“I would never…”
“You would,” Marco said. “You simply don’t know it. He scares you too. That’s why you like him.”
“What’s this about Lady Giulietta?”
The duke turned to face his uncle, who blushed and found himself apologising for his interruption. So the duke told him it was all right, just not to do it again. “Tell them the truth,” Duke Marco ordered Atilo.
“That first time. She simply ran away.”
“And you simply returned her?” Alonzo asked. “And forgot to mention the circumstances?”
“Yes, my lord.”
“That was the night…”
“Alonzo,” Duchess Alexa said.
“The Regent is right,” said Marco, smiling sweetly. “That was the night the Blade was broken.” Seeing the blood drain from Atilo’s face, he smiled. “Well, cracked certainly. You admit it’s cracked?”
The kneeling man nodded.
“And my mother is right. Krieghund, mages, death walkers, now this.” Marco IV, Prince of Serenissima, stared round the chamber, nodding to each of the Ten in turn, before finally blowing Desdaio a kiss. “It’s best to be discreet. We have so many enemies one can never tell who’s listening.”
Standing up, he descended the steps in front of his throne and dragged Atilo from his knees. Standing him straight. “You know what saves him?”
“No, your highness.”
“I will not offend heaven. And I will not risk offending hell. Tycho’s life is spared. So is that of your next apprentice. Though I’m not sure my uncle will let you keep the demon.”
These were the last coherent words Duke Marco IV was to say for three months. No one knew that then, obviously. Except, perhaps, Hightown Crow, who hurried forward to help the duke back to his seat.
Gripping its arms, Marco clung tight as if his life depended on it. Relaxing seconds later, and kicking his heels against its base. A little while after that, he became lost in watching a moth circle a lamp. When Atilo was certain the duke’s attention was elsewhere, he glanced from Alonzo to Alexa.
“Do I have the throne’s permission to withdraw?”
“No,” Alonzo said. “You don’t.”
Alexa looked across. “Marco has given him their lives.”
“Their lives,” the Regent said heavily. “He said nothing about the slave’s freedom. The beggar brat means nothing. Atilo can keep him. But the other is a slave. He now belongs to the city. The city will dispose of him.”
“Let me buy him,” Desdaio said.
The Regent grinned. “I’m sure your beloved would love that. No, the slave will be sent south and sold. With those looks…”
With those looks he’d command a premium in the slave markets of Constantinople, Alexandria or Cyprus. The matter of his clothes, his fear of daylight, and the whiteness of his skin would merely add to his exoticism and increase his price. If he died there who could blame Venice? And if he didn’t, well, he’d probably come to wish he had, given time.
“How many galleys leave harbour tomorrow?”
“A dozen, my lord.”
“And where’s the first headed?”
“Dalmatia, Sicily and then Cyprus.”
“Make sure he’s on it. As a galley slave. Give orders he’s to be sold at the journey’s end and any money sent to our agents. He may wear his ridiculous clothes. Be coated with whatever repellent unguent our alchemist recommends. And an awning can be used to stop our merchandise being damaged. Other than that, he’s to be treated like any other slave.”
51
A knock at the door made Giulietta look up from the baby at her breast.
When she didn’t answer, the door opened slowly and Prince Leopold put his head round. “May I come in, my lady?”
“I’ve told you,” she said. “You don’t need to knock.”
“You might have been feeding Leo.”
“I was,” she said. Smiling, she folded back her gown and stroked her child’s cheek until his mouth opened and he returned to his hungry nuzzling. When Giulietta returned her gaze to Leopold, he was staring pointedly through a window at red-earthed Cypriot fields outside.
“Something interesting?”
“Farmers cutting barley on the upper slopes.”
Their friendship was sometimes fragile. So much now unspoken.
Leopold and she shared a bed, sleeping together when the baby let either of them sleep, which was more often now than in the first few months following his birth. She could have had a wet nurse; in fact, Leopold offered to have one found for her. He seemed resigned to the fact she refused. Yet he knocked at the door before entering and looked away when she fed her child.
Such delicacy was at odds with the cursed thing he’d become on the roof of Ca’ Friedland. And at odds with the savagery of the battle she’d witnessed in Cannaregio.
The fight against the Assassini was more than a year gone, but its memory still made her shiver.
“What are you thinking?”
“Nothing,” she promised.
“About that boy,” Leopold said sadly.
“Leopold… I swear. He doesn’t even enter my head.”
It was a lie. There were moments, usually on the far side of midnight, when she woke certain the silver-haired boy from the basilica was in her room, watching her as she slept. He never was, of course.
“I saw how you looked at him.”
“That’s not true.”
“Yes,” Leopold said. “It is. And I saw how he looked at you. You think he let us go because of me? If you hadn’t appeared I’d be dead. He let you go, and he let me go with you.”
“I love you.”
Tears were building in Giulietta’s eyes.
“And I love you,” he said. “In my way. But you dream of him. It’s as if you had one soul between you, and someone cut it down the middle. Remember, you told me how the child wasn’t Marco’s…”
“Leo, please stop.”
“Is the baby his?”
Giulietta’s mouth shut in misery.
Prince Leopold returned that evening carrying a Maltese lace shawl, half a dozen early figs and a bowl of sorbet—white wine mixed with lemon juice and crushed ice—as peace offering and apology. “I’m sorry,” he said, placing his presents on a table and turning to go.
“You can stay.”
“I’ll only say something else stupid.”
“All the same…” Giulietta patted the seat beside her. “You know,” she said, “at the court in Venice they talked of your silver tongue. My aunt was furious at the number of her ladies-in-waiting…”
“Whose heads I’d turned?” Leo said, offering her a fig.
“Although maybe she was cross about other things,” Giulietta admitted. “But I didn’t know about you being krieghund then. But your reputation…”
“Around you, my tongue turns to lead.”
She smiled. “Not always.” Leaning her head against his shoulder, she let him fold his arm around her. Their companionable silence lasted for the time it took a candle to burn out. And then, when Leopold stood to light another from the guttering wick of the first, Giulietta rearranged her gown. “So it’s true about the Mamluk sultan gathering a fleet?”
“What makes you say that?”
“The barley. They’re gathering it against a coming siege.”
“Possibly.”
“Leopold, where did you get the ice for the sorbet?”
“From the last of the king’s own supply.”
“Exactly,” Giulietta said. “I hear he’s also drinking his best wine and sharing out the pickles the kitchens usually keep for banquets.”
“What are you saying?” Leopold asked, fixing the candle into a holder and turning to face her.
“What will happen if the sultan does attack?”
“We’ll fight.”
“And will we win?”
When he came to sit beside her, wrapped his arm round her shoulder and kissed her gently on the
forehead, she knew the answer was no. Instead of protesting or asking Leopold to lie, she snuggled against him and tried to frame the question she wanted to ask. The fact he said nothing meant he knew… If not that she was wondering about a question, then that she was thinking.
Thinking time when you had a new baby was rare.
Well, it was if you insisted on feeding the child yourself and letting it sleep in the same room. A decision so odd, Giulietta knew she’d become a talking point among the ladies of the court. If she hadn’t been one already.
“Leopold.”
“Yes?” he said, sounding ready for whatever she wanted say.
He really did know her, Giulietta realised. Their shared time here meant he knew her better than any man had. Maybe better than any other would. Leopold knew her weaknesses. These, he insisted, were fewer than she imagined. And her strengths, which, he told her she underestimated daily. He knew her so well she wondered if he knew what was on her mind.
“If we lose…”
“Yes,” he said. “I promise.”
She kissed him on the cheek. Not knowing the right response to a man you’ve just asked to kill you rather than let you be taken prisoner. When the man promising loves you, despite the fact, if you’re honest, you dream of someone else.
52
Thunderclouds filled the far horizon. The light was a sullen grey, as if malign angels flew between the setting sun and the swollen sea, casting shadows over everything below. Tycho would vomit, but had nothing to throw up.
So, he hunched in his oil-silk doublet on a dirt-filled bag and hoped the rotten canvas of a makeshift awning would protect him while he waited for orders.
Everyone was waiting for orders.
The Seahorse was a small galley. One captain, the owner’s son, one drummer, one slave master and fourteen rows of slaves. Tycho wasn’t sure what she carried. Nothing heavy from the way she tossed on the swell.
The wind was rising. Ominously cool.
In other circumstances he might have welcomed it and been refreshed. But he learnt what it brought when Adif, the Mamluk next to him, began to count the gaps between lightning and thunder. The strikes were close and coming closer.
A wall of rain headed for them, hiding the distant lines between sea, land and sky. Behind them, night had arrived already, constellations visible and the ocean dark and flat where it met the night’s edge.
“We must go north.”
“Sir, that’s impossible.”
The galley owner’s son stamped his foot. He was young, rich and afraid. If his father had been there to control him it might have been different. The boy wanted to be on land. In storms, orders said head for the nearest port.
But it was the storm that stood between them and the Dalmatian coast, with its cliffs, endless small islands and rocky shoals. Italy’s own coast was a day in the other direction given wind and luck, much longer if luck was bad and the wind against them.
Captain Malo had offered two alternatives.
Hack down the mast and ride out the storm or run before it. That had been before he took another look at the wall of rain and declared he now lacked enough time for the first. So he suggested the second.
Fat-bellied, old and tired, the Greek was resigned to lugging his ship up and down sea lanes that faster vessels used daily. The Seahorse had been modern once. Now she was a patchwork of replaced planks. Her caulking needed redoing and she required new tree nails, those thin lengths of dowel holding her sides in place. Most days it a miracle she still floated.
He’d like to keep it that way.
Ruined galleys were found after every storm. So were dead slaves. Chained to their oars and floating or washed up on beaches among driftwood and splintered planks from the ships they’d served.
Running from the Dalmatian coast meant trying to outrun the storm, and widening the violent and nasty seas between the Seahorse and those cliffs. The odds weren’t great. But they were better than trying for port.
“Find land,” the boy said. “That’s an order.”
“I’m captain.”
“Not much longer if you don’t do as I say.” The boy’s words carried over a lull in the wind. “We return to port now.”
Beside Tycho, the Mamluk hawked on the deck and spat words in his own language. Tycho didn’t need a translator to know it was a curse.
“That’s bad?”
“He’s going to get us killed, snow djin.”
Adif had taken to calling him that on the first day. After Tycho unhooked his makeshift awning as night fell, and let the doublet drop from his shoulders to reveal snow-white skin.
“If they unchain us, grab an oar and kick for land.”
“Water will kill me.”
The Mamluk hissed and then nodded. Cross with himself for expecting anything else. “Then I wish you a quick death.”
Tycho and Adif sat either side of an aisle on the last bench of all. Ahead of them sat the other slaves. Immediately behind, an open-fronted shelter of canvas over wooden hoops was were Captain Malo and the owner’s son slept.
Like everyone else on the ship, they shat over the side.
The difference was they did so at will. Adif and Tycho were restricted to pissing themselves where they sat, and shitting each morning, when their hands were briefly unchained. Not all of the slaves could wait that long.
“Arnaud, make him.”
The slave master was midway in age between the boy and the captain. His face once handsome but his eyes hard and his temper brutal.
“You heard the boss,” he said.
“He’s not the boss,” Captain Malo said. “I am.”
The whip cracked and Tycho heard the captain stagger back, hissing in pain and outrage. “Return to harbour,” the slave master ordered.
“If we try, we’ll die.”
“What’s your plan then?” the boy demanded.
“Outrun it,” Captain Malo said. “While we can. If we can.” He spat, angrily. “Which I now doubt. We could head south, maybe. See if we can edge past it. But in the dark…”
“The storm’s too big,” said Tycho, without thinking.
“Who asked you?”
He heard a whip crack a split second after pain ripped across his shoulders, tearing oiled silk and skin. And then Arnaud was on the raised walkway that ran along the aisle. His boot scraping down the side of Tycho’s cheek.
A slave on the row ahead turned round to see what was happening and took the rest of the slave master’s anger.
“Enough,” Captain Malo snapped.
The slave master raised his whip, and gasped as Adif suddenly slammed his unchained hand into Arnaud’s knee. An awkward blow, but it struck lucky, dropping the man to his knees. When he came upright he was holding a knife.
“This is where you die.”
There was a dignity to Adif’s face as he braced himself to face the blade. And Tycho suddenly understood that the man had forced the quarrel, seeking a quick death instead of drowning. “Good choice,” he said.
“Wait.”
Anger fought obedience as Arnaud hesitated at the boy’s order.
“We’ve had nothing but shit since we took that thing on board.” The owner’s son meant Tycho. “Kill him after that one.”
The slave master was readying his blade, Adif still waited, refusing to show fear. Captain Malo’s face said he knew it ended here.
“Die well,” Adif said.
“No,” said Tycho. “It doesn’t work like that.”
Gripping silver-topped spike that nailed him to his oar, he screamed as he ripped it out, feeling flesh sizzle. And then standing, he blocked Arnaud’s dagger with his forearm, and jammed the nail under the man’s chin. Slamming it into his skull with a slap of his burning hand.
The slave master tumbled sideways.
As the slave opposite grabbed the owner’s son by one ankle, Captain Malo elbowed the boy hard in the throat, ordered the slave to let go, and flung the boy overboard to drown.
“Idiot,” he said.
“Right,” shouted Tycho. “Turn her to the storm.”
“Reckon you’re a sailor now?” Captain Malo snarled.
“I intend to live,” Tycho said, surprising himself when he realised it was true. “At least, I don’t intend to die drowning. Tried it once. Never again.”
“He’s a djinn. Listen to him.”
“Well,” Captain Malo said, “he’s sure as shit not human. My lord Atilo warned me of that.”
Tycho felt his guts knot. He’d hoped Atilo felt some affection. Something behind the coldness in his face as he’d hammered the silver-topped spike in place himself.
“Turn her. Then lose the oars.”
“What?”
“Lose them.”
“We can stow them,” Captain Malo protested. Iron rests either side let the oars be lifted when the galley was under sail.
“It won’t be enough.”
The sea terrified Tycho. The thought of being swallowed was unbearable. He’d died, and still survived the canal in Venice. What if he sank, died and lived now? Water took his strength. Only the earth bag beneath him kept him sane. He’d be trapped in a watery half-life forever.
“You want to die?” he shouted. The silver-topped spike still jutted from Arnaud’s skull, but Tycho had the man’s dagger.
Captain Malo shook his head. “I’ll get the key.”
“No time.”
Oars were removed in harbour to stop slaves rowing away when the crew were ashore. At sea, oars were chained in place. “Turn into the storm,” Tycho ordered.
“Do it,” Captain Malo shouted.
Slaves churned oars in the gravid waves. Those on one side rowing forward. Those on the other rowing back, until the Seahorse turned into the wind just as the rain arrived in a rushing wall.
“Hold her steady…”
Grabbed Adif’s oar chain, Tycho snapped it and pushed the oar through the galley’s side. He managed to clear two thirds the Seahorse’s length before a huge wave struck, breaking over them. It hit straight on, half lifting the galley, but catching the still-chained oars of those at the front.
The Fallen Blade: Act One of the Assassini Page 30