. We’ll just go and make sure it’s still there, then make an official visit tomorrow.’

They were a little delayed getting to their hotel. Siena is a town where the streets have changed not at all since the thirteenth century, and to cope with modern traffic flows, the authorities have instituted one of the most ferociously complex one-way systems ever devised. A single mistake anywhere, and you are flung off in entirely the wrong direction without the slightest chance of doing anything about it. They had driven – quite illegally as the area is closed to traffic – past the cathedral twice before Flavia reversed the wrong way down a narrow one-way street and found the road she wanted at the end.

She had chosen a comfortable, elegant and expensive hotel to serve as their temporary headquarters. It also served a remarkable lunch, which Argyll suspected might have weighed more heavily in its favour. They had a preliminary drink, and Argyll leaned back in his chair to gaze at the Tuscan hills out of the window. ‘Wonderful,’ he said. ‘The Italian police really do things in style.’

Flavia shrugged. ‘The very last thing the General said to me was that we were to take care of ourselves.’

‘I don’t think this is quite what he had in mind.’

She spread her hands out wide in a very Italian gesture. ‘Who can tell? Find this picture and no one will care. Besides, I’ve always wanted to stay in this place.
And my expenses in London were derisory. This will make up for it a little. I’ve booked us in over the weekend. We can sort the picture out, then have a couple of days relaxing. Do you mind?’

‘Am I complaining? This time last month I was sitting in a sandwich shop in London eating a cheese and pickle roll. This arrangement seems slightly preferable, whatever the dire consequences of failure.’

‘Are you afraid of that?’

‘Of failing or the consequences? Yes and no. I think you will have your proof by tomorrow, whatever happens. Do you carry a gun, by the way?’

Flavia frowned at the apparent
non sequitur
, trying to work out the mental leaps that took her companion from one subject to another. ‘No,’ she said, giving up the effort. ‘I’m not in the police, remember. Just a civilian. Why do you ask?’

BOOK: The Raphael Affair
6.99Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

Two if by Sea by Marie Carnay
If the Shoe Fits by Sandra D. Bricker
The Makeover by Vacirca Vaughn
Bellissima by Anya Richards
Search Party by Valerie Trueblood
Tempt Me by Shiloh Walker
I'll Be There by Iris Rainer Dart
The Three Princesses by Cassie Wright