Death in Sardinia

Death in Sardinia Read Free

Book: Death in Sardinia Read Free
Author: Marco Vichi
Ads: Link
to do things? Can you imagine what would happen if—’
    ‘Just tell me one thing, sir: will you help me get that warrant or won’t you?’ Bordelli retorted, standing in front of Inzipone’s desk. The commissioner sighed deeply, chewing his lips.
    ‘I’ll see what I can do,’ he said.
    ‘Well, be quick about it. That man must be stopped.’
    ‘And what if your search yields nothing of interest?’
    ‘I’ll turn his flat upside down, take it apart piece by piece… I’m convinced something will turn up.’
    ‘You’re really so sure, are you?’
    ‘Let’s say I’m certain it’s worth the trouble of trying,’ Bordelli concluded, and with a nod, he headed for the door. Inzipone stood up.
    ‘Bordelli, have I ever told you I don’t like your methods?’
    ‘I think you have.’
    ‘Well, then let me repeat it. I don’t like your methods one bit.’
    ‘I’m truly sorry about that.’
    Closing the door behind him, Bordelli heard the commissioner sputtering curses between clenched teeth.
    In the days that followed, he learned that the judge had thrown a tantrum. Without a formal denunciation or concrete evidence, the possibility of a search warrant was less than a mirage. Seeing red, Bordelli had decided to go and talk directly with Judge Ginzillo, the man with the smallest head he’d ever seen. He’d had to deal with him a number of times in the past, and it had never been pleasant.
    ‘Dr Ginzillo, please don’t always throw spanners in my works, if you can help it,’ Bordelli said politely the moment he was allowed into the judge’s office.
    ‘Please sit down, Inspector, and excuse me for a moment,’ Ginzillo said without looking at him. He was busy reading something and seemed engrossed. Bordelli sat down calmly, repressing his desire to grab him by the ears and lift him off the ground. He even resisted the desire to light a cigarette, but not for Ginzillo’s sake. He’d decided to stop smoking and was always trying to put off the next cigarette for as long as possible.
    The judge glanced at his watch, took a sip of water, and drummed his fingers on the desk, all the while hypnotised by that bloody, stamp-covered piece of paper.
    ‘All right, let’s hear it, Inspector, but make it brief,’ he said suddenly, without looking up. Before the inspector could open his mouth, a forty-something secretary dressed like an old maid walked in carrying a number of documents that urgently needed signing. The judge adjusted the glasses on his nose, and with a solemn mien sought the proper pen on his desk, found it, then started skimming the documents, murmuring the words as he read them. When he got to the end of each document, he gave a nod of approval, appended his signature, tightening his lips, then pushed the paper aside and went on to the next.
    ‘Go ahead, Inspector, I’m listening,’ he muttered, still reading. Bordelli didn’t reply, for fear he would utter an obscenity. When the secretary finally left, Ginzillo removed his spectacles with a weary gesture, cleaned them with a handkerchief, and put them back on. Then he resumed reading, fiddling with a very sharp pencil with a rubber at the end. He was holding it between two fingers and making it bounce off the wooden desktop.
    ‘So, you were saying, Inspector?’ he said, still hunched over the sheet of paper.
    ‘I haven’t breathed a word.’
    ‘Then please do. What are you waiting for?’
    ‘When I speak to someone I like to be able to look them in the eye, sir. It’s a fixation of mine.’
    Ginzillo raised his head and, sighing, set the pencil down on the stack of papers. It seemed to cost him a lot of effort.
    ‘Go ahead,’ he muttered, looking at Bordelli with what seemed like great forbearance.
    ‘I need that search warrant, Dr Ginzillo.’
    ‘What search warrant?’
    ‘Badalamenti,’ the inspector said, staring at him.
    ‘We needn’t be so hasty.’
    ‘Hasty? Tell that to the people who’ve left their bollocks on the loan

Similar Books

Special Deliverance

Clifford D. Simak

The Better Man

Cerian Hebert

Girl Meets Ghost

Lauren Barnholdt

Ivory and Steel

Janice Bennett

The Good Mayor

Andrew Nicoll