CHAPTER ONE

Angela Parker sat in the sunshine with her back against the wall of the old fort in Bassano del Grappa and gazed out over the valley at the foot of the Alps. Northern Italy had been the perfect choice for her recuperation. Already she was healing from the terrible car crash that had left her damaged both physically and psychologically.

With a sigh she rose to her feet. It was noon and time she found some shade. She wandered across the square and sat down under the canopy of a small café. After ordering a sandwich and lemonade she watched people passing by—an old lady with shopping; two men arguing over the bonnet of a brokendown car; a couple of tourists; a girl and boy whizzing past on a motor bike; a mother and daughter with a child in a push-chair, hurrying home.

The noise behind her increased as the old men tipped dominoes on to the table. She smiled and decided that it was time to return to her apartment. As she rose a passing businessman moved a chair out of her way. She thanked him with a polite smile then leaning heavily on her two sticks began to walk back across the square.

Hugo, her stepfather, had told her she was welcome to the apartment, belonging to his family, for as long as she needed it. It lay in a narrow lane in the old part of town, tucked beneath the fortified walls. There was a restaurant and jeweller on the ground floor and a lift to take her up to the first floor.

Sinking gratefully into the large blue suede settee she laid her sticks along the floor and sat back.

At four that afternoon she opened her eyes and stared at the ceiling. With slow movements she eased her feet to the floor. Once, she had moved swiftly and gracefully if not on the stage then to the music in her head. Family and friends had envied her the natural co-ordination and enthusiasm she exhibited. She had been promised a great future and the love of a good man.

Where had it all gone, she asked herself every day. At first she had wallowed in self pity. Friends had dropped by the wayside. The family had fussed a great deal, feeding the bitterness and resentment that turned her against them. Then the healing process took over. With the exception of odd moods of depression she fought her way back from paralysis with all the determination and energy that had preceded her accident.

Only when the recovery stopped, when she was told she could expect no further improvement, that she would never dance again, had the light inside her died. They had tried their best to console her, Hugo and her mother, her two brothers, Daniel and Benjamin, but nothing had mattered to her, not even Philip’s desertion when he realised she would always limp slightly. He was a choreographer, a creator of movement and beauty and he couldn’t be expected to understand the needs of a lame person.

At half past four the doorbell sounded and without glancing at the television viewer she pressed the button to open the door. Carlo, the son of the people across the lane, always brought her an ice-cream from the shop at the bottom of the street at this time of day.

She smiled as she heard his footsteps coming up the steps from the hall. He was nine years old with black hair that lolled around his head in great loose curls and eyes almost too large for his small, cheeky face. His brown gaze was always direct and his manner verged on the insolent but his honesty and love of life bought him a million pardons.

He chattered non-stop as he handed her the ice-cream and took the small change she offered him. Then they both sat down at the table and she concentrated on what it was he was saying.

‘There was a man looking for you this morning, signorina.’

‘How do you know he was looking for me? Did he ask for me?’

‘No, but he rang your bell,’ the young boy went on.

Angela frowned.

‘What did he look like, this man?’

Carlo tipped his head to one side and stared upward while still taking a bite out of his ice-cream, a thoughtful expression on his face.

‘He might have been big but he was thin. He was quite old.’

Angela’s eyebrows rose a fraction for Carlo’s idea of old was anyone over thirty. He licked the drips of cream from his fingers.

‘And he was a polizziotto,’ he added.

‘A policeman? Did he have a uniform on, or how did you know he was a policeman?’

Carlo shrugged his shoulders and grinned.

‘I always know. He had no uniform, but I know.’

Angela was confused. Why would a plain clothes policeman come to see her? She searched her mind for any law she might have broken, any accident she may have witnessed, but there was nothing. Had something happened at home? Were they bringing her bad news? She finished her ice-cream and wiped her hands at the sink.

‘Will he come back, do you think?’

‘Si. They always come back.’

After he’d gone Angela switched on the television to take her mind off the visit of the police and also to help improve her Italian. On her arrival in Italy at the beginning of the summer she had only her schoolgirl Italian to fall back on. Her stepfather had rarely spoken to them in his native language. Now, after several months she could converse quite easily.

*          *          *

‘I came because of the note.’

Hugo Pagelli paced from one side of the apartment to the other, a big, angry man.

‘What note?’ Angela asked.

She sat in the gold suede armchair, a look of amazement on her face.

‘I don’t know what you are talking about.’

Her stepfather had arrived without warning that morning. He handed her an envelope and she withdrew a single sheet of paper and read it. Her mouth fell open as she gasped.

IF YOU LOVE YOUR STEPDAUGHTER KNOW THAT SHE IS IN GREAT DANGER. PERHAPS SHE CAN GIVE TO US WHAT WAS TAKEN FROM US, she read.

‘What are they talking about? What do they mean and what was taken from whom?’

He had stopped his pacing and was towering over her.

‘Have you noticed anyone following you? Anyone taking a more than natural interest in you. Have you had any strange visitors?’

She was frowning as she answered hesitantly.

‘No, well, there was a policeman here yesterday.’

‘You have broken the law?’

His voice was rising with his temper.

‘No, of course not.’

‘What did he want, this policeman?’

Angela got to her feet and he moved away from her and stood looking out of the window. She sighed.

‘I don’t know. I didn’t see him. The little boy across the lane told me he had been. Does it matter? What connection can a visit from the police have to do with that dreadful letter? Did you give it to the police? Is that why they came to check up on me to see that I was not in any trouble?’

A shiver ran across his shoulders as he turned to face her.

‘The police must not know I am in the country.’

‘Why?’

He sat down in the chair she had recently vacated.

‘Let me explain, Angela. There was an inheritance in my family that was hidden away during the war. After the war there were only myself and a distant cousin left of the family. He is an evil man and I suspect he is the sender of this letter. For many years the inheritance has lain hidden but now it has been brought to the government’s notice, or should I say the lack of it has been brought to the government’s notice. You see, sixteen years ago, I was accused of stealing these things. Now my cousin wishes the inheritance for himself, so he brings me here because I alone know where it is. He reminds the police that I am a wanted man.’

‘Then you shouldn’t have come.’

‘I would not put you in danger and worry your mother.’

They stared at each other, both minds working silently. His tone was grim when he spoke.

‘You will go home and I will stay and work this thing through.’

‘I’m not ready to go home.’

The determination in her own voice surprised her.

‘Nevertheless, you will go.’

Angela sat down again. She watched him as he moved to the telephone and rang the airport. He booked her a seat on a flight leaving that evening. She remained silent, her mind swirling with indecision. Who was this evil member of Hugo’s family?

Her stepfather was in trouble and instinct told her that if she disappeared it would be even worse for him.

‘Please, pack your things now, Angela. We can stop for a meal on our way to Venice. After that it will be time to leave you at the airport.’

Shaking her head, Angela stomped off to her room. She had few possessions and only a hold-all bag to pack.

When she returned to the main room she saw that Hugo had closed the shutters and switched off the electricity. The little sunlight that peeked in through a multitude of cracks in the shutters threw the room into a shadowy greyness.

‘Good,’ he said coming back into the room after closing the shutters in her bedroom. ‘We can go now.’

Angela watched him pick up her bag then followed him out of the apartment. He helped her into his hire car and as they drove off she saw her little friend from across the way come to the doorway of his home, licking a large icecream. He waved happily to her as they turned the corner and drove out of sight.

*          *          *

They ate in the restaurant of a high-class hotel on the outskirts of Venice. It was still early and they had the place to themselves with the exception of an American couple and a man sitting in the farthest corner from the windows who rarely raised his head from his meal. When they had finished their dinner they made small talk over coffee in the lounge. Angela asked after her mother and brothers.

Hugo answered in monosyllables, his mind on other things. At last it was time to leave and Angela replaced the magazine she had been glancing through. As she straightened, her eyes met those of the man leaving the diningroom.

A bolt of something like recognition shot between them, then was gone as he walked past them and out of the main entrance. He had taken a long time with his meal she thought as she followed Hugo out of the building.