Chapter 12

DECEMBER 1451 TO JANUARY 1452: GENOA

L ongo stood at the pier as the ship that bore Sofia glided to a stop before him. He did not know why she had returned to Genoa, nor did he care. She was here now, beautiful in a simple white cotton robe as she stepped off the ship. He hurried to greet her, and to his surprise, she threw her arms around him.

'I am so glad you have returned,' he told her. 'But why are you here? Are you not needed in Constantinople?'

'I came for you,' Sofia told him.

'You are too late,' Longo said, pulling away. 'I am married.'

'No, it is never too late.' Sofia kissed him and her mouth opened to his. 'Come with me.' She led him to his palazzo and then to his chambers, stopping before his bed and turning to face him. 'I've been thinking of you, of our kiss,' she told him.

'As have I. It is foolish, I know.'

'No, it is not.' She untied her robes and they slipped to the floor, leaving her naked. Longo's eyes moved down from the curve of her delicate collarbone, to her small but firm breasts, to the nest of auburn hair that began below her flat stomach.

He shook his head. 'But I am married. We cannot.'

'We can,' Sofia said. She stepped towards him, and Longo pulled her into his arms, kissing her hard. But something was wrong. A thin layer of smoke had filled the room. Through the window beyond Sofia, he could see that the city was aflame, overrun by the Turks. The room was filling with smoke and fire, and suddenly the scar-faced Turk who had killed his parents was there. He pointed at Sofia and ordered his men to gut her. Longo drew her to him, ready to defend her with his life, but Sofia dissolved into flames, her mouth open in a silent scream as she vanished from his arms. The flames spread over him and the air filled with choking smoke… Longo awoke to the sweet, acrid scent of burning grapevines. He rubbed his face and looked about him. He was in his villa, and the woman lying next to him was not Sofia but Julia, his wife of nearly two years. He had been dreaming, another nightmare. Longo rose and went to the window that looked out over his vineyards. The sun had risen, and his men were already busy, pruning the leafless vines. The cuttings were being burned in small piles. Behind him, Julia stirred in bed.

'Come back to bed,' she pleaded. 'I'm cold.'

'There is work to be done,' he replied.

'Let Tristo and William deal with it. That is what servants are for,' Julia whined. 'Don't leave.' She sat up in bed, her swollen, pregnant belly extending before her. 'Come. Feel this,' she said, placing her hand on her stomach. 'He's kicking.'

Longo sat on the edge of the bed and placed his hand gently on his wife's stomach. His eyes widened as he felt a slight movement. He took Julia's hand. 'I must go,' he told her. 'Your brother Paolo has invited me to a reading this evening, and I have much to do first. After the pruning, I have a new horse to break.' In truth, Longo was happy for an excuse to be away from his young wife. She was spoiled, moody and demanding, and had become more so since the start of her pregnancy.

'A reading?' Julia asked, brightening. 'I want to come.'

'You know you cannot travel,' Longo said. Julia pouted. 'And anyway, you could not come. The piece is by a young Neapolitan named Guardarti, and apparently it is not appropriate for ladies.' Longo was not particularly interested either. However, Paolo had remained aloof, even hostile, since Longo's marriage to Julia, and Longo was eager to repair their relationship.

'But I want to come,' Julia insisted, frowning in a manner that portended a tantrum. 'I am so bored here in the country.'

'You will give birth soon enough. You can visit your family in town then.' Julia's frown deepened. She turned her back to him and pulled the covers over herself without speaking. Longo breathed a guilty sigh of relief. He knew that some servant would bear the brunt of her frustration later that day. 'I will return late tonight,' he told her and left. Longo was in a foul mood when he reached the Grimaldi palazzo that evening. Just before he had left his estate, a fire had begun in his vineyards, spreading from one of the piles of cuttings to the rows of vines. Longo had left William and Tristo to handle it while he rode into Genoa accompanied by six of his men. He would have liked to stay and deal with the fire himself, but he did not wish to spurn Paolo's invitation.

He was soon glad that he had come. Paolo greeted him warmly, embracing him and calling him brother, and throughout the evening he treated Longo with unusual courtesy. Longo also found the proceedings more interesting than he had anticipated. A Spanish noble, one Carlos de Sevilla, was present. He was an elegant man, short and spare with close-cropped black hair and darkly tanned skin, and after the reading he discussed the recent Portuguese discoveries in Africa and the possibility of reaching the Indies by sailing west. As the guests began to depart, Paolo took Longo aside to speak with him.

'I wish to be frank,' he told Longo. 'I regret if I have been less than welcoming since you joined my family. There are those in my father's household who blame you for my brother's death. I fear that I listened too closely to their complaints, and I wish to apologize. There should be no grudge between us.'

'I am glad to hear you speak so,' Longo said. 'And there is no need to apologize. Your goodwill is all I ask.'

'Excellent,' Paolo said, smiling broadly. 'Now come. It is nearly midnight, high time that you return to my sister.'

Longo entered the Grimaldi stables to find his men hopelessly drunk. Judging by the number of empty wine bottles lying about, it looked as if Paolo's men had treated them to free wine, and they had drunk more than their fill. Two were slumped unconscious over a table, a forgotten game of cards between them. Three more lay on the floor, snoring loudly. Only one was awake, lying in a pool of his own vomit. He tried to rise, swayed unsteadily and then collapsed. Longo vowed to have words with his men, when they were sober enough to understand him. Paolo offered to let Longo's men sleep off their debauchery at the Grimaldi palazzo, and Longo accepted. He would ride to his palazzo, he decided, instead of his country estate.

Longo kept one hand on his sword as he rode through the narrow, dark streets of Genoa. It was not uncommon to come across thieves or bands of cutthroats late at night. He passed through a shadowy square dominated by a large oak, its leaves silvery in the moonlight, and entered a particularly narrow alleyway that wound its way towards his palazzo. Halfway down the alley his path was blocked by a hunched beggar, noisily rattling his tin cup. 'Help a man to eat?' the beggar asked.

Longo had slowed his horse and reached for his purse when he noticed a glint of steel from under the beggar's cloak. He was carrying a sword. Longo drew his sword and backed his horse away from the beggar, but it was too late to retreat. Six men, swords in hand and wearing black masks, had stepped into the alley behind him. Ahead, the beggar had been joined by four more masked men.

'Help! Assassins!' Longo shouted, although he knew better than to hope that anyone would intervene. He would have to save himself. He spurred forward, running over one attacker with his horse and striking down another with his sword. But the alley was too narrow to avoid the other men. Longo's horse reared suddenly as one of them slashed it across the chest. Longo fell backwards, tumbling out of the saddle. He rose immediately and found himself attacked by three men. He cut one of them down, ducked a swiping blow from the second and rammed his shoulder into the third, knocking him aside. He sprinted past them, but as he did so, one of the men slashed him across the thigh. Longo gritted his teeth and ran on, limping slightly. Behind him, he could hear the footsteps of his attackers gaining on him.

Longo left the alley and crossed another square. He hurried up a short flight of steps, and a dagger flashed by his head just before he took a sharp right into a shadowy side passage. He turned and waited. The first of the masked men came charging around the corner and ran straight on to Longo's sword. The others pulled up short as Longo retreated into the alleyway. The walls were close enough here that his attackers would only be able to come at him two at a time, and none of the remaining seven men seemed eager to test his blade.

'He is only one man!' one of the masked men shouted at the others in accented Italian. 'Kill him or you will answer to me.' Three of the men inched reluctantly into the alleyway. The rest departed, no doubt circling around the block to attack Longo from behind.

The three men approached, not attacking but staying close enough that if Longo turned to run, they could strike. Longo gave ground, exaggerating his limp. When one of the men came too close, he sprang forward. The man hardly had time to raise his sword before he was skewered through the chest. The other two backed away, swords at the ready. Then, Longo heard the sound of footsteps approaching him from behind. He glanced over his shoulder to see that the other men had entered the alley. He was trapped.

He lunged forward, driving his attackers back a step, and then turned and ran. He spotted a door halfway down the alley and headed for it, but one of the masked men coming from the other direction reached it first. Longo parried the man's thrust and punched him hard in the face. He then grabbed the dazed man, spun and hurled him face first into the door, which banged open. The man landed unconscious on the floor, and Longo followed him into a dark room crowded with vats of tallow. He slammed the door shut behind him. The bolt that locked the door had been broken, so Longo held it with his shoulder.

A second later, someone rammed the door from the other side. Longo staggered back but managed to hold it closed. Again someone rammed the door, and this time Longo stepped away and allowed it to swing open. A surprised attacker stumbled into the room. Longo cut him down and then slammed the door closed again. He could hear the remaining four men outside, discussing what to do next. Longo waited a second, then pulled the door open and rushed out.

He dropped two of the men immediately, stabbing one in the gut and then spinning and slashing the other across the face. A third man lunged for his chest, and Longo just managed to twist out of the way. He hacked down at his attacker's arm, and the man dropped his sword and fell to his knees, holding his bloody arm and crying out in pain before fainting.

Longo turned to face the last man, who had backed well away. 'We shall meet again, signor,' the man said.

'Who are you?' Longo demanded. 'Who sent you?'

The man turned and ran. Longo slumped against the wall of the alleyway, his thigh burning with pain now that the fury of battle had left him. Beside him, the man clutched his bleeding arm and began to moan. Longo rolled him on to his back and knelt down, one knee on the man's chest. He pulled the man's mask aside and slapped him. The man's eyes fluttered open. Longo drew his dagger and held it close to the man's face.

'Who sent you?' he growled. The man did not respond. His eyes closed as he began to lose consciousness. 'Tell me!' Longo insisted, pressing the knife against the man's nose.

'Paolo,' the man croaked, and then he lost consciousness. Longo stumbled into the courtyard of the Grimaldi palazzo with the unconscious man slung over his shoulder. 'Paolo!' he roared as he dumped the man unceremoniously on the ground. 'Where are you? Paolo!'

Paolo, his face pale and eyes wide, came down the steps of the palazzo. 'What has happened?' he asked. 'Who is that?'

'You tell me,' Longo snarled. He grabbed Paolo by the collar of his shirt and slammed him against the wall. 'He and ten other men attacked me shortly after I left you tonight.'

'H-how did you escape?' Paolo managed.

Longo ignored the question. 'You are my kinsman, else you would be dead now,' he hissed. 'I know you sent them.'

'You sent that English brat to kill my brother,' Paolo spat back. 'You are a murderer.'

Before he could even think, Longo had his knife at Paolo's throat.

'Longo! What is this?' the elder Grimaldi called out as he descended the palazzo steps. He gestured to Longo's blood-stained clothes. 'What has happened?'

Longo released Paolo and turned to Grimaldi. 'Your son hired men to kill me.'

'Paolo, is this true?' Grimaldi demanded. Paolo looked away. 'I'm sorry, signor,' Grimaldi sighed, turning back to Longo. 'I knew that Paolo was upset over his brother's death, but I never thought he would go so far.'

'Something must be done,' Longo said. 'I will duel him, tomorrow.'

'I cannot allow it,' Grimaldi replied. 'Paolo is my only son. If you strike him, then you strike me. I do not wish to be your enemy, signor.'

'Nor I yours,' Longo said. He turned to Paolo and spat at his feet. 'Count yourself lucky,' he said, then turned and strode away.

'This is not over,' Paolo called out after him. 'Carlos is not done with you. That English bastard of yours is as good as dead!'

'William,' Longo whispered and broke into a run. 'William!' Portia giggled. 'Your beard, it tickles!'

He stopped kissing her ear. 'But you think me very handsome with it?' he asked with a grin. Now eighteen, William was inordinately proud of his short, reddish-brown beard.

'I find you… acceptable,' she teased.

'Acceptable?' William asked, kissing her neck. His hand moved slowly up her leg.

'William!' Portia gasped, pushing his hand away from her inner thigh. He moved his hand to her back and pulled her down into the straw of the hayloft, kissing her passionately. She opened her mouth and pressed herself against him. His hand slid down her side to her hip, and then between her legs. 'Stop!' she exclaimed and pulled away. She was breathtaking, her long black hair tousled, her dress half undone and her dark eyes lit by the low flame of the lamp William had brought. 'You do not love me,' she pouted.

'Why do you say such things?' William asked.

'You know why,' she said. She turned her back to him and pulled her knees up to her chest. 'You are the same as all the others. You only want one thing.'

'You know that is not true,' William said, placing his hand on her shoulder. She shrugged it off.

William had met Portia two years ago, a few weeks before the Genoese ambassadors came. She was fifteen then, the daughter of a leather worker in a nearby village. Word of her beauty had spread throughout the region, and more than one prosperous merchant had already approached her father with talk of marriage. The boys of the village followed her in an adoring crowd, but Portia would have nothing to do with them. Later, she had confessed to William that the boys had terrified her. Her wet-nurse — a bitter widow who had lost her husband and child to the plague before taking in Portia — had told her horror stories about what men would do if they ever got their hands on a woman, and Portia had believed her.

William had wooed her for weeks before Portia had even spoken to him. Even then, communication was slow at first, constrained by Portia's shyness and William's halting, broken Italian. Eventually, Portia had grown appreciative of his constant attention. With William around, she no longer had to worry about the groups of boys who whistled and leered at her when she went about town, at least not after he single-handedly chased off a gang of would-be lovers, slapping their backsides with his sword and threatening in English to cut out their tongues and stuff them up their arses. Portia had begun to look on William as a friend, and then as something more.

Portia's father did not approve of William. He did not want his daughter married to a soldier. So they met in secret, spending long afternoons walking the countryside and magical nights here in this barn behind a farmhouse just off the main road. It was the only place in the countryside they could find that was safe, private and reasonably warm, even if it did smell of chickens and cow manure.

'What do you want me to say?' William asked her.

'You know what I want.'

William swallowed hard. 'Will you marry me?'

Portia turned, a smile lighting up her face, and threw herself upon William. 'Yes,' she whispered between kisses. 'Yes, yes.'

The stable door creaked open and they both froze. 'My father!' Portia whispered. 'He'll kill us!' She rolled off William and began to lace up her dress.

William crawled to the edge of the hayloft and peeked down. It was not Portia's father. A man dressed in black stood in the shadowy light, a sword hanging from his waist. He was small with dark features. He looked up, and his eyes met William's. William caught a flash of steel and a second later a dagger embedded itself in the wood of the loft just in front of William's face. He scrambled back.

'Stay here!' he told Portia. He grabbed his sword and swung over the edge of the loft, dropping to the stable floor below. He rolled as he landed and sprang to his feet just in time to parry a sword thrust aimed at his heart. His attacker lunged again, his movements quick and graceful, and William skipped away backwards, stepping behind one of the wooden posts that held up the loft. 'Who are you?' he asked.

'I am Carlos, and I am the last man you will ever meet,' the man said in Italian with a heavy Spanish accent.

The man lunged past the post, forcing William back. He pressed the attack, and William gave ground as he struggled to parry the Spaniard's lightning moves. William had received endless hours of sword lessons from Longo, but he was no match for this man. Carlos swung high, and as William ducked, Carlos's knees came up to catch him in the chin. William stumbled backwards and his back slammed into the wall of the barn. He parried a blow from Carlos, and their swords locked, bringing them close together. Carlos head-butted William, stunning him, and then slashed across his sword arm. William dropped his sword. There was nowhere for him to retreat.

Carlos lunged, and his sword dug into the wall as William twisted out of the way. Then the Spaniard stumbled back cursing as something made of glass shattered against his head with a flash of light. William swung out, catching his adversary in the chin and dropping him. He looked up and could make out Portia standing in the loft. She had thrown the lamp at Carlos, but the burning oil had sprayed across the floor, and the trampled straw had caught flame. Chickens in their coops began to squawk and the cows snorted and rolled their eyes. The fire was spreading quickly, filling the barn with smoke. Flames began to run up the wall of the barn towards the loft.

'Jump!' William called to Portia. She leapt from the loft, and he caught her, falling as he did so. They scrambled to their feet and ran out leaving the prone form of Carlos behind.

William put his arm around Portia and pulled her close to him as they stood in the cold night, watching as the flames engulfed the building. Behind him, William heard the thunder of hooves and turned. It was Longo and Tristo. They reined in, and Longo leapt from the saddle. 'Are you all right?' he asked. 'Both of you?'

William nodded. 'There was a man, Carlos. He tried to kill me,' William said. He pointed to the barn. 'He's in there.' Just then, the roof of the burning structure gave way and collapsed, sending a shower of sparks into the sky. 'Do you know why?'

'Paolo,' Longo explained. 'I fear we have not seen the end of this.' A long wail of pain reached Longo where he stood at the low wall that surrounded his villa, waiting for the birth of his child. Julia's birth pains had started the previous night, shortly after Longo had returned with Tristo and William. After hours of waiting, Longo had finally fled his quarters to the wall, where the cold rain was preferable to Julia's terrible screaming.

The news of Paolo's betrayal had upset her, and she had entered labour early. Longo was worried for her, but even more for the child she carried. Ever since his childhood, he had been tormented by dreams of the scar-faced Turk who had murdered his family, but now when he dreamt, he often dreamt of a son. He knew that his child might well be a girl, but in his dreams the child was always a boy. Longo would teach him to read or to ride, or they would fish or walk the vineyards together. The boy would have a good life, the life that Longo had not had.

A particularly loud, anguished cry from Julia drew Longo from his thoughts. And then there was silence, broken almost immediately by the loud bawling of an infant. A moment later, Tristo's wife Maria and the midwife emerged from the villa. The midwife was covered in blood; she cradled a wailing infant in her arms. There were tears in her eyes.

'What has happened? Is it a boy?' Longo asked.

The midwife nodded, and showed Longo the bundle she held. It was a boy, with fine blond hair and Longo's blue eyes. The child cried in the cold, and Longo took him and held him close.

'Julia asked that he be called Carlo, after her brother,' Maria said.

Longo nodded. 'How is Julia?'

The midwife turned away, choking back tears. Maria placed her hand on Longo's shoulder. 'I am sorry. She died giving birth.'

Longo held his child closer as he turned away and looked out over the rows of pruned vines. He had not loved Julia, but he had grown fond of her, and he felt for his newborn child, who would never know his mother. Carlo was only a babe, and already his life was marked by loss.

'We are in mourning,' Longo said. 'Cover all the mirrors and close up the shutters of the house. I will ride to town to inform her father.' Longo rode into the Grimaldi palazzo and was shown immediately to Grimaldi's private quarters. Grimaldi sat at a small table, drinking coffee. He rose when Longo entered. 'If you have come about Paolo,' Grimaldi began, 'then I must again apologize for my son.'

'It is not that,' Longo told him. 'Julia has given birth.'

Grimaldi's face lit up. 'A son?'

Longo nodded. 'That is not all. She died in childbirth.'

Grimaldi sank back into his chair. 'I see,' he said, his head down. 'I am sorry, Longo. She was a lovely child.'

'She was,' Longo agreed. He sat across from Grimaldi. 'I have a request to ask of you.'

'What is it?' Grimaldi asked, looking up.

'I want you to take my son. His name is Carlo.' Grimaldi's eyes went wide. 'I have no reason to remain in Genoa,' Longo explained. 'Julia is dead, and I fear there will be more bloodshed between our families if I stay. I am leaving for my lands on Chios. The East is no place for a child. Our merchants returning from Constantinople say that the sultan is preparing for war, building castles and forging cannons. He will strike soon, if not this year then the next. Carlo will be better off here.'

'You are sure of this?' Grimaldi asked. 'You are his father.'

Longo looked away, fighting to keep tears from his eyes. 'Yes,' he said. 'And I will do what is best for my child. The boy has already lost his mother. He should not have to watch his father die as well.'

Grimaldi nodded. 'I will raise him as my own son, signor.'

'Thank you,' Longo said. 'I will return for him once the war is over. If I die…'

'I will see to it that he inherits your lands,' Grimaldi promised. Longo nodded his thanks. 'When do you leave?' Grimaldi asked.

'After the funeral,' Longo said. 'As soon as my household is in order.' Longo scanned the horizon as he paced the deck of la Fortuna, which swayed gently beside the pier, riding low with the ebbing morning tide. All was ready for departure. The ships were loaded, and Longo's men were all aboard with him or on a sister ship, la Speranza. A few wives had joined them, including, to Tristo's chagrin, his wife Maria. Nicolo was on la Fortuna, complaining already of seasickness. The one person who was not yet on board was William. The night before he had gone to bid farewell to Portia. Longo half hoped that he would stay with her. William had grown into a capable young man, and Longo had come to rely on him. But if William stayed in Italy, he could have a better life than that of a soldier. He would be wise to choose love over revenge.

The sun was only minutes from cresting the distant hills. Soon the tide would set against them, trapping them in the harbour. It was time to depart, William or no. Tristo had been standing at the crosstrees, watching the horizon for William, and now he slid down a backstay and on to the deck. 'We can wait a bit longer, I think,' Tristo said.

'No.' Longo turned from the shore to face the sea. 'We should be underway before we miss our tide. Give the orders to cast off and make sail.'

The orders were given, and la Fortuna drifted away from the dock and slowly gathered way. They were gliding towards the centre of the harbor, followed by la Speranza, when the lookout caught sight of a horse charging into the dockyard. He hailed the deck, and Longo turned to look. Two people dismounted, and an argument ensued with a group of sailors on the dock. Finally, a boat shoved off with the two riders in it, rowed by four sailors. Longo ordered the sails slackened, and the boat quickly gained on them. William was one of the passengers sitting in the stern. The other was cloaked against the spray, and Longo could not make him out.

Within minutes the boat pulled alongside la Fortuna. William clambered aboard first. 'Sorry I'm late,' he said.

Tristo laughed and engulfed him in a hug. 'Nonsense. We're just glad you made it.'

'We are indeed,' Longo said, taking William's hand.

'I still have a score to settle with the Turks,' William said. 'When the war comes, I will be there.' He withdrew his hand and turned to help the other passenger into the boat. 'And now, the reason for my tardy arrival. May I present my fiancee, Portia Fiori.' Portia stepped on to the deck and pushed back the hood of her cloak, freeing her hair to stream in the gusting wind. A few low whistles of appreciation were heard from the hands on deck. Portia blushed.

Longo bowed. 'My Lady,' he said, 'you are most welcome aboard my ship.' Portia blushed an even deeper shade of crimson and curtsied. 'William, show her to her quarters. She can sleep with Maria and the other women. Tristo, give the order to make all sail. Let's take advantage of what little tide remains while we can.'

The ship moved ahead once more, and Longo walked aft to stand at the rail. The sun finally crept over the mountains, transforming the sea into molten gold. The wind teased his hair, and Longo breathed deeply of the tangy ocean air. For the first time since Julia's death, he permitted himself to smile. Love and revenge. There was, Longo supposed, room in the world for both after all. Part II

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