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Cruel Music
Cruel Music
Cruel Music
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Cruel Music

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Tito Amato returns from an operatic tour expecting to relax with his family. Instead he finds his merchant brother Alessandro imprisoned on a trumped-up smuggling charge, a capital crime in 1740 Venice. The senator who controls Alessandro's fate is determined to have a Venetian as the next pope. He forces Tito to Rome to sing at the villa of a powerful, music-loving cardinal who will control the coming papal election.

Spying as he serenades Cardinal Fabiani and his guests, Tito peers into the dark mirror of Roman politics. Pope Clement XII is sinking fast, and two candidates emerge as leading contenders for St. Peter's throne. Will Fabiani support the highborn Venetian whose secret passion is tinkering with electrical experiments? Or the humble cardinal with the gift of healing and a mysterious past?

The discovery of a beautiful corpse in Fabiani's garden complicates Tito's mission. Fabiani believes that a member of his household killed the young maid in a fit of madness, but Tito follows clues that indicate a more complex motive, assisted by his irrepressible manservant Benito and Englishman Gussie Rumbolt. From the heights of the Janiculum Hill to the muddy waters of the Tiber, from a cozy Trastevere cookshop to the chilly corridors of the Quirinal Palace, the trio wrestles with events that could change the course of history. Can Tito stop the killer and affect the election before Pope Clement takes his last breath? Or will Alessandro face the scaffold?

LanguageEnglish
Release dateMay 31, 2012
ISBN9781615951376
Cruel Music
Author

Beverle Graves Myers

Beverle Graves Myers fell in love with opera at age nine during a marionette production of Rigoletto. A Kentucky native, she studied history at the University of Louisville and went on to earn a degree in medicine. After a career in psychiatry, she devoted herself to writing full-time. Beverle is the author of the Baroque mystery series featuring Tito Amato.

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    Cruel Music - Beverle Graves Myers

    Contents

    Cruel Music

    Contents

    Dedication

    Characters

    Part One

    Chapter One

    Chapter Two

    Chapter Three

    Chapter Four

    Chapter Five

    Chapter Six

    Chapter Seven

    Part Two

    Chapter Eight

    Chapter Nine

    Chapter Ten

    Chapter Eleven

    Chapter Twelve

    Chapter Thirteen

    Chapter Fourteen

    Part Three

    Chapter Fifteen

    Chapter Sixteen

    Chapter Seventeen

    Chapter Eighteen

    Chapter Nineteen

    Chapter Twenty

    Chapter Twenty-one

    Chapter Twenty-two

    Part Four

    Chapter Twenty-three

    Chapter Twenty-four

    Chapter Twenty-five

    Chapter Twenty-six

    Chapter Twenty-seven

    Chapter Twenty-eight

    Author’s Note

    More from this Author

    Contact Us

    Dedication

    To Matthew

    Characters

    Venice

    Tito Amato, a well-known singer

    Benito, Tito’s manservant

    Annetta, Tito’s sister

    Augustus (Gussie) Rumbolt, her husband, an English artist

    Alessandro Amato, Tito’s brother, a merchant seaman

    Messer Grande, a police official

    Senator Antonio Montorio, head of the noble Montorio family

    Rome—Villa Fabiani

    Cardinal Lorenzo Fabiani, the Cardinal Padrone

    Marchesa Olimpia Fabiani, his mother

    Abate Pio Rossobelli, his private secretary

    Gemma Farussi, the marchesa’s maid

    Guido, Roberto, Teresa, and various other servants and musicians

    Rome—Palazzo Pompetti

    Prince Aurelio Pompetti, an aristocrat

    Lady Mary Sysonby, English intellectual and antiquarian

    Rome—Palazzo Venezia

    Cardinal Stefano Montorio. Venetian Ambassador to the Papal States, Antonio’s brother

    Abate Massimo Lenci, a Montorio nephew

    Rome—others

    Clement XII, the reigning pope

    Cardinal Silvano Di Noce, administrator of Roman charities

    Liya Del’Vecchio/Pellegrina, a Jewess from Venice

    Maddelena, her friend

    Gaetano Tucci, a singer

    Mario Sertori, a magistrate

    Part One

    It is cruel, you know, that music should be so beautiful.

    —Benjamin Britten

    Chapter One

    Zio Tito, asked my four-year-old nephew, what do you think Befana will leave in my stocking?

    Little Matteo clung to my knee with candy-stickened hands and searched my face with grave brown eyes. It was the eve of Epiphany, only five days into the new year of 1740 and the night that the good witch Befana raced her flying goat all over the skies of Italy. In the morning, good children would awaken to find stockings stuffed with candy and trinkets. Naughty children would be rewarded with a single, bleak lump of coal. While I’d never actually known a child consigned to that terrible fate, Epiphany Eve could be an anxious time for a little boy whose curiosity often overcame his mother’s admonitions.

    Befana may not leave you anything. I addressed the boy with mock severity, settling back into a stuffed chair after helping him hang two stockings over the sitting room stove. It depends on how you’ve behaved.

    His huge eyes grew even larger as I pulled him onto my lap. Now, you must tell your uncle the truth. While I’ve been away in Dresden, have you been into any mischief?

    Matteo shook his head quickly and tried to distract me with a question of his own. What were you doing in Dresden, Zio? The name of the unfamiliar Saxon town came out with a decided lisp.

    I was singing at the royal opera house. I played a knight in love with the sister of a wicked sorceress. For weeks and weeks, I sang every night and lots of people came to see me.

    Did they like you?

    Very much. After every aria, the people clapped and shouted for me to sing it again. They paid me so handsomely and gave me so many presents that now I can stay home in Venice and have a nice long rest.

    My nephew shrugged his shoulders with a contented sigh and began to twist the sparkling crystal buttons on my waistcoat. I raised his chin with my forefinger. But tell me, little man, have you been behaving yourself? If you speak the truth, I may put in a good word for you with Befana.

    He darted a look toward my sister Annetta, who was bent over an embroidery frame trying to work by the flickering glow of a table lamp. Have I been good, Mama? he asked. I tried to be.

    Annetta pushed her sewing aside, resisting a smile. The last few years had been kind to my sister. Marriage to my friend Augustus Rumbolt had erased the shadows of old worries from her eyes, and I was glad to see that she had traded her severely coiled braids for a loose chignon. As soon as I had stepped over our threshold, I had also noticed a new plumpness about the front of her apron that hinted I might soon have another niece or nephew to indulge. There couldn’t be too many for me. Since the knife that created my voice and my livelihood had also severed any hope of fathering my own children, my sister’s family was the only one I was ever likely to enjoy.

    Annetta raised an eyebrow at the squirming, sticky bundle in my lap. Have you forgotten that just this morning you hit your sister and took the sugar stick that Papa brought her from the market?

    Matteo sent me a stricken look. His nurse, Lucia, had come downstairs and was bearing down on him to commence the nightly ritual of undressing, washing, and bedside prayers.

    I bent my mouth to his dark curls and whispered, If you let Mama and Lucia put you to bed without a fuss, I think I can persuade Befana to overlook this morning. I’ll make that old witch jump down the chimney and stuff your stocking with more presents than you can carry.

    Annetta carried the grinning boy away, stopping in the hallway to allow him an enthusiastic hug for his Papa, who was just coming in from a long day at his easel.

    Gussie Rumbolt was a second son of English gentry. Drawn to Italy by dreams of painting like the great masters, my friend and brother-in-law seemed to grow more Venetian with each passing year. It wasn’t his unruly yellow hair, blue eyes, or honest, pink-cheeked goodness that had changed. The signs of his transformation were much more subtle. Gussie’s walk had grown liquid and languid, his laughter more ready, and except for a few favorite exclamations, our soft Venetian idiom had gradually replaced his mongrel speech of English tidbits and schoolbook Italian.

    When he caught sight of me, Gussie spread his arms and crossed the faded Persian carpet with long strides. As further proof that Venice was seeping into his soul, he did not pump my arm in his customary fashion but embraced me warmly and graciously endured a kiss on both cheeks.

    Tito, how long have you been here? Annetta should have sent to the studio for me.

    My coach reached Mestre last night, but I couldn’t find passage on a boat crossing the lagoon until this afternoon. After I landed, I had to stop at the Post and call at my tailor’s. By the time I reached our door, it was almost dark. I wouldn’t let Annetta send old Lupo after you. She said you are swamped with work.

    Rather! His blue eyes twinkled. I’ve secured a commission from one of my countrymen. The Duke of Richmond wants ten views of the Grand Canal as a memento of his visit to the sunny South.

    An ambitious project.

    Quite so, especially as the duke is in a hurry. I’ve had to hire several assistants—a boy to stretch the canvases and grind the pigments and another man to lay out the perspective and sketch the architecture. Of course, I’ll do all the painting myself.

    Gussie warmed his hands before the stove’s glowing coals, then moved to the cabinet that held some glasses and a decanter of Cyprus wine. In our case, the difficulties that are apt to arise when an extended family shares a house had been avoided by a fortuitous mixture of mutual affection and happenstance.

    After the death of our father, this modest house on the Campo dei Polli had passed equally to Alessandro, Annetta, and me. Our younger sister, Grisella, had been lost to us long ago. Alessandro was the eldest, a merchant seaman. After years of sailing on ships owned by the great trading houses, he had finally amassed enough capital to purchase his own vessel. Venice might no longer be the complete mistress of Mediterranean trade that she once was, but my enterprising brother had managed to locate an exporter of Turkish tobacco who also provided a ready market for Venetian goods. Thanks to his loyal business partner in Constantinople, Alessandro reaped a tidy profit on glass chandeliers, books bound in gilded leather, exquisitely woven lace, and other luxuries produced on the islands of our lagoon republic.

    I had not been seeing nearly as much of my brother as I would have liked. These days, Alessandro spent more time in Constantinople than Venice. Though he denied it, we half believed that he had set up housekeeping with a dusky Turkish beauty. At any rate, Alessandro occupied his room in the house on the Campo dei Polli only several months of the year, and when he sailed, he left no wife behind to foster strife by challenging Annetta’s domestic arrangements.

    Traveling almost as often as my brother, I was as much of an Italian export as the Murano glass nestled in Alessandro’s straw-filled crates. Europe had gone mad for Italian opera. From Handel’s theater in London, to the chilly courts of Sweden and Russia, right down to the sunnier stages of Madrid, music lovers clamored for the vocal fireworks that only Italian singers could produce. Great sums were offered to engage the best singers, and I was counted among their ranks.

    The best meant castrati—male singers gelded as boys to outwit nature and produce sopranos who could deliver angelic song with the powerful lungs of fully grown men. In addition to the surgery, the process of creating a castrato voice separated us from our families for years of intense musical training. It was a brutal system, but the public seemed to think that the end results outweighed our suffering.

    There had been a time when I shrank from the role of musical eunuch, but I had given up my doubts and my meekness long ago. I was what I was. If that disturbed some people, so be it. Music was as much my delight as my master, and I was proud to be one of its most exclusive servants. However, I had to admit that my latest round of travels had been less than uplifting. Dresden had left me tired to the core of my being.

    How was the journey, Tito? Gussie handed me a glass of wine as we settled ourselves in a pair of chairs by the stove.

    I merely shrugged.

    You must have come over the Brenner, he continued, then down the valley to Bolzano. Not an easy journey over those mountains on winter roads.

    Traveling wasn’t the worst of it. I thought back to the endless hours in the hired coach, swaying and jogging over rutted roads with only the irreverent comments of my manservant, Benito, for amusement. Though once we’d crossed the pass, the postilion trotted the horses downhill so fast, I fear my backside may never recover. Gingerly, I shifted forward and contemplated the garnet liquid in my glass. No, what I’m feeling is more than road weariness.

    What is it then? You look quite done in.

    Dresden doesn’t have public theaters like we do in Venice. There is only one opera house—wholly supported by the Elector, Prince Frederick Augustus. The singers and musicians are obliged to perform at His Majesty’s pleasure, and his royal pain in the ass desires the pleasure of music at all hours. He would keep us at the theater until midnight and beyond, then demand a performance while he took a late supper. Mornings, I had to report to the palace for lessons.

    You had pupils there?

    Yes, two young ladies. The Elector’s daughter and her companion. I shook my head at the memory. It was absolute torture! No matter how I encouraged or demonstrated, I couldn’t convince the girls that moderation was a virtue. They insisted on shrieking their notes as if they were playing to the fifth-tier boxes at the opera house. To make matters worse, the older one decided to fall in love with me. She started by brushing my hand as I turned the pages on her music book. Before I knew it, she was calling me her angel and tucking fervent notes in my pockets. I practically had to perform acrobatics to keep the clavier between us.

    Gussie’s paint-stained waistcoat rumbled with a deep chuckle. Was the journey as profitable as you hoped?

    I nodded. Mainly thanks to the concerts in private homes. Everyone was vying to have the Prince’s latest favorite, and the Saxons are a generous lot. Besides my fees, I collected a whole trunkful of snuffboxes and other costly gifts.

    What’s next for our famous virtuoso?

    Instead of answering, I closed my eyes and let the familiar sounds of home surround me: the sighing of the coal in the plastered stove; a child’s laugh from the floor above; the muffled clatter of dishes as Lupo, our ancient factotum, set the dining table for the evening meal. A lump swelled in my throat. Why was it so hard to say that I simply needed to wrap myself in the warm mantle of home and family?

    I answered Gussie’s question with a weak joke. I suppose I’ll just rest in Venice until I grow fat as a sow and lazy as a Calabrian mule. I stretched my arms above my head. "Thank God I’m not at the everlasting mercy of a patron. Not so many years ago, my entire career would have been spent singing for my supper at some noble court, dancing attendance on a master who wouldn’t know a decent portamento from a pisspot. But now that opera has become a business, theater managers are fighting to engage me. Thank God I’m free to make my own arrangements."

    I sank lower in my chair, smiling at the prospect of long mornings in my dressing gown, sipping chocolate and catching up on the gazettes. In the afternoons, Alessandro and I could loaf on the Piazza, and in the evenings, we’d all see what the Venetian opera houses had to offer. I’d eventually cast around for work that suited me. But only when I was fully ready.

    My brother-in-law poked a pin in one of my lovely dream bubbles. Alessandro isn’t here. His ship sailed this morning, but you can come with me to the studio tomorrow. This new project is really quite interesting. I’m starting with the Rialto Bridge at sunset. The light is tricky, but…

    I let Gussie chatter on. Watching paint dry wasn’t the sort of relaxation I had in mind. My thoughts sprang to the ghetto that lay a few squares away. It was an Israelite enclave, gated, and ringed by walls and wide canals. I’d befriended a family of Hebrews who kept an old clothing shop there. Perhaps tomorrow I’d make a visit to the Del’Vecchio household and inquire after their wandering daughter. I had not seen Liya for almost five years, since the unhappy events surrounding the murder of her lover, Luca Cavalieri.

    I pictured the lovely Jewess as she had been at our last meeting: angry, grieving, poised to flee the stifling confines of tradition and religious prejudice for a freer life in the wild mountains of the mainland. Not for the first time, I puzzled over what might have happened to her and the child she carried.

    A loud banging on our street door jerked me back to the present. I shot a questioning look toward Gussie. He shook his head, forehead wrinkled.

    Lupo hobbled the few steps from dining room to front hall. The front door creaked, and the sitting room lamps flickered in the rush of cold air. The clatter of many boots filled the hall.

    Gussie and I jumped up. Before we’d taken two steps, a uniformed constable burst into the room and ordered us to stand still. Ignoring our surprised protests, a dozen of these rough sbirri fanned out through the ground floor, overturning chairs and scattering papers and bric-a-brac.

    Several made for the stairs. When a feminine scream sounded and was sharply cut off, Gussie and I pushed our way to the hall. On the stair landing, Annetta and Lucia each held a frightened, whimpering child. One constable had my manservant Benito by the collar and was threatening the little man with a thick truncheon. Old Lupo had collapsed in a heap by the front door.

    Annetta, Gussie bellowed, charging the stairs. A bull-necked constable blocked his path. The man flashed his dagger, and my brother-in-law halted with the blade inches from his nose.

    I ran to kneel beside old Lupo. His face was pale and a trickle of blood ran down his forehead, but he nodded to show that he still had his wits about him.

    What’s the meaning of this? I cried to the assembled sbirri. You have no right to barge in and terrorize decent citizens.

    They have every right, someone snapped from the front door.

    Gussie and I turned to see Messer Grande, the chief of Venice’s constabulary. His red robe of office lent his weasel face an eminence it otherwise lacked. I had sparred with the man over the investigation of Luca Cavalieri’s murder. I would always remember his haughty incompetence, and I was certain that he had not forgotten what he had described as my amateurish meddling and lack of respect for my betters.

    An unpleasant smile danced across Messer Grande’s lips as he entered and began to unfold an official-looking document. My men are doing what they’re paid to do, he said. Securing the household of a wanted man. I have a warrant here—for the arrest of one Tito Amato, virtuoso.

    What? I cried.

    Lupo weakly pressed my shoulder, urging me to stand. I propped the old servant’s back against the wall and went to face Messer Grande.

    I advise you to come quietly, Signor Amato. His gaze was stony. There is no reason why anyone else should be hurt.

    I was dumbfounded. I had committed no crime. When I’d set out for Dresden, I’d just finished a successful run in an opera by Maestro Vivaldi. I’d been the toast of Venice, everyone’s darling. Who could I have crossed in the few short hours since my return?

    Gussie approached and extended his hand. Let me see this warrant. Who authorized it?

    Messer Grande ignored Gussie and handed the paper to me, holding it by his fingertips as if he couldn’t bear to brush hands with a eunuch. As Gussie hung over my shoulder, I skimmed through the flowery legal language to the signature at the bottom of the page.

    My heart sank.

    Montorio, I whispered.

    Gussie was suitably impressed. Senator Montorio? The State Inquisitor?

    I nodded. Doge Alvise Pisani and the senate elected by the heads of noble families were the titular rulers of the Venetian Republic. But everybody knew that the real power was concentrated in a secretive body of powerful senators called the Council of Ten. No unacceptable act or opinion escaped the notice of the inexorable Ten. With their well-paid network of spies and informers, they kept an ear to every café, church pew, and, it was rumored, bedroom. The Ten were a law unto themselves, and the instrument of their absolute authority was the Tribunal of State Inquisitors. In chamber, two inquisitors dressed in black robes and one in red. Senator Montorio wore the red.

    Gussie stared in wordless bewilderment. Messer Grande waited by the door, smacking a limp pair of leather gloves against his palm.

    What am I accused of? I asked. Why was the warrant issued?

    I’m not here to answer questions. Messer Grande shrugged disdainfully, but his voice softened a trace. I will, however, conduct you to someone who can.

    Despite the hackles rising on the back of my neck, I forced myself to lower the pitch of my natural speaking voice and calmly announce, Don’t worry, Gussie. Someone has simply made an unfortunate mistake. I expect to sort things out and be home by tomorrow morning.

    Messer Grande didn’t even try to conceal his smirk.

    Chapter Two

    A pair of sbirri seized me under the arms and dragged me, half-walking, half-stumbling, into the night. Messer Grande murmured orders to their sergeant, who relayed his commands in a parade ground bellow. Dense clouds had swept in from the sea, obscuring the stars and turning the sky into an endless mantle of black velvet. The shadowy mass of houses that crowded around the Campo dei Polli provided the only light. Even their friendly dots of yellow lamplight winked out as my neighbors heard the commotion and came to their windows to watch my ignoble progress across the square and down the calle toward the canal.

    Three gondolas bobbed at the landing. Their lanterns threw streaks of silver lightning across the black water. My captors dumped me into the middle boat, and Messer Grande ordered two more men to join us. The other boats, manned by archers, escorted us fore and aft.

    I shivered from more than the sharp breeze whistling down the canal. Why send so many men to secure the person of one less than robust singer? It was not as if I were a prizefighter or some nobleman’s bravo. My strength lay in my throat, not my limbs. The authorities had spared no resources in staging this grand show, but its purpose had me completely baffled.

    The trio of gondolas slowly navigated the narrow channels of my domestic quarter, then picked up speed once we reached the wider waters of the Grand Canal. The nine o’clock bells had only just rung, so there was still plenty of blaze and bustle on Venice’s main throughway. With our boatmen straining at the oars, we flitted around hulking barges bound for the Rialto markets as if they were standing still. Their shadowy crewmen pointed and whispered among themselves. I could imagine the curious questions: Who is this criminal under such stalwart guard? A traitor to the Republic? A murderer?

    I wasn’t surprised when our little fleet turned left at the mouth of the Grand Canal and passed alongside the gothic arcades of the doge’s palace. The Quay of Prisons was close at hand, and it was at those dismal stones that I was forced to disembark. At this bastion of government power, Messer Grande retained only four men to persuade me against struggle or flight. He conducted me to a small room. Not a cell, but a bleak chamber furnished with a wooden table and one straight chair. When I saw he intended to shut me in without a word, I confess I abandoned my last shred of dignity and begged to be told why I was being held.

    You have a reputation for cleverness, he answered, digging under his red robe for a tinderbox to light the squat tallow candle on the table. Let’s see if you can come up with a guess. I’ll give you a few minutes to think about it.

    The door thudded shut, and the rasp of the key in the lock sounded a note of cold finality. Surrounded by silence, I had ample time to review the last few months: every house I’d visited, every acquaintance I’d dined with, every triumph, every tiff. Then, one leg gone numb from perching on the hard chair, I paced the flagstone floor until I could simply think no longer.

    I must have fallen asleep eventually. When the squeak of door hinges jerked my head from my folded arms, the candle wax had snaked onto the table and the flame was burning low. Two sbirri entered, truncheons bared. Messer Grande followed. He made a short circuit of the room, peering into the bare, dark corners as if he expected assassins to materialize out of the grimy plaster at any moment. When he was satisfied that my little prison was secure, he opened the door and bowed low.

    Senator Antonio Montorio—it could be no other—sauntered toward me on elegant court shoes with high red heels and diamond-studded buckles. Above his coat of silver brocade, his beautifully dressed wig covered his head at a clumsy angle. Heavy bags pulled his bloodshot eyes low, and his neckcloth was in disarray. While I had been agonizing, the senator had been indulging himself at some casino or pleasure hall.

    He stopped just a few inches from my chair and towered over me with hands on hips. He spoke without introduction or preamble. What do you know about the situation in Rome?

    Rome? I know nothing of the opera houses of Rome. I’ve never had occasion to sing there.

    Santa Maria! It’s not music that concerns me, man. It’s the pope. Surely you’ve heard he is ill.

    I nodded. Everyone knew that Pope Clement had gone blind early in his reign and suffered from a host of ills. At every Mass, the priests offered endless prayers for his recovery. Yes, of course, I answered. But what does that have to do with me? Why have I been arrested?

    Senator Montorio placed his balled fists on the table and leaned on his knuckles. The pope is dying. The old man’s been going by inches for months. In Rome, they say the cardinals will be electing a new pope by Easter.

    I nodded, still mystified.

    It’s high time for another Venetian pope, he continued. Pietro Ottoboni was the last we sent to Rome. That was over fifty years ago, and the man took pneumonia and died before he could send any significant subsidies our way. We’re not going to miss our next chance with the Sacred Conclave, and this time, it won’t be an old man with one foot in the grave.

    I cocked my head. It sounds like you already have a candidate in mind.

    He took a deep breath. My brother Stefano desires the papal tiara and I will see that he gets it.

    Montorio’s resolution didn’t surprise me. Like all the nobility of my mercantile city, the Montorio fortune was built on trade. In their case, spices. Europe’s taste for Malabar pepper and other Indian seasonings had made the Montorio family a power to reckon with. At one time or another, members of their numerous clan had filled every post in the Venetian Republic from the doge on down. Senator Montorio’s younger brother Stefano was already a cardinal who served as Venice’s ambassador to the Papal States. Again and again, the industrious Montorios had distinguished themselves from the usual run of charming wastrels who made up the current bulk of Venetian nobility. A Montorio on St. Peter’s throne? Why not? Lesser men had certainly been elevated to the role.

    But why had the senator ordered my arrest? I swallowed hard and asked that very question.

    Montorio straightened and eyed me narrowly. Then he ordered Messer Grande to find two glasses of wine as if the chief of police were his personal footman. If only the circumstances had been different, how I would have relished that moment.

    The wine was fetched, as well as several lanterns with brightly burning wicks to hang from wall hooks. Smiling amiably, Montorio sat one hip on the edge of the table and set his free leg swinging back and forth. I recognized the parts we were to play. Just two men having a friendly chat over our glasses. I touched my lips to mine but found I couldn’t drink. I waited for his next words with gritted teeth.

    Allow me to elaborate, he began. The next papal election is by no means a foregone conclusion. When the pope’s infirmities confined him to bed, he appointed Lorenzo Fabiani as the Cardinal Padrone to act in his stead. That makes Fabiani one of the most powerful men in Rome, if not all of Italy. Though he’s collected a few enemies along the way, Fabiani has enough cardinals in his pocket to control who will be the next pontiff.

    Will he back Cardinal Montorio?

    We thought so. Certain promises were made, certain favors given. Montorio regarded me thoughtfully, rolling the stem of his glass between his fingers. Don’t be shocked. That is the way papal elections have been decided for centuries.

    I wasn’t shocked. Only an infant could fail to understand that the Church was as much about politics as salvation. No, what Montorio saw in my expression was the dawning realization that my long rest in Venice was threatened by forces far beyond my control.

    He went on. The election was looking good for Stefano. We’d secured the loyalty of the Spanish cardinals and were prepared to reward Fabiani most handsomely for all the other votes he could swing our way. We were assured of the Cardinal Padrone’s loyalty. But… Montorio dropped his companionable manner and stared into space with a clenched jaw.

    But? I prompted.

    Besides Stefano, there is another that is often mentioned as a contender for St. Peter’s throne. A Cardinal Di Noce. Montorio seasoned the name with a liberal helping of venom. "He’s an upstart from some insignificant village in the

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