Page 34 of Private Rome


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He shrugged again.

“And Brambilla?” I pressed. “What about him? How is Matteo Ricci involved?”

“Who knows?” Antonelli said. “Your job is to find out answers, Mr. Morgan. Mine is to grow olives. But if the priest knew a secret, that might explain his death. And my daughter’s former partner could be discredited so that no one would believe anything he said. Or perhaps made into an easier target. People die in jail all the time.”

I shuddered, and the sweet tomato and mozzarella in my mouth turned sour at the thought Matteo might be in imminentdanger. I’d assumed incarceration was the worst he’d face, but Elia Antonelli had opened my eyes to a new dimension of danger.

Luna said something in Italian.

“You can protect him, surely?” she added for my benefit.

“I will do what I can for you, my dear Luna, but even my protection is not infallible,” Antonelli replied. “Perfection is the sole preserve of God.”

“Or artisan olive growers,” I quipped, and Antonelli smiled.

I wondered how a mobster could talk of perfection in such an imperfect world. How could he, an instrument of evil, still hold faith in a religion rooted in the concepts of virtue and sin?

Sitting in the man’s company, eating the fruits of his land, seeing the way he looked lovingly at his daughter, it was clear he did not consider himself a bad guy.

“I trade in power,” Antonelli said. “The things I do to retain or grow that power are as necessary as war waged by government or state-sanctioned execution for capital crimes. Power does not concern itself with right or wrong. Morality is not the issue here—only the individual’s standing in the sphere of influence.”

So Antonelli’s worldview was amoral at best. My business was justice, and without some appreciation of the difference between right and wrong, I could not function. At least, not happily.

“What else can you tell me about Lombardi?” I asked.

Antonelli shook his head. “You now know as much as I do.”

“And Father Brambilla?”

“I don’t know anything about the priest. I’ve given you all Ican. My advice would be to stay out of the game. Leave Rome to the Romans and go home, Mr. Morgan.”

“I can’t do that,” I told him. “I don’t believe in the legitimacy of power for its own sake. I believe in good, in right and wrong, and I gave my word I’d learn the truth about what happened here.”

Antonelli looked thoughtful. “Maintaining a sense of personal honor involves the use of power, Mr. Morgan. I admire you. I wouldn’t want to be you, but I admire you.”

I stood. “Thank you for lunch, Signor Antonelli.”

“One of my men will drive you back to the city.”

“That’s okay,” I replied. “Hopefully, I still have a cab waiting.”

“We sent him on his way,” Antonelli advised. “Politely, of course, and with a generous tip.”

“I’ll walk you to the car,” Luna said, rising.

“Remember what I told you, Mr. Morgan,” Antonelli added. “Someone in this city is overdosing on power, throwing the balance of Rome into turmoil. Like all addicts, power-seekers are dangerous. They will stop at nothing to secure their fix. And they will let nothing stand against them. Not even an honorable man.”

“I’ll bear that in mind, Signor Antonelli,” I said, walking away.

CHAPTER30

LUNA AND I walked side by side along the terrace to the end of the house.

“I’m sorry I couldn’t tell you the truth,” she said, “but I have spent a lifetime hiding this secret. My father imagines he is some kind of hero, a Robin Hood, when in fact he is a gangster who is bad news for Italy and for Rome.”

I was surprised to hear her talk in such unequivocal terms.

“What?” she asked belligerently. “Tell me I’m wrong.”