Bianca (32 page)

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Authors: Bertrice Small

BOOK: Bianca
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They reached the beach, where a little boat was waiting to take the young silk merchant back to the anchored vessel.

“The captain has been given orders to set sail immediately,” the prince told his guest. “His destination is Istanbul. You will find a ship there to take you home.” He held out his hand to Marco. “I greeted you in peace, brother of my wife. I now bid you farewell. Go in peace and with my friendship.”

Marco took the prince’s hand and shook it. “Thank you, my lord,” he told him. “I can see that you have treated my sister well. I cannot deny her love for you. I offer you my friendship,
signore
.” Then he waded out to the small craft, and climbed into it. He turned with a smile and gave Amir a friendly wave. Then Marco Pietro d’Angelo faced the sea again.

The prince watched as the little boat was swiftly rowed out to the large ship. By the time the prince had climbed back up to the palace gardens his vessel was already under way, sailing from the small cove that served the Moonlight Serai and headed for the Bosphorus. He reentered his home and went directly to the harem. There he found Azura as he had expected he would, standing by a window watching too.

Hearing his entry, she turned, smiling. “He did not come for my family’s sake. He came for his own. I have relieved his poor burdened conscience,” and she went on to explain her conversation that afternoon with her brother.

“Are you saddened to see him go knowing you are unlikely to meet again?” he asked her.

“No. My life is here with you,” Azura told him, smiling to herself as she spoke. Men! Why was it that they always seemed to need reassurance from those they loved or cared for? she wondered. Then she looked into his deep blue eyes and said, “I want a child, Amir. A child of our love for each other. Maysun and Shahdi would like me to have a child too, for the harem is lonely without the laughter of children.”

“You know the dangers, beloved,” he reminded her. “My uncle could at any time turn on me because of my father. Remember that he has three living sons of his own. If our child were a male, it could present a danger to us all, but to you in particular. Besides, there has been no sign of a child in all the time we have been together.”

“Because Nadim mixes a potion each morning that Agata presents to me as a strengthening drink. I am not supposed to know it is to prevent conception. There is no harm in it, so I drink it down quite dutifully,” Azura told him with a small laugh.

“I should have them both beaten!” Amir exclaimed, feigning anger.

She laughed again. “They protect us by their actions,” she told him.

“A child,” he said slowly. “I had not thought to have a child, especially when you did not seem to prove fertile. A daughter who favored her mother would be a joy. Still, it is a serious chance that you contemplate, beloved.”

Amir knew his uncle well. Bayezit was a patient man, but he was also unafraid to act in his best interests, as his race to reach Istanbul when Sultan Mehmet died had proved. He had been at a farther distance than his brother, and yet he had gotten to the capital first, where he had promised the Janissaries what they wanted and paid the right bribes so that his brother had no chance at all of gaining the throne. Bayezit would not hesitate to have an infant slain if he felt the child was a future danger to his throne. And how would Azura feel having her newborn torn from her arms and smothered? Could he subject her to that?

Still, if they dared it, a child would bring their house such joy. And it could as easily be a daughter as a son. A daughter who one day could be used to the sultan’s best advantage in an important marriage alliance. An Ottoman princess would please his uncle. Of all Amir’s cousins, he suspected that the youngest of the sultan’s sons, Selim, would be the one to father a large family. Ahmed, despite Bayezit’s favor, preferred gambling, drinking forbidden wines, and pretty page boys. Korkut was a serious scholar interested only in his studies. But Selim was much like Bayezit himself. Selim would take the throne one day, outsmarting his brothers as his father had, and it would be Selim’s family that would prevail.

“I do not know if I can put us in such jeopardy, beloved,” Amir considered. “The sultan has been favorable towards me, but there are those who have his ear, who would just as soon see my father and me dead. My uncle’s three
kadins
are ambitious women, especially Ahmed’s mother, Besma. It is rumored she managed the death of Bayezit’s eldest son, the offspring of another
kadin
, to further her own son’s chances at the succession. How would you feel if after you gave birth your son was taken immediately from you to be killed?”

Azura gasped, horrified. “They would not do that!”

He said nothing, and his silence gave confirmation to his words.

“Would they?” she whispered.

“I cannot bear to see you unhappy, beloved,” Amir told her. “If you want a child, I will give you one, but understand the risks involved if I do and you bear me a son.”

“If we had a son, why would the sultan have to know?” Azura asked. “We do not live in Istanbul. How would he even learn that we had a family?”

Amir laughed. “If I did not inform him of a child’s arrival, it would appear treasonous on my part. You are thinking like a Florentine.”

“I am a Florentine,” she said.

“No,” he told her. “You are my beloved, my wife, and everything that came before us is irrelevant. I will not share you with your history except where I am involved. I am a jealous man where my wife is concerned.”

She kissed his mouth sweetly. “You must learn to share me, for I want a child, Amir. I will take the chance that your uncle will be merciful to us if I have a son, but I will have a daughter so we need not fret about it.”

“You have shown no signs of a child yet,” he said. “How can you be certain that you will have one now that you have decided you want one?”

“I have told you that I only need to stop drinking the strengthening drink that Nadim mixes and Agata feeds me each morning. They think I do not know,” Azura explained to him. “My mother drank a similar liquid when she did not wish to have more babies. It is possible to control these things.”

She had mentioned this to him before, he now recalled, but he had been so concerned with other matters it had slipped entirely from his mind. Once again he didn’t know if he should be angry or not. He realized that his slaves were indeed attempting to safeguard him and his wives as well as their household. “Stop drinking the potion,” he said to her. “I will speak with Nadim and with Ali Farid. We will take our chances and have a child, beloved.” As he said it he wondered if he was being wise. Women were known to die in childbirth. He didn’t want to lose her, but he also wanted to make her happy. He caught her hand and kissed it before placing it over his heart for a moment. Then he released it with a smile.

“Now I will be content,” Azura promised him. “And Maysun and Shahdi will be as well, for this child will belong to all of us, my love.”

“Come to me tonight,” he said, and she smiled into his eyes.

“As my lord commands,” she purred, giving him a quick kiss.

He grinned mischievously at her and chuckled. “How amenable you are, beloved, when you gain your own way with me.”

“All women are easy to live with when they are happy,” she replied.

Agata no longer brought her the strengthening drink in the mornings, and they all began to watch her carefully. Still, despite the passion shared between Amir and Azura, there was no quick sign of a child. Azura found herself disappointed, but Nadim and Agata comforted her, assuring the third wife that the conception of a child was God’s will and not man’s. It had only been a little over a month since the decision had been made.

Then late one morning Captain Mahmud and a small troop of Janissaries arrived at the Moonlight Serai. They had orders requesting that Prince Amir return to Istanbul, for his uncle, the sultan, wished to speak with him.

Azura was suspicious. “What does he want? Why could he not simply send a message to you? Why must he see you?”

Maysun and Shahdi, being better-versed in the politics of the Ottoman Empire, were even more concerned, although they kept their fears to themselves. They did not wish to distress Azura when she was attempting to breed. But what if Amir was being summoned only to be met by the sultan’s gardeners, his executioners? What if Prince Jem’s behavior had finally brought his brother’s patience to the breaking point, and his only son was to suffer the punishment of death for it?

“He is the sultan, and he has requested my presence,” Amir said. “I must go.”

“A request is written on a parchment and delivered by a single messenger. This is a demand with a troop of Janissaries sent to fetch you,” Azura replied.

“Nonetheless, I must go,” Amir said quietly, and kissing each of his wives in turn, he left them, going with Captain Mahmud and his troop of Janissary horsemen. The truth was, he had no idea why his uncle would send for him unless it had something to do with his rebellious father. To his relief he was taken to Sultan Bayezit immediately upon his arrival. Entering the august presence, he bowed low with each step he took forward.

Bayezit watched his nephew come towards him making the proper obeisance as he came. He smiled faintly to himself. Amir was a careful man, he thought. “Come, Nephew, and sit by my side so we may talk,” he invited the prince.

Amir did as he was bid, kissing his uncle’s hand respectfully, his eyes darting quickly around the room for any sign of gardeners. There were none. “Thank you, my lord,” he said. “I am happy to see you looking so well.”

“Unlike your troublesome father, Nephew, you are loyal. Because of your faithfulness I am sending you to Rhodes with the payment for your father’s keep. I want you to speak with Jem personally. Try to convince him to cease his resistance to me, and make his peace. I would happily welcome him back to govern one of my provinces, whichever one he chooses. I will give you a province and its income too if you succeed.”

“I will gladly go to Rhodes for love of you, Uncle, but I wish no part in the government, and my ships bring me enough income that I neither need nor want any government allowance. Give these honors to your sons. I am content.”

The sultan stared at his nephew, then finally said, “You are unique among the males of our line, Amir, for you are, or you seem, content simply to be.”

“I have seen what ambition does, my lord,” Amir answered his uncle. “I have my own wealth, three wives, a home I love. I want for nothing. Perhaps I am simply lazy, for being sultan is a great deal of work.”

“You have no children, then?” the sultan asked.

“None,” the prince answered. “I should have told you if I did, my lord.”

Bayezit nodded slowly. “Your fidelity is impressive, Amir ibn Jem,” his uncle told him. “My father always said that you were trustworthy. Go to Rhodes for me. I will not hold you responsible if you cannot bring your father to reason, but you must try for my sake and for my brother’s sake.”

“I will do my best for you, my lord uncle,” Amir told him. “When do you propose I leave? And I assume I will have Janissaries with me to guard the gold?”

“You will leave in a month’s time, and ride overland down to the Mediterranean coast. From there you will embark for Rhodes. The gold will await you at your destination and be loaded aboard the vessel taking you to Rhodes. Captain Mahmud will meet you first at Bursa and go with you. There is no need for a troop of his Janissaries, for they would only attract attention. I would have you be discreet, Nephew,” the sultan told Amir. “You can get yourself to Bursa?”

“I can,” Amir said. “Would you like me to use one of my own ships to transport the gold, my lord? I should gladly give you the loan of one.”

“I would! You are generous, Nephew,” the sultan said.

“Nay, my lord, I am a practical man,” Amir told him. “Load the gold in Bursa. Captain Mahmud and I will sail from there rather than riding overland. It will be safer.”

“If you think that is best, Nephew,” the sultan said to him, “then do it. I will see that the treasury sends the gold to Bursa.”

“If you have no further need for me, then, my lord, I will return home to inform my wives that you have entrusted me with a mission. They need know nothing more, but I would not have them worry,” Amir said.

His uncle nodded, and waved him away. The prince hurried from the sultan’s presence and three days later returned home to his overjoyed women, who had been genuinely frightened. They were full of questions as to why Bayezit had called upon Amir, and when they learned he was to go to Rhodes, his wives were none too pleased.

“You will be gone for several months,” Maysun complained. “If you are charged by the sultan with trying to bring your father to reason, you must remain long enough with Prince Jem so that you can be said to have tried, but not so long that suspicions are cast upon you and it is suggested that you are plotting with your father. I do not like this. I do not like it at all. Why can the sultan not be satisfied that you are not your father, or your father’s man? This task your uncle sends you to do for him appears to be a trial of sorts. You are being tested once again, although you have done nothing to warrant it.”

“And it is a fool’s errand,” Shahdi chimed in. “Your father cannot be moved, and everyone in the world knows it. Someone who has influence with the sultan is playing a wicked game. Who is your enemy, my lord? Do you even know?”

“This is a woman’s trick,” Azura said quietly, and they turned, surprised once again by her grasp of Ottoman politics. “Amir has done nothing that would, that could, that should arouse anyone’s suspicions as to his loyalty to the throne, to his uncle, the sultan. But a woman, ambitious for her son, would be distrustful of him.

“He is the Conqueror’s oldest male grandchild. His has a legitimate claim to the Ottoman throne one day. Yet he eschews politics, will not accept a position governing for the sultan, does not lend his sword to the continuing conquest of the empire. He lives quietly, amassing wealth, and without children who could be used against him. Why does he do this? What motives are behind this behavior? Does he hope one day to seize the throne when Bayezit’s three living sons are involved in a fight for it?

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