14
“Where is my aunt?”
Roderigo looked into Lady Giulietta’s anxious face and opened his mouth to say he didn’t know.
“You don’t know, do you?”
“No, my lady.”
“Idiot,” she said crossly. “Everyone’s an idiot this evening. I know she’s not with the duke, because he’s in his room.” Permission was needed to visit Marco after dark, even for Giulietta, so Roderigo avoided asking how she knew.
“Have you asked the Regent?” he said instead.
Giulietta turned on her heel.
Wrong suggestion, obviously. “My lady,” he called after her. “Shall I mention your wish to see her should I meet the duchess?”
“Yes,” came the answer. Although Lady Giulietta didn’t bother to stop or turn and thank him for the thought. Why would she? he thought. She was a Millioni. A member of the richest family in Europe. And he…? A minor patrician, who squatted one room of a ten-room palace because the other nine were colder, damper and even more disgusting than the one he used.
His meeting that afternoon with her uncle had been worrying.
There was something not being said. Something that had Prince Alonzo trapped between fury and worry, with the Mamluk ambassador’s reactions almost identical. The men were sparring nervously. Roderigo would have been happier, and more secure, if he had known about what.
The Mamluk ambassador demanded the Ten investigate the burning of his master’s ship, and refused to accept the ship hadn’t been ransacked and its cargo stolen before being set on fire. He refused, flatly, to accept it was an accident.
“Mamluks don’t drink wine,” he said crossly, when Duchess Alexa suggested a drunken crew member tripped over an oil lamp and brought disaster. There were just enough drunk Mamluks, Arabs and Moors in the taverns along Riva degli Schiavoni to give that the lie. But in general it was true.
The ambassador’s position was firm.
His master did not take kindly to his trade ships being burnt. Nor would the sultan take kindly to the Ten’s refusal to investigate. The duchess hoped that wasn’t a threat. The ambassador, with the cold pride for which he was famous, declared it a warning, nothing more. Although he suggested Venice take his warning seriously.
“You already know,” Alonzo said, “my respect for your master.”
“The sultan has been your friend in the past.”
Maybe Roderigo was the only one who read but that is now over into this sentence. “I would hate to be disappointed,” Prince Alonzo said. “To feel my overtures, my offers of friendship were being rejected.”
“Disappointment is a fact of life.”
Prince Alonzo looked at the ambassador in shock. “Both our countries will lose if this is not resolved smoothly.”
“As God wills,” the ambassador said.
At this, Prince Alonzo seemed to regain his temper. He repeated that the fire aboard the Mamluk ship had been an accident. Captain Roderigo was certain of this, wasn’t he?
“Of course,” Roderigo had said.
“My lady…” The voice behind her was oily. Unctuous, Lady Giulietta decided, shivering at the word’s suggestion of greasy ointment. She increased her pace towards the stairs.
“His highness is looking for you.”
“The duke?” she said, spinning round.
The Regent’s secretary swallowed, and shot a nervous glance at a nearby guard. “Forgive me,” he said. “I meant, his excellence, Prince Alonzo…”
She knew her uncle was looking for her. That was the reason she was looking for her aunt. Lady Giulietta had begun to fret about the way Uncle Alonzo eyed her. And his constant suggestions that they have a quiet talk soon, alone. Her worry wasn’t helped by her aunt’s reply when told this earlier.
“We must talk too,” Alexa said. “In the meantime, light a candle for your mother, every night. You can rely on her to guard you.”
Everyone wanted to talk. No one specified when and time was running out. Sir Richard left on tomorrow’s tide and took Giulietta. The treaties were signed, the banquets were over. The courtiers wanted her gone. She could see it in their eyes. They wanted her moping, and her anger and her misery, out of their lives.
Aunt Alexa was so elusive that Giulietta now wondered if she also wanted her gone. The duchess knew how she felt about this marriage, because everyone at court knew how she felt, even those who usually found safety in knowing nothing. So why was Alexa refusing to see her? If you had any guts you’d kill yourself.
The voice was small, still and her own.
“My lady.”
“What?” Her uncle’s horrid little secretary was still there. Looking like a weasel, with his watery eyes and balding head.
“Well, don’t.” He’d never dare express an opinion if she wasn’t leaving tomorrow. But she’d be gone by the following noon, so what did he have to fear from her now? Her aunt was nowhere to be found and she could hardly complain to… “Where is my uncle?”
“Della Tortura.”
“He’s torturing someone?” She wouldn’t put it past him. He often claimed to miss the mud, blood and brutality of the battlefield. So much cleaner than politics. You were meant to believe he was a reluctant ruler. But he plotted and schemed and lied with the rest of them.
The Sala della Tortura was on the fourth level, below the roof and above the armoury and chambers of government. Since she was on the second level she had two sets of stairs to climb and a dozen or so guards to pass. No doubt each would sneak a look at her face, wondering what was wrong this time.
The stairs were cold
and wind rippled the tapestries ordered by the last duke. These
were French and showed the highlights of his reign. The first
outlined Marco III’s overthrow of the Second Republic as a young
god, with his enemies crabbed and bitter. The second his marriage
to the Khan’s granddaughter, who became Alexa di San Felice il
Millioni. She arrived with three boxes of gold, a case of black tea
and a dozen imperial pigeons. Her grandfather relied on the breed
to carry messages about his conquests, issue orders to his armies
and send to the rear for supplies or reinforcements. Tm
r, the new khan of khans,
did the same.
The third and final tapestry was divided into Heaven, Hell and Earth. On Earth, Marco III sat with Alexa and his son. In Heaven, Princes Matteo and Cesare, murdered by the Second Republic, smiled on their brother’s new family. And below, in the bowels of Hell, republicans were tortured by demons, while their sons and daughters were violated with spits or hung like joints of meat.
That one gave Lady Giulietta the creeps.
The stairs to the next floor were narrower and far less grand. Flaking murals no one cared about lined the walls. The tapestries had holes. She liked these stairs better. Neither of the guards by the Tortura door readied to open it.
Giulietta was about to be furious when she remembered she’d told them she could open doors for herself the last time she came here. She decided to be furious anyway.
“Open it, then.”
They did as ordered.
A fire burnt in a brazier and sweet smoke filled the air. The room was double height. A balcony ran down both sides, with wooden chairs for councillors who wanted to watch a questioning. A single rope dangled from high above. It was the rope from which suspects were suspended. The Sala’s walls were bare wood, darkened with smoke and age. The floor was old stone. An incongruous leather bed was pushed into one corner, covered with a Persian carpet. Next to it stood a portable desk, overflowing with papers and cut quills, while an ink pot had its lid open. The man sat at the desk was sketching a horoscope with confident strokes.
“You’re here at last,” Dr. Crow said.
“Where’s my uncle?”
“Busy.” Alonzo’s voice came from an alcove behind curtains.
“I’ll come back later.”
“No,” he crossly. “You’ll wait. I sent for you an hour ago. Your lateness could have made matters…”
“What?”
“Unnecessarily complicated.”
Hearing the door open behind her, Giulietta glanced back, expecting her uncle’s secretary or one of the guards. A sour-faced abadessa in the white wimple of her order stood there instead. And next to her, a drunk so blowsy she could have been scooped from the stalls of the nearest brothel. Sweat and alcohol rose from her filthy skin.
“You,” she hissed, seeing the alchemist.
Dr. Crow smiled. “Mistress Scarlett.” The air crackled with the early stirrings of a storm. Only to settle when the nun glared between them.
“We’re all here, then.”
Dropping the curtain behind him, Prince Alonzo stepped out of the alcove holding a goose quill. It looked like a pen, except it was missing a cut nib and lacked the feathers usually left to balance a pen’s upper end. “You’re certain the time is propitious?”
“A day off the new moon,” Dr. Crow said. “No time better.”
“What about her?”
“If what her linen maid says is true. Scarlett can check.”
Stepping towards Giulietta, the blowsy drunk scowled when the young woman backed away from her. “This will be easier with your help.”
“What will?”
“Everything,” Prince Alonzo said heavily. “Believe me. It will be easier for everyone if you cooperate. Abadessa…”
Grabbing Giulietta, the abbess spun her round and dug a thumb into the soft flesh of Giulietta’s arm, shocking her into stillness. “Struggle, and I’ll press harder.”
Piss spread in a puddle around Giulietta’s feet.
“With the Regent’s permission,” said the abbess. “We’ll begin. Mistress Scarlett, if you’ll confirm we’re not wasting our time?”
Lifting Lady Giulietta’s gown and undergown, the wise woman pushed her hand between the girl’s thighs and sniffed her fingers. “Close enough. The quill’s fresh?”
“What do you think?” Alonzo said, lacing his codpiece.
“It would be surer to…”
The Regent’s face darkened. “Do you want me damned?” he snarled. “It’s against the rules of consanguinity. I might as well burn churches and eat meat on a Friday.”
“You can’t…”
And then Giulietta said no more, because the sharp-faced nun dug her thumb so savagely into Giulietta’s arm she wet herself again, shame spreading in a growing puddle across the floor.
“Stop snivelling,” the abbess told her.
“I’m not sure,” Dr. Crow said, “that was necessary. And I’m not sure,” he added, looking reproachful, “you mentioned your niece was unwilling.”
“If she’d bothered to answer my summons we’d have had time to discuss this. As she didn’t…” Alonzo let his comment hang. He obviously considered Giulietta’s ignorance of his plan her fault. “And I don’t explain myself to my mage.”
“Duke Marco’s mage,” Dr. Crow said quietly.
Lady Giulietta thought her uncle would strike him. When the Regent held his tongue she knew it meant one of two things. The alchemist was more powerful than she suspected. Or her uncle wanted this over, whatever this was. Neither choice made her happy.
“Put her on the divan,” Mistress Scarlett said.
It didn’t matter that Giulietta struggled. On her back, with her dress and undergown round her waist was where she ended. Although it was only when she began to scream that the Regent lost his temper. “Fetch the bitch a gag.”
“We don’t have time.”
“Deal with it,” Prince Alonzo ordered Dr. Crow.
“As you wish.” Touching both sides of Giulietta’s jaw, he whispered, “Silence.” And that was that. Lady Giulietta’s jaw locked and her tongue froze in her head. When Mistress Scarlett began to force her knees open, the alchemist looked away, then headed for the alcove where the Regent had been earlier.
“Where do you think you’re going?”
“To get wine. You do have wine, don’t you…?” Dr. Crow muttered something about bloody well hoping so. And then he was gone, the curtain was in place and Mistress Scarlet was raising the girl’s ankles while the abbess held her wrists.
“This will happen,” the wise woman said, apologetically. “Struggling only makes things worse. So be kind to yourself and behave.”
Although she hated her own cowardice Giulietta did as she was told. Mistress Scarlett spoke the truth. All Dr. Crow had to do was pass his hands across her hips and those would be out of her control as well.
“Do it,” the Regent ordered.
Taking the quill, Mistress Scarlet pulled a fish bladder from her sleeve, blew into it and pushed it on to one end of the quill. The other, she slid between Lady Giulietta’s thighs, cursing when the young woman began bucking hard enough to free one wrist.
“Hold her.”
The grip on her captive wrist grew savage. “Such a fuss,” the nun said. “You’d think you were the only girl to do her city a service.”
Repositioning the quill, Mistress Scarlet squeezed the bladder to free its contents. “See,” she said. “Not so bad. And you’re as intact as the day you were born.” She smiled, as if this should make the difference.
“Alchemist.”
“It’s Dr. Crow to you, woman.”
“My part’s done,” Mistress Scarlett said. “I’ll be taking my money and going.”
The Regent opened his mouth.
“I’ll take my money and go,” she repeated.
Prince Alonzo threw a purse at her. “Witch,” he muttered, as the door shut behind her.
“If you will,” said Dr. Crow, moving the abadessa back from the divan and indicating that Giulietta should remain where she was. Since the nun blocked her escape Giulietta did as ordered.
“A son,” the Regent said tightly. “You understand? She’s to bear Cyprus a son. If she fails I’m going to be angry. In fact, you’ll find I suddenly agree with the Pope in Rome’s opinion that you’re a heretic.”
“My lady,” he said. “First babies are often late. Cyprus will never suspect your child is not his. And you will never tell him. In fact…” The alchemist glanced at the Regent, who nodded. “You will never talk of what happened here.”
The mage held Giulietta steady until she stopped shivering and then touched her face, letting his fingertips brush her jaw.
“How could you?” she demanded.
“I need corpses to dissect, my lady. The Regent provides those and keeps me safe from those who regard my work as abomination.”
The abadessa left next. And Giulietta was made to lie for half an hour with her knees up and a cushion under her hips. Although the nun’s contemptuous parting gift, which was to rearrange Giulietta’s gown, at least meant she had her decency. But when Giulietta was at last allowed up, and turned for the door, her knees weak, her guts vomitous and her bowels on the edge of emptying, her uncle called her back. Her job was more than simply giving Cyprus the son his first wife had not. There were other considerations, matters of policy. He wished to explain exactly what was required of her when she arrived at her new kingdom.