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The Case of the Missing Botticelli, page 1

 

The Case of the Missing Botticelli
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The Case of the Missing Botticelli


  Table of Contents

  Excerpt

  Praise for Marilyn Baron

  The Case of the Missing Botticelli

  Copyright

  Dedication

  Part One

  Chapter One

  Chapter Two

  Chapter Three

  Chapter Four

  Chapter Five

  Chapter Six

  Chapter Seven

  Chapter Eight

  Chapter Nine

  Chapter Ten

  Chapter Eleven

  Chapter Twelve

  Chapter Thirteen

  Chapter Fourteen

  Chapter Fifteen

  Chapter Sixteen

  Chapter Seventeen

  Chapter Eighteen

  Chapter Nineteen

  Chapter Twenty

  Part Two

  Chapter Twenty-One

  Chapter Twenty-Two

  Chapter Twenty-Three

  Chapter Twenty-Four

  Chapter Twenty-Five

  Chapter Twenty-Six

  Chapter Twenty-Seven

  Chapter Twenty-Eight

  A word about the author…

  Thank you for purchasing

  Also available from The Wild Rose Press

  Hadley wrote down the phone number, and her jaw went slack when she heard and inscribed the rest of the message. “Tell him it’s about a missing Botticelli. It’s urgent.”

  A shot of adrenalin coursed through Hadley’s veins. Sandro Botticelli. Her favorite artist in the whole world. Creator of the Italian masterpiece, Nascita di Venere, The Birth of Venus, the ancient Goddess of Love, dated circa 1484. She wasn’t aware a Botticelli painting was missing.

  “Is there any additional information you can give me? The name of the painting? The provenance? Capito. I understand the need for utmost secrecy. We can set up a meeting, and I’ll make sure Signore Domingo will be there.”

  She jotted down some more notes. “Piazzale Michelangelo? At sunset?”

  Hadley tilted her head and chewed on her bottom lip. That was a strange destination for a business meeting. Although it offered the most scenic view of the city, perched atop a hillside overlooking Florence, meeting at a park after dark was reminiscent of a murder scene in a film noir. Where the heroine, Hadley, would later be found, dead, her virtue compromised and her throat slit. She would have to get Luca to drive her up on his motorcycle and stay out of sight while she conducted her business.

  Was the female caller from a museum? A high-end gallery? An auction house? Was she an art or antiquities dealer, or a wealthy private individual, or was she representing a government agency? And, if so, which government? Enemy or ally? She would soon find out.

  Praise for Marilyn Baron

  “THE ROMANOV LEGACY: A NOVEL is…historical fiction shrouded in mystery and intrigue…an unbelievable story amongst historical fact [set in] the lavish world of Imperial Russia, …secret societies, carrying on the bloodlines, and unraveling a puzzle.”

  ~NN Light’s Book Heaven (5 Stars)

  “STUMBLE STONES…named so for the plaques laid in tribute to victims of the Holocaust, possesses the best qualities of historical romance. Baron knows her settings and her history, and her characters…are well-drawn and convincing.”

  ~Georgia Author of the Year Judge

  “THE ALIBI…Southern, small town mystery, intrigue, suspense, murder, and a bit of down-home charm. …and an absolute enjoyable read.”

  ~Gabrielle Sally, The Romance Reviews (5 Stars)

  “A compelling and entertaining story…a superb job with character[s]…the story fun and enticing!”

  ~Turning Another Page, Book Unleashed (5 Stars)

  “Marilyn Baron brings a unique style to her quirky and fast-paced stories that keeps readers turning pages.”

  ~New York Times Bestseller Dianna Love

  “A treasure trove of mystery and intrigue….”

  ~Andrew Kirby

  STRACCIATELLA GELATO: MELTING TIME

  “A quick and fantastical read…traveling back to a special time or… place…in our hearts and minds…”

  ~Laura Hartland (5 Stars)

  “Fast, enjoyable read…has gotten me in the mood to read again. Thanks to the author for that gift.”

  ~GerriP (5 Stars)

  The Case of the Missing Botticelli

  and

  The Case of the Vanishing Vermeer

  by

  Marilyn Baron

  Two Massimo Domingo Mysteries

  This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are either the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to actual persons living or dead, business establishments, events, or locales, is entirely coincidental.

  The Case of the Missing Botticelli and The Case of the Vanishing Vermeer

  COPYRIGHT © 2022 by Marilyn Baron

  All rights reserved. No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever without written permission of the author or The Wild Rose Press, Inc. except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles or reviews.

  Contact Information: info@thewildrosepress.com

  Cover Art by Debbie Taylor

  The Wild Rose Press, Inc.

  PO Box 708

  Adams Basin, NY 14410-0708

  Visit us at www.thewildrosepress.com

  Publishing History

  First Edition, 2022

  Trade Paperback ISBN 978-1-5092-3970-2

  Digital ISBN 978-1-5092-3971-9

  Two Massimo Domingo Mysteries

  Published in the United States of America

  Dedication

  I dedicate this book to my wonderful daughters, Marissa and Amanda, and to my granddaughter, Aviva.

  Part One

  The Case of the Missing Botticelli

  “Researching a lost work of art is like solving a mystery—and, as is often the case, sometimes the mystery is only partially unraveled, while threads of other mysteries are discovered.”

  ~from “Researching the Lost Portrait of Gutle Rothschild,” a December 1, 2020, Hadassah-Brandeis Institute blog by Dr. Susan Nashman Fraiman, a researcher and curator of Jewish and Israeli art, about a painting by Moritz Oppenheim

  Chapter One

  Firenze (Florence), Italy

  “Pronto.”

  Hadley Evans finished sipping her fizzy lemon soda, savoring the satisfying blend of tart and sweet tastes on her tongue and the sparkling slide of the cold liquid down her throat. Setting the drink aside on her desk, she picked up a pen and a pink telephone message pad.

  “Signore Domingo is not available at the moment. He’s at lunch. No, I don’t know when he’ll be back.”

  The caller’s impatient tone bled through the telephone line, piercing Hadley’s already super-frayed nerve endings. Her boss was dining on a back street at Trattoria La Strada around the corner from Santa Felicita Church. The trattoria was where all the locals dined. Fridays were typically crowded and packed with Fiorentinos and tourists who came to ogle the statue of David, swoon over the paintings in the Uffizi, load up on leather goods, gorge on cups of rich gelato, and shop for gold and jewelry in the high-end shops along the Ponte Vecchio. The restaurant was not much to look at on the outside, but inside, the smells and the cuisine were divine, courtesy of the owner’s parents, who doubled as the chefs. Which is why any Italian worth his buffalo mozzarella dined there.

  Signore Domingo was on the portly side because eating pasta was his favorite pastime. He’d already been gone two hours, so he was most definitely lingering over dessert. If Hadley had to guess, right about now, he’d be ordering the special tiramisu of the day and playing footsies under the table with his latest innamorata—Simonetta or Angelina or Sophia—the current flavor of the week.

  “I’ll be glad to take a message. No, I’m not the secretary. She’s out. I’m just covering for her. I’m Signore Domingo’s assistant.” Nothing wrong with a little white lie. She was actually Signore Domingo’s gofer. For the last six months, he’d kept her dashing around Florence running errands, like picking up his laundry, keeping his office stocked with sweet and savory snacks, making restaurant reservations, and shopping for gifts for his wife to keep her off the scent of his mistress-a-la-mode. So not exactly what she signed up for when she took the job.

  Although she was hoping for some additional responsibility, running errands only made her fall more in love with Florence. There were no malls or big supermarkets. If she wanted a quart of milk, she could walk into the corner coffee bar. If she craved something sweet, she could visit a secret bakery shop for a hot, fresh pastry or wander to the local florist where she was greeted like a friend by the flower lady when she picked up a fragrant bouquet. The gourmet food court at Mercato Centrale offered the region’s best wines and local ingredients.

  She enjoyed the personalized service and the intimate relationship with the people who sold her things—from fragrance to fashion. The familiar sights and sounds and smells. And the priceless artwork on display in the museums around the city—the Uffizi, the Bargello, the Academia, and the treasures tourists so often miss—hidden away in the churches.

  She knew her way around every narrow street and alleyway. Her heart swelled at the sounds of the church bells in the religious center, as she walked in the shadow of the traditional Florentine tower houses in the heart of Florence’s historical center and on to the medieval
quarter to the political center of the city. She paused for refreshment at Government Square, Piazza Signoria, with its statues, the sculptures in the Loggia, the monuments that made Florence the destination for some eleven million tourists a year.

  She’d been told she could almost pass for an Italian—with her thick and lustrous, long and wavy auburn hair, green eyes, and a girl-next-door smile, until she opened her mouth. Then her accent gave her away as a foreigner. Fake it till you make it wasn’t exactly working for her.

  She was living la dolce vita. But as her mother and father reminded her every weekend when they talked, she was living in a dream world and did she understand that one day she was going to have to come home and face reality? Start her actual life? Marry her college sweetheart? Have children? Did she realize there were plenty of museums in America? And coming home didn’t include bringing home an Italian boyfriend to meet the parents.

  She had moved to the city to finish her degree in Art History from Florida State University on the Florence Program. After graduation, program director Dr. Franco Dotti had graciously arranged for a job interview. He’d touted Signore Domingo’s stellar reputation as an art detective, a rather obscure but fascinating profession, and his great respect for art history. She knew she wanted to stay in Florence as long as possible to bathe in the Birthplace of the Renaissance and stay close to Luca, the sexy cop she was dating, a member of the Carabinieri, one of Italy’s national police forces. She and Luca were from opposite sides of the world, yet they spoke a common language—not Italian—the language of love. Well, not love exactly, more the lust she experienced when she gazed into his big brown eyes and the rugged planes and angles of his handsome face and when he kissed her and held her against his sturdy body. So, for the moment, she was willing to work for paltry wages.

  She and Luca weren’t at the serious stage, but she loved being with him. She wasn’t planning to marry him, of course. He hadn’t even introduced her to his parents. Eventually, she’d return to the States and marry her acceptable-to-her-mother longtime boyfriend King Charles. His actual name was Charles King, but once he’d shown her an email—an acceptance letter from law school that had addressed him as King, Charles. And although she never referred to him by that name to his face, the nickname stuck.

  When she’d last seen King Charles, he was enrolled in law school. But then she’d received an email from her best frenemy delightfully revealing that he had dropped out of law school and was riding the campus bus, counting students. He never told her he had quit law school and she never told him about Luca. So much for honest relationships. King Charles had been promising to fly over and visit her one of these days, but the days rolled into weeks and the weeks into months, and loneliness and homesickness had set in and messed with her mind.

  She spent the first few months of her college program down in the basement of the hotel that housed the students, missing King Charles, drowning her sorrows in cheap wine, and crying over “It Don’t Matter to Me,” “Baby I’m-A Want You,” and “Diary,” and the soft melodies of America, singing “I Need You,” with some classic rock thrown in, the more melancholy, the better.

  When King Charles wrote her that he wouldn’t be flying to Florence to spend her summer vacation traveling around Europe, she hitchhiked to Rome and hooked up with Trace, a tall American tourist from Texas, where after an exhausting day of sightseeing, they ended up sharing a bottle of Chianti and a bed. Was it because he was an American and she knew she’d never see him again?

  And was that why, when on a ski trip to Zermatt, Switzerland, she’d slept with the son of a colonel from the air force base in Pisa because she’d had too much Sambuca or because, when she visited the base, they offered barbecues? And, after a steady diet of pasta, she was ready to do almost anything for a hamburger.

  And was that why she had held out for so long before sleeping with Luca, because he wasn’t American?

  She hadn’t set out to cheat on King Charles, but as far as she was concerned their relationship was in limbo. Then she met Luca, under rather unusual circumstances. As a student in a foreign country, she had been walking to class in the streets along with the rest of the crowd, and suddenly someone yelled, “Jump!” Naturally, she jumped to her right toward the sidewalk and collided with a young man on a motorcycle. Luca was the cop who ticketed her and took her to the police station where she was charged with “walking in the streets” and had to pay for the damage to the boy’s bike.

  “Are you seriously arresting me?” Hadley had protested.

  “I’m just following the law.”

  “You were walking in the street, and so was everyone else,” she’d objected.

  “Do you always do what everyone else does?”

  Hadley fumed.

  “And I didn’t knock over a man on a motorbike and damage his property,” Luca maintained.

  “It was an accident. And he hit me, an innocent pedestrian.”

  “Who should have been walking on the sidewalk. The law is the law.”

  “Are you always so unyielding?”

  “Yes, when I’m right.”

  “And are you always right?”

  “Usually.”

  “Do me a favor. If you ever see me on the street, don’t talk to me. Pretend you don’t know me, capito?”

  Luca’s face spread into a smile.

  “Are you laughing at me?”

  “No, just your accent. You make capito sound like it rhymes with libido.”

  Mad as she was at him, he had served as her translator and insisted on helping her through the process. The biker wanted her to meet him in a park at night and hand over the damages to fix his motorbike in cash. Luca instructed her not to go. The biker continued to harass her until one day the calls stopped. Hadley had spoken to her parents, who told her their insurance policy had paid him the $15,000 for damages to his bike.

  A few days later, she ran into Luca and his dog in the park. The dog jumped up, placed his paws on her breasts and attempted to tackle her to the ground. She got down on her haunches and started playing with him.

  “Oh, you’re so cute. What’s your name?”

  “It’s Bocelli,” Luca said.

  “After Andrea Bocelli?”

  “Yes.”

  “He’s my favorite singer.”

  “Mine too. I’m Luca, by the way.”

  “I know who you are,” she said with a sideways glance.

  “You said the next time we meet I was to pretend I didn’t know you, so I’m reintroducing myself.”

  Then he had the nerve to ask her out on a date. She didn’t want to go at first, she was so mad at the Carabinieri and their silly laws and the fact that her parents’ insurance company had to pay because someone on a motorbike hit her. If anyone should have sued, it should have been her. But Luca’s good looks, charm and, oh, yes, the way he filled out his uniform, won the day. When he said something in Italian that sounded like, “Love my dog, love me,” she melted. In the end he wore down her resistance, like an unsuspecting frog, slowly boiling in a pot, that didn’t realize it was in hot water. By the time she knew it, she was in his bed. Possibly it was lust that drew him to her initially. She wasn’t sure she should trust her emotions.

  Since she’d shown up on Signore Domingo’s office doorstep, he hadn’t trusted her with a real assignment, which she was perfectly capable of handling. What she didn’t know then but she knew now, was that Signore Domingo was living on his laurels, along with multiple daily helpings of pasta, that he hadn’t caught a decent case in years, and that, after half a year in his employ, she was no closer to her ultimate goal of becoming a museum curator or director.

  While in college in Florence, she had attended art history, Italian, literature, and mythology classes during the week and spent weekends traveling around Europe with other students on the program. Her first stop in any new city was always the local art museum, whereas her friends frequently made a beeline for the trendiest bars and the best beer festivals.

  ****

  Hadley rubbed her eyes, trying to stave off a headache while she continued her telephone conversation with the unidentified woman.

  “Of course you can trust me. I promise I will pass on this message and your phone number as soon as Signore Domingo walks in the door.”

 
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