Death Brings Gold. Nicola Rocca
said, looking at the digital clock on the dashboard. It was 8:32 am.
According to workplace rules, at five to nine they should all be sitting in front of their PCâs. Mazzucotelli, their boss, was very strict. He said that you can tell a good employee by their punctuality.
Pffft⦠by their punctualityâ¦
Due to a kind of superstitious bent-, he waited the full minute until the clock showed the thirty-third minute before calling Ghezzi again.
This time he let it ring twice, three time, four times, five, six â¦
âYouâve reached the voicemail of 338â¦â
He hung up, grumbling.
âIâll bet this idiot is going to make us both late.â
For a moment he regretted having offered the lift. He cursed his colleague, his car that was with the mechanic and the mechanic himself. With all the money mechanics charge for a simple vehicle inspection, he mused, the price should include the risk of being insulted without reason.
He tried making yet another call, but after six rings, it went to voicemail again.
âFuck,â he cursed, realising that his annoyance had even made him forget about his throbbing hands.
He browsed through his Contacts again until he found his colleagueâs landline number. He pressed the Call button.
After it rang and rang endlessly, hearing at last the click of a receiver being picked up suggested to him that someone had answered.
âHiâ¦â
He recognised the voice as belonging to that great piece of ass, Martina.
â⦠youâve reached our voice message. The Ghezziâs are not at home at the moment. If itâs urgent, please leave aâ¦â
âFuck off,â snapped Giovanni, after he hung up.
He felt stupid for mistaking Martina-answering machineâs voice for the flesh and blood Martina.
For a moment he even doubted he was supposed to pick Raffaele up that day.
He scrolled down the list of text messages until he found the conversation with the dickhead. Raffaeleâs last message dated back to 9:03 pm of the day before.
Could you pick me up tomorrow as well? Thank you. Raf
Heâd sent a reply two minutes later.
Ok. Good night.
He stood and gazed at the screen on his mobile phone. He hadnât make a mistake, not at all. Raffaele himself had asked for the lift.
âDickhead,â he said to a colleague that couldnât hear him. âProbably still sleeping.â
He was about to put the car into gear and start driving, but something inside him â something that he couldnât explain â told him that it wasnât the right thing to do.
âDammit!â he cursed, banging the wheel with his fist.
He stopped the car and sat there, contemplating the muted colours of a morning that looked as dull and grey as the city.
His side window reflected the image of a man in his forties that had no desire to deal with that freezing morning again. This also reminded him of a phrase that somebody âhe couldnât remember who â had said to him a couple of weeks before:
Mirrors will always reflect an idiot.
He smiled and in doing so he felt a bit more idiotic than before.
He started counting down mentally from three. When his imaginary timer reached zero, he unlocked the car door handle and got out of the car, closing the car door behind him. As he was crossing the road, he pressed the button on the car key. In return, he heard the sound of the carâs central locking system engage. He didnât know why, but crossing the street as the car locked itself always made him feel coolâ¦
He smiled at the thought.
When he reached the gate he realised â as he should have imaginedâ that it was closed.
As he engaged his climbing skills, he asked himself what the point was of having a seventy centimetre high fence. His mind could not formulate an answer.
He walked down the path towards the glass door. He pulled the handle down, luckily it was open. He began climbing the stairs.
Reaching the landing on the first floor he saw his image reflected in the glass of the big window. He then remembered who had told him that stupid thing about mirrors and idiots.
The memory of Angelo Brera saying those words managed to get an almost hysterical laugh out of him. Then, he composed himself and continued going up.
When he reached the second floor, his wheezing suggested to him that maybe, from now on, it would be better to spend his time jogging instead of going to the pub and drinking Irish beer while watching twenty two guys on a giant screen kicking a ball around in exchange for millions of Euros a year and hot babes.
He covered the last flight of stairs trying to work out how many lifetimes someone with his job would need to work to earn what those boys pocket annually.
He reached the third and last floor now gasping for air. He moved closer to the door of his colleagueâs flat. He knocked, lightly at first, with his knuckles. Then again with his hand in a fist.
No answer. Whatthefuck.
He pushed the door bell and in return received a sharp ring coming from inside the house.
Apart from that, no other sound.
He rang it a second time.
Another sharp ring and nothing more.
At that point, he instinctively pulled the door handle down. And to his surprise, realised the door to the flat was open.
What he saw when the door swung open forced him to turn away. For a long moment, he thought his imagination was playing a horrible trick on him. Rather, he hoped it was.
Taking a breath, as if building courage, he looked back. His imagination had nothing to do with it. It was all real.
With one hand holding himself up against the door frame, against his will, he began retching violently.
CHAPTER 5
When the police arrived at the flat, they found the man still visibly shaken.
Shortly after, an ambulance had arrived, along with the Police Forensic Team.
Inspector Carrobbio, head of Forensic Police, immediately set his men to work. The victim was Raffaele Ghezzi who had lived an apparently quiet life for around fifty years.
âWell, quiet,â detective Bassani said, âuntil someone killed him.â
The body was lying on the floor in an unusual position. It looked like he was asleep, rather than dead. His hands were placed on his chest, in proximity of the heart, one on the other. A yellow-gold coloured necktie was wrapped around his neck. The necktie was carefully arranged on the dead manâs chest, as if to make him look like the main protagonist in a ceremony.
âIt almost looks as if somebody made fun of him,â said an officer, nodding towards the lifeless body.
âI still canât believe it,â Belmondo jumped in, as if in defence of his dead colleague.
âAh, our witness is getting better, at last,â said Bassani. âAre you feeling better now?â
Belmondo indicated yes with a light nod of his head, but judging by his wide open eyes, it was easy