As the novel opens, a doctor arrives at the apartment of Maria Grazia Battestini, an elderly shut-in who is hated by everyone around her (including her only surviving relative, her neice) for her miserly, spiteful ways. The doctor dreads his task of visiting her once a week, since she is always complaining about her Romanian illegal-immigrant housekeeper etc. But on this visit the doctor finds … Battestini brutally murdered, having been struck by a blunt object in the skull. He immediately reports the murder to the police and the second Lieutenant Scarpa hears that the old lady had a Romanian housekeeper, they assume she was the murderer. He has his men check all of the trains leaving the city and sure enough, the housekeeper, whose name is Flori, is found on the train with a purse containing 600 euros. While she is being questioned by Scarpa’s arrogant men, however, she fleas, only to be struck by a train on the opposite track. Scarpa, satisfied that Flori murdered Battestini, decides not to pursue any other suspects.Weeks later, the old lady’s neighbor, Signora Gismondi, returns from a trip to London to discover that the old lady is dead and the housekeeper was named the murderer. She calls the police to plead otherwise: on the day of the murder, the housekeeper had been fired and locked out of her house by the old lady, upon which Signora Gismondi had given her some money and offered to take her to the train station so that she could return to her native Romania. Gismondi had personally driven the housekeeper to the station, and had dropped her off there in a calm state, meaning it was unlikely that she committed themurder before leaving to Romania.Scarpa, however, is convinced that Signora Gismondi is lying. Like most of his colleagues, he is a lazy, distrustful, unimaginative police officer who wants to find the easiest solution rather than truly investigating. On the other hand, Commissario Guido Brunetti believes that the woman is telling the truth. He realizes that although he is not assigned to the case, it is his duty to follow through with the woman’s tip and find the real killer.After questioning Gismondi, Brunetti searches Battestini’s apartmenting, finding among her papers an odd one that seems to be written in code. He takes it back to the office and someone realizes it is a list of bank account numbers. Signorina Elettra, a desk worker who used to work at a bank and is an expert in computer hacking, examines the accounts and discovers that someone had been depositing a fixed monthly amount into each of the right up until the day after the woman’s death, when an unknown person consolidated all the accounts and moved them to an offshore account.Commissario Brunetti questions Battestini’s lawyer, the woman who was encharged with all of her affairs. She confesses that she was the one who moved the accounts offshore, but that Signora Battestini never told her the source of the payments.In questioning people, Brunetti learns more about Battestini’s son, who died five years earlier. Rumors circulate that he was gay and died of AIDS. Battestini’s mail carrier reveals that once she was delivering his mail and a pornographic magazine depicting adolescent boys slipped out of its bag. Brunetti also learns that the son worked for the school board. Meanwhile Battestini’s doctor reveals that he once heard Battestini brag that her son took very good care of her. Brunetti begins to wonder if perhaps the son was responsible for the deposits in Battestini’s accounts.Brunetti begins to suspect that the son was blackmailing someone involved with the board of education, where he used to work. So he interviews the director of the board of ed, Signor Rossi. Signor Rossi says he didn’t really know the son, but Brunetti suspects he is lying. Brunetti returns to Battestini’s old apartment (where she was murdered) and when he looks in the attic, he finds that it has been ransacked. Someone has come here looking for something….
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Donna Leon is one of my most favorite authors. Her stories pull you in immediately so it’s hard to put them down.
I enjoy this series. Good characters and good story line.
Beautifully developed characters even minor ones.
The atmosphere of Venice is evoked so well.
Ms Leon writes beautifully crafted stories about fully fleshed-out character,and she uses 2 vocabularies (English and Italian) to construct amazing sentence lines. Reading her books is a joy!
*I have read many of Donna Leone Books and have not read one I did not enjoy. I have recomended her work many times.
This series by Donna Leon is one of my favorites.She brings the city of Venice alive, and I feel like I’m meeting old friends when I begin another one of her books about Commissario Guido Brunetti.
Got to admit I am infatuated with Commesarin Burnetti, the local and the politics of Venice that Ms. Leone creates in theses books. These are the definition of great summer reads.
I love anything She writes and I love he inspector
The setting was another character in the story. Venice came alive. She kept me guessing up to the very end. Well done.
I always enjoy Leon’s stories featuring Inspector Brunetti – they are always clever, thoughtful, and full of fascinating, finely-drawn characters. A wonderful series, set in Venice and packed with local color.
Always a good story and good characters. Love the bit of Venetian that comes with these books.
Brunette is, as always, thoughtful and thought-provoking. I like the equivocal endings to many of Donna Leon’s Brunetti stories – it’s more realistic than the “kill the bad guy and get the “Partner” at the end. And her sense of place in Venice is wonderful. I’ve even paid full price and bought the hardcover, I like them that much!
Ms. Leon’s prose is wonderful.
Donna Leon is on her game and I love her character development and thoroughly enjoy Commissario Guido Brunetti.
Another outstanding series!
Great characters
I love everything Donna Leon writes. I’ve followed her since her 1st mystery.
I love Donna Leon’s books, and especially her main character, the police commissioner who is wise, compassionate and always captivating. We have been to Italy several times and to Venice as well. It is amazing how different the two areas are–almost worlds apart. I always learn something new about Venice from her, a transplanted American who …