I’m off to Rome to see a lawyer
…
Before I went to Italy I called in on Anthony and his assistant Alessia and got them to give me a briefing on the mother of the man who had become and died the countess’s husband.
Along with a warning that the mother was not in the brief, and he was reluctant to share what information they had. I left thinking something had happened or changed, and Anthony had been told to respond only to specific questions; Rodby was trying to keep my attention on his orders.
The question burning at the back of my mind: what was Rodby hiding?
I also asked for a copy of the coroner’s report on the death of the count, and even before I got through the first paragraph, there was enough evidence to prove he had been murdered.
Did the countess get a copy of the report, or was that left in the hands of the family? I suspect the latter, because of one statement she made, the Count’s family handled all the ‘detail’s’. I was beginning to think that she was about to become a detail herself and be handled accordingly.
It was also clear that the Count’s mother, a countess herself, was the one who ruled with an iron fist, even before the count was dead. She had run the business. And now he had died, their cosy arrangement was about to be signed away into the hands of a woman who was not going to let the older countess run it.
That was probably for a reason, the old countess was doing stuff that she didn’t want anyone to know about. Had her son discovered the truth and she had him killed. At least I could discount Alessandro and Fabio. They were both the most unlikely assassins and if they had tried, they would have botched it. And I doubt either would have anything to do with killing their brother.
The briefing had a slim folder that contained several sheets of paper that outlined the nature of the Burkehardt businesses. It seemed the companies never made profits, which made it odd as to how the family members could live such extravagant lifestyles.
The old countess’s name was Anna, rather plain, I thought, and had been the daughter of a poor wine grower. His was not a large vineyard, but they were very good grapes and sought after by the bigger winemakers. She had grandiose ideas and had virtually blackmailed the man she married.
Of course, it wasn’t hard to see that the family were also making a few other distilled products. Without telling the government. But if you read between the lines, Anna wasn’t exactly a law-abiding citizen., and she had some very rough-and-tumble acquaintances, not the least of which had ties to the mafia.
I was going to create a splash, on both sides of the channel, when I landed in her drawing room.
My first stop when I arrived in Italy was to go and visit the countess’s private legal representative in Rome. I had asked Cecelia to get the name and address from the countess, and she texted the details as I got off the plane at the airport.
Cecelia also sent me a photo of Anna, at the house in Sorrento, along with both Alessandro and Fabio, who must have taken a flight the previous day. It seems their concern the countess was missing was not a priority.
I hated driving in Rome, so I left the car in a parking garage on the way to Sorrento on the outskirts of the city and took public transport. I had one of those back-of-neck sensations when I collected my bag off the carousel, and it was as I suspected, a man trying very hard to look like a fellow passenger watching me.
He passed me off to someone else after I collected the rental car, and drove to bus terminus out in the suburbs on the way to Sorrento. Whoever was tailing me in the car was very good, and I only saw them twice.
Rodby checking up, or someone else. I didn’t see Alfie, and after the last debacle, he may have been replaced, but whoever that was, they would be less conspicuous than my current minder.
I took the bus but wasn’t joined by anyone, but that didn’t mean they had lost sight of me. I checked and thought I’d made the car following the bus. These people were relentless. And there were a few of them, and whoever their boss was, he had deep pockets. Not Rodby then.
From the bus terminus, it was a short walk to the building that housed many lawyers. In England, they were called chambers. In Italy, they were called camere degli avvocati, or something like that.
I could speak almost fluent Italian because of Violetta, though she used to tease me over some of the word translations, and many a day was spent teaching me the language. Even so, I still didn’t always get it right, but these days I liked pretending I had only schoolboy Italian and see if people helped.
This was going to be one of those occasions, not because I had the time, but I had picked up another tail and they were very good. It added some interest to my day where otherwise it might have been boring. This time it was a woman, not much older than me, but not conspicuous and had I not been looking, would have missed her. She hadn’t entered the building yet, and if I wanted to draw her in, I might have to force her hand.
So I stood there, in front of the board, trying to make head or tail of the names, and descriptions on the board that listed the tenants of the building, and I pretended I was having difficulty. Perhaps looking confused was more of a help than a hindrance because it gave the girl that I assumed was following me the perfect excuse to stop and ask, in almost perfect English, “You are lost perhaps?”
“I am, and not perhaps.” I gave her the piece of paper with the avvocati’s name on it, and after a quick perusal of the board, she pointed him out.
“Fourth floor, I’m going there myself.”
We crossed to the elevator and waited with several other people who definitely looked like lawyers, barristers, or wealthy clients. My impression of the building with ornate marble on the floor and walls, was that only the rich could afford to work her and afford the services of them.
© Charles Heath 2023