Suleiman hesitated, then said, ‘This is … Marcello. One of my European advisers in Kefe.’
Ezio bowed low. ‘Buona sera.’
Ahmet made an impatient gesture. ‘Marcello, my nephew and I have a private matter to discuss,’ he said, sternly.
‘Of course. Please excuse me.’ Ezio bowed again, even lower, and backed his way to the door, exchanging a quick glance with Suleiman, who, he prayed, would get them out of this. Luckily, the young prince picked up his cue perfectly and said to Ezio in a clipped official voice, ‘You know your orders. As I’ve said, there will be a ship waiting for you when you are ready to leave.’
‘Grazie, mio principe,’ Ezio replied. He left the room then, but lingered just outside it, wishing to hear how the conversation would end. What he heard did not convince him that he was out of the woods at all.
‘We will track down the perpetrator of this crime, Uncle,’ Suleiman was saying. ‘Have patience.’
Ezio mulled that over. Could matters be that dire? He didn’t know Suleiman that well. And what was it Yusuf had warned about? Against meddling in Ottoman politics?
His mood was grim as he left the palace. There was one place he needed to be now. One place where he could relax – as he badly needed to – and collect his thoughts.
50
My guide and I regained the hidden road
Which took us back to the bright world once more.
We strode along it fast – not seeking rest –
He led, I followed, ’til at last I saw,
Through a round opening, some of the things
Of real beauty which the heavens bear;
Then we emerged, once more into fresh air,
And saw again, above us, all the stars.
Ezio had started re-reading Dante’s Inferno at Sofia’s suggestion several days earlier. He had read it when a student but never really taken it in, since his mind was preoccupied with other matters in those days, but now it seemed like a revelation. Having finished it, he put the book down with a sigh of pleasure. He looked across at Sofia, her glasses perched on her nose as she sat, head down, glancing from the original map to her reference books to a notebook she was writing in. He gazed at her as she worked, but did not interrupt, so deeply engaged did she seem in the task at hand. Instead, he reached for the book again. Perhaps he should make a start on the Purgatorio.
Just then, Sofia lifted her eyes from her work. She smiled at him.
‘Enjoying the poem?’
He smiled back, and placed the book on the table by his chair, and rose. ‘Who were these men he condemned to hell?’
‘Political opponents, men who wronged him. Dante Alghieri’s pen cuts deeply, no?’
‘Sì,’ Ezio replied, thoughtfully. ‘It is a subtle way to seek revenge.’
He didn’t want to return to reality, but the urgency of the journey he soon had to make pressed upon him. Still, there was nothing he could do until he had word from Suleiman. Provided that he could trust the prince. But his thoughts had calmed. How could it profit Suleiman to betray him? He resumed his seat, picked up The Divine Comedy again, and turned to the place where he had left off.
She interrupted him. ‘Ezio,’ she began, hesitantly, ‘I plan to make a trip to Adrianopolis in a few weeks, to visit a new printing press there.’
Ezio noticed the shy tone of her voice and wondered if she had picked up the softness that had crept into his whenever he spoke to her. Had she realized how great his … affection for her had become? Overcompensating, he was deliberately nonchalant when he replied, ‘That should be fun.’
She was still diffident. ‘It is a five or six day ride from here, and I will need an escort.’
‘Prego?’
She was instantly embarrassed. ‘I’m sorry. You are a busy man.’
It was his turn to be embarrassed. ‘Sofia, I would love to accompany you, but my time is running short.’
‘That is true for all of us.’
He didn’t know how to respond to that, taking its meaning several ways; and remained silent. He was thinking of the twenty-year age-gap between them.
Sofia looked down at the map for a moment, then back up. ‘Well, I could try to finish this last cipher now, but I need to run an errand before sundown. Can you wait a day?’
‘What do you need?’
She looked away and back again. ‘It’s silly, but … a bouquet of fresh flowers. White tulips, specifically.’
He got up. ‘I’ll get you the flowers. Nessun problema.’
‘Are you sure?’
‘It will be a nice change of pace.’
She smiled warmly. ‘Bene! Look – meet me in the park just to the east of Hagia Sofia. We will trade: flowers for … information!’
51
The Flower Market was a blaze of colour and pleasant scents, and there wasn’t a Janissary in sight. Ezio made his way through it anxiously, as nowhere in all this cornucopia had he yet been able to find any of the flowers he sought.
‘You look like a man with money to spend,’ said a flower-seller, as Ezio approached his stall. ‘What do you need, my friend?’
‘I’m looking for tulips. White ones, if you have them.’
The flower-seller looked doubtful. ‘Ah. Tulips. Forgive me, but I am fresh out. Something else, perhaps?’
Ezio shook his head. ‘It’s not up to me, unfortunately.’
The flower-seller thought about the problem for a moment, then leant forward. He spoke confidentially, ‘OK, just for you, here is my secret. Many of the white tulips I sell, I pick myself near the hippodrome. Not a word of a lie. You go and see for yourself.’
Ezio smiled, took out his wallet, and tipped the flower-seller generously. ‘Grazie.’
Busily, a man in haste, he made his way through the sun-warmed streets to the hippodrome, and, sure enough, in the grass along one side of the racetrack, he found white tulips growing in abundance. Happily, he bent down, and, unleashing his hidden blade, cut as many as he hoped Sofia would want.
52
The Imperial Park to the east of Hagia Sofia was laid out as formal gardens, interspersed with verdant lawns dotted with white marble benches and arbours ideal for private meetings. In one of them he soon found Sofia.
She had laid out a little picnic, and Ezio could see at a glance that it wasn’t local food and drink. She’d managed somehow to organize a lunch which brought together some of the specialities of both their home towns, so there was moleche and rixoto de gò from Venice, and panzanella and salame toscano from Florence. She’d also provided figs from Tuscolo and olives from Piceno, and there was a dish of macaroni and turbot. The wine she’d brought was a Frescobaldi. A wicker hamper stood by the neat white cloth she’d laid.
‘What is this?’ he said, marvelling.
‘A gift. Sit.’
Ezio bowed, handing her the flowers, and did as he was bidden.
‘These are beautiful – thank you,’ she said, accepting the huge bouquet of tulips he had cut for her.
‘So is this,’ he replied. ‘And don’t think I don’t appreciate the trouble you’ve been to.’
‘I wanted to thank you for letting me play a small role in your adventure.’
‘I would scarcely have called it small, but a “small” role is quite enough for this adventure, believe me.’
She laughed quietly. ‘You are a mystery, Ezio Auditore.’
He looked worried. ‘I’m sorry – I do not mean to be.’
She laughed again. ‘It’s fine!’ She paused, then added, ‘It’s attractive.’
Ezio didn’t know how to respond to that, so he concentrated on the food. ‘This looks delicious.’
‘Why, thank you.’
Ezio smiled. He didn’t want to break the mood, but a shadow had fallen over his thoughts. He mustn’t celebrate – or hope for anything – prematurely. He looked at her more seriously and she immediately caught his frame of mind.
‘Any luck with the final code?’ he asked
, as casually as he could.
‘Ah, the code,’ she replied, still a little playful, and Ezio was relieved. ‘Yes, I solved it a few hours ago. But you’ll have to be patient. You will get it soon enough.’
And she looked at him then in a way that broke down any defences Ezio had left.
53
The last book was located in a place more difficult to get to. Niccolò Polo had managed to conceal it high on the front façade of the mosque of Hagia Sofia itself, above the great curved arch which stood before the principal dome of the former basilica.
Ezio chose to complete his mission in the small hours before dawn, as then there would be the smallest number of people about. He reached the building unchallenged, and carefully made his way to the exonarthex, looking up at the cliff of stone which he had now to climb. There were few crevices for his hookblade to get a grip, but after several unsuccessful attempts, he managed to climb to the spot Sofia had pinpointed. There, he found a weathered wooden panel overhung with cobwebs.
He managed to belay himself to some nearby pipework which, after testing, he found solid enough to take his weight, and he used the hookblade again to prise the panel open. The wooden board fell to the ground beneath with what to Ezio’s ears was a deafening, echoing clatter, and he hung there in the grey light of false dawn silently praying that no one would have been alerted by the noise. But after he had waited for three whole minutes and there was no reaction, he reached into the cavity the board had concealed and from it drew the book he sought.
Once back on the ground he sped away and found a quiet spot in the very park where he had dined with Sofia only the day before, and there examined his find. The book was a copy of Luitpold of Cremona’s Mission to Constantinople. He allowed himself to imagine for a moment Sofia’s pleasure at the sight of such a rarity before turning to the front.
The blank pages glowed as brightly as the thin streaks of dawn light he could see away to the east across the Bosphorus. A map of the city appeared, which, as he watched hopefully, resolved itself into focus. On it appeared another light, brighter than the rest, clearly marking the Forum of the Ox.
Following the trail indicated in the book, Ezio made his way to the Forum, away in the west of the city, past the Second and Third Hills, and about midway between the Aqueduct of Valens to the north and the Harbour of Theodosius to the south. It was quite a walk, but when he arrived it was still too early for anyone to be about. Ezio scanned the huge deserted square for some kind of clue, but the marked spot in the book gleamed sharply, and he remembered the system of subterranean cisterns beneath the city. He concentrated his search and located, after a little time, a manhole from which stone steps descended into the bowels of the earth.
Ezio closed the book and stowed it safely in his satchel. He replaced his hookblade with his pistol, checked his hidden blade, and warily made his way downwards.
He soon found himself in a vaulted cavern on a stone embankment by which an underground river ran. Lit torches stood in sconces on the walls and, as he crept quietly through a narrow, damp corridor, he heard, above the sound of rushing water, echoing voices raised above the din the river made. Following the sound of them, he came upon two Byzantine Templars.
‘What have you found?’ one said. ‘Another key?’
‘A door of some kind,’ his comrade answered. ‘Bricked up with hard stone.’
Rounding a corner, Ezio saw a number of soldiers a short distance away standing on an old pier which jutted into the river. One of them was rolling a barrel off one of two waiting rafts.
‘That sounds promising,’ the first of the nearer Templars said. ‘The first key was found behind a similar door.’
‘Is that so? And how did they open that door?’
‘They didn’t. The earthquake did.’
On a signal from the men closer to Ezio, the other soldiers came up with the barrel, which they proceeded to lodge in place against the door. Ezio could now see that the opening was sealed with close-fitting blocks of some hard black stone, cut by a master mason.
‘The earthquake! That was helpful,’ said the second Templar. ‘And all we have is a few barrels of gunpowder.’
‘This one should be big enough for the job,’ replied the first.
Ezio’s eyes narrowed. He quietly released his gun and pulled back the hammer.
‘If it isn’t, we’ll just get more,’ the first Templar continued.
Ezio raised his arm and took aim, but the barrel of the gun caught the light of a torch as he did so and glinted, the unusual flash of light catching the eye of one of the soldiers.
‘What?’ he snapped.
He saw the gun and leapt in front of the barrel at the same moment that Ezio fired. The ball struck him and he fell dead instantly.
Ezio swore to himself.
But the soldiers were onto him now.
‘It’s the Assassin! Let’s get out of here!’
Ezio tried to reload, but the soldiers were already making their way back towards the rafts. He followed, desperate to stop them before they could raise the alarm, but as he reached the pier they were already pushing off. By the time Ezio had leapt onto the second raft and was struggling to loose its moorings, the soldiers were in midstream floating away.
He had cast off and was in pursuit when the thought struck him – were they scared of him or were they leading him on? Well, it was too late now. He’d have to play this to the end.
As his raft was lighter, the current began to carry him closer. The soldiers seemed to be in a panic, but that didn’t stop them from priming bombs and loading muskets.
‘We have gunpowder aboard, we should use it!’ one cried.
‘We’ll blast him out of the water with grenades,’ said another, throwing a bomb, which exploded as it hit the water barely a foot ahead of Ezio’s prow.
‘Give me some room,’ yelled another soldier, trying to steady himself, to take aim with his musket.
‘Shoot him!’
‘What do you think I’m trying to do?’
‘Just kill the bastard!’
They careered on downstream. Ezio had managed by now to grasp the tiller of his raft and brought it under control, all the while having to duck and dive to avoid the musket balls that cannoned towards him, though the pitch and roll of their raft made it all but impossible for the soldiers to take serious aim. Then one of the barrels aboard worked free of its ropes and rolled around the deck, knocking two soldiers into the torrent – one of them, their tiller man. The raft bucked wildly, throwing another man into the black water, and then smashed into the side of the embankment. The survivors scrambled to the bank. Ezio looked up to the high vault which ran perhaps twenty feet above the river. In the gloom, he could see that a taut rope had been slung the length of the roof, and no doubt barges or rafts were often hooked to it to guide them down the river. You’d only need one person aboard with a pole to unhook and rehook round each of the eyelets to which the rope was affixed at regular intervals. Ezio could see that the rope, following the river’s downhill course, sloped gradually downwards too. Just enough for what he had planned.
Bracing himself, Ezio steered his own raft for the embankment and, as it smashed into the one he’d been pursuing, he leapt from it onto the stone pathway at the river’s side.
By that time, the surviving soldiers were already some way ahead of him, running for their lives – or to summon reinforcements. Ezio had no time to waste.
Working fast, he swapped his gun for his hookblade, scrambled up the side wall of the cavern, and threw himself towards the rope over the river. He had just enough momentum to catch it with his hookblade, and soon he was shooting downstream over the water, far faster than the soldiers could run, though he had to unhook and rehook with split-second timing at each eyelet in the roof to avoid falling into the roaring torrent beneath.
As he caught up with the soldiers he reversed his first manoeuvre and unhooked at the crucial moment, throwing his body sideways so that he la
nded on the embankment just ahead of the Templars. They stopped dead, panting, facing him.
‘He is a madman,’ said the first Templar.
‘This is no man – this is a demon,’ a second cried.
‘Let’s see if demons bleed,’ bellowed a braver comrade, coming at Ezio, his sword whirling in his hand.
Ezio performed a hook and roll over his back and pitched him, while he was still off-balance, into the river. Three soldiers remained. The fight had all but gone out of them but Ezio knew he could not afford to be merciful. The ensuing clash was short and bloody, and left Ezio nursing a gashed left arm, and three corpses lying before him.
Gulping air, he made his way back to the sealed door. They had come a long way downriver and it took him a good ten minutes to regain the jetty where the rafts had originally been moored. But at least he knew that he need be in no immediate fear of pursuit; and the barrel of gunpowder was still lodged where the Templar soldiers had placed it.
Replacing his hookblade with his pistol once more, Ezio loaded it, chose a position upstream from where he could take cover behind a projecting buttress, took careful aim, and fired.
There was the crack of the pistol and the hiss of the ball as it shot towards the barrel, even the thud as it struck home, but then there seemed, for what seemed an eternity, to be silence.
Nothing happened.
But then …
The explosion in those confines was like a thunderclap, and Ezio was deafened. He thought, as tiny stones rained down all around him, that he might have brought the roof in, that he might have irreparably damaged whatever was behind the door. But when the dust settled, he could see that for all the force of the explosion, the sealed entrance was still only partially breached.
Enough, however, for him to reach within it, and see the familiar plinth, on which, to his intense relief, the circular obsidian key, partner to the others he had collected, rested undamaged. But he had no time to relax. Even as he reached for it, he noticed the glow emanating from it which he had experienced with the others. As it grew in intensity, he tried, this time, to resist its power. He felt undermined, unsettled by the strange visions which succeeded the blinding light he had come to expect.
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