Death Brings Gold. Nicola Rocca
replied, defensively, âI was studying these damned symbols,â he continued, waving the paper in front of him.
âAh!â exclaimed Bassani. âItâs a big headache.â
âIt is,â confirmed the Inspector.
When Walker turned back to Bassani, he noticed the detectiveâs face was as dark as a cloudy night sky.
âWhatâs the matter, detective?â he asked him.
The man waited for an eternity before answering.
âWhatâs got into you?â Walker pressed him again.
Bassani stroked his moustache.
âWe must return to Ghezziâs house,â he stated, serious.
âTo Ghezziâs?â
âYes, Chief.â
âBut why?â asked Walker.
âDo you remember when someone said theyâd heard the noise of something falling on the floor? A metallic soundâ¦â
âIt was a buttoâ¦â Walker didnât finish his sentence. âAre you trying to say thatâ¦?â
âYes,â admitted the detective. âIf weâre lucky, weâll find what weâre looking for.â
âYouâre a genius, Bassani.â
CHAPTER 19
David was sitting on the bed, his eyes fixed on his motherâs lifeless ones. He was listening to the mangled words the woman was pronouncing with difficulty. They seemed meaningless and made no sense. A sign that death was coming to take her.
David sighed, trying to hold back the tears.
âDavid, m-mhy d-d-hearâ¦â
The voice shook him.
For the first time his mother had said something almost comprehensible.
He granted her his full attention. He stood there staring at her for a time that seemed eternal, then more words came.
â⦠ss-h-k-keep on sshmoukeeng, if hhhyou c-canât do⦠uithout â¦emâ¦â
Then, on the womanâs face there was the sign of a breakdown, a snarl of pain that prompted David to squeeze her hand to comfort her, making her feel his presence.
The old womanâs head fell heavily forward, almost lifeless, and he tried to call her.
âMumâ¦â
The woman, with her last strength, raised her head and half-closed her eyes, trying to focus on her sonâs face. Then, she shut them completely and started chewing on nothing again.
A series of distorted and fragmented syllables was the reward to Davidâs patient wait.
ââ¦But plheashe ⦠itâs for u hoo⦠art a mmlyâ¦I whuont hhee you sttleouwn.â
He sprung suddenly and sat on his bed soaked with sweat. That dream again. That nasty pain again, suffered at his motherâs deathbed.
He placed a hand on his chest, as if trying to calm the frantic beat of his heart.
He repeated the words engraved in his memory, but he couldnât decipher their meaning.
He sat there until a normal heartbeat returned.
He lit a cigarette and took a long strong drag. He held the smoke inside until he felt some kind of itchiness in his lungs, then he let it out, along with a thousand thoughts.
He entered the bathroom with uncertain steps, in the hope that his morning routine would bring him some peace. He came back to the bedroom, leaned for a moment against the door frame.
It was from there that he saw it.
On the pillow was the sheet of paper that he had almost worn out from constantly looking at the symbols.
He stood there observing the crumpled piece of paper, while taking his mind back to Ghezziâs house.
He had entered into Raffaele Ghezziâs flat, after Bassani had his intuition. The metallic sound â¦
At that point he and the detective, having donned latex gloves, had begun searching the living room. They had looked everywhere. Under the furniture, on and under the rug, they had searched meticulously between the gaps of the tiles. Nothing. Besides, what could they have expected to find, after the Forensic team had gone through that room again and again?
They had looked at each other, dejected. Walker had dragged a small chair over to sit down. That was when he heard something scraping against the floor. He had turned the chair upside down and there it was: the tag.
He held the little gold coloured piece close to his eyes and tried to read the symbols engraved on its surface.
While Bassani, triumphant, was going back to Headquarters with their loot, Walker got in his car to go home, having copied the symbols of the two small tags on a new sheet of paper.
And now, as he approached the sheet of paper, he realised that he was not even a millimetre closer to the solution. In fact, the increasing number of symbols rendered him practically unable to come up with (let alone find!) any meaning whatsoever. Lines, dots, circles. Nothing, he couldnât think of anything.
He noticed his cigarette had almost burnt out. He stubbed out what was left of it in the ashtray and grabbed the crumpled paper.
He stood staring at the new symbols.
ḷ % -
ḷ % -
He sighed.
Then he made his tongue click against his palate, turned the paper over, so he could see the whole sequence of symbols, and tried for the umpteenth time to solve the problem.
- / = ḷ % -
- / = ḷ % -
He was sure: those signs were nothing more than a mathematical code to decipher. Or maybe a lead, a hint that, somehow, held information. About what? The murders already committed, orâ¦
They should expect a third murder, Walker said to himself. And maybe a fourth one, even.
Many serial killers were in the habit of using that modus operandi. It was the means the killer was using to communicate with the Police. The only thing in common between him and those who were hunting him. The main difference was that one formulated the riddles to make them as difficult as possible; whereas the others racked their brains trying to solve them, before it was too late.
âThis son of a bitch wants to play the maths professor,â he said out loud, conscious that he was talking to himself like crazy people do.
He turned the sheet of paper over again and focused on the symbols found at the first crime scene.
ḷ % -
ḷ % -
He tried to find a link between the three or five symbols â in case the central one was a percentage symbol â and the place where the second victim had been found.
What is the fucking connection between the minus, the percent, that bloody âiâ, and the murder of Giuliano Giuliani, a man with one foot and one hand?
The answer he was hoping for didnât come. And he was sure it was not going to come easily.
Disheartened, he let the paper fall on the pillow.
He retrieved the clothes he had thrown on a chair the night before and started