The phone’s harsh ring jarred Mason into wakefulness. His eyes went to the red glow of his bedside digital alarm clock: 3:10. He searched for the phone in the dark and put the receiver to his ear. “Hello,” he mumbled.
“Signor Mason?”
“Who is this?”
But he already knew who it was—the same man who’d called him at his office a few days ago and who’d approached him the day of the Caravaggio opening.
“Mr. del Brasco wishes to arrange a meeting with you tomorrow night.”
Mason was still sleepy. Did he mean that night, or the next night?
The caller anticipated the question. “Not this night, Signor Mason. Tomorrow night.”
“Is Mr. del Brasco coming to Washington?” Mason asked, sitting up and turning on a lamp.
“Mr. del Brasco will send representatives to see you. You will be called again tonight at seven. I suggest you be at this number.”
Click.
To attempt to go back to sleep was folly. He made coffee and mentally went over the telephone conversation a dozen times. He was certain the caller had said representatives would contact him. Plural. More than one. He knew someone was to be designated by del Brasco to examine the painting before turning over the money. But who were the others? Del Brasco’s henchmen? Blond Curls from San Francisco? Hired goons of the sort who’d murdered Carlo Giliberti?
It had never occurred to Luther in all his planning that he would have to take steps to protect himself physically from Franco del Brasco. Physical violence hadn’t been factored into his thinking because violence wasn’t part of his world. Would that be what ultimately brought him down, his naïveté?
Luther Mason had never been able to accept that child abuse took place because abusing a child was anathema to him. Just as bigotry was beyond his comprehension.
But that didn’t mean, of course, that those things did not happen. It simply wasn’t part of his genetic and environmental mix.
He also detested hypocrisy yet knew he was being a hypocrite. He was engaged in a criminal act no matter how he tried to sugarcoat it. And he was certain as the monochromatic early morning light rendered everything in his kitchen gray, including him, that naive criminals must always be the ones who were caught and paid the price.
He told himself while showering that he must create a scenario for turning over the painting that would minimize physical risk. That meant two things: First, he had to be the one to determine where and when the exchange took place. Second, greed mustn’t be allowed to cloud his judgment.
Luther’s deal with del Brasco called for him to be paid a million dollars for Grottesca. A fraction of its worth.
But he didn’t need a million dollars to live the remainder of his life in modest comfort. If the opportunity presented itself, he might be able to offer some of his million to buy a positive report from del Brasco’s appraiser. Surely, anyone working for Franco del Brasco would not be a stranger to bribery.
He also decided (along with the realization that planning a crime was the most exhausting mental exercise he’d ever gone through) that it might be possible to limit the amount of time the appraiser had with the painting. He could ask for a small down payment against the million dollars in return for allowing the appraiser to take Grottesca back to California to be studied more closely. If so, he would gladly waive the balance owed him. How much did he need? Half a million? Two hundred fifty thousand? His life was worth more than that.
He was about to leave the apartment for the Gallery when the ringing phone stopped him. The man again? There was no sense trying to avoid him. He answered and heard the bombastic voice of M. Scott Pims. “Luther, my friend. Scott.”
“I thought you were in New York.”
“I am. About to leave. Thought I’d best check in with my favorite wayward curator.”
Luther winced at the characterization.
“Looks like your deceased Italian friend, Mr. Giliberti, was quite the artful smuggler.”
“Was he? I wouldn’t know about that.”
A guttural laugh from Pims. “How are things progressing? You’re nearing the culmination of your grand adventure.”
“I can’t talk now, Scott. I was just leaving for work.”
“Loyal up to the last moment. I like that. You sound—well, you sound slightly shaken. A new and unpleasant development?” He didn’t wait for a reply. “Free for lunch?”
“No.”
“Then we’ll make it dinner.”
“Call me at the Gallery when you’re back. Maybe we should get together.”
The main entrance to the National Gallery was the scene of a commotion as Mason drove past. He pulled to the curb and narrowed his eyes to better read the message on signs carried by picketers: AMERICAN GALLERIES FOR AMERICAN ARTISTS. It was the same group of dissident local artists who picketed the National Gallery whenever a major exhibition featured a foreign artist. At least Julian wasn’t with them.
He then noticed another picketer standing far removed from the group. Mason knew who he was, too. The Style Section of the Post had recently run a piece about an Italian-American who’d been picketing the Italian Embassy on Albemarle Street, acting on his complaint that the Italian government had allowed Grottesca to be first exhibited in the United States.
Luther attended an eleven o’clock meeting of the Exhibition Committee, at which Paul Bishop’s proposed exhibit of British landscape painters, anchored by William Blake and Joseph Turner, with some Constable and Samuel Palmer thrown in to add spice, was discussed. Mason said that such an exhibition would be “characterized by a numbing sameness that would choke the spectator in detail.” His evaluation did not sit well with Bishop.
Mason’s growling stomach told him he was hungry. Maybe Lynn would like to have lunch. It was an impetuous thought. They’d avoided each other since the confrontation about her promotion, but he was drawn to her office by a need to not give up all contact. At least not yet.
Her office was empty. He was told that she’d called in that morning to say she was taking a personal day.
Strange that she hadn’t called him, Mason thought as he walked through the East Building on his way to the employee exit. One rule of his department was that anyone calling in sick or intending to take a personal day inform him personally.
After a fast, solitary lunch at nearby Jaleo, he returned to his office and called Scott, catching the rotund art critic just as he walked through the door.
“Ah, Luther. Feeling better?”
“I would like to catch up with you later today. I thought maybe a drink after work.”
“I think I could arrange that. I have to dash from here to The Collector. Our gregarious innkeeper-friend, Mr. Wooby, is about to open his annual exhibition from Life Skills Center. Always a lovely event, heartwarming and inspiring.” One month each year, works by mentally handicapped artists belonging to Washington’s Life Skills Center were displayed at The Collector, the best becoming menu covers that sold for ten dollars as a fund-raiser.
“I have to be home a little before seven,” Mason said. “Could you meet me at five?”
“Yes. Why do you have to be home a little before seven?”
Mason’s initial reaction was anger. What business was it of his? “I’m expecting an important call,” he said.
“Concerning your little adventure? You’re coming down to the wire, aren’t you?”
“Meet me in the lobby of the Four Seasons at five.”
“Yes, sir,” Pims said, laughing. “Why do I have the feeling, Luther, that you are about to spring something dark and mysterious on me?”
“Because—because maybe I am.”
He decided to leave early and called Court Whitney to let him know.
“Mr. Whitney is in conference, Luther,” said Whitney’s secretary.
“No chance of speaking with him for thirty seconds?”
“I’m afraid not. They just arrived, and—”
“Who just arrived?”
“Mr. Spagnola from the Vatican and two other gentlemen.”
“I see. Please tell him I have a doctor’s appointment and won’t be back this afternoon.”
“Anything serious?”
“No. Just a stiff neck. I must have slept funny. Did Court say anything about me attending the meeting? I’ve been here all day.”
“No.”
He drove home on automatic pilot, unaware of the trip, entered his apartment at three-thirty, and poured a glass of red wine. He needed something to calm his nerves; the wine seemed a more benign prescription than the Valium in his medicine cabinet. As he sat in a chair staring out his living room window, a horrifying thought came to him. What if del Brasco’s representative, perhaps accompanied by two strong-arm men, insisted upon coming to the apartment? That was the last place he wanted to see them. It would be too easy to kill him there and walk away with the painting.
He had an equally potent revelation. They wouldn’t kill him if he didn’t have the painting for them to take. His gut twisted; how could he have been so foolish as to keep the original Grottesca here? The worst possible place. If he didn’t have it, it would leverage his chances. He needed another safe place until he’d worked out arrangements with del Brasco’s men.
“Of course,” he muttered, opening the closet door. But as he peered into its recesses, he sensed something was wrong. The paintings weren’t as he had left them. Or were they? He frowned as he tried to remember exactly how he’d positioned them. He was certain he’d lined them up one directly behind the other. But an inch of the original, which was behind the copy, protruded to the side. I must be wrong, he thought, as he pulled them out and put them in his large black leather portfolio, zipped it closed, went to his car, and drove to the Four Seasons Hotel on the fringes of Georgetown. “Calm down,” he silently told himself as he chose an oversized stuffed chair in a corner far removed from the nearest seating area and absently stirred a Bloody Mary with a skinny red plastic straw until Pims arrived.
The large man paused at the lobby entrance, saw Luther, and laboriously made his way in his direction. “Started ahead of me, I see,” Pims said, slowly easing himself into the next chair.
“I was early.”
Pims’s eyes went to the black portfolio resting against Mason’s chair. “And what have we here?” he asked. The waitress requested his order. “Brandy and port, in equal amounts, in a snifter, no ice,” Pims said.
The waitress asked him to repeat it.
“Tell the barman to place in a large snifter equal amounts of brandy and port wine. Very good for the stomach, my dear. Very soothing. More effective than blackberry brandy.”
She smiled and walked away, eyebrows up.
“Now, Luther, my friend and irrepressible imp, tell me what has happened since I’ve been away. I told you about Carlo. He was obviously the perfect cultural attaché. Stealing culture from his native land to see that it received a wider audience. But I won’t bore you with that. You can watch it on my show next Friday. Drink your Bloody Mary. You look like you need something. You’re ashen. The gray face of a man in a dilemma—or about to have a coronary.”
“I feel fine, Scott. I believe that tomorrow night will be the end of all this.” He continued to stir. “I received a call early this morning. They’re calling back again at seven to set up a time to exchange the painting for money.” He stopped talking as the waitress delivered Pims’s concoction, which Pims lifted in a toast: “To my dear friend and curator without peer, Luther Mason. May all the days of your life be sunny and warm, and may you drink from the well of beauty forever more.”
Luther touched the rim of Pims’s snifter with his glass, placed it on the table, and said, “I want you to hold the two paintings for me for twenty-four hours.”
The sudden worried expression on Pims’s face was exaggerated, Mason knew. The big man said, “I was right. You are indeed suggesting something dark and mysterious. What paintings might these be that I would be holding in escrow for you?”
“Oh, stop it, Scott, will you!”
Pims drank from the snifter. “Usually, this wonderful mixture of spirits, which I learned from a Scottish bartender in Wick years ago, after making an obscenely rough journey to the Scottish mainland from the Orkneys, works almost instantly. But today, Luther, my stomach seems to be getting worse.”
“Forget I asked,” Mason said.
Pims placed his hammy hand on Mason’s arm. “Don’t be so touchy, Luther. Of course I’ll do this favor for you. I just didn’t want you to think it was an insignificant one. I want you to know that it marks the depth of the commitment I have to you as a friend, to say nothing of being an admiring critic. You want me to walk out of here with that portfolio.”
Mason nodded.
“And to keep it safe until summoned by you to return it.”
“Yes.”
“And then, when you meet with your esteemed client and turn over one of the paintings to him in return for a fat envelope filled with negotiable currency, you wish to have me present to lend weight to your claim that what you’re giving is the real McCoy, and perhaps more important, to lend my not inconsiderable physical presence to keep these same people from wringing your neck.”
It hadn’t occurred to Luther to ask Pims to accompany him to the meeting. But why not? He’d been the one to suggest it. And he knew everything about the scheme anyway.
A smile from Pims, and another reassuring placement of hand on arm. “Enough said,” he said, sitting back and finishing his drink. “I offer myself as your aide-de-camp. In fact, this is all delightfully camp. When do you think this meeting will take place?”
“Sometime tomorrow night. I’ll let you know as soon as I hear.”
The waitress asked if they wished another drink.
“No, but give my friend the check,” Pims said. When she went to get it, he said, “I think it appropriate that you pay for our drinks, Luther. But only because it will make you feel better. Make you feel less guilty about the awkward, dangerous position in which you place me.”
“Jesus, Scott, will you please stop it. Either do this for me graciously or forget I asked.”
They stood outside together. “Time for a quick bite?” Pims asked.
“No. I must get home for that phone call. And please go directly home yourself and put that portfolio where no one will find it.”
Pims laughed. “You have placed it in the most capable of hands, Luther. You know that, which is why you chose me. I’m flattered.”
You might be flattered, Mason thought, but I’m feeling painfully empty-handed at this moment. Don’t lose it, Scott. Don’t have me end up a pathetic member of the Dortmunder gang in a Donald Westlake novel.
While Mason waited by the phone in his apartment, Pims dialed a number from his. He’d unwrapped both versions of Grottesca and propped them against chairs next to his desk. “Remarkable,” he said aloud. “Absolutely remark—Hello. M. Scott Pims in Washington calling David Decker.”
Decker came on the line. “Scott. How are you?”
“Splendid. Even better than that.”
“How is the book coming?”
“You would ask that, being my editor. I was just in New York but didn’t have a moment to call you. Tracking down another remarkable story having to do with a deceased cultural attaché from Italy who was more smuggler than attaché.”
“Oh, yes, you mentioned Giliberti the last time we talked. Is that what you’re calling about?”
“No. You know how delighted I am at having been brought into this inventive Caravaggio imbroglio. I mean, David, really being brought into it. Informed every inch of the way.”
Decker sat in his cluttered office at the New York publishing house that had published Pims’s last book and that had signed him up six months ago to do another.
“But just a few minutes ago, David, my inclusion on the margin of things suddenly put me in the midst. Things took a dramatic and unexpected turn. Can you keep a confidence?”
The young editor said, “I think so.”
“The work in question. No, make that the works in question, sit mere inches from me as we speak.”
Decker took his feet down from the edge of his desk, placed his elbows on the desk, and lowered his voice. “Are you saying—?”
“Yes, David. This is exactly what I am saying. You may have seen the best-seller potential when I first proposed this book to you. But that revered, albeit dubiously achieved status is now assured.”
“When will I see the manuscript?”
“As soon as this adventure has played itself out to its logical conclusion.”
“I can’t wait. By the way, while you’re on the phone, I’ve been playing with titles. I really like The Caravaggio Conspiracy.”
Pims laughed. “Good title, but unfortunately already taken. Peter Watson did a book about Caravaggio with that same title a number of years ago. Excellent work. I highly recommend it. Well, just wanted to touch base with my New York editor to let him know that his instincts for a good story are almost as good as mine. Ta-ta, David. We’ll be in touch.”
Pims placed both the original Grottesca and its copy on the dining room table and carefully rewrapped them in the brown paper. Luther had told him that the small pencil dot on the paper designated that package as containing the original. As he folded and taped the paper with the dot over the Saison forgery, he paused and looked up at the ceiling.
“Can you really do this to so fine a friend?” he asked himself aloud.
Then, looking down at the table, he laughed and said, “Of course you can.”