A Murder in Tuscany

A Murder in Tuscany by Christobel Kent Read Free Book Online

Book: A Murder in Tuscany by Christobel Kent Read Free Book Online
Authors: Christobel Kent
Tags: Suspense
the little motorino for a quick getaway. She sat, numb.
    Per Hansen had been right: something had happened to her.
    Could it be true? Dead? How could she be dead? They’d all seen her only hours earlier, only last night, fizzing with life and energy and flirtation and malice, those blue eyes bright and dangerous. Loni Meadows, Dottoressa , Director of the Orfeo Trust; suddenly it seemed to Cate absolutely impossible that such a person could die.
    Yesterday morning, alive and well, in one of her haughty tempers at coffee because not enough of them wanted to go to the Pinacoteca in Siena next week. Walking down to the villino later, to see Tina’s work in progress. At drinks, talking to Alec Fairhead about someone she knew at his publisher’s. ‘Gorgeous girl,’ she’d said, giving him a sly look, ‘just your type.’ At dinner, telling Per she planned to go to Oslo for his premiere. Talking about art galleries in New York, putting people’s backs up, her life full to the brim and now gone.
    Cate had seen her at eleven, and something like an hour later, she’d been dead. Cate shook her head in disbelief.
    As everyone dispersed, she saw Luca Gallo’s eyes on her, and when she returned his look with a questioning glance he held up a finger to detain her.
    ‘I’d like to see you in my office, Caterina,’ he said. ‘Half an hour?’
     
     
    ‘You’ve what?’ Giuli wasn’t good at disguising her feelings; she sounded like a kid at the back of the class, crowing over a teacher’s slip.
    ‘I’ve lost her,’ said Sandro.
    Sandro’s part-time receptionist, secretary and assistant, Giuli – Giulietta Sarto – did not have much of a CV. The daughter of a drugaddicted prostitute who worked the Via Senese and overdosed before her child was fifteen, Giuli was a graduate of prison and psychiatric hospital who had come into Sandro’s life when he had arrested her, four years earlier, for the murder of her one-time abuser. It had been his last case as a serving police officer, the same case that had led to his early retirement, and in its wake he and Luisa had as good as adopted Giuli.

    Her rehabilitation had worked better than expected – thanks to them, some had said, though Sandro always argued it was down to the girl’s sheer stubborn determination – and Giuli was on his side, for better or worse. Skinny, razor-tongued and sharp as a tack, she was as close to a daughter as Sandro and Luisa were ever going to get, and Sandro for one could not have got through the previous year without her.
    Half the week Giuli worked at the Women’s Centre, around the corner from the Via del Leone in the sleepy little Piazza Tasso; since close on a year earlier, more or less when Luisa started the treatment, Giuli had taken to calling in on Sandro, for a chat, or to bring him a coffee. She brought him stories from the Centre too; who’d got clean, who’d got pregnant, gossip about bent police officers and pimps and respectable women.
    Then one morning she’d caught him swearing at his computer and had nudged him aside. Sitting next to him at the desk she had taught him how to organize his email address book, how to re-boot, to clean up his data and update his word-processing package, how to use internet search engines properly. And when a week or so later she’d got down on her hands and knees to pull all the drawers out of his filing cabinet to retrieve a wedge of papers that had got caught at the back, Sandro had suggested, tentatively, that she might think about formalizing the relationship, two mornings a week to start with.
    Financially, of course, it made no sense at all; Sandro was hardly earning himself. But he’d always liked to find the odd twenty euros for Giuli, and this way, she was happier to take the money. And God knew, there was always something for her to do; she’d even followed the baker’s wife for him, one morning when Sandro was worried the woman had started to recognize him. By the end of the

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