Paganini's Ghost
It's the most exciting concert Cremona has seen in years: a brilliant young Russian playing a violin once owned by the 19th-century master Nicolo Paganini. But the performance is overshadowed by the murder of one of its sponsors. Solving the murder will require a journey into musical history; to make that journey, Cremona's police-chief will need the help of Gianni Castiglione, an elderly charmer and only mildly larcenous expert in violins.
"1100085423"
Paganini's Ghost
It's the most exciting concert Cremona has seen in years: a brilliant young Russian playing a violin once owned by the 19th-century master Nicolo Paganini. But the performance is overshadowed by the murder of one of its sponsors. Solving the murder will require a journey into musical history; to make that journey, Cremona's police-chief will need the help of Gianni Castiglione, an elderly charmer and only mildly larcenous expert in violins.
14.95 In Stock
Paganini's Ghost

Paganini's Ghost

by Paul Adam
Paganini's Ghost

Paganini's Ghost

by Paul Adam

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Overview

It's the most exciting concert Cremona has seen in years: a brilliant young Russian playing a violin once owned by the 19th-century master Nicolo Paganini. But the performance is overshadowed by the murder of one of its sponsors. Solving the murder will require a journey into musical history; to make that journey, Cremona's police-chief will need the help of Gianni Castiglione, an elderly charmer and only mildly larcenous expert in violins.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781934609682
Publisher: Felony & Mayhem Press
Publication date: 12/16/2010
Series: Gianni and Guastafeste , #2
Pages: 320
Sales rank: 554,367
Product dimensions: 5.50(w) x 7.40(h) x 0.80(d)

About the Author

PAUL ADAM grew up in the north of England and studied law at Nottingham University. He began his writing career as a journalist and has worked in Rome as well as England. He is the author of The Rainaldi Quartet. He lives in Sheffield, England, with his wife and two children.

Read an Excerpt

Paganini's Ghost

A Mystery
By Adam, Paul

Minotaur Books

Copyright © 2010 Adam, Paul
All right reserved.

ISBN: 9780312383855

One

Over the half a century that I have been working as a violin maker and repairer, I have had instruments brought to me in many different ways. Most were nothing out of the ordinary—a musician simply turning up at my workshop with a violin in a case—but one or two have been more remarkable.

There was the Guadagnini, discovered under a pile of wooden crates in a hayloft near Bergamo, that was delivered to me wrapped in newspaper and an old potato sack. Then there was the famous, but decidedly eccentric, international virtuoso, whom discretion forbids me from naming, who showed up on my doorstep one day with his Stradivari nestling in the bottom of a supermarket carrier bag. Perhaps most extraordinary of all was the Amati belonging to a well-known Italian soloist, which his wife—a neglected, highly strung woman, tired of playing second fiddle to a piece of wood—had smashed over his head during a particularly violent marital argument. The soloist filed an assault charge against his—soon to be ex-—spouse, and several months later the violin, or, rather, the bits of it, being Exhibit A in the prosecution case, were conveyed to me for repair in eight separate police evidence bags.

But none of these events, bizarre though they were, were quite so memorable asthe one that was now unfolding before me.

There were six vehicles in the convoy. I had been telephoned half an hour earlier to be given advance warning of its arrival, so I was waiting outside my house when the procession appeared on the horizon, speeding towards me along the road from Cremona. At the front was a blue-and-white police patrol car with its roof light flashing, but its siren mercifully silent—a show of restraint not normally associated with the Italian police. Behind the patrol car was a shiny dark blue Alfa Romeo with tinted windows, followed by a black armoured van like the ones banks use for delivering cash to their branches. Fourth in the line was a red Fiat Bravo, then a silver Mercedes saloon. Bringing up the rear was a second marked police car.

I had never seen anything like it. My home is relatively isolated, a former farmhouse surrounded by fields of maize and potatoes. The nearest house is a good kilometre away. I usually enjoy the privacy the location affords me, but today, for once, I was sorry that I didn’t have any closer neighbours who could share in this curious spectacle. Such an ostentatious convoy seemed wasted on me alone.

The first police car skidded to a halt just past the entrance to the gravel forecourt at the front of my house, the driver indulging a worrying penchant for exhibitionism by braking heavily and slewing his vehicle round so that it blocked the carriageway. Two scruffy uniformed officers climbed out, both sporting the mirror sunglasses, stubble, and institutional truculence that seem to be de rigueur in the Polizia Nazionale.

The two vehicles immediately behind—the Alfa Romeo and the armoured van—turned off the road onto the forecourt and stopped beside me. Two men got out of the Alfa Romeo. They were so similar in appearance that they could have been twins. Their smart black suits, white shirts, and highly polished black shoes were identical. Even their ties, a silvery grey silk with a black diamond pattern, were the same. They were in their late twenties, wearing mirror sunglasses like the police officers, but a class apart in every other respect—sleek, well-fed leopards to the policemen’s mangy alley cats. With their discreet but stylish clothes, their alert manner—heads constantly moving, eyes searching for possible threats—and the walkie-talkies clutched in their hands, they looked like the bodyguards you always see accompanying the U.S. president or other heads of state. And I suppose bodyguards is what they were, only the body they were guarding was made of maple and pine, rather than flesh and blood.

"You are Giovanni Battista Castiglione?" one of them asked me curtly.

I nodded.

"Your workshop is where?"

"Round the back, in the garden," I said.

"Show me."

I led him down the side of the house to the old farm smithy that I have converted into my workshop. His companion remained at the front, but the two men kept in contact by walkie-talkie.

"One-storey brick building, set apart from the house," the bodyguard murmured into his radio. "Garden"—his eyes scanned my lawn and flower beds—"large, open. Good visibility. No perimeter barrier. Fields beyond." His gaze came back to me. "Let’s see inside."

He studied the heavy wooden door and sturdy lock approvingly as I opened up the workshop, relaying his findings to his colleague. Then he inspected the interior of the room, checking the windows first before turning his attention to the workbench and cupboards.

"That’s a safe?" he asked, staring at the steel door set into the recess that had once been a hearth.

"Yes."

"Looks pretty solid."

"I handle a lot of valuable instruments," I said.

He prowled round the table in the centre of the room and opened a couple of cupboards warily, as if he were expecting some assailant—presumably a very small one—to leap out and attack him. Then he raised the walkie-talkie to his lips again.

"Okay, it’s secure. I’m coming back now."

We returned to the front of the house, where a small group of people had gathered—the occupants of the Fiat and the Mercedes, which had been obliged to park on the verge at the side of the road because there was no room for them on the forecourt. A diminutive man in a grey suit and rimless spectacles stepped forward and held out his hand.

"Dottor Castiglione, it’s a pleasure to meet you. I am Enrico Golinelli, assistant curator of antiquities for the city of Genoa."

I took his hand in mine. His fingers felt so slight and fragile that I hardly dared squeeze them.

"I apologise for the short notice," Golinelli went on. "It is most kind of you to help us."

"Not at all," I replied. "I’m honoured that you asked me."

"Nothing like this has ever happened before. I don’t know what it can be. The instrument was checked over thoroughly before it left Genoa. But Signor Ivanov is absolutely sure that . . ." Golinelli paused. "Forgive me, I’m forgetting my manners."

He turned away from me and gestured at the man and woman standing next to him.

"Allow me to introduce Yevgeny Ivanov, and his mother, Ludmilla Ivanova."

Ludmilla Ivanova offered me her hand. I didn’t hesitate to clasp it firmly in my own. There was nothing delicate about her fingers, or her grip. There was nothing delicate about any of her, in fact. She was a big woman, tall and statuesque, with thick black hair pulled back and fastened with a clasp at the nape of her neck. She was wearing red high heels and a scarlet-and-black knee-length dress that was perhaps a shade too low-cut for her mature years, but she had the figure, and the confidence, to carry it off. Her build, the strong, determined set of her jaw reminded me of a Wagnerian soprano and I wondered whether she had been an opera singer once. When she spoke, her voice, too, had the powerful resonance of a Brünnhilde.

"Dottore, I’ve heard much about you," she said in fluent Italian, the words muddied round the edges by her strong Russian accent. "They say you are good, the best luthier in Cremona."

I inclined my head modestly, but she was not expecting a reply.

"I hope they are right," she continued. "We are in urgent need of your expertise. Whatever is wrong, you must fix it. My son’s recital is only hours away."

She glanced at the young man beside her. He gave me a shy nod, then seemed to shrink away, retreating into his mother’s s

Continues...


Excerpted from Paganini's Ghost by Adam, Paul Copyright © 2010 by Adam, Paul. Excerpted by permission.
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