A Season for the Dead
I’m sorry.”
    “I’ve seen worse,” Rossi grumbled. “We both have. Yesterday. Sometimes it catches you like that. You just walk along thinking, it’s not so bad, I can make it through the day. Then you just stumble around the corner and put your shoe into something that makes you realize the bad stuff was there all along and you just fooled yourself into thinking it could be any other way.”
    “There’s a painting near here. It’s about that. I could show you if you like.”
    Rossi almost laughed. “Me? Look at a painting?”
    “Sure. Why not?”
    “You won’t tell anyone? Some of those bastards take the piss.”
    “It’s a deal. But I want to hear about Cardinal Denney first.”
    Rossi grabbed him by the arm. “Keep your voice down, for Christ’s sake.”
    Costa raised an eyebrow. There was still just the woman in the place, mopping away, well out of earshot.
    “You never know,” the big man said defensively.
    “Know what?”
    Rossi shook his head. “You don’t even get to hear the station gossip, do you?”
    “Too busy doing a job.”
    “Oh my,” the big man grumbled. “The kid’s a saint. Listen. You heard of the Banca Lombardia?”
    “Sure.” Costa nodded. “I read it was in trouble. Bad investments. Trouble with the authorities. There’s supposed to be some mob money in it. Ours. The Americans’.”
    “Clever boy. Well let me tell you something. Two partners ago I used to share the Fiat sofa with this grown-up guy who couldn’t keep his trap shut. Probably yakked in his sleep, but the funny thing was . . . he was worth listening to. He’d been on temporary assignment with the spooky people in the Finance Ministry and, my, did he like to talk about all these secret stakeouts he did, and all the good-guy politicians that were really on the take. He knew all the names of the people who pulled the strings without anyone in the outside world seeing. You know what? One of them wore a red cap. Goes by the name of Michael Denney, and if it wasn’t for the fact he could hide in that place of his we’d be throwing him in the cells right now.”
    “The Vatican?”
    “Where else?” Rossi waited, hoping for some enlightenment. “Jesus. The bankers were just the front men. This was a private little operation that Denney spun out of some genuine Vatican venture without telling anyone.” He raised his glass, drained it. “And now it’s rapidly going bust. Liquidity problems. No one knows whether it’s going to pull through or what. Remember?”
    “Yeah,” Costa conceded. “I think I read about that.”
    “You read nothing. Listen to me, Nic. This Denney’s been putting his holy hands into stuff no one ought to be messing with, least of all a priest. He had offshore funds in places that don’t have offshore funds. Places anyone could put money and no one—not the tax people, not the intelligence agencies—would be any the wiser. There’s a queue of people waiting to talk to him about that. Us. The Ministry of Justice. FBI. And probably the Mafia too from what I hear. They don’t like it when the man from the Vatican does the laundry wrong. Lucky for him he can hide there trying to get the rest of us to agree that, if we let him walk out, he’s covered by diplomatic immunity.” He paused. “You remember what Falcone said? About Rinaldi?”
    Costa did. The dead man had been called to give an expert opinion on the subject only a few months before.
    “You think Denney was somehow paying Rinaldi to come up on the right side?”
    Rossi looked around him to make sure no one else came in. “If he was it didn’t work. Maybe that’s why Denney got pissed off with him. He quit being a churchman years ago to work on the financial side. Should have filled in the right forms if he wanted to claim he was a diplomat. Too late to start whining when there’s money gone missing. A whole lot of money too. I read the file.”
    Costa was struggling to make sense of this. “Why would he steal

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