Название: Death Brings Gold
Автор: Nicola Rocca
Издательство: Tektime S.r.l.s.
Жанр: Триллеры
isbn: 9788873042716
isbn:
âI have nothing to do with it,â he moans, his cheeks damp with terror and desperation.
The killer takes another step towards the broken man. He stands there observing him, like a scientist would do with a laboratory animal.
The victim recognizes in those eyes a look he has seen before âolder now, but identical to the one he had seen many years before. He would like to ask for mercy and forgiveness, but the words stick in his throat with fear.
The killer speaks again.
âYouâre a dead man.â He smiles, his face lined with fine wrinkles. The kind that pain carves into your face while youâre still young and vulnerable. âJust a stupid dead man.â
The words seem to float around the room indefinitely.
The killer moves closer still, ignoring the prisonerâs groans. Barely breathing, he reaches into his pocket and slowly slips out the weapon that will kill him.
CHAPTER 1
Umberto Visconti stood there and stared at the casket being lowered into the ground. His face was wracked with grief. The only loved one heâd had left was leaving like this.
David Walker was watching him cry. He stood still and stared at the line of people queuing to show their affection to their tearful friend. Then, when the man was alone, Walker approached him.
âMy condolences, Umberto,â he said, taking and squeezing his cold hands.
Visconti forced himself to smile. He blinked his eyes a couple of times in an attempt to clear the tears that were clouding his vision. Losing a parent, even if they have reached the farthest edge of old age, always breaks your heart. Umberto knew that pain; he had already experienced it.
âThank you very much, David,â he said, hugging him.
David never liked these moments of sadness, but he didnât want to be the first to separate from the embrace. He was hoping Umberto would do it. While waiting for that gesture that never seemed to come, he stood still and felt sorry for the other manâs sobs. Because Umberto Visconti, as well as being the medical examiner that worked with him, in time had also become a valuable friend. And for David, a friendâs pain was also his pain.
Finally, David felt Umberto detach from their embrace -his lips moving close to his ear. His breath was warm and his skin smelled like aftershave.
âThanks again for coming, my friend.â
In the last weeks they hadnât met or called each other much. Visconti was often unreachable because he had to look after his mother during the last stage of her life; Walker, on the other hand, was busy hunting down a guy who liked to rape, rob and kill high-class prostitutes. In the end he managed to catch him and close the case, even though a bullet cost him a couple of days in hospital. At least, he had arrived on time at the funeral. His shoulder was hurting like fuck, but he was there.
âI had to, Umberto,â he replied, in the most comforting voice he could offer.
The two men stood staring at each other.
âIâm really sorry, Umby,â he said, regretting almost immediately the banality of those words.
The other man stared at him, and Walker had never seen such a sad look on his friendâs face. He was nodding his head and looked like he was suffering from one of those awful tics that come with old age.
âShe was a good woman,â he said. âIâm not saying it because she was my mother. Iâm saying it because itâs true.â
David nodded repeatedly, and for a moment it looked like the other man had passed that annoying nervous tic onto him...
âIâm sure,â he replied. Not that he had ever met Umbertoâs mother â he had seen her only once â but he was convinced it was true. He had been working with Umberto Visconti for some time and over the years he had found in him a good person. Polite, refined, and professional. The kind of person that must have been brought up in a respectable, principled family.
âShe suffered so much â¦â Umberto said, muffling the phrase with an expression of anguish.
âIâm sorry,â the other repeated, almost under his breath.
âShe didnât deserve all that suffering, David.â
This time the Inspector didnât reply. He thought that no one deserved such a terrible ordeal of pain. No one. He kept the thought to himself.
âShe was torn apart by that terrible disease, David. It was as if⦠as if someone had decided to measure out her pain little by little. To eradicate her from this life with brief painful jabs.â
The man paused, then he continued with a voice-which although calm, also carried an edge of anger.
âI hope I wonât go like she did. I hope that one day I wonât end up like my mother. A slow agony. I hope that when my time comes, it will be something quick, fast, and painless. I couldnât bear to be trapped inside the prison of a long illness. Because being ill is like being in jail.. The fact that you are bedridden, that you are not self sufficient anymore, that you have to depend on others ⦠That is, all of this is the same as serving a life sentence for a crime committed. Actually, itâs worse, far worse â¦â
He stopped. He took a breath and stared in the direction of the ground under which his mother had just been buried. A tear ran down his cheek.
â⦠Because the only crime attributable to my mother is that she was victim of that damned cancer. Thatâs why I hope that when my time comes â¦â
âDonât think about it now, Umberto,â the Inspector said, bringing the otherâs words to an end. âYouâve got an entire life ahead of you. You must think about overcoming this test. The love for your job will save you, youâll see. It was the same for me, too.â
David thought he had been convincing, but his friend replied with bitter resignation.
âDo you think so?â
The question hung between them, illuminated by the headstones candles. David didnât bother replying. And what could he have said to his friend to console him? More pointless words?
âI think not,â continued Visconti. âNow I am alone. My life will never be the same again.â
David understood that the recent loss of a loved one takes away oneâs will to go on, to pick yourself up again, to move forward. To live. He had known it too. But he also knew that time would set things right again. In these circumstances, the passing of time is the only remedy to heal the wounds that everyone carries in their hearts.
âBe strong, Umberto,â he said, putting an arm around his shoulders. âYouâll see, itâll get better. I, too, have gone through this.â
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