The Rome Murders
Forty-seven stolen masterworks. Thirty years of silence. One woman who wouldn't accept the answer.
No se pudo agregar al carrito
Add to Cart failed.
Error al Agregar a Lista de Deseos.
Error al eliminar de la lista de deseos.
Error al añadir a tu biblioteca
Error al seguir el podcast
Error al dejar de seguir el podcast
Obtén 30 días de Standard gratis
Compra ahora por $9.99
-
Narrado por:
-
Virtual Voice
-
De:
-
Daniel Parton
Este título utiliza narración de voz virtual
A body at the Pantheon. A forgery in the Vatican. A theft that has been hiding in plain sight for thirty years.
When a retired Vatican archivist is found dead at the Pantheon at dawn — seated, positioned, a photograph of a painting folded in his breast pocket — Europol investigator Lucas Faro recognises the staging immediately. Someone is making an argument. He needs to understand what it is before they make it again.
The painting in the photograph is currently on display in the Vatican Museums' secondary gallery. It has been there since 1995. Forgery expert Dottoressa Russo needs eleven minutes to confirm what Faro already suspects: it is not a seventeenth-century Flemish master. It is a very good copy. And no one, in thirty years, has asked.
Between 1993 and 1995, forty-seven works were quietly removed from Vatican storage, replaced with expert forgeries, and sold privately to collectors in Zurich, London, Monaco, and Munich. The scheme was authorised by a Cardinal, executed by a master restorer, administered by an archivist, and processed by a junior administrator who was twenty-six years old and doing what she was told.
A German nun working in the Vatican archive saw what happened. She reported it. Three times, through the correct channels, over twenty-seven years. Each time she was told she was wrong. She died in 2021 still doubting what her own eyes had seen.
Her daughter is Elena Voss — provenance researcher, cultural property specialist, the best in her field. She has spent two years verifying everything her mother described. She filed a formal complaint with the Vatican in 2023. It was closed in six weeks. Now she is in Rome, and she has five names on a list, and the forgeries are still hanging on the walls.
Faro works the investigation alongside Ispettore Marta Colonna of Rome Homicide — a woman who knows this city's art the way other investigators know crime scenes, and who understands what the stagings mean before Faro does. As the body count approaches its limit and the case against Elena assembles itself with terrible clarity, Faro faces the same question he couldn't answer in Paris, in a harder form: when the evidence was always there, when the channels existed and simply didn't work, when the institution managed its own accountability for three decades — who carries the weight of that?
The killer's cause is unimpeachable. The method is not. Hold both.
The Faro Files is a pan-European crime series. Each book stands alone. The train always moves.