“Captain von Essen told me I should stay here at the hotel to avoid ‘trouble.’ I asked him if he could just provide me with a car. But he said Trastevere wouldn’t be safe tonight.”
“We have to get word to the sisters,” Angelo said. The Villa Medici was a good distance from Trastevere and even farther from the Vatican.
“There are telephones in every suite. I heard the women talking in the powder room. They were all highly impressed. I’m sure they are all looking forward to eavesdropping on each other’s conversations.” She held out the key, enthusiastically. He took it, his unease growing as he stared down at it.
“We’ll ask for another room. We’ll switch,” he said abruptly. “Come with me.”
They approached the registration desk, but Eva held back when Angelo put a warning hand on her arm.
“Let me,” he whispered. “Stand here and look frightened.”
“That won’t be hard to do,” she murmured. Angelo understood completely. His own heart was pounding heavily beneath his cassock. But he smiled easily and nodded at the man behind the glossy mahogany registration desk, who took his hand and kissed it, as if he wasn’t sure if Angelo were someone important or not.
“Signore, I need your help,” Angelo said, sotto voce. “My sister is staying here at the hotel. She is a renowned violinist and she played for the dignitaries who are in attendance at the gala this evening. She is very beautiful, you understand.” He paused so the concierge could verify this truth for himself.
The little man with the slick black hair and the neat little mustache peered around Angelo’s shoulder and eyed Eva. His eyes widened slightly. “Yes. Yes. I see,” he said awkwardly, as if he wasn’t sure whether to agree that she was beautiful or refrain from commenting on a priest’s sister.
“She is receiving some unwanted attention from one of the guests. No one especially important. But I would like her to be moved, if possible. Unfortunately, he saw her coming out of her room, and my sister is now a little frightened.”
“Oh, yes, Padre. Of course. I understand.” The concierge took the key from Angelo’s hand and consulted his ledger.
“Will you be staying with your sister?” he asked judiciously. Angelo tried not to react or to think about what those words could entail.
“For a while. I would like to make sure she is all right.”
“Yes, Padre.” The man bobbed and whisked out two keys with a tidy little nod. Then he crossed himself as if it had been a while since his last confession. Angelo didn’t know whether to smile or sigh. He had a tendency to make people chatty or nervous. It didn’t hurt that this man was nervous. He’d been easy to persuade.
“Do we need to move the lady’s things to her new room?”
“No. That won’t be necessary. She was so upset she was ready to leave the hotel altogether. I put her things in the cloakroom while she played. It will be easy enough to retrieve them.”
“Very good, Signore. I mean, Padre. Very good.” The man bobbed his head and crossed himself again.
The suite was lavish and large behind double doors with a small foyer that opened up into an elegant sitting room and well-appointed bathroom beyond that. The sitting room was built around the large windows that overlooked the Spanish Steps. But Angelo didn’t waste time staring out at the backdrop.
There were ten monasteries, convents, and churches sheltering Jews in Trastevere, with more Jews sprinkled among another twenty families in the area. If the whole west side was to be raided, the whole west side would need to be warned. He was put through to the Vatican and reached an assistant of Monsignor O’Flaherty. Angelo asked that he be told that O’Malley had called with news of the Midnight Mass being conducted that evening in Trastevere. Midnight Mass was code for a night raid.
There was a one-word warning that he had put in place with a few trusted runners who had access to telephones, people who could get a warning to a nearby convent, monastery, or religious institution sheltering refugees. Most convents and monasteries were not equipped with phones—few places were—and getting someone to answer, hear the warning, understand what it meant, and then pass it on would be almost miraculous. Angelo began the laborious task of waiting to be put through, via operator, over party lines that were far from private, sharing a message anyone could listen in on. But eventually, one by one, he was able to convey the warning to every runner except for the one for Santa Cecilia. He would have to warn them in person.
“You can’t go. What if there is a raid and you are there and Captain von Essen sees you?”
“I have to go,” he said simply. “I have to. Stay here. I promise I will come back for you.”
She nodded, just once, her face tight and her eyes huge and frightened in her beautiful face. He could see from her expression that she thought it was too dangerous, that to her it felt like her father heading to Austria all over again, destined for disaster. But she didn’t try to stop him, and he was struck by her courage. She rose and followed him to the door, a slim silhouette in a long black dress, a candle in the darkness.
“I was so proud of you tonight. Felix would have been proud too. You are a remarkable woman, Eva Bianco. A remarkable woman,” he said sincerely.
She looked as if she were holding back tears, and he turned away before he weakened and took her in his arms, pulling the door shut behind him instead. He was halfway down the stairs before he realized he had called her Eva Bianco—not Rosselli—like it was her actual name. Like she was truly his.
CHAPTER 18
THE CRYPT
Angelo was only a block from the Villa Medici, moving as quickly as his leg and cane would allow, when a long black car slid up alongside him and the window was lowered, revealing the top portion of Captain von Essen’s face. He was alone in the backseat.
“I’m sure you are aware it is after curfew, and even a man in your position can get in some trouble, Father Bianco,” he said silkily.
“I have a permit, and I don’t live far. A priest’s work is never done.” Angelo smiled and sighed, but his heart was pounding. The captain had murdered Aldo Finzi, and there was something very off about him. Maybe it was his tidy ways and his soft-spoken delivery that didn’t quite mask his glee at being a proud, card-carrying member of the Reich. He was the kind that inflicted torture while mournfully telling his victims it was all their fault.
“I will give you a ride, Father. Climb in.”
Angelo did not want a ride. He hesitated, unsure of how to refuse.
“I insist,” the captain said quietly. “You must let me do this as a courtesy to your sister, at the very least. You were there tonight to support her, I’m sure. Now you find yourself in a predicament, walking home after curfew.”
Angelo walked around the car, but the driver was quick to hop out and open the door. The courtesy made him breathe a little easier.
“I thought I saw your wife with you this evening, Captain,” Angelo mentioned as the door was closed behind him. She was not with him anymore, and Angelo’s anxiety rose once more.
“Yes. She was. She had some friends she wanted to visit with. I had business to attend to. A military man’s work is never done either, I fear. We have that in common.”
“I’m sure that is true,” Angelo said politely, folding his hands in his lap.
“Eva was wonderful tonight,” the captain murmured. “Magical. It was such a treat to hear her play. Herr Himmler was most impressed. Lieutenant Colonel Kappler as well.”
“Yes. She was wonderful.” Angelo wouldn’t let himself think of Himmler or Kappler or the attention they had given Eva. If he dwelled on it, he would do something dangerous, something stupid, and he couldn’t afford to do either.
“You two are close, yes? She told me she came to Rome to be near you. I was always close with my older sister. She was like a second mother to me. Of course, that’s not how it is with you and Eva, is it? You are the father.” He laughed at his play on words.