She’d been introduced to the apprentices: Stefano, a husky young man of eighteen with narrow blue eyes and long blond hair; thirteen-year-old Marin, with the face of an angel in a Nativity painting; and Alvise, Ferraldi’s nephew, the scruffy, unfriendly boy who’d let her in. She’d met the painters: Lauro, the workshop’s second in command, the hard-faced man to whom Ferraldi had been talking when she arrived; Zuane and Antonio, cousins who looked almost alike enough to be twins.
Introductions finished, she’d been handed over to Stefano, who showed her around the workshop and took her up to the third floor, where Ferraldi, who was unmarried, had his living quarters and the apprentices slept crammed into a single room. Though curious about where she was from and how she’d convinced Ferraldi to accept her, Stefano was more interested in talking about himself, making sure she knew that he was nearly at the end of his apprenticeship and working on studies for his master painting—which, to hear him tell it, was certain to be a masterpiece.
The tour finished, he’d brought her back to the workshop and put her to sweeping up. Work ended for the day as soon as the light began to fail; Lauro and the other painters departed, while Ferraldi and the apprentices retired to the third floor and Giulia was dismissed downstairs. She’d built her scrap-lumber platform, then ventured out to find a tavern and used a little of Sofia’s money to buy bread and cheese and sour wine, which she’d consumed by the light of the candle Ferraldi had given her.
Now, with everything silent, she longed to creep back up to the workshop—to wander among the materials and tools, to hold her candle close to the half-finished paintings, to uncork the pigment pots. She hadn’t realized how deeply she missed the voices of the paints until she heard them again this afternoon, or how dull and quiet the world was without them. She wanted nothing more now than to listen to them sing, and if that was a sin, as she had sometimes feared, she did not care. Better, though, not to risk it. Tomorrow would be soon enough.
“Do you see me, Maestra?” she whispered to the shadows and the flickering candlelight. “I have a master. I have a workshop. I will be a painter, not a slave under Domenica’s command.”
All afternoon and evening she’d been repeating this to herself, trying to believe she had actually, against all the odds, achieved everything she had planned. Well . . . not quite everything, for Ferraldi had not yet made her an apprentice. But that would come. Warm under the blanket and Bernardo’s mantle, her stomach full and her head buzzing pleasantly from the wine, she could finally allow herself to admit how much, in her heart of hearts, she had doubted she would get even as far as this.
In the time she’d been traveling, she had only vaguely considered the future. All her planning, all her energy and hope, had been bent on reaching this moment. Now her mind leaped forward: to the days she would spend in the workshop, proving herself to Ferraldi so that the last piece of her plan could slip into place. To everything she would need to do and learn in order to survive in this unfamiliar workshop, this alien city. And to the challenge of guarding her secret, of maintaining her disguise. Of pretending every moment to be someone—something—she was not.
A thread of cold rippled through the drowsy warmth enclosing her. Had she ever thought of her disguise as anything but temporary? But the reason for it was not temporary. If she could not apprentice as herself—as a female—would she ever be able to paint as herself?
Will I have to wear this disguise forever?
Something unfurled inside her chest, the same trapped, breathless feeling that had seized her at Santa Marta when she had considered her final vows. She thought of the words of her horoscope fragment, God’s will for her life written in the stars of her birth: never to love or marry, to die without her name. A nun at Santa Marta, Girolamo Landriani in Venice—was it not the same? How many times had she tried to outrun her fate; how many times had the stars brought her back? Would every choice she made always bring her back?
But Girolamo Landriani will paint. That must be God’s will as well, for did not God give me my gift? And if I must spend my life alone and unloved, shall I not at least spend it painting?
She thought of what Sofia had said to her on the night she presented the portrait: Your gift demands everything of you. It was so. She could feel it: her gift, the core of fire that was the heart of her. Burning, always burning, no cold or doubt or cruelty enough to put it out.
Only God knew the future. As in the meadow after the brothers robbed her, she would do one thing at a time, take one step at a time, and see where it led her.
I’m here, with Ferraldi. For now that’s enough.
She blew out the candle. The room fell dark. She curled into the shelter of Bernardo’s mantle, feeling the presence of the great city around her, and herself within it, a new seed cast on fertile ground, ready to grow.
CHAPTER 14
KING DAVID
Venice, Italy
Early January, Anno Domini 1489
The great voice of the Marangona bell, which pealed each morning from the Campanile in the Piazza San Marco to summon Venetians to work, and again each evening to send them home, rang out as Giulia turned the corner into the narrow street where the color seller had his shop.
The spice vendors and jewelers who did business in this part of the Rialto were only just starting to raise their shutters, but the pavement was already crowded with shoppers and tradespeople. Shouts, voices raised in bargaining, the sound of hammers and other tools echoed from the housefronts; whiffs of cinnamon and clove caught at Giulia’s nose, mingled with the smell of charcoal smoke and the metallic odors of the forge. Her breath plumed out in front of her as she walked. She’d never experienced anything quite like the cold of the Venetian winter: damp, raw, incredibly penetrating.
The color seller’s shop was near the end of the street. She pushed open the door and stepped into the welcome warmth.
“Master Landriani!” A smile of welcome creased the color seller’s plump cheeks. “I have your order ready.”
“I also need twenty sticks of black chalk, if you’ve got them.”
“I do indeed. Just give me a moment.”
The color seller bustled over to the crowded shelves that held his goods. Giulia warmed her hands over a brazier as he counted out the chalk, then counted it a second time for good measure. She breathed deeply, savoring the shop’s distinctive aroma: the dense, mixed scents of the hundreds of items sold here, overlaid by the sharp tang of vinegar boiling in another room, where an apprentice was steaming lead to extract white pigment.
In other cities, pigments were sold by apothecaries. Only in Venice, Giulia had learned, were there shops such as these, for nowhere else was there such a wealth of raw materials, or such an army of artisans to use them: painters, textile dyers, potters, even glassmakers from the vast glassworks on the island of Murano. Precious minerals from Persia, rare woods from Africa, oils and plants and earths and even insects from all over Europe and the Orient: All passed through Venice, the queen of trade, and all could be found on the color sellers’ shelves.
“The fresco progresses well?”
The color seller was an avid gossip, with an astonishing store of knowledge about all his clients. He pressed Giulia shamelessly for information every time she visited. But he was honest, and the colors Ferraldi bought from him sang true, without any taint of adulteration. And he often tipped a little extra onto the scale when Giulia purchased supplies for herself.
“Well enough,” she said. “Three days should see it finished, assuming the plasterer shows up.”
“A drunkard, that one, or so I’ve heard. But he’s your master’s cousin, is he not? Family. What can one do?” The color seller shook his head. “I can recommend a man if you need one.”
“I don’t think that will be necessary. But I’ll tell my master.”
The color seller tied the chalk up with cord, then brought out a larger bundle, which he opened so Giulia could inspect its contents: an array of raw pigments, gr
ound and dried and compressed into little blocks that only needed to be broken up and mixed with the painting medium of the artist’s choice. Accustomed as she was to a workshop where the paints had almost all been prepared by the artists themselves, Giulia had been surprised at first at how many of his pigments Ferraldi bought ready-made. But she knew now that in Venice, this was common practice.
“That’ll be two scudi for everything,” the color seller said. “Shall I put it on account?”
“Yes. Thank you.”
“Don’t forget that plasterer.” The color seller placed both bundles in Giulia’s hands. “Just let me know.”
Giulia pulled up the hood of Bernardo’s mantle—no matter how she tried, she couldn’t stop thinking of it as his—and plunged back into the cold.
—
If, on her first night in Venice, she had been able to look ahead three months and see herself as she was today—easy in her disguise, confidently negotiating the crowded streets and campi of the Rialto—she would hardly have recognized herself.
She wore her boy’s clothes without a thought—better clothes than when she’d arrived, for Sofia’s purse had allowed her to replace her travel-worn garments and buy a proper pair of boots. She no longer needed to remind herself how to walk and speak, no longer forgot to respond when someone called her false name. She’d grown skilled at coping with the inconveniences of her masquerade: the privacy she always needed, the excuses and accommodations she had to make. She could untie her hose in scarcely more time than it took a real boy to unlace his codpiece.
It was true, what Sofia had said: People saw what they expected to see. As long as she took care, her clothes and hair and her boy’s name told a story no one thought to question. The dread of discovery, which had made her first weeks in Ferraldi’s workshop an excruciating trial of nerves, was only a shadow now—always there behind her thoughts, but rarely consciously called to mind.
Venice, so huge and alien, had overwhelmed her at first. With no access to a boat unless she paid to hire a gondola, her only option was to go about on foot—and in this too Sofia had spoken true: For pedestrians, the city was a labyrinth. There were no long, continuous thoroughfares as in Padua—only a spiderweb of narrow streets and alleys, carried by slantwise bridges over dark canals, intersecting at strange angles and dead-ending unexpectedly on campi and rii, so that finding one’s way could be as much a matter of retreating as of moving forward.
Ferraldi allowed her to accompany the other apprentices on errands, and this had helped her begin to orient herself—in spite of the efforts of Stefano and Marin, who thought it hilarious to give her invented street names and imaginary addresses. Cautiously, on Sundays and in the occasional hours she had free, she began to venture out on solo sketching expeditions, learning the city not just by walking it but through the alchemy of eye and charcoal. She used scrap paper from the workshop, filling the sheets fully on both sides, sometimes drawing over earlier work. She had a growing stack of these sheets in her little sleeping area in Ferraldi’s storeroom.
She was confident enough now to go exploring on her own. She’d found her way to the church of San Giobbe, and spent a rapturous hour before Giovanni Bellini’s magnificent altarpiece, so masterfully painted that its illusion of a chamber just off the church, in which the Virgin sat surrounded by saints, seemed like a window onto a living world. She had visited the Piazza San Marco and gaped at the golden domes of the Basilica and the great brick pile of the Doge’s Palace. She’d explored the busy docks and markets of the Rialto, where hundreds of shops and stalls and warehouses offered every good or service she had ever imagined, and many she had not. It was on the Rialto too that she glimpsed the dark truth beneath Venice’s glittering abundance: the mean back alleys stinking of sewage and refuse, the tenements and the brothels, the beggars and the prostitutes.
She was still an outsider—in the city, whose shape and rhythms she was only just beginning to understand; in the workshop, where everyone, from the artists to the apprentices to Ferraldi’s maidservant, knew her as a charity case Ferraldi had taken on for reasons he had not cared to explain. There were still moments when disbelief rocked her like a slap to the face: What am I doing here? All alone? Disguised as a boy? But with every day that passed, she gained a little more assurance, the mask of Girolamo a better fit over her own true face.
Now and then she found herself missing Santa Marta—not the changes she’d fled after Humilità’s death, but the things she’d loved while her teacher was still alive: the peace and order, the friendships, the certainty of a known future. She wondered sometimes whether it would be risking too much to send Angela a letter, just to let her friend know she was safe. Surely, if she gave no details of her situation . . .
But then she would remember Matteo Moretti. She would think of Domenica and Madre Magdalena. She would feel the presence of the little pouch at her neck, with its weight of secrets. And it would seem too much like tempting fate to remind anyone in Padua that she was still alive.
—
With her errand to the color seller completed, Giulia set out for Cannaregio and the palazzo of the Cesca family, where Ferraldi had his fresco commission.
The Rialto bustled year-round, but midwinter, when the trade vessels began returning from the East, was among its most hectic seasons. Giulia pushed her way through the busy streets, heading for the Riva del Vin, the quay along the Grand Canal where the wine warehouses stood. Boats and barges packed the canal; the quay teemed with workmen unloading goods, merchants in their long black robes, and an occasional cluster of dandies already masked for Carnival, cloakless in the cold to display their fine clothing.
The Rialto Bridge rose at the end of the Riva del Vin. Giulia crossed it and entered the Merceria, the twisting commercial avenue that linked the Rialto with the Piazza San Marco. Here too she had to fight the crowds, but once she turned north toward Cannaregio, the traffic diminished, and she was soon walking through streets and campi nearly deserted in the cold.
Snow had begun to sift down by the time she reached Palazzo Cesca. The servant on guard at the street door waved her into a courtyard, where a marble stair led up to the pòrtego, the long central hallway that was a feature of the piani nobili of all large Venetian dwellings. Like much of the rest of the palazzo, the pòrtego was under renovation. Holding her breath against the dust, Giulia slipped into the room where Ferraldi and his assistants were working.
Ferraldi ran a very different kind of workshop from Humilità’s—necessarily, for though Humilità’s workshop had brought in money for the convent, it had not primarily been a commercial concern. Ferraldi did not have the luxury of picking and choosing his commissions as Humilità had; he took on any work that came his way, from portraits, to commissions from churches and civic organizations, to Madonna and Child panels for private homes. He was also in demand as a frescoist. There was not much call for fresco in Venice, with its damp, salty air that ate away at plaster. But Ferraldi, who had trained in Padua, was known as a specialist.
The fresco he was completing now occupied the wall of a bedchamber: a biblical scene, King David spying on Bathsheba as she bathed. The contract for the commission had been very unbiblical about Bathsheba’s endowments and the way she should be displaying them, causing much sniggering among the apprentices—though not when Ferraldi could hear them.
Canvas had been spread across the floor to protect it, and lanterns supplemented the daylight admitted by the windows. Ferraldi, his silver hair tied away from his face and a painter’s smock covering his clothes, stood over Alvise, who was stirring up the limewater that would be combined with pigments to make fresco paint.
“Did you remember the chalk?” Ferraldi was a kind master, but when deeply involved in his work he could be impatient, even harsh.
“Yes, Maestro,” Giulia said.
“Good.” He gestured toward a trestle table, where Stefano was working at the grinding stone. “Start with the red ochre. I need it first.”<
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“Took you long enough to get here.” Stefano eyed Giulia as she shrugged off her mantle and began to unpack the color seller’s bundle.
“There was a cart overturned on the Riva del Vin. I had to wait to get past.”
“Or perhaps you were lying late abed and only dreaming of a cart.”
As you would do, given half the chance. Giulia swallowed the retort. Stefano was a bit of a bully, and could be vengeful if crossed. Giulia got on with him fairly well, but only because she was careful not to provoke him.
“I didn’t oversleep,” she said mildly.
“So you say.” Stefano tossed his long blond hair, about which he was as vain as a girl. “Pass me that ochre.”
Over by the fresco, Ferraldi’s cousin, Eugenio, had completed the intonaco, the smooth layer of wet plaster on which the painting would be done. Alvise, finished with the limewater, had begun to unroll the template for today’s work: part of a full-scale drawing of the fresco that had been made on glued sheets of paper, then cut into pieces corresponding to each day’s work. Today’s section was the figure of King David, peering out from behind a column.
“Now, Uncle?” Alvise asked, his voice tentative.
“Don’t always ask direction, Alvise. Take the initiative.”
Alvise swiped his sleeve under his perpetually running nose and held the template to the intonaco, orienting it to the finished sections of the fresco and the underdrawing that had been made on the first plaster layer, which still showed in the areas that had not yet been painted. But, forgetful as usual, he’d neglected to fetch hammer and nails to tack it in place. Glancing nervously at his uncle, who was watching with folded arms and frowning brows, he laid down the template and went to get the tools.
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