have performed this entire aria on one breath; certainly it had all been sung on the same note. He wondered if this man or his wife could affect Paolaâs career in any way, and then it occurred to him that, regardless, they could not affect his own, and so he turned to Paola and said, interrupting the professor, âI need another drink. Would you like one?â
She smiled at him, smiled at the astonished professor, and said, âYes. But let me get them, Guido.â Oh, she was a sly one, his wife: a snake, a viper, a weasel.
âNo, let me,â he insisted and then compromised. âOr come with me and meet this young woman who has just been telling me the most fascinating things about algorithms and theorems.â He smiled and made a small bow to the professor, muttered a word that could have been âfascinatingâ, or could have been âhallucinatingâ, said they would just be gone a moment, and fled, pulling his wife to safety by one hand.
She tried to speak but he held up a hand to indicate that it was not necessary: âI cannot allow the oppression of women,â Brunetti said.
Together, they went and collected fresh glasses of prosecco; he noticed that Paola drank half of hers thirstily.
He asked if she had looked at the works, then went with her as she walked around each of the cases. When she was finished, she said, âDisplaying it would be a problem, thoughâ, just as if he had asked her if they should buy one and, if so, which.
Brunetti looked around at the crowd, which had grown denser. A bearded scarecrow of a man, he saw, had been caught by Professore Amadori, who seemed to have been switched back to PLAY. A tall woman wearing a miniskirt with a fringe of glass baubles dangling from the hem walked past the professor, but his gazeremained on his listener, whose eyes, however, ached after the miniskirt.
A man and woman appeared by the first display case. They wore matching crocheted white skullcaps and ponchos made of rough wool, as though they had passed through Damascus on their way home from Machu Picchu. The man pointed at each piece in turn, and the woman fluttered her hands in praise or condemnation, Brunetti had no idea which.
When he turned back to Paola, she was gone. Instead, standing less than a metre from him and speaking to a woman with short dark hair, he saw Ribetti. He looked better than he had at their first encounter, and happier. He looked better not only because he was wearing a suit and tie and not the trousers and wrinkled jacket he had been wearing when Brunetti saw him the last time, the clothes he had been wearing when he was pushed to the ground and then detained by the police. The suit fitted him, but it seemed that the womanâs company fitted him even better.
Brunetti looked down into his glass, not quite sure of the etiquette involved in a social meeting with a person he had saved from arrest. Ribetti, however, made Brunettiâs reticence unnecessary for, as soon as he saw the Commissario, he said something to the woman and came across. âCommissario, how nice to see you,â he said with what appeared to be real pleasure. Then, after a pause, âI didnât expect to see you here.â Realizing this could be construed as doubt thata policeman could have any interest in art, he added an explanation, âI mean on Murano, that is. Not here.â He stopped, as if aware that anything else he might say would only dig him in deeper. He glanced back at the woman and said to Brunetti, âCome and meet my wife.â
Brunetti followed him over to the woman, who smiled at the approach of her husband. She had short hair in which Brunetti noticed quite a bit of grey. On closer inspection, he saw that she was older than her husband, perhaps by as much as ten years. âThis is the man who didnât arrest me, Assunta,â Ribetti said. He stood beside her and wrapped an arm around her shoulder.
She smiled at