Inspector Lynley 18 - Just One Evil Act
Italia,” Bruno told him.
Lorenzo glanced at him sharply. “You have told me this. What is your point?”
And now the lie they had all agreed upon. Salvatore prayed that Bruno could carry it off: “Someone saw me take the
E. coli
,” he said. “It was nothing to him at first. He wasn’t even sure what he saw. He thought nothing at all until the story about Angelina’s death appeared in
Prima Voce.
And even then he thought little enough till the police showed up.”
Lorenzo said nothing at first. Salvatore watched his face through the binoculars. He lit a cigarette, his eyes narrowing from the smoke of it. He picked a bit of tobacco from his tongue. He said, “Daniele, what is this that you speak of?”
“You know what I speak of. This
E. coli
, the particular strain of it . . . The police are asking serious questions. If Angelina is dead because of
E. coli
, if they found it still within her body . . . Lorenzo, what did you do with the bacteria I gave you?”
Salvatore held his breath. So much hung on Mura’s reply. The man finally said, “And this is why I come to meet you all the way from the
fattoria
? To tell you what I did with a bit of bacteria? I flushed it down the toilet, Daniele. It was not useful to me as I thought it would be . . . an experiment with bacteria and wine . . . so I flushed it away.”
“Then how did Angelina die with
E. coli
in her system, Lorenzo? This is what the police want no one to know. This
E. coli
is what killed Angelina. It is what they are withholding from her murderer.”
“What are you saying?” Lorenzo demanded. “I did not kill her. She carried my child. She was to be my wife. If her death was
E. coli
. . . You know as I do that this is everywhere, this bacteria, Daniele.”
“Some
E. coli
is everywhere. But not this
E. coli
. Lorenzo, hear me. The police have been to DARBA Italia—”
“You tell me this already.”
“They speak to Antonio, they speak to Alessandro. They have made a connection and they will want to speak to me soon and I do not know what to tell them, Lorenzo. If I tell them that I gave the
E. coli
to you—”
“You must not!”
“But I
did
give it to you, and if I am to lie on your behalf, I must know—”
“You need to know nothing! They can prove nothing. Who saw you give it to me? No one. Who saw what I did with it? No one.”
“I do not wish to be arrested for what I did, my friend. I have a wife. I have children. My family is everything to me.”
“As mine would have been. As it
could
have been had he not shown up. You talk of family while mine has been destroyed, just as he planned it.”
“Who?”
“The Muslim. The father of Angelina’s daughter. He came to Italy. He intended to have her back. I could see this: the loss of her, the loss of my child because she left me as she had left others and this is something . . .” Lorenzo’s voice cracked.
Daniele Bruno said, “It was for him, no? The
E. coli
, Lorenzo. It was for the Muslim. To do what? To make him ill? To kill him? What?”
“I do not know.” Lorenzo began to cry. “Just to be rid of him so that she would not look at him, she would not call him by a pet name, she would not allow him to touch her or to care for her while I stood by and had to watch this . . . this
thing
between them.” He stumbled towards the picnic tables. He fell onto one of the benches and sobbed into his hands.
“
Va bene
,” Salvatore said, removing his headphones within the white van. He radioed the police cars that waited for his word, farther along the road and deep into the Parco Fluviale. “
Adesso andiamo
,” he told them. They had enough. It was time to bring Lorenzo Mura to justice.
LUCCA
TUSCANY
He lifted his head the moment he heard the scrape of tyres on the gravel of the parking area. He saw the police cars, and he didn’t wait to catch sight of the white van trundling along Via della Scogliera from the direction of the café. He knew in an instant what had happened. He ran.
He was very fast. A football player, he had remarkable speed and equal endurance. He took off across the
campo
where he coached his soccer pupils, and before Salvatore was out of the van, he had crossed the field with four uniformed officers in pursuit.
He quickly disappeared into the trees at the far side of the field. He was heading southwest, and on the other side of those trees, Salvatore knew, a steep berm rose, its side heavily grown with grass in this springtime month,
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