Cold Tuscan Stone by David Wagner (best books to read in your 20s txt) ๐
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- Author: David Wagner
Read book online ยซCold Tuscan Stone by David Wagner (best books to read in your 20s txt) ๐ยป. Author - David Wagner
โLoGuercio.โ
โThis is DeMarzo, sir. IโฆI canโt locate the American.โ
LoGuercio leaned forward in his chair. โThatโs impossible, you called me only fifteen minutes ago to say he was locked in his room with his computer. What happened?โ
The sergeant spoke in short bursts, gasping for breath. โI finished my sandwich quickly and walked to the hotel, ready to sit in the lobby to wait for him. When I got there the girl at the desk, sheโs the oneโโ
โYes, yes, the one whoโs been helping you, go on.โ
โYes, sir, well she told me that Montoya had left the hotel a few minutes earlier with his coat on. He didnโt drop his room key, he just walked out the door.โ
โDid she see which way he went?โ
โNo, she doesnโt have a clear view of the street. I rushed outside and covered a few hundred meters of the street in both directions. Nothing.โ
โHis car?โ
โStill in the hotel garage.โ
LoGuercio looked up at the yellow ceiling of his office, trying to decide what to tell the man to do. โIโll put men on the gates of the city. You start walking around the main streets near you to see if he appears. If not, go back to the hotel and stay there, he will have to return some time. Call me immediately if he turns up. He canโt have gone very far. If youโre lucky he just went out to buy a newspaper or some shaving cream.โ
โOr something for his computer.โ
Like a new hard drive. โI doubt that.โ
He hung up, breathing heavily. You wanted excitement? Now you have it. Where would Montoya have gone, especially after telling the desk he was going to stay in his room? If it wasnโt just a quick decision to play tourist, someone must have called him. Who? The more pressing question going through LoGuercioโs head was something else. How long should he wait before telling Conti?
***
โEcco,โ said Rick, trying to stay as calm as he could. He walked over to the first urn while the man leaned against the table, the flashlight now back in his pocket. As he watched Rick he pulled out a cigarette and lit it, the smoke adding to the stale odor of the cave. The urn was at chest height so that Rick could reach out and run his fingers over the stone decoration. The surface was relatively clean, like it had been recently rubbed with a cloth. Particles of dust clogged the tiny recesses of the design, and given its intricacy, there were many nooks for dust to have collected over the centuries. At first Rick thought it to be a battle scene, but then he noticed a large bear on the left side of the panel, reared up and facing the spears of the hunters. Would the dead man have really killed a bear? An Etruscan Davey Crockett? Rick was not aware that any bears lived in this part of the peninsula, but perhaps the man had traveled further north for sport or as a soldier. Or it may have been the depiction of some legend or myth. Whatever it portrayed, it made an exciting bit of bas-relief theater, drama about which the toga-wearing Etruscan sculpted on the lid seemed blissfully blasรฉ. He reclined in the typical banquet position, as if saying โYes, I killed that bear in my lifetime, now I can brag about it to everyone in the afterlife. What does a dead guy have to do to get some more wine around here?โ Rick moved to the next niche.
The theme on this one was clearly classical, even if the figure on top had the same relaxed demeanor as his neighbor. It depicted a chariot carrying a man clad in a flowing robe followed by another man on foot wearing light armor. The chariot, with ornate decorations on its side and wheels, was pulled by four strong horses. Above the scene loomed a winged figure, a deity of some sort, looking straight into the face of the charioteer. Contrasting the flowing lines of robes, wings, and horseflesh, regular stone blocks of a temple ran across the top of the urn and bent around the sides. Rick was so intent on studying the stone that he almost jumped when the man spoke.
โDo you think you can find some rich client who would be interested in such a piece?โ He tapped ashes on the dirt floor.
Rick hoped the man didnโt notice how quickly he was breathing. โIt depends on price, of course, but these urns are certainly unique.โ He tried to shift into his role as buyer, wondering what he should be asking. โWhat about delivery?โ
โWe have shipped them to other countries before, always hidden with legitimate goods, and thereโs never been a problem. Customs officials in most countries are overworked and underpaid. I trust that is also the case in America.โ He took another pull on the cigarette. โWe will require half payment to close the deal, and the other half after delivery. Bank account numbers will be given to you. I trust those terms will be agreeable?โ
โYou havenโt mentioned price.โ
โNo, I havenโt. That will be the subject of another meeting. We thought you would want to talk with your people in America before we get to that point.โ
โYes, I think I would.โ Rick turned back to the urn, rubbing it and picking up a trace of dust on his fingers. โWhen will that next meeting be?โ
โVery soon.โ
โWith you?โ
โProbably not.โ
Likely with
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