Authors: James Green
The inspector abandoned the chair and went and stood by the window with his back to Jimmy. The sun was trying its best to shine through but it was always going to be a losing the battle. The policeman took out his sunglasses anyway and put them on. Maybe they helped him to stare at the grime. Or maybe they helped him think. Then he took them off, put them away, and came back to the desk and sat down.
âAll right, let's say your retirement is your own affair.'
Jimmy managed his own smile; the Italian accent had completely gone.
âThe accent comes and goes, does it? When the rector was here you definitely sounded Italian even if you were speaking English.'
The inspector's smile didn't reappear. That was a good sign, that was progress.
âI was born in Glasgow. I lived there until I was twelve, then my family moved to Rome. At university here I studied Modern English Literature and I did a year at Leicester University as part of the Erasmus exchange scheme. The accent is just for window dressing when I think the occasion benefits from it. It helps put people at their ease if they're being questioned in English by an Italian copper. That OK, Jimmy?' He gave the name a real Glasgow twang. âThat answer your question?' Jimmy didn't say anything. He hadn't really asked a question. âLook, I don't want us to get off on the wrong foot and for some reason it seems you do. So how would it be if we stop pissing around and I tell you what this is all about?'
But Jimmy decided he wasn't ready yet for an olive branch. He wanted to be firmly in the driving seat before he â¦
Suddenly everything changed.
What the hell was he doing? Why was he putting a wall between himself and this man? Why was he still clinging to the old rules? This was Rome, not London. He was in the rector's office, not some bloody Met. nick. This wasn't trust no one, like no one, let no one get close or ever know what you're thinking. It wasn't be ready to kick the shit out of them before they kick the shit out of you. It had to have changed. He had to have changed. For Bernie's sake, for the sake of his grandchildren and the few years of happiness they'd given him.
âAll right, I'm listening.'
It wasn't easy and it hadn't come out anywhere near friendly, but it was the best he could do under the circumstances. He told himself it was different now and there was no reason to worry if the police came into his life. He told himself he should try to co-operate if he could. He was a priest in training, he should want to help. That was what he told himself.
Unfortunately, he didn't believe himself.
FOUR
âI've been asked to look into the death of a visiting archbishop who died here a couple of years ago. Originally it wasn't regarded as suspicious. Now, well, let's say that it's being treated in some quarters as an open question. I'll be working independently, not in any police capacity; anything I find, if I find anything, will be off the record.' He paused for a second. âAsk away, this isn't meant to be a monologue.'
Jimmy was angry with himself. Five years out of the job and you get sloppy. You sit at a table with people you hardly know, having a few beers, and you tell them your fucking life story. A copper you've never seen before, with no reason that you know of for talking to you, tells you he's looking into the death of some archbishop and as soon as he opens his mouth there's a question written all over your bloody face.
But then his anger switched off. What the hell? It doesn't matter any more. The Jimmy Costello who would care was dead, he died at a London hospital bedside.
So he asked his question.
âIf it's police business why isn't it official?'
âI didn't say the police were involved. I said I'd been asked to look into it.'
Jimmy shook his head.
âNo. That one gets right past me.'
âAs far as the local police or anybody else is concerned I'm on leave pending medical reports.' He grinned. âDon't worry, what I'm supposed to be suffering from won't be catching.'
Jimmy managed to smile back. There, being like other people wasn't so hard; you just had to make the effort.
âOK, you're a policeman who, at the moment, isn't a policeman. Either way I'm getting interviewed. So, once again, what's it about?'
âI don't know much, just what I've been told and what I could figure out for myself. Not long ago a high-powered but unofficial request got made to a minister. The person who made the request wanted an investigation into this archbishop's death but it had to be strictly off the record, no official police involvement, but a capable officer was to be used. I got told I should go to the ministry which I did and got handed the job.'
âWhy you?'
The inspector shrugged.
âSomeone chose me, I don't know who and I don't know why. All I know is that I got sent to the minister.'
âBut you're on sick leave.'
âSomeone arranged for me to be able to drop everything by creating a medical report which says I need to be given indefinite leave because I might have something and it may be serious.'
Jimmy was impressed.
âNot such an easy thing to arrange.'
âNo, neither is telling a minister to set up an investigation but they both got done.'
âSo the sick leave is phoney?'
âNo one said as much. I keep in shape but you never know so I get checked. After the last one the doctor was a bit cagey, tests inconclusive, further tests needed. For a while I was worried.'
âI can see how you would be.'
âThen I got sent to see the minister. He knew about my medical and told me I had been given indefinite leave pending the results. While I was on leave he had a job for me.'
âNeat. Somebody took a lot of trouble to choose you.'
âThey did.'
âWhy? Why you?'
âI don't know. Maybe I'm good.'
âThis is a special, a very high-up special if a minister's involved. In my day that would mean a superintendent at the very least and probably Special Branch, not some inspector from the plod squad.'
âYes, that thought occurred to me as well so I asked and it was made very clear that the whole thing was off-limits within the police community. Do as you're told and don't ask any more questions. That came from the commissioner himself which means the original request came from a very powerful source.'
âLike who?'
âI couldn't say for certain, but this is Rome: who could tell a minister to jump through a hoop, fix a medical report, and make the police top brass keep their mouths tight shut and turn a blind eye to one of their own being commandeered?'
âIt's your town, not mine.'
âHow about the people we're with at the moment?'
âWhat people.'
âHere.'
The penny dropped.
âThe Vatican.'
âThe very same.'
Jimmy was even more impressed. The Church, he knew, was powerful and nowhere more so than here within its own city state.
âAnd the death?'
âAs far as the world is concerned Archbishop Francis Xavier Cheng died a perfectly natural death and that's how it will stay.'
âEven if it turns out otherwise?'
âThere will never be any official police involvement. I will keep no records and there will no follow-up whatever I turn up. Just my report to the minister. There it ends.'
âI see. It's very high-level and ultra hush-hush, so you naturally arrange to come here and spill the whole thing to a complete outsider, me.' The inspector smiled but didn't say anything. Jimmy envied him his smile, it really worked. He also envied him this case. He was out of it, being a copper was behind him, finished, but that didn't stop his professional interest from being roused. He was interested, that was all, just interested. It didn't have to go anywhere. âOK, I don't understand but at this point I guess that's how you mean it to be, so keep going. For the time being I'm still listening.'
âArchbishop Cheng was seventy-three years old and of the last thirty years twenty-two had been spent in one Chinese prison or another. He was released five years ago and placed under house arrest for one year after which he was allowed to resume his ministry. Just over two years ago he was given permission to come to Rome to see the pope. He had been here about three weeks when he became ill and died. It was unexpected but a seventy-year-old man who's been in Chinese prisons for most of the last thirty years and still works a fourteen-hour day might be expected to have a pretty tenuous grip on life.'
âSo why wait two years and then decide the death needs looking into?'
The inspector shrugged.
âWho can say? The Vatican does things in its own way and its own time. Maybe they know something now they didn't know then.'
âThere was an autopsy?'
âOf course.'
âDid it turn up anything?'
âYes and no. In the normal course of events the autopsy would have been routine. Death was caused by asphyxia, suffocation brought on by respiratory depression. His breathing failed. He was a tired, frail old man and that sort of thing happens to tired, frail old men so you'd expect a quick autopsy to confirm natural causes, end of story. But it was anything but quick or routine, it was unusually thorough.'
âBecause?'
âMy guess is the Chinese. They would want to know exactly what had been the cause of death. The autopsy showed that he'd been badly knocked around over the years but they'd looked after him during his year's house arrest, made sure he got back to being as physically OK as was possible after what he'd been through. For whatever inscrutable reason it seems they wanted him fit and back at work. Maybe they were beginning to trust him, perhaps even getting ready to work with him in some way. Whatever their motives, they'd got as far as letting him come to Rome and for the Chinese that's trusting a Catholic archbishop a lot.'
âYou make it sound like you're an expert on China?'
âNot me, I got it all from someone who's a serious China watcher. He says maybe Cheng was a try-out as a secure, unofficial contact between Beijing, the underground Catholic Church in China, and the Vatican. Cheng had never been a member of the government-approved Church and his time in prison proved his loyalty to the pope. He would have been ideal for some sort of go-between role.'
The more Jimmy listened the more he felt himself being drawn in. He told himself it wasn't what he wanted, not what he'd come to Rome to do, but a lifetime's work wasn't so easily set aside. Part of him wanted to get up and walk out, to leave, to say it was none of his business and he wasn't interested. But his legs didn't move. He'd left it too late, he'd listened and he was interested. It was in his head now so he set his mind to work. It was unofficial which was bad and it was high level which made it worse. Unofficial meant the rules didn't apply. With the rules you got some sort of protection and although rules could get broken they couldn't be totally ignored. And anything involving the real high-ups meant the people pulling the strings and giving the orders were fireproof. It was always the foot soldiers, the expendable ones, the inspectors and sergeants who got their balls crushed and then got screwed and mostly they never got to know the real truth about whatever it was they were getting screwed for. That part of his mind which had wanted him to leave was almost shouting at him â have nothing to do with it, it's none of your business, all you'll do is get fucked. For God's sake get up and walk away while you can. You're not a copper now, you're a priest in training, you want to put all that behind you, you came here to change, to be someone people can turn to for help. Someone who knows good from evil and does the right thing and does it willingly. All true of course and it all made sense. But another part of his mind said, for God's sake you want this, this is what you do, what you're good at, not pissing about pretending to be a priest. That will never happen and you know it. Stop sniffing at the fucking thing and get on with it.
FIVE
âDid the autopsy turn up anything?'
âThey found a trace of some sort of opioid.'
The inspector pulled out a small notebook which he flicked open.
âThe nearest they could get was buprenorphine, an opioid analgesic which can bring on respiratory depression. No good to kill anyone who was fit and healthy, to do that the dose would have to be massive.'
âBut a frail old man?'
The inspector nodded.
âIf you had it in a form you could administer without the victim knowing, in a drink or in his food. It's not conclusive. The trace was faint and he may well have been given morphine-related drugs for pain before coming to Rome. Like I said, the autopsy showed he'd been gone over more than a few times in prison. He would almost certainly have had enough residual pain to need some sort of medication. That could account for the trace.'
âIs there anything else, anything new that's turned up?'
âNot that I've been told about.'
âSo, you've got an outside possibility of cause of death and that's all you've got.'
âApart from all the cloak and dagger business that got me dragged into it.'
âOK. Where do I fit in?'
âYes, now we get to you. If it is the Vatican pulling strings then I don't think they altogether trust me. It's nothing personal, you understand, it's not even professional. It's just that the Vatican doesn't trust anyone who they regard as an outsider. I think they want one of their own alongside me but it has to be someone who knows how these things work. Purple socks won't be any good on this.'
âNot a monsignor then?'
âNo, a policeman, and it just so happens they have one to hand training to be a priest. You're not perfect but you're damn close. If I hadn't checked on you I'd say you were some sort of set up.' He stopped as if a thought had struck him. âYou're not a plant, are you, Jimmy, not already a part of this?'