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De Carlo continued, "Yet you received what amounted to a slap with a glove."

Ercole said nothing but waited for the insult, the sneer, the condescension, not knowing what form it might take.

How would he respond?

It hardly mattered; whatever he said it would backfire. He would make a buffoon of himself. As always with the Silvio De Carlos of the world.

But then the officer continued, "If you want to survive this experience, if you want to move from Forestry into Police of State, as I suspect you do--and this might be your only opportunity--you must learn how to work with Dante Spiro. Do you swim, Ercole?"

"I...yes."

"In the sea?"

"Of course."

They were in Naples. Every boy could swim in the sea.

De Carlo said, "So you know riptides. You never fight them, because you can't win. You let them take you where they will and then, slowly, gently you swim diagonally back to shore. Dante Spiro is a riptide. With Spiro, you never fight him. That is to say, contradict him. You never question him. You agree. You suggest he is brilliant. If you have an idea that you feel must be pursued and is at odds with him then you must find a way to achieve your goal obliquely. Either in a way that he can't learn about, or one that seems--seems, mind you--compatible with his thinking. Do you understand?"

Ercole did understand the words but he would need time to translate them to practical effect. This was a very different way of policing than he was used to.

For the moment he said, "Yes, I do."

"Good. Fortunately, you're under the wing of a kinder--and equally talented--man. Massimo Rossi will protect you to the extent he can. He and Spiro are peers and respect each other. But he can't save you if you fling yourself into the lion's mouth. As you seem inclined to do."

"Thank you for this."

"Yes." De Carlo turned and started to walk away then looked back. "Your shirt."

Ercole looked down at the cream-colored shirt he had pulled on this morning beneath his gray uniform jacket. He hadn't realized the jacket was unzipped.

"Armani? Or one of his proteges perhaps?" De Carlo asked.

"I dressed quickly. I don't know the label, I'm afraid."

"Ah, well, it is quite fine."

Ercole could tell that these words were not ironic and that De Carlo truly admired the shirt.

He offered his thanks. Pointedly he did not add that the shirt had been stitched together not in Milan but in a Vietnamese factory and was sold not in a boutique in the chic Vomero district of Naples but from a cart on the rough and rugged avenue known as the Spaccanapoli by an Albanian vendor. The negotiated price was four euros.

They shook hands and the assistant inspector wandered off, pulling an iPhone, in a stylish case, from a stylish back pocket.

Chapter 21

Not in Kansas anymore.

Walking down the residential portion of this Neapolitan street--dinnertime and therefore not so crowded--Garry Soames thought of this cliched line from The Wizard of Oz. And then he whispered it aloud, glancing at a young brunette, long, long hair, long legs, conversing on a cell phone, passing by. It was a certain type of look, and she returned it in a certain way, eyes not exactly lingering, but remaining upon his sculpted Midwest American face a fraction of a second longer than a phone talker would do otherwise.

Then the woman, the epitome of southern Italian elan, and her swaying, sexy stride, were gone.

Damn. Nice.

Garry continued on. His eyes then slipped to two more young women, chatting, dressed as sharply--and as tactically--as any hot girl on the Upper East Side in Manhattan.

Unlike Woman One, a moment ago, th

ey both ignored him but Garry didn't care. He was in a very good mood. And what twenty-three-year-old wouldn't be, having exchanged his home state of Missouri (sorta, kinda like Kansas) for Italy (Oz without the flying monkeys)?

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