Read The Fallen Blade: Act One of the Assassini Online

Authors: Jon Courtenay Grimwood

Tags: #01 Fantasy

The Fallen Blade: Act One of the Assassini (32 page)

BOOK: The Fallen Blade: Act One of the Assassini
13.69Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

“That’s Good Friday, my lord.”

“Maybe so. You’ll still want paying, won’t you?”

The tavern keeper nodded and filled a jug to the brim from a barrel apart from the others. Even if it wasn’t Barolo, it was obviously special enough for him not to want jugs given away by accident.

“What is it really?” Iacopo demanded.

The tavern keeper glanced round. “It really is Barolo,” he whispered. “Just not a very good one.”

Iacopo laughed loud enough to make the hazard players look over. He met their gaze and they saw a stranger with a sharp black beard, wearing a stylish breastplate, taking a jug of the best wine. A couple of them nodded, one even smiled.

“Friends of yours?” Roderigo asked.

“Not really,” Iacopo answered, leaving it understood he knew them, just not very well. His embroidering was interrupted by the tavern keeper, who carried a bowl of stewed mutton, which he ladled in heaped spoonfuls on to thick slices of stale bread. The captain ate his mutton and left the bread. So Iacopo did the same.

“I should go,” Roderigo said. “Temujin’s probably drunk by now.” He stood unsteadily, appeared on the edge of saying something about his own state and shrugged. “Bloody man,” he muttered. “Always causing trouble.”

Iacopo hoped he was talking about the sergeant.

“About Desdaio…” Roderigo said a few minutes later.

“My lord?”

“Is she happy?”

“Oh yes, she’s…” Iacopo stopped. “Well, as happy as can be expected. It must be hard to be disowned. And she… My lord, may I speak plainly?”

“Feel free.”

Roderigo waited.

“What,” he asked finally, “did you have to say?”

Iacopo sucked his teeth. “Maybe she’s not that happy,” he said. “She expected to be wed by now. But my lord Atilo is always busy. And it must be a lonely life for a healthy young woman…”

“You have her confidence?”

“No, my lord. She confides in Amelia, her maid. And…” Iacopo hesitated again. “Atilo has a slave.”

“The blind boy?”

“He’s not blind, my lord. But light does hurt his eyes. So he wears strange spectacles and avoids daylight whenever he can.”

“So I gather,” Roderigo said shortly.

“My lord, if I’ve offended you…”

“I’ve had dealings with the boy.”

Iacopo caught himself and kept drinking. Something in the captain’s voice was too casual. If Iacopo hadn’t known better, he’d say Captain Roderigo feared Tycho. “My master intends to release him.”

“So soon?”

“Soon, my lord?”

“I heard Atilo kept his slaves and bondsmen for three to five
years before releasing them. To release them at all is ridiculous. No offence, of course. But to get only one year’s work.” Captain Roderigo shrugged. “How long before he freed you?”

“I was not a slave or bondsman.”

“Really? I thought…”

“I was an orphan, true enough. My father died on the galleys.”

Iacopo had no proof of this, since his father was unknown. But Venice held a special place for freemen who died in battle protecting the city’s trade routes or opening other avenues of trade. And Roderigo’s approving nod said this mythical father counted in his favour.

“Why is Atilo freeing this one so soon?”

“He learns fast,” Iacopo said flatly. “Table manners. Italian. All that Desdaio teaches him. He’s even starting to learn to write.”

“You don’t like him.” Captain Roderigo said this as a fact.

“I don’t trust him, my lord. And Desdaio watches him,” he said carefully. “I used to think she was afraid of him. Now I’m not sure. They spend a lot of time together.”

“Desdaio and the slave?”

“Lady Desdaio, the slave, sometimes Amelia,” said Iacopo, forcing a worried smile. “Hours alone in the piano nobile while Atilo is away. And the slave accompanies them on evening walks. Sometimes they go for hours. I’m sure nothing happens…”

“He’s a slave.”

“Indeed, my lord.”

Captain Roderigo looked disgusted.

42

“Iacopo?” asked Tycho, hearing his door begin to open.

Desdaio peered into the cellar. “Are you expecting Iacopo? she asked, sounding surprised.

“He was moving about earlier.”

Slipping inside, she left the door open and moonlight flooded in from above. The moon was full tonight, the sky bright with stars.

“My lady, shut the door.”

“We can’t all see in the dark.”

More moonlight filled the room as Desdaio obstinately opened it a little wider. Turning, she found Tycho facing the wall. “Leave,” he said. “Or close it.”

“Tycho…”

“Do it now.”

She shut the door with a bang.

“Go to that corner. Don’t come any closer…”

Kicking a wooden wedge under the door, Tycho found a candle, kindling and flints. The kindling was rag, the flints dropped by a
cittadino
too spoilt to retrieve them. “Candles cost,” said Desdaio, with the fervour of a rich woman who believes she is now poor.

“Moonlight hurts me,” Tycho said.

“That’s the sun.”

“A different kind of pain.”

Desdaio looked at him doubtfully. Moving closer, she seemed surprised he kept the candle between them. “I have things to tell you. And I want to sit.”

“On my mattress?”

“Do you see a chair?”

She smelt of roses and sweet wine, an undertaste of sweat, and a musk Tycho loved, loathed and found addictive. Every woman in the city between fifteen and thirty smelt the same.

“Are you all right?”

“No,” he said harshly. “I’m not.”

Desdaio was so shocked she stepped back. And for that Tycho was grateful. Her body still called to him, the pulse in her throat the beat of a drum summoning him to disaster. The skin of her neck glowed with youth and candlelight.

“Leave,” he told her. “Just go.”

“I thought you were my friend,” she said. “And then you talk to me like this.” Her eyes were huge with unspilt tears. “You can’t. It isn’t allowed.”

“Because I’m a slave?”

“It’s rude.”

“Some days,” he said, “I hate you.”

She sobbed. A single gulp in the back of her throat. “I thought if I was kind it might help. They say all slaves want to kill their owners. You’re meant to be different. You have a good heart,” Desdaio said fiercely. “Inside all your hate.”

Tycho’s smile made her shiver.

“You’re wrong, my lady. I doubt I have a—”

The knock interrupting his boast was abrupt and Desdaio’s eyes widened. Being found here was bad enough. To be found in her nightdress, a woollen shawl thrown over her shoulders and her feet bare…

“Maybe it’s Amelia. I’ll explain.”

“It’s Atilo,” said Tycho, as the knock repeated.

It came again, angrily. Atilo now knew the door was jammed, from trying its handle when his second knock wasn’t answered.

“How do you know?”

“His footsteps.”

Pulling aside his mattress, Tycho revealed a hole in the floor. An early and abandoned attempt to tunnel out. When Desdaio hesitated, Tycho lifted her—one hand under her knees, the other round her ribs—and dropped her in, before dragging his mattress back into place. From the look on her face she’d felt his hand come to rest under her breast too.


Open this door
.”

“My lord, if you could stop pushing.”

The pressure ceased and Tycho pulled away the wedge, moving just fast enough to avoid having his fingers crushed by Atilo’s furious entry. The old man glanced at the offcut in Tycho’s hands, then glared round the cellar, his eyes alighting on the candle. “Why do you need that?”

“My night sight’s not perfect,” Tycho lied.

“Where is she?” he demanded.

“Who, my lord?”

“Amelia.”

“Asleep in her bed, I imagine.”

The old man scowled. “She was meant to come to me tonight.” He sucked his teeth, deciding he’d said too much. “Iacopo is also missing. If they’re up to mischief together…”

“He returned a little earlier.”

“How do you know?”

“I heard him, my lord. His new breastplate scraped the wall above and he swore loud enough for me to hear.”

“Drunk, I imagine.” Dark eyes above a sharp beard watched Tycho. “You don’t miss much, do you?”

“I try not to, my lord.”

“And your locked door?”

“You know there are no bolts inside. But I found this above.” Holding up his offcut, Tycho said, “It keeps my door secure. You say we should secure our entries and exits. I’m simply obeying orders.”

The old man snorted. “Get some sleep. Wake early, rested and ready, with your wits sharp. Much turns on tomorrow. Don’t let me down.”

“My lord?”

“Pray to your gods for success.”

There are no gods
, Tycho almost said.
Not for the likes of you and me.
“I will, my lord. Goodnight.”

Kicking his door jamb back into place, Tycho dragged the mattress aside and hauled Desdaio from the hole beneath. She shook him off when he tried to brush earth from her gown. “That’s what I came to tell you. Atilo has a special job for you tomorrow. And I should have known…”

She hiccuped.

“Known what?”

“Amelia goes to his bed. I thought…”

That he confined himself to the duchess? That he kept his whoring for brothels? She couldn’t really believe that a man as powerful as Atilo il Mauros slept alone under his own roof? Even Desdaio wasn’t that naive.

Holding her tight as she cried, Tycho folded her in his arms, feeling her breasts press against him and her nipples harden. Her eyes went wide when he kissed her and for a second she responded. Then he was blocking a slap.

“You kissed me back.”

“I did not.”

“My lady…”

“Enough.” Her voice was furious. “We won’t talk of this again.”

43

“This had better be good…”

Atilo stood in his chamber door in a long-sleeved woollen robe, with scarlet slippers that curled at the toe. Even though Iacopo had given his name when knocking, the old man had a stiletto in one hand and a lamp in the other.

Oil thrown at an attacker was everyman’s mage fire. Ten years earlier a patrician died after a lamp was hurled by a servant whose daughter he’d raped, with the girl tossing a flaming torch after. Duke Marco let the two hang. He forbade the slitting or castrating, gutting and burning tradition demanded. A popular decision with everyone except the noble’s wife. And she was Genoese anyway.

“Well?” he demanded.

“May I enter, my lord?”

Atilo stepped aside grudgingly.

“Forgive my intrusion… You intend to test Tycho tomorrow?”

The old man’s face hardened and he sat on a wooden stool without inviting Iacopo to do the same. His eyes fixed on Iacopo’s face and held his gaze until the young man looked away. “Jealousy gets you killed.”

“I’m not jealous, my lord.” The young man shrugged. “Although I envy the speed with which he learns. And his night sight is useful. Guard dogs ignore him also. As if he wrapped himself in magic.”

“It’s not magic,” said Atilo. “He has no smell.”

Iacopo’s mouth fell open.

“You should have worked that out. Whatever sickness makes him day-blind denies him a scent. That’s why hounds never find his tracks. They’ve nothing to follow…”

A season’s lessons in how to double back, lay false scents and hide in water had been abandoned after a week. Tycho couldn’t hide in water even if he wanted to. And, since the dogs couldn’t find his scent in the first place, the rest of the lessons were irrelevant.

“No smell,” Iacopo said. “That must be useful.”

Atilo looked on him more kindly. “You’re drunk. Get some sleep and you’ll feel better. And make friends with him…” Atilo held up his hand, admitting the obvious. “Not easy for you, I know. But make the effort. Because he will join us if he passes tomorrow’s test.”

“You’re freeing him?”

“Separate the two,” Atilo said. “Training takes five years. He’s a slave. I free slaves when they complete training. If he succeeds tomorrow I free him. One follows the other.”

“No one can train in a year.”

“Are you saying I’m wrong? That I don’t know when an apprentice is ready to become a journeyman?” There was ice in the old man’s voice.

“No. Certainly not, my lord.”

“What are you saying?”

“He was trained already…” Iacopo considered his suggestion, obviously liked it. “He must have been. He came here to kill someone. To betray us. He could be working for the emperor.”

“Which one?”

“Either,” Iacopo said, warming to his theme. “German or Byzantine, it doesn’t matter. They both want Venice. How better to…”

BOOK: The Fallen Blade: Act One of the Assassini
13.69Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

The Reawakened by Jeri Smith-Ready
Hale Maree by Misty Provencher
When We Argued All Night by Alice Mattison
The Runaway by Martina Cole
To Room Nineteen by Doris Lessing
Hip Deep in Dragons by Christina Westcott
In the Blood by Jackie French
Death Row by William Bernhardt