Gold, Galileo and Guadalcanal: A Tale of Blood, Sins and Dreams

Chapter 20
  • Ashley sat perched on the edge of the roof of a shabby one horse carriage on a great hill south of the black river Arno. She was well past the town walls of Florence, though she could see them from her vantage, and being this far from a civilized world kept a pistol by her left hand. But what a single pistol, rendered useless the moment it fired its ball, could do against the roving bands of rogues now plaguing the country was not a thought she much wanted to think through. Nor did she wish to think on what the rogues would have probably done to her, a foreign woman not known to them, after they would have relieved her of all valuables. That her driver would be quite useless in a fight she knew. He was hired because his ankles looked good in a hose and he kept his tongue behind his teeth about her bed chamber habits. Faced with desperate fellows armed with knives, he was liable to throw her into their arms to distract and take off running. Another thought to chase off.

    Ashley thereby filled the time admiring the city she now had called home for three years onwards. Florence. A glowing jewel, from a distant hill. From this high up, Ponte Vechio was a bustling market circumscribed by a bridge, with people coming and going and spending money. One had the luxury, from a hill, to not smell the desperation and hunger of the sellers, whose rented stalls now began to cost more than they are truly worth, for few people in town had coin enough to spend on the luxury wares on the bridge. And likewise, this high up, from distance, one did not see the thick layers of grime rendering the famous Florentine landmarks unrecognizable due to filth.

    And the Jewish quarter looked majestic from the hill as well, for one did not have to take in the smells and sights of the ghetto now crammed with refugees, seeking to avoid the ravages of the war and the horrid displaced anger of their neighbors. The rich Tuscan tongue had given birth to a new strange and savage portmanteau to describe what had happened to the Jews: massesacch, from massacri e saccheggi, massacres and lootings.

    But all those scarred and scared people from Ashley's rooftop perch could not be seen, and neither could one taste the hunger and fear of anyone from the town, Jewish or Catholic, for this high up. No, all looked orderly and serene from the beautiful hill.


    "How did you manage to climb up there, my good lady?"

    "With the same pluck I have shown in my finding of art, honorable ambassador."

    Marco Augustus Franciotti, formerly one of many, many governors of Lucca, was recently appointed ambassador to Medicean Tuscany in Florence, replacing his cousin, who shared his name. The said cousin had been recently recalled and made a governor of Lucca, just to confuse things. And it was the same such cousin who suggested in strongest terms possible in a communication committed to writing (and thus vulnerable to hostile interception) that Marco meet with Ashley as soon as he could. And so it was that after he had presented himself to the Grand Duke at his magnificent palace south of Arno, did good Marco ride eastwards to this hill to present himself to the enchanting picture monger.

    "So I have heard, my good lady. May I be so forward as to compliment you on your Lucchese dialect?"

    "Thankee. And yes, you may, so long as I can point out the fine shape of your ankle in that hose."

    "You are too good to notice."

    There followed fifteen minutes of flirting so pedantic and common as to make you fall asleep, if you were not the two people talking that is, in which case a generously portioned woman with an ample bosom in a dress perhaps one size too small and a twinkle in eye conversing with a fellow not entirely unattractive and still retaining the juice of his youth in his later years might entice you. Or it may not. Ashley feigned interest. But Marco was drawn less far unscrupulously. He read one report too many filled with gossip about Ashley's bed habits and the possibility he might partake in what kept him up long past the hours he would devote to sleep, reading the accounts in as much detail as letters allowed... Marco was much intrigued. But soon flirting turned to something more serious. That is not to say we do not consider flirting not a serious matter worthy of commentary and copy, perish the thought, it is just the flirting now on display was quite subpar for our refined tastes, and yours.

    "Tell me, my good ambassador..."

    "Marco, please dearest lady."

    "Then you must call me Ashley."

    "Delighted to serve."

    "Thankee. Marco, one hears the most curious rumors of Lucca. That by abstaining from the mire of wars now engulfing the Italies, it has retained at present most of its coin and its denizens spend it as freely as Florentines did before these conflicts descended upon us."

    "You have heard true. We are a port town, and not being subject to war, our trade still flows well."

    "So your good cousin claimed, but I wished to hear it from someone living there more recent."

    "My good cousin spoke truth."

    "Certes. And thankee."

    "'Tis all?"

    "It is a good start, for our future talks."

    And with that Ashley hopped off the roof to the driver's seat, and in so doing, her dress flew more than slightly up revealing thick creamy thighs and enticing the now hopelessly ensnared Marco. Ashley then hopped off the driver's seat to the ground and spread her arms, for all the world as if an acrobat waiting coin and applause. Coin Marco did not bring to him to the meeting, but applause he did give. And for his efforts was given a wink and a bedroom smile. Then the enchanting creature disappeared into her carriage proper, gave a more lady like goodbye and was whisked off, leaving Marco covered in dust.

    ***


    "Saint Helena?"

    "Aye. A haven for pirates and other rascals, o fair maiden. We will steer well clear of her, lest the winds say otherwise and our stocks of food and water fall."

    "Where shall we next make landfall then?"

    "Some Portu'gee colony on the Africas, I should think. True Portu'gee I mean, not ones held by Spain."

    Olympia nodded. Her companion shared the rail with her, his face now more weather beaten than when they first met. His body more taut. And his manner... his manner Olympia could neither easily describe, nor place. The man at her side answered Augustin, but that is almost all he shared with the man who got on the ship when it was docked in Genoa. Oh, to be sure, both had the same bed chamber tastes of being quite gentle. And both could speak nonsense for hours before an audience willing, or not, about trade winds, the need for good steering and the moons of Jupiter (always the moons). But many other things about Augustin had fallen and many more things suddenly were sewn on, from speech patterns to gait and even head movements. Yes, yes, head movements. Sir Augustin of St. Ives kept his head on a swivel, always ready to dart here and there, at first noise or a curio, but this Augustin moved his head with a... well, lofty was the first word that came to mind, though it did not meet with Olympia's satisfaction. As was his gait, that could be attributed to the motions of the sea (pardon - ocean). But even on dry land, Augustin now walked as if lord of the manor. Yet none of those things were as wince inducing as the manner of speech.

    Augustin turned around and walked back to cabin, and Olympia snuck behind him and closed the door when both were inside.



    "What is this 'maiden fair' nonsense?"

    "Hmm?"

    "You keep calling me 'maiden fair' or 'o fair maiden' or 'sweet maiden.' My sharing of bed with you was done more than once, and I wager you did not feel blood on your sex when we coupled?"

    At this Augustin blushed. For he was in his heart of hearts still an Englishman, and though living among Italians had liberated him some, and his conversion to the Old Faith allowed him to view sin and sinful actions in a quite different manner than when he was Protestant born, bred and battered in school.

    "I am no maiden, Ash. I am a grown woman."

    "Pardon me then. I do not know where those words came. Well, that is not true. When I look at you, I see a maiden fair and true - warrior-maiden, that is, as if Joan of Arc of Italies, or mayhap a Hippolyte of Florence."

    "Joan of Arc was burnt at the stake, after her own men betrayed her and locked the gate to the castle to which she was retreating. As for Hippolyte...! She was struck down by Hercules, while she stood as if an idiot gaping about, wondering why her Amazons were coming towards the boats of the Greeks clad in armor and holding weapons. And then her corpse was looted."

    "Well, when you put it as that... I shan't use that phrase any longer. You shall be 'Olympia' to me. No more and no less."

    "Thankee."

    "It is just... Sir Augustin of St. Ives is dead. If he ever existed. Oh come now, Olympia, do not protest, you know as well as anyone I am no baronet, or even a knight, or... I am a bastard."

    "Pray keep your voice low."

    "It was my sister's idea to put on the airs. I do not even know where she had picked out 'St. Ives' and cannot begin to tell you in what part of England it is meant to be found. 'Sir Augustin of St. Ives' does not exist and never had. And I imitated him, badly. He was a strange skin into which I had to crawl to appease, uh, others. I am glad he is dead. He has never lived. He is not who I am."

    "Who are you then?"

    "Augustin. The name I chose for myself."

    "Augustin and...?"

    "Cannot one name suffice? Emperor Augustus did not require two."

    "No, he required four: Caesar Divi Filius Augustus."

    Augustin smiled warmly.

    "What?"

    "I love it so when you show me how deep lies your mind."

    At this Olympia flummoxed. For warm compliments always confused her greatly and made her mistrust the person giving them, and yet she knew this compliment came from a good and sound place.

    "Suppose I were to call myself 'Augustin of Australia?' Would that suffice?"

    "Yes, for now."

    "There, it is then settled, o fair mai..."

    Olympia dove for him and he allowed himself to be dragged down and pinned, his smile impish. The smile soon ended up in Olympia's mouth and what followed next, everyone on the ship heard with envy.

    ***


    "How do you find the new enclave for Jews upon the good hill?"

    "I will feel better once walls are put up around it, my lord Cardinal-Inquisitor."

    "Uh, yes, there were... troubles, I am told."

    "497 are dead due to massesacch."

    "Tragic. But do you not find they died, so that 8,000 may live?"

    "His Excellency speaks in a Devil's arithmetic."

    "Dear me, you go much too far. I think you forget you are servant here. A valued servant, but one mere nod and you are chained to a wall in a dungeon and I doubt anyone would ask what became of you, and if anyone did, they would be quite sad to learn we had forgotten to feed you and you starved to death in said dungeon."

    "I apolo..."

    "Please do not, good Allesandro. I like you angry and bitter. It gives you an edge. And I have no wish to humiliate, merely to remind you that I have much power here and have used it thus far to help, not to hurt. And I have done so, because even though we are here alone, what one man says to another alone, he may blurt out in the company of other fellows, and that would not be allowed, yes?"

    "It is as his lordship says."

    "Splendid. The water in the Old Ghetto?"

    "Has become easier to find and less sickness permeates."

    "Splendid. So then, one more gift I shall give and then I will ask for a favor. First, the gift. Each Carnivale, in our dear Rome, a baker's dozen of Jews are found in the ghetto and are made to run through the streets to amuse Christians living here, while they pelt them with rotted things..."

    "... and rocks..."

    "Yes. That. Come next Carnivale, there shall instead be a race of horses."

    "Thankee."

    "Splendid. Please sit closer. No, no, closer still. I shall whisper the favor. There, that's better. Before I ask it, I shall be very forward, possibly indecently so, but then again I ask of a murder, so perhaps one should not worry about wearing white gloves when digging through night-soil. Not that I have ever dug through... Dear me, I babble. First I take issue with your comments, and now I babble. The carriage of my mind is not... No, no, no, that shall be no excuse. I am of sound mind. Quite sound. It is just... As I was saying, I shall be forward. If your prey's death does not look like a natural cause, and you are discovered, I shall have to..."

    "... kill me most cruel. And if I am successful, you shall me without any torture or pain."

    "I am not...!"

    "Your Excellency, I know who you want me to kill. Regardless of what happens, just by uttering the name of the target, I am condemned. You can ill afford to have me remain alive once the words leave your mouth."

    "And?"

    "And if what you have done stays. If the good you have done to the downtrodden of this town is not washed away by the next man who sits in this office on your side of the desk... it would have been worth it. If I fail, you can do as you wish. But if I succeed, may I ask you use the quickest poison?"

    "I... I shall do as you ask."

    "Then for formality's sake, name your quarry."

    "My dearest uncle, His Holiness Pope Urban VIII. He must die."
     
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    Chapter 21
  • Odd wooden blocks dotted the map of Northern Italies on a massive table. The blocks were of different shapes and sizes and some had little flags, while others were topped with pins with colorful glass bead heads. To the eyes of the Grand Duke of Tuscany His Highness Ferdinando II of family Medici it looked chaos, but watching the slim long fingers of his brother Mattias move the blocks about and listening to his voice, soon a pattern emerged, provide the Grand Duke did not drink too much. There lay the other trouble, for the Grand Duke was drinking cognac from a wine goblet. Last night he was shown figures of debt, as well as letters of his bankers to their mistresses showing they were terrified of the state of Florence should the war carry on (and incidentally showing the wisdom in Franciotti reticence in committing certain things to fragile paper).

    "How much more, little brother?"

    "Half a million florins for these three sieges to finish their work, I should think."

    "Jesu, how you say 'half a million.' One would think you were asking for a soldo stuck to the bottom of a coin purse of a drunk trader draining piquette in a cheap tavern by the docks."

    "Brother, I know of the costs. I am a Medici. But we must not lose."

    "No, we must not. Not after all of this. Though I fear my son will not see it as we do."

    "I am sure your... Wait, you have a son?"

    "The things I have done for my duchy."

    "She is then pregnant, your wife?"

    "Yes, so the doctors assure me. As I have assured them I will hang them by thumbs from The Bell Tower should they tell me lies."

    "Why, brother, that is great news!"

    "So my wife thinks. She looks forward to, uh, 'glowing.' Jesu. I need another drink."

    And so the Grand Duke did, while brother, the celibate bachelor, spoke warmly of heirs and family. For a wonder the Grand Duke made no jibes on his brother's hypocrisy. They were Medici after all, and hypocrisy ran in their blood as evil ran in the blood of the luckless Borgia. The only thing the Grand Duke concentrated on was pouring more and more cognac to dilute his good blood. And in this state he was dragged off to his private chambers, by pages fearful of him desiring intimacy. But the thought of touching other human beings after he had laid down with his wife disgusted the poor Grand Duke to such an extent that he threw out the much relieved help, fell asleep, woke to throw up on the finely tiled floor, fell asleep yet again and this time choked to death on his own vomit.


    The body was not discovered until noon the next day, and there followed mass scenes of chaos. Mattias was utterly lost til nearly Nones, but recovered his wits to send messengers to his other brothers. But by that point the rumors had spread through the whole town, and fearful conversations were had by the townsmen and strangers alike. Ashley walked in on her Sienese companion Salvatore and the new chambermaid, ignored the shrieks of the surprised and quite impressionable sixteen year old and commanded Salvatore to get dressed and prepare for a journey of some length. This Salvatore did without qualm, while trying to soothe his young new conquest, though with little luck in the latter task.

    The pale butler approached the lady of the house, deputized by the rest of the senior household servants to try to find out where she was leaving and for how long.

    "Pisa. And I shall return for the great summer festivals. Now please be so good as to not question my motives and movements again, servant."

    The butler paled further, exploded in apologies and was shoved aside.

    And so while the town mourned and people debated, Ashley as was her wont, took charge, and departed in a coach-and-four in a trail of dust, with no servants.


    "May I ask why Pisa, dearest Ashley?"

    "Because it is easier to get to Lucca from there than from Florence, Sal."

    "I trust not the ambassador."

    "Who speaks of trust? They have money. I want it."

    "Do we not have money enough?"

    "Oh you sweet pretty child, 'enough' is never enough, when one speaks of money."

    "I so love it when you debase me so by calling me simple names."

    "Hush up, there are none here inside but the two of us. Your 'debasement' is not witnessed."

    "But stings all the same."

    "May I balm your manly pride once we are somewhere safer by straddling you savagely?"

    "That you may, but I fail to see how Pisa, or Lucca for that matter, is safer than Florence. Wealthier mayhap, but not safer."

    "Wealthy is safety."

    "It did not save the Grand Duke..."

    "... from himself. And the cause of his pain was his loss of the wealth. Trust me."

    "And now we speak of trust."

    "Sal, two thirds of all of our wealth are in paper made worthless with each passing day. And now the man whose name signed off on said paper is dead, rendering the paper somehow even more worthless. My mind is not in a state to parry your thrusts and if it were made to parry them now, I may not confine myself o merely bat your blade aside with my own, but plunge mine and plunge it quite deeper than 'sweet pretty child.' So please be aware."

    "That is the most polite way you have told me to keep my mouth shut. Thankee."

    "I would curtsy, but I am sitting down."

    At this Salvatore flashed a smile and stayed silent, for which Ashley was thankful as her thoughts were flying about and causing too much noise for her mind to track and bear.

    ***


    Sea-Captain Gian Carlo Medici heard much noise as well. And most of it was of his own making as was Ashley's. He sat alone in a room, while Mattias barked orders to keep order. Guards were posted. Food prices controlled. Spies sent out to scotch rumors bad and spread good gossip. All this was done by Mattias with ease, once he had recovered his wits, while Gian Carol was still partially witless.

    He had seen the looks on their faces change soon as the news broke. The very moment he was ushered into the room and took note of their stares. He had led before, and been leader in many things, but this, oh this was different. He was to wear purple. The thought was mildly absurd and exaggerated of course, but it did not make it any less true. It was him, had to be. He was the eldest brother. And while he would of course make the poor fat dumb Vittoria the regent of Tuscany and the child in her womb would rule Florence in due time, it was to be him who was now the true ruler of the great polity. Yes, yes, he would of course listen to his brothers and he had no intention of ignoring their sage advice, Mattias in matters of war and Leopoldo in all things politic, but it was him who would sit on the throne now, no matter what the title he would receive. He was to rule the family Medici.

    Jesu, he trembled. He had thoughts of this scenario before, as we have documented in this very work, but now... He was inheriting a principality at war against the Pope, a principality leading a coalition of reluctant allies bound by blood and fear. This was not the bucolic Florence of yester-year, which quite frankly (not that we have not been frank with you this entire time) never quite existed but at least was more peaceful and much more prosperous. This was the Florence of here and now, a Florence in war. And he was to lead it to glory, or utter destruction. He stood, because sitting alone with his thoughts now hurt too much and marched over to Mattias.

    "The ambassadors?"

    "Of the polities now our allies are all here. We shall see them soon."

    "No, dearest brother, we shall see them now and reassure them all is in hand."

    It was the first time he had corrected his brother from a position of authority and both had known it, as did the servants spying on them. And... Mattias yielded. And Gian Carlo tried not to breathe in relief in such a fashion as for it to be visible. He had passed the first test. More lay in store.

    ***


    "Who is this pock marked ill looking fellow?"

    "Boniface. He is to replace Pietro as deputy game keeper."

    "What? Why? What happened to Pietro?"

    "Had an accident while cleaning his gun."

    "Jesu, you do not think he...?"

    "He was a good Christian. He would never commit such a mortal sin."

    "Then how could he have...? He handled weapons for living."

    "How many blacksmiths injure themselves by hammers? How many hat makers by the tools of their trade? His tools were guns, thereby..."

    "Poor man."

    "Aye, but come, let us welcome the new fellow and explain him his duties."

    And thus Boniface, previously known to us as Allesandro and (also) Boniface from before, resumed his name as he took on new job at the Castel Gandolfo, a properly which at that time belonged to whomever was the Captain-General of Papal Armies through awkward tradition born of when the poverty stricken family Savelli sold the property to the Curia while member of their house was still pope. The Castle abutted the remains of the Savelli holdings, the princely lands dubbed Albano, though they were not very majestic looking at the time of our tale, at this point.

    But back to the Castel, which at this point was owned by the Captain-General of Pope Urban VIII, that is to Taddeo Barberini, but which Pope Urban VIII himself graced with his presence from time to time, to best learn of the new military stratagems his beloved nephew was perfecting to destroy the reviled Northern League. And Boniface was hired unto this property to shoot game to keep the tables of the family Barberini well stocked with pheasants and other things the heads of household desired.


    And it was while he was out hunting for game, to keep true to his job until he was called on to perform a quite other task that he was suddenly summoned to see the Cardinal-Inquisitor Francesco Barberini. He found the man dressed in travelling clothes, overlooking the nearby lake (also named Albano).

    "The Grand Duke of Tuscany died in his sleep."

    Boniface said nothing.

    "It may changes things, or it may change nothing as far as the task given to you is concerned. Stay the course for now and find a way to do that which you were here brought to have done. Unless you hear from me otherwise in less than a fortnight, then do it."

    "As you command."

    "You have my leave."

    Boniface nodded and left. As for the Cardinal-Inquisitor, he stayed until his hands shook no longer. It was not an easy command for him to give, nor did the whole affair give him pleasure. What he did, he had done out of conviction due observation and past facts. His uncle would not look upon the death of the Grand Duke as a great deliverance to gain respite for both sides. If anything, the fool would see it as a sign to carry on even harder than before, damning all costs and condemning their family into the bargain. The war had to end. The death of the Grand Duke would not stop it. For the war was now a Medicean inheritance and would be carried out by the three surviving brothers for the sake of their town and polity. The death of the pope would end the war true. It was just a matter of making sure the rest of the Cardinal-Inquisitor's plan carried off proper.

    ***


    While Ashley was speeding to Pisa on coach-and-four from Florence, after learning of the passing of the Grand Duke from gossip. Leopoldo Medici sped much faster in a six horse drawn carriage from Pisa to Florence and had received his news by a fast courier who fairly murdered his poor horse on the journey. Thus before Ashley caught sight of the wondrous leaning tower, Leopoldo was already in the war room of his now dead brother in Florence, holding a council with his two remaining ones.

    "Is she truly pregnant, dear brothers?"

    "The doctors are nearly certain, Leopoldo."

    "The bloodline is then secure. Still, you two should find wives and get some brats in a hurry, just to be safe."

    Mattias blushed, while Gian Carlo blinked.

    "I would have done it as well as you two, but I am a cardinal, any child I spawn will be a bastard, in the eyes of the laws and customs, and more importantly in the eyes of the people of Florence. Thus you two must find wives."

    Mattias blushed deeper still, while Gian Carlo nodded, though with distaste.

    "Let us speak of the war?"

    Here, Mattias found his tongue:

    "It is going quite well. All is going as planned."

    "While grass grows between the stones of most Florentine squares?"

    "I understand the war is costly, but..."

    "Life is costly, my brothers, but have you seen Florence? She looks like shit."

    Leopoldo was not a man to use coarse words and his two brothers blanched.

    "I have no intention to lecture you two on the matters of war, for you are the subject's true masters. But I can speak of economies, people and the general mood. All of which are horrific. Too much money has been diverted to guns, powder and armor plate, and not enough to bread and trade. That needs to change, or you will inherit a ruin."

    "The plan..."

    "Bugger the plan! What are we without Florence? And what is Florence without wealth? Have you forgotten your history? Know you what happens to us when we are not seen as handmaidens of profit?"

    Gian Carlo was not used to this Leopoldo. Nor was poor befuddled Mattias. As for Leopoldo, he nearly surprised himself. He was used to the Grand Duke, and his airs and his gracescapes, but he expected more sense from his two surviving brothers than they thus far showed. Gian Carlo in particular should have seen folly where it presented. Mattias was too focused on war and its execution, and could not be counted to grasping the nettle of politics, despite his time spent in Germanies and governing Siena. But Gian Carlo previously showed some spark of diplomacy for something other than doing while searching for a larger boulder to hurl at one's foes. Alas, now the two coconspirators of their Grand Plan were too committed to its execution and were missing what had happened around them.

    "Brothers, Florence must see wealth. We will stage a grand funeral and we must be seen to invest."

    "But if the money is taken from the war, then..."

    "Bugger the war! We are only fighting to prevent this Pope from becoming our neighbor. I love our dear sister, but if her idiot Farnese husband had sued for peace when Castro fell, we would not be in this mess. The sooner we can wind down the war, the better. Peace brings wealth, not war, this isn't Rome. Florence makes money not from foreign conquest, but flow of goods and our banks. Extend an olive branch to the Barberini to see if they'll come to their senses. Let us have peace in our time. Think. While I got comfort our brother's widow."

    And with this, Leopoldo departed, while Gian Carlo found his crown did not fit. Ferdinando was never thus bullied, and yet he was, here and now, and more to the point, he had allowed it. Seething, he stalked out, without so much as by your leave to Mattias. He wanted to hurt something or someone, but smartened pages stayed out of his path and maids hid in the alcoves. Gian Carlo was thus denied. When he found his room, he hurled a vase at a painting and was pleased to see it tear through.
     
    Chapter 22
  • Off the coast of Africa, Augustin was met with a different sort of trouble. According to his maps, he should have been off an island held by Portuguese. Instead, the fort at the mouth of São Tomé harbor flew a Dutch flag.

    "Captain, let us endeavor to sail North to find Portu'gee held land."

    But this was easier said than done, for the next dozen islands and coastal towns all had Dutch markings. It seemed that the wars between Holland and Spain and Spain's reluctant bride Portugal had not done well (said marriage having occurred due to the death of the Portuguese king creating a union of thrones between the two Iberian powers that was not universally well received in Lisbon).

    Running low of fresh water, the tiny two-ship fleet forced a landing at the next Christian held center of population, which turned out to be yet another formerly Portuguese colony now held by the Dutch. To forestall any awkwardness, the crew of both ships were indoctrinated with a story of being a three-ship fleet of merchantmen sailing from Genoa around the Horn to victual in the English township of Toliara on Madagascar and from there to hopefully go unto India, but tragically one of their ships was sunk and now they were returning back to Genoa, heads hung low. This tale, oft repeated and rehearsed amused the cruel Dutch and they left the ships alone and bartered food and water without much markup.

    And so the whole thing would have passed without incident, had not the poor lunatic of the "Fortune" and his two officers not tried food that disagreed with them on land and expired, after squirming on deathbeds for four days, shitting and pissing themselves all the while. This left the sole third officer of the ship in charge, and as he was an eighteen year old nephew of a friend of the lunatic, with a brass nose due to the flesh organ having fallen off due to Venusian maladies acquired through a dissolute youth, presented a problem to be solved.

    "Captain Kelly, if I could borrow your navigator, I shall sail the 'Fortune.' While you should take the surviving officer of 'Fortune' and keep an eye."

    "I will not allow such a, uh, fellow upon my deck."

    "Then I suggest we drown him."

    "What?"

    "If you do not believe he should be let to live, then..."

    "I did not say that. I said I shall not suffer him on my deck, not... Let him live. So long as I have not to share his berth and share meals with him."

    "Captain, either he is drowned or you take him."

    "Why can't you keep him on the ship?"

    "Because... Well, there you have me. I shall have him then."

    In truth, Augustin had a hearty dislike for those who were sick, owing to his upbringing upon village green in the outskirts of nothing England, watching boil covered hags and dumb scarred dirty men go about their days til they went into ground. His mother died young. As did he father. And so did his natural brothers (though not all of them). And given his mother died of Venusian maladies, he was thus troubled by sight of brass noses and rotting flesh. Even more so than others. But he could not in good heart kill the unfortunate degenerate young man, for Olympia's father was struck down by same-such maladies as well, and she... Well, let us just say Olympia's relations with her elder were quite complex and not entirely well, but she too would not sanction the cold blooded murder of an eighteen year old, lest there was profit to be had by the deed. And Augustin's fears and her discomfort did not count as profit.

    Thus Augustin became captain of "Fortune," assisted by a copper haired handmaiden of death, a brass nosed young degenerate and a bewildered and sometime shy pilot. And he could not be happier. He wanted to be captain since he was very young and the feel of the ship under his feet as he sailed her made him smile.


    The two ships were next planning to land at the fort at the mouth of River Gambra held by Portuguese. It was to be the same fort where they victualed on their journey eastwards. But while they were away, the fort was taken by Dutch, lost back to Portuguese and then taken by rogue Couronians (of all things). By luck, they spoke decent German and being strangers far from home and all alone themselves they were eager to make a good deal with the passing Genoese fleet and soon pigs, goats and good foot was had by the crew.

    As for Augustin's captaincy, it was well accepted. He sailed well along African coast, and he had done a good job going through the treacherous Gambra. And when it was found he made a deal with the local native rulers to bring women to slake the men's thirsts... Well, he was quite loved for that.

    The next sennight turned the two ships into loud bordellos and there was some concern by Couronians that their visitors went mad with lust. While the locals began to think of the Genoese as insatiable. But Augustin was on hand to smooth things over and to keep peace. And on the eighth night, the women were sent back, bruised and exhausted, but not otherwise harmed and the happy crews sailed onward.


    They made one small port of call before going through the Pillars, in a Portuguese held port town full of Arab merchants and tradesmen, and there, the two battered ships were repaired, and under Olympia's supervision, gaudily painted, while bolts of cloth cut in a uniform manner were bought for all crew. Augustin was dragged by his companion from tailor to tailor and made to put on impractical robes and bewildering capes. Then came blacksmiths who made him an even more impractical gilded armor that would get him laughed off any field of valor in Christendom and dare we say Mussulmen held lands. Then came barbers and worse. All this Augustin endured with the patience of martyr, only balking at being asked to wear furs. The weather was warm and Augustin could not be made to swaddle himself in furs, despite the urging of Olympia. It was bad enough he was dressed in silks and had his hair long.

    Olympia took pity and had the furs taken off, but then held a long experiment as to the length of his hair versus that of his beard and what type of eye-patch the conquering hero of Australia should be made to wear upon his Genoese triumph to dazzle the men and the women of that fine port town.

    ***


    In Florence, the funereal rites for the dead Grand Duke were carried out in a manner that combined Catholic ritual, Tuscan custom and Roman Empire splendor. There was food enough to feed 150,000 men and enough strong drink to render 250,000 insensible. The body was taken from the Cathedral di Santa Maria del Fiore and the procession wound its way down ever slow through jammed streets. The first stop was at Piazza della Signoria, where orations were read, official mourners wept and the three surviving Medici brothers proclaimed their brother's love for the city of Florence and all that it had stood for, though none were arsed to explain was that. After a gust of one strong wind too many sliced through the dashing but woefully thin robes of Gian Carlo, he shivered and sent a signal for the proceedings to be sped up. But Mattias misread the sign and launched into an ill advised Latinate speech seasoned with too much flowery language even by the relaxed rules of the Florentines, and soon the crowds began to move off towards taverns. Leopoldo intervened where he could, but by the time the procession resumed its march to The Palace by way of Ponte Vecchio, a third of the crowd was lost to the cold and Gian Carlo sneezed.

    Things picked up once the crowd made its away past the shuttered bridge and got to the palace, where fires were lit in advance to warm hide and hearts. More strong drink was handed out, along with hot food and actors, under strictest of time limits imposed by now forewarned Leopoldo, gave orations that brought tears to the eye that had nothing to do with the chill winds. And here, and only here, while Gian Carlo was thoroughly lost to the sniffles, did Leopoldo give his big speech. It was a Florentine speech aimed at the true hearts of the true denizens of the great city, and it contained enough pauses in it to allow the words to be passed along by those in the front who had heard it to those in the middle and the back who had not. And so when dusk had settled on Florence, there was talk of how well it was done, but that mayhap the wrong Medici was by the side of the regent and babe.

    Word of these conclusions quickly reached Gian Carlo, and he, in his stupor, as he had medicated himself with hot wine, made the decision, with too many people around to hear it to later reverse it while retaining any semblance face, that the war against Barberini must be made to continue and be persecuted with full vigor, scuppering all chances of the olive branch Leopoldo had offered to give. Whether this was done out of spite, jealousy, head cold or wine... take your pick.

    ***


    "Good lady Ashley, I confess I had thought to find you in Florence, not Lucca."

    "I prefer joy to grief, Excellency."

    The Cardinal-Bishop of Lucca Marco Antonio Franciotti nodded his understanding, while struggling to maintain eye contact. The heaving bosom of the Englishwoman distracted his thoughts.

    "So, uh, my brother and cousin tell me."

    "They are too kind to take pity on a lonely wayward soul, Excellency."

    The Cardinal-Bishop realized he had to sit, before his body made it impossible for him to stand without an aid of a codpiece. He found it rather remarkable. The last time he had such strong urges wreak havoc to his body he was very young, and fought them by laying on his stomach until the pangs of the body passed or were too painful to further maintain. But he was no longer three and ten, he was a man in his fifties, and this unseemly behavior confused and rather excited him in equal parts.

    Seeing him sit, the Englishwoman sat down as well, making a production out of the affair and making sure the top of her lacquered scarlet boots pushed back the hem of her dress to reveal shapely ankle.

    The Cardinal-Bishop once again struggled to find her eyes and when asked by his brother how the conversation went, he could not recall. But was not surprised to learn the next day that he had agreed to buy paintings from the Englishwoman and to let her stay in one of the family villas with her retinue.

    To get the bewitching heretic born child of Albion out of his mind, he bade his steward to bring him three shapely blonde women in scarlet boots. He then picked out one that was closest to look to the Englishwoman and debauched himself with her completely.


    As for Lady Ashley, she found the villa dreary, cold and out of style. Franciotti were an ancient family where Lucca was concerned, but there were two dozen still more ancient in that very town and half dozen of them had far greater wealth. Ashley roamed the halls, disgusted with art on display and marveling anyone with any taste could have such ridiculous tiles. That night she sought comfort in Salvatore's arms and wept at her misfortunes and made hot speeches about needing to fly back to good Florence as soon as the situation was clear.

    ***


    "The situation is not entirely clear, my lord Cardinal-Inquisitor. Gian Carlo is acknowledged by all in the family as its leader now that Ferdinando II is dead, but the tavern talk places Leopoldo as the true power. As to the military men, they all prefer Mattias, feeling he understand the struggles they face."

    "What of the wife?"

    "I... I did not think she signified, so I did not ask."

    "What of her side of the family? Any ambition seen?"

    "They have no wish to be seen as attempting to be ruler of Florence, for they fear what would happen if anything were to go wrong. The feeling seems to be that while Medici are respected, if not beloved, any other family attempting to steer the ship would be blamed for all troubles encountered."

    "You have my leave."

    The spy departed, and the Cardinal-Inquisitor reviewed other reports. His mind was distracted and he first did not realize what the report from the Moorish town with an improbable name of Casablanca. It was three reports later, detailing the failing conditions of the Catholic cause in Germanies and speaking of a Battle of Gainsborough in England bringing much triumph to a Parliamentarian opposed to the king named Cromwell, that the Cardinal-Inquisitor suddenly blanched and went back to re-read. Two Genoese ships, with rich sailors, captained by Englishmen. One of them called "Female Bastard."

    The Cardinal-Inquisitor devoured the report, then scoured for the confirmation in the others now on his table, but found nothing more on the subject. Two bell rings later, he barked out instructions for his agents to be sent out to collect more on the sighting, while he felt a strange shooting pain down his left arm from shoulder to the crook of his elbow. He examined his arms and stilled his beating heart to a more temperate rhythm.

    A single sighting meant nothing of course. It needed confirmation. But if confirmed... things would change. As the Cardinal-Inquisitor thought through the implications of a fantasy made reality, his attentions were diverted from that fact that it was now more than a fortnight since he told a man now named Boniface to carry out his assassination of his good uncle.

    ***


    His Holiness Pope Urban VIII was an enigmatic man, made more confusing by history, and it seems unfair of us to introduce him in person just now, at the very moment his assassination is planned by a man field dressing his game meat, but such are fates.

    The pontiff sat at a balcony overlooking the lake and thought dark thoughts of war and fleeting glory. The frailty of human memory was his concern. He was shocked most profoundly how he, a patron of sciences and arts, was so quickly portrayed as destroyer of progress and intellectual forethought all because he had condemned a single stubborn heretic. All those paeans to him written by poets, alchemists (both secret and plain), turned to ash as soon as he merely exercised his proper authority. And the wave of vicious words that came afterwards... That they did not love him in so-called "Protestant" England, mutinous Holland and the rabidly heretic university towns of the wrong parts of the Germanies he had known. That Northern Italies would play politics with his careful decision to bring Galileo to heel, gently mind, just a house arrest and no rough stuff, that, that he almost understood. For he was an Italian and such were games his people had played. But when philosophers of France, a decent ally, whom he supported even when he should not, when those people barked at him, he was stunned. To say nothing of the good Catholic towns in the Germanies he was fighting to liberate from the yoke of the fanatic disciples of that miscreant Luther. When they spoke out against him, he was at a total loss. How quick they forget, he had wanted to shout, but held his tongue, for he was no mere man, but now an institution. But the wounds hurt, and so he did what he did best, he rebuilt.

    He found Rome a town lacking esteem of Madrid, London and Paris. Crumbling churches, unpaved roads and pilgrims robbed at the point of the blade. He made that all a distant memory, where it counted. Fountains now decorated most squares worth knowing. All entrances to the Eternal City now held symbols of majesty of the Holy Mother Church. Renovation was done on a scale not previously seen in four, nay six, decades prior. Let the intellectuals thunder and philosophers drip poison from quills. His memory would be safeguarded by the surety of marble, which as as near immortal as decently proper.

    The pheasant given to him at his table tasted strange to him that day, but he put it down to heavy thoughts which now weighed him for these last three years. The War of Castro was more vicious than planned, but with the Grand Duke dead, he had reasoned it would not last longer. He took a great lungful of the good airs of Albano, but suddenly found he could not breathe. He blinked and went for his collar, but his fingers stiffened and would not do his bidding. He opened his mouth to let loose a scream, but could not. His body voided itself of all fluids in his bladder and his backside churned the red cushioned chair a darker shade of magenta with some streaks of brown. He then fell off the chair and that noise is what brought his servants rushing in. They could do nothing. Pope Urban VIII had lived.
     
    Chapter 23
  • The Lord Cardinal-Inquisitor Francesco Barberini made sure to shed a tear and cry out when he was told his uncle had passed. Then after three minutes of plucking his nose hairs to elicit tears true for all visiting him to remember, he called on his brother Cardinal-Nephew Antonio Barberini, who arrived late and ghostly pale. He missed the chair and nearly fell and had to be helped by his valet to guide the seat of his pants to the much larger cushioned settee.

    "Brother, we are lost. We are lost. Lost and doomed."

    "Antonio, pray stop spreading nonsense. We have suffered a loss, this is true. But we are not lost. We are Barberini. We came from selling horseshit by the side of some forsaken Tuscan road during the Great Plague to now occupy the highest of holies of Christendom. One of our own was the father of all princes on Earth. And we shall now rule the Vacant Seat while a conclave, eventually, assembles."

    Antonio needed a moment or a dozen to catch all of that and stared at his brother in confusion.

    "Vacant Seat?"

    "Aye. It is what is called when a pontiff has passed and another is not yet there to take his place."

    "I did not... The rules of succession. I never read up."

    "You should. It makes for a curious reading. Now then, while the Seat is not occupied, there is a regency, held by all cardinals, but shepherded by the Cardinal Chamberlain of the Holy Mother Church."

    "That is I."

    "It is you indeed. You are now in charge, carrying out the duties of all cardinals, til enough of them can be convened here to help choose a worthy successor to our good uncle, however long that shall take."

    "Long?"

    "Oh it won't be an easy affair, what with the wars and all ravaging our poor Christendom. But do not worry, the longest vacancy, per the records made by the moderns, was only two years and ten months. So at most, you shall be in charge for less than three years."

    "Three years?"

    "Here, have some wine. You are not making much sense dimly repeating things I have said."

    Antonio drank and the Cardinal-Inquisitor read through reports and made notes in the margin. While Antonio attempted to recover his wits, the Cardinal-Inquisitor granted a knighthood to a worthy merchant, condemned another to an assassination and subtly strove to bankrupt the third. Then he looked up to find his brother almost sensible enough to resume conversation.

    "The Medici are but a side show now, dearest brother. And side shows must be wound down lest they distract from the main stage. Let us instruct our good brother Taddeo to give us an easy win North of Castro and then fall back, while we concentrate on the real war eternal."

    "You speak of France and Spain?"

    "I am glad your wits have yet again found you. Yes, yes, yes. Spain will want Pamphili to wear The Triple Crown..."

    "Over my dead body!"

    "Pamphili would be preferable to some of the others I could name."

    "He would destroy all we have built and...!"

    "Pray be tranquil, dearest brother. While Spain have their candidate, so do your beloved French."

    "As if you did not benefit from Richelieu's favors."

    "Would that be favor he bestowed upon us by giving arms to the heretic rebels now killing Catholics in the Germanies, or the time he gave aid and comfort to Turks?"

    "France is fighting for survival against Spanish juggernaut."

    "I do not judge them. But pray do not confuse their interests with that of ours. And as I was saying, it would not surprise me if Parisian interests were not to push for Bentivoglio, at least initially, and then settle on Sacchetti, either of whom would be of great boon to us, so we will not be that lucky, due to the accumulation of seething hate."

    "I... I do not understand."

    "Brother, there will soon be celebrations in the streets and the busts of our uncle shall be thrown in the Tiber once news of his death is heard of in Rome. We have made these dumb people poor while flaunting our wealth. The Romans hate us and so we must now make them fear us, as they shall never favor us strangers with love. So we shall give them reason to fear us while we search for a less sharp response to elicit from these spoiled teeming masses. Thus, Taddeo must win a battle - any battle will do - and then bring down here foreign mercenary troops, the more foreign the better, and they shall must rape and pillage those we dislike and keep a lid on the cauldron of hate."

    Antonio nearly choked on his wine and stared at his brother in dull shock.

    "Brother, none of the money you earned was by legitimate means. Our uncle showered you with property taken from others, that is - stolen. Please do not look at me as you have given virgin birth and know not the meaning of sin. We are thieves and we must now do murder to hold onto power. But even murder has its limits, I fear. So we must be economical with it and plot and scheme and do it well. First, the sideshow of Medici is to be wound down, then we shall trampling Rome and then with our position recovered we may try to swim between the beastly frogs and dons and find our place in the sun and not have our properties taken back by the bloody hands of the natives. Which brings me to the next point, if you are quite ready for it: there shall soon arrive a fellow to our good Italies with a lot of gold of the New World and fable continents one thought myth and it would be quite prudent of us to make him welcome. His name is Augustin, I am told, though that may be a lie as is gold, but if true... I shall endeavor to find more. In the meantime, first Medici, second Rome and thirdly the Franco-Spanish relations. Yes, yes?"

    Antonio managed a nod and was dismissed, his head in dark cloud full of thunder and rain.

    As for the Cardinal-Inquisitor, he then shed a few more tears with two more plucks at his nostrils. More messengers were sent and brought in, to witness his sorrowful eyes and plans were hatched and assassins dispatched to dispatch others.

    ***


    Boniface sat by the lake of Albano and awaited his fate. It soon made its presence known, a small runt of a man dressed in a travelling cloak, his one eye milky from a knife scar bisecting. He wore low cut boots to reveal ankle fine and a cloak decorated with Roman colors and fringed almost finely, though a bit ragged from five years hard use.

    "If you are to shoot me in the back of the head, my lad, you can come closer still so as not to miss and make dog's breakfast of my skull and require reloading. I am unarmed and my hands are well away from my body and belt."

    "I am here to give poison, not shoot."

    "You carry a pistol in your right boot and another is hidden by your cloak."

    "We live in most dangerous times, my good gentle."

    "Aye. There is a sack of silverware by that tree. Couple of forks and a goblet. Next to the sack are a couple of good rocks. After I am dead, put the rocks in my doublet pockets to weigh me down and throw me into the lake. But do not forget to slit open my belly so I will not bloat to the surface. As for the silver, you can take that with you. Or toss it into the river. It shall give canopy to the tree of lies that I ran off with stolen things after the pontiff expired."

    "Jesu, you are calm."

    "I made a deal with the Devil. I know what comes next."

    The milky eyed man threw a skin of wine at the feet of her target and stood back. His hand on the butt of his pistol, his one good eye darting.

    Boniface picked up the skin. Pulled out the stopper and sniffed.

    "You are Borgia?"

    "Are we not all?"

    "No, my blood has no such pleasure."

    "Ah, I forget. You are a Moor."

    "No, if I was Moor, I would be part Borgia. I am a Jew."

    The words left his mouth and he felt his the lower right part of his stomach oscillate, it was the queerest sensation and he stared at it, not able to think of anything else. Why or should his body be subject to such a vibration, he could not answer. He looked up once he realized the milky eyed man was talking.

    "I did not hear what you said, my mind was elsewhere."

    "I asked if the wine is not to your liking."

    "It is not the wine I find troubling, though it looks as if piss. It is the poison you are using. The old Borgia recipe, which is half-myth and half-dung. Cantarella. Favored potion of half bright alchemist looking to help a girl get rid of a bad suitor or a wicked stepmother. You would have been better off stealing Medici powders. Those at least have been proven to work from time to time."

    "Ah, yes, forgive me. You are right. I am not much for poisons. I strangle and stab, and sometimes shoot. But mostly strangle."

    "Garrote I should think, judging by those palm marks."

    "You have a keen eye. Yes, yes, I prefer the garrote. Jesu, but this talk is strange."

    "We live in strange times."

    "Will you drink the wine then?"

    "No, it will just make me sick."

    "Then should I shoot you?"

    "You just said you prefer the garrote. Suppose you miss?"

    "I can get closer."

    "I have seen shots be led astray at point blank range. No I should think a slit wrist is called for here."

    The milky eyed man hesitated, then produced a wickedly sharp and much curved dagger.

    Boniface suppressed a sigh. The weapon looked flash, but the way his killer held it did not fill him with confidence of a clean and quick death. The whole thing was beginning to feel silly and very queasy.

    "Come I shall feed you my arm."

    The milky eyed man nodded and made his approach, his heart at his throat, the blade handle slick with sweat in his callused palm and thick, broken fingers. He dry swallowed when he thought the strange Jew blinked to his nerves. Made his approach and looked on, not quite sure of what Boniface would do next.

    Boniface felt the oscillation again in his lower right stomach. It was so strange. He stared again.

    The milky eyed man wiped his sweaty hand as he was distracted.

    "Ready?"

    Boniface looked up and blinked. Then gave a nod.

    The milky eyed man readied his blade.

    Boniface jutted out his left arm. The milky eyed man steadied his breath, gently gripped the wrist of Boniface with his left hand and raised the knife.

    Boniface struck the milky eyed man right in the kidneys.

    The man doubled over, staggered and fell to his knees. His brittle, dandruff caked, sun burnt hair fell into his face and mired it with more dirt from its filthy edges and split ends.

    Boniface stood to full height. Gave a sigh. Took the blade. He was not yet ready to die.

    ***


    Mazarini was at the gaming tables, when he was told. He was playing Red and Black against aristos with more gold than sense and had been lucky, as always. A little page of no account simply walked up to him and whispered, "Yellow hawk" and departed. And Mazarini's heart skipped a beat, but his face revealed nothing and he played two more turns, losing money and made his excuses and departed. By the time he was through the outer salon, the gossip had started. By the time he got into his carriage, stable boys knew. So much for the silver he paid the page then. Soon all of Paris knew - the King was dead. Louis XIII, called The Just, because that is what he liked to be called, had finally expired. He had left behind a five year old son, a weak willed but strongly opinionated wife and a kingdom on the cusp of peace. The Battle of Rocroi had just transpired not that long ago, and the tide against Spain was turning.

    Mazarini smoothed out his clothes and calmed his trembling fingers.

    Peace. He would bring peace to France, and then utter destruction of Spain. In that order.

    ***


    The two ship fleet, painted as a caravan of madmen, had come to linger in the port of Ajaccio at Corsica (then Genoese held) to better build up anticipation of their Genoese welcome at the capital town of the Most Serene Republic. Already three galleys had left bound for Genoa since their arrival, each with a morsel of news and a letter penned by Augustin at Olympia's dictation. Then, and only then, after two dozen fights in the taverns and the chances of the crew running off with gold in wild Corsica before the triumph, did Olympia finally give her approval for the fleet to depart and off did they sail, greeted and cheered by each passing Genoese galley, boat and ship.

    The men, dressed in impractical but highly colorful matching clothes, worked the deck slowly, so as not to ruin their garb and the whole thing began to take on appearance of an opera staged by a sodomite with a drinking habit. Stays were missed. Mizzen sails not taken in as they should. And the pilot was so concerned about chipping the paint work of his hull against a particularly rancid spot of water near an island where locals shit in the sea that he nearly colliding with a fishing trawler now appearing on his other side. Augustin, over the objections of his companion, pulled the crew aside and explained that even though they are dressed like whores on parade, they are still sailors and there will be plenty of sailors in the Genoese harbor to judge them. That brought all up short and the crews stopped straying from form and performed marvelously thereafter.

    And thus, three summers after setting sail from port, did the two ships return to cheers.
     
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    Chapter 24
  • Giovanni Battista Durazzo, the former Doge of the Most Serene Republic of Genoa, stood on a makeshift dais overlooking the docks, he was joined by his cousin Cardinal-Archbishop of Genoa Stefano Durazzo and two dozen senior relatives of the family Durazzo, whose standing in the great town has been transformed in less than five day and who now, collectively, stood head and shoulders above all the great families of Genoa (save perhaps Grimaldi, but those two good Houses were bound by blood, so the competition was far less deadly, if not any more pleasant). Already there was talk that the next Doge must be from the Durazzo House and the former Doge was being greeted as long lost friend by distaff members of his family hoping to be endorsed. How quickly things change.

    "I still say I should fly to Rome, not stay here, cousin."

    "Stefano, don't be a fool. You do not go to Rome unbidden in the midst of a war, and besides, look about, this is where we were meant to now stand."

    "The Barberini have been good to us."

    "No, cousin, they were kind to you, because you thumped local aristos in favor of Roman liturgy."

    "I say..."

    "Cousin, people are watching, pray keep your tongue... Dear me, what is that wondrous smell?"

    "Smell?"

    "There, on the ships, oh but the smell. I can smell it from here. See there, it... by Jesu, it glows."


    And indeed, the wood lining the outer sides of the ship did glow and smell well, for it was almug trees, taken from Guadalcanal and brought back to Christian lands, and not seen since the days of the Great King Solomon, who used them as pillars to build the House of the Lord, taken from the ships of Hiram, who brought them from Ophir, per 1 Kings 10:11 and 10:12. Soon, the more pious among those on the packed dock understood (though they may have been aided by paid gossipers put among their number by Olympia's prudence), and a might cry went up, for that in it itself was proof that the Isle of the Gold Mines of the Great King Solomon had been found by the blessed adopted son of the great town of Genoa, Agostino the Sea Wolf, aided by true sons of Genoa (overlooking the one named "Kelly").

    The ships slowly came in and were docked, and a single boat came forth from the "Fortune," standing at its prow was the Sea Wolf, dressed in fine silk, beautiful gilded armor glinting in the setting sun, wearing a beard of a man true, his long but shockingly clean hair dangling by the side of his weathered and rugged not entirely unhandsome face, one of his eyes covered by an intricately carved silver patch edged in very fine leather. He was also draped in wolf's furs, locked in placed by unseen silver chains, and held at his studded thick belt a two handed sword of some girth. And silver toed boots with gloriously shiny spurs completed the tale.

    He was oared to dock by a crew of ten men dressed in matching clothes, Olympia among their number, dressed as one of them, with her breasts taped down by bolts of thick cloth to make her look like a man and thereby to better allow the maiden and matron fantasy of Genoese women that the great Sea Wolf was as yet untamed by any female hand and could be made lover or even husband.

    The boat carefully glided up to the dock. The oars were shipped. The Sea Wolf made ready to step, but stopped himself, looked about and boomed in the purest Genoese:

    "Citizens, have I your permission to once again enter the greatest town in the whole world?"

    There came forth a great roar that shook the boat, water, pier, dock and dais.


    The Sea Wolf stepped on the dock and walked forward to the dais. A path was at once cleared for him by Durazzo guards and hired cutthroats found by Olympia in the last five days, and so the Sea Wolf had unimpeded path to the dais, but he had no great hurry and walked slow as he could, acknowledged the warm greetings of men and the shrieks of women with an imperial nod and a good smile, showing he had retained all his teeth and they were white indeed (scrubbed by noxious potions that made him vomit on the entire trip from Corsica to Genoa, but thus the price of beauty).

    Slowly and slowly, did the Sea Wolf climb the staircase, flanked now by four sailors of "Fortune," Olympia among their number. She sweating bad and nervous behind a fake thick beard that itched. Her hands found her weapons behind her cloak and fiddled with them, while looking about for assassins.

    The Sea Wolf came up to the former Doge, gave a nod disguised a bow and was given a bow in turn. Then the Doge could not help and grip the wrist of the Sea Wolf and raise it about for all world as if announcing a fellow bare knuckle brawler deserving accolades at some cheap theatre.

    But cheap theatre is seldom not popular, and the crowd roared yet again, while the poor Doge had no clue how close he had come to certain death, for Olympia stepped up when her companion's wrist was seized and was ready to sever the limb of the Durazzo transgressor.

    For his part, the Sea Wolf greeted the display with equanimity of those truly set apart from baser mortals. He gave yet another nod and flashed a smile that set hearts aflutter and gave shriller shrieks among nearly all women. There followed a ridiculous speech of the former Doge, which we will not bore you with, but the substance of it was that Durazzo sent out a great man to achieve greatness for Genoa and greatness returned, yay Durazzo. The crowd listened to it with patience, for soon it was the time for the Sea Wolf to speak, and speak he did, pausing carefully, though the speech was small, to ensure all could repeat it in the front rows and pass it down to the middle and so on.

    "Good people of the Most Serene Republic, I first came here as a stranger from a much strange land, and you took me with love that I will hope to repay in the coming months and years. I came here, of all other towns on our Earth, because I knew here I could prosper. I came here also because since I was but a small child, I was inspired by the greatest son of Genoa who had ever lived - Columbus. He had discovered the New World, a feat no one can repeat. And he made me realize there can be greatness in all of us, if we start off in Genoa. So I came here, to the greatest town on Earth, and from here, I sailed forth to discover. And discover I did. I found in our good century the source of the Gold Mines of King Solomon. I found the great Isles whose wealth will become our wealth, all of ours."

    The cheers came in waves and the great Sea Wolf allowed himself to be lapped by them.

    There were plans of some other Durazzo family members to speak after that, but the former Doge forbade them after hearing Sea Wolf. One does not follow good wine with weak grape. And they have all been doused by the dose of the finest vintage he had seen in his long, long life.

    That night, there was a fete, and the Sea Wolf allowed himself to be feted, while his men tasted women they never had before and bought drinks and had drinks bought for them, and all seemed possible and the future was quite bright indeed, lit as it was by the moon, almug trees, gold and glazed eyes.

    ***


    It was much different pair of eyes, though still glazed, that greeted Ashley that night in the Franciotti villa (well, one of the villas, for the family owned quite a few). The eyes belonged to the Cardinal-Bishop of Lucca Marco Antonio Franciotti. At first Ashley was quite concerned for her bodily integrity upon seeing those lustful eyes. That she excited men she knew since the age of eight, but soon she had realized she was seeing a more different type of longing.

    "Is not your brother the Englishman who set forth to find King Solomon's Mines?"

    "Aye, he's my twin."

    "Your brother, my dear lady, has just returned, from King Solomon's Mines, with gold."

    Ashley gaped, then gave forth a shuddering exhale.

    She knew her brother was no fool, but the best and brightest of the finest kingdoms and empires had failed. And he... by Jesu, what pluck and what luck. She stopped tensing, and fairly sprawled on the cushioned chair, her eyes half-hooded with pleasure and her lips half parted in anticipation of more.

    "My brother was destined for greatness from start."

    "Yes, yes, could you write him a letter?"

    Ashley's generous mouth gave something that could be mistaken for smile, or a leer.

    ***


    The Cardinal-Inquisitor Francesco Barberini was much put upon. There were riots outside the western gates of Rome and parts of the less well policed southern environs of Eternal City. Then there was the price of bread, or rather prices, which could not brought to heel, and the troops of Taddeo would not come fast enough, for the roads were packed with refugees and yet another infestation of pilgrims convinced the death of the pope was a sign of something or other. It was enough to drive a man mad, and still the messages came. Such as the fourth, no, no, seventh secretary coming in with a sheaf.

    "My lord, Vieri has left message in the expected place that all went well."

    "Who in bloody bowels of Christ is 'Vieri'?"

    "The fellow with the milky eye, who went to Albano?"

    "What? Oh, yes him. He reports all is well? Splendid. Next. Wait, no, have someone write me a message to his lordship Cardinal Mazarini informing him that his servant, uh, Boniface had expired due, uh, the pox. No, make it an infection from a pricked finger on a rusty door nail. Yes. That. Next?"

    "There are multiple and quite credible warnings of riots spreading further North in Rome, and a demonstration to be done near the St. Giovanni de Laterano in South at the same time."

    "No, no, no, it cannot be done. That church is the very Vacant Chair which... that is the cathedra that... That is our bloody Church. Ours! We cannot... Send more guards. The crowds must be chased off. The North is likewise... No more riots."

    "Your lordship, the messages..."

    "Go away! No, no, no, come back. Pull the guards from the ghetto by Tiber and send them South."

    "My lord, if those guards are pulled... the Jews may be massacred."

    "And hopefully pillaged. It would give Romans something to do other than complain about us and throw symbols of my family into rivers, covered with spittle. Pull all guards from the ghetto."

    "My lord, I... As you command."

    "Hang about, the guards at the new ghetto are to remain. It is a smaller place, newer and is easier to hold fast with less troops. Guards are to remain there. But the guards from the ghetto are to be sent South to restore order. And they are to stay there, do you understand? They are to stay there for two days and three nights. Understood?"

    "Yes, my lord. I shall write it out exactly."

    "Do not be an Eden child! Nothing in writing. Summon the commanders of the districts and give them orders by worth of mouth. Nothing is to be put to scroll. You have our leave."

    The seventh secretary departed, his heart feeling as if his mouth was filled with ash.

    The fourth secretary - truly this time - did enter, unbidden.

    "My lord..."

    "Oh what is it now?"

    "Sir Augustin of St. Ives, the warlock who set forth from Genoa three years ago, has returned to his place of departure, with the gold from the, uh, Gold Mines of King Solomon."

    The Cardinal-Inquisitor took a deep breath to steady his nerves, for they were quite frayed. The first thoughts were ones of annoyance. The ships did not just appear in Genoa overnight. They had to have sailed through the Pillars and were probably victualed in Corsica and then sailed for Genoa true. Three weeks? Mayhap something slightly less, but still more than a fortnight. And he had found out only now. The last report was that they were possibly sighted in Casablanca. New report, they are in Genoa. The entire spider-web of spies in the Ligurian Seas would have to be redone and purged with medicine of the foulest and most vicious kind. But that must come later, right now, his wits must be salvaged and from that wreckage of the carriage of his mind must a new vehicle emerge and carry the family to victory, for there were nobody else to handle the wild horses. The metaphors flew too thick and he stopped, steading his breath all the while. And not five minutes later he came with a possible gambit of a plan.
     
    Chapter 25
  • Anzio was not much of a town. In fact it was no town at all, but a fishing village. All sensible travelers went to neighboring Nettuno to catch passage across the sea or to gain a coach or something rougher to travel overland down, or up, the Italian peninsula. But the strange pock marked ill looking fellow did not look as if he wanted advice or passage, and so his dreary wine was served without commentary at the fishing village tavern. The stranger took his wine without any words as well. And the tavern keeper went about his day, til he was fed gossip by Vincenzo Russo, village idiot and town crier all in one:

    "They say all the Jews are dead in Rome!"

    "Leave off."

    "I have heard it from the people on the road. Tiber red with blood."

    "What utter nonsense. Everyone knows heathen blood is not red. Jew blood is light pink."

    "I would not know that, but I know the Jews are being killed."

    "The guards at the forsaken heathen ghetto simply let the good men inside to cleanse town?"

    "There were no guards."

    "Everyone knows there are guards."

    "No, no, no, they were not there. They were called off. They say the Inquisitor arranged it."

    "Oh leave off. Come back when you have better news."

    "Thousands of Christ-killers are no longer breathing and you do not think it good news?"

    "I would, if I believed in any of it. Off with you."

    The tavern keeper was not sure when the pock marked fellow was gone, but when he next looked, the fellow was not there. But his good coin remained. And that was all that mattered to the keeper.

    ***


    His Excellency Prince Gian Carlo Medici woke late. The affairs of state have begun to take a toll on his body and mind, and he had found himself exhausted most days. He was dressed while in a sullen silence and stalked the ornate hallways of the Medici palace in a mood. His younger brother Mattias was not present, having returned to the frontlines to resume the costly and exhaustive war against Barberini. The trouble was not there. Well, there was trouble over the bloody cost, but that was not the utmost trouble in Gian Carlo's mind. The trouble was his other brother, now occupying rooms in the heart of Florence, at the old Medici palace. And it was there that now courtiers and fortune seekers trekked. The palace where Gian Carlo brooded housed the widow of the former Grand Duke said to be with child, though who could truly tell, for the woman turned to fat routinely and by purging got back to decent weight, only to plunge to fatness yet again. That would be the ultimate joke, would it not? The so-called regent of Tuscany trapped in a now cold and dreary palace with a dumb fat woman who had no heir to give, while his brother truly ruled Florence and by extension the whole of Tuscany. Gian Carlo turned and hit a wall. Unfortunately his fist found a beam behind the wall rather than mere plaster and he broke two knuckles and smeared blood on an artwork to boot.

    The doctors worked their cures, while Gian Carlo brooded still. Leopoldo had stolen his thunder, then glory and now true power. The only thing saving Leopoldo's circus ugly body from an even uglier fate was that Gian Carlo was a Medici, not Borgia. Medici did not kill brothers. But sometimes the urge to find Borgia blood in his veins to justify the unjustifiable was strong. None more than now, while he was sitting on a chair, his right hand wrapped in blood streaked bandages, his mind full of confusion and loathing, and his life slipping out of his hands.

    The messengers were avoiding him and he knew it. He could not blame them, but blamed them still.

    "You there, damn your eyes. Get here. I see a scroll."

    The meek fellow brought the sealed scroll and retreated before he could be hit. Gian Carlo read the words without reading, forced his eyes to focus and re-read. Then re-read yet again, for the message seemed a jest. Australia discovered? By an English sea wolf in the pay of the Durazzo? The Sea Wolf's twin sister a former picture monger of the former Grand Duke of Tuscany, now living in Lucca? It reads as nonsense. The first urge was to throw the scroll at someone's head, but then the Medicean instinct prevailed. The blood cooled and he realized that no agent would dare bring such a jest to a Medici prince, even one as isolated as Gian Carlo. And if it was not a jest...? It changed things. It might even change Gian Carlo's situation. But, first a confirmation.

    "Send for my spymaster, and be quick about it."

    ***


    Cardinal Mazarini put down the letter from Cardinal-Inquisitor Francesco Barberini announcing the accidental death of a man he knew as Allesandro, and set it down next to the spymaster's report on the English sea wolf returning to Genoa with the gold from King Solomon's mines. He was missing a link in these chain of events, but took no more than a quart hour to seek out to find it. There were more pressing issues after that, such as the fates of France. The Eldest Daughter of the Holy Mother Church was beset by enemies, without and within. The Sea Wolf and his gold would no doubt be of some help to the beleaguered kingdom, but one had to move careful here. One had to find the right approach, but the time for it was not there, especially now that the sole spy who had gotten closest to the Sea Wolf and his copper haired killer angel Olympia was dead, by accident. An accident. How... timely.

    The missing link troubled Mazarini more and would not let him go to his other duties. He made a note to assign one of his better men to look into it. One of the better, mind, but not the best. For the brother of the now dead Louis XIII - Gaston, sometimes called "Monsieur" at court - rated as bigger trouble, as did the newest cabal of contessas - no, no, the word was "countesses," one should think like a Frenchman while in France, and he was Jules Raymond Mazarini, not Giulio Raimondo Mazzarino any longer. And while the gold of the Australias glittered in Italies, he was now in France, and more French matters had to take leading role. Still, the puzzle would be solved.

    ***


    Cardinal Chamberlain of the Holy Mother Church Antonio Barberini stared at a document before him.

    "This is the logbook of their journey?"

    "Uh, a logbook, my lord, made by one of the crew of a surviving ship."

    "But not the logbook of the Sea Wolf?"

    "No, my lord. It was made by another."

    "An officer at least? Or am I looking at the half-literate scratches of a common sailor?"

    "It is a copy of a log kept by the captain of 'Fortune,' who did not survive the journey."

    "A copy of a log then, not the real thing?"

    "It is real, my lord. A friend of the now dead captain held it for him."

    "Can it be inscribed unto a map?"

    "It shall be converted into a portolan shortly, my lord."

    "Suppose you tell me what is a 'portolan?'"

    "A map, with navigation observations, compass directions and distances between objects."

    "You... You are saying I have in my possession an object which can be turned into a map to the Isles of the Gold Mines of King Solomon?"

    "Yes, my lord. But... The distances all read as estimates. That is, we think them accurate, but..."

    "'We?' How many have seen this log?"

    "I have had it authenticated by experts in the employ of his lordship. The distances are all estimates, my lord, as I have said. The Sea Wolf did not share with anyone the distances he observed using the moons of Jupiter. The Sea Wolf then merely instructed the captain to sail this way or another, and did not tell anyone how far they were from one object or another. What you have before you is an experienced sailor's guess based on what he saw all about him."

    "I... I thank you for your honesty."

    "I have no wish to lie, my lord."

    "Go on and make this log into a portolan then. Let us see what we have before we speak further."

    "Yes, my lord."

    Antonio Barberini released the arm of his chair from the grip of his left hand. His fingernails and fingers hurt. He was so close, he could almost smell the almug wood and feel the gold slipping through his fingers. And then the gold truly slipped through. But hope springs eternal and all that.

    In the meantime, the armies of Medici pressed down and the people of Rome were restless. His brother, it was said, had allowed the mob to slake their bestial urges by removing guards from the ghetto and letting violence occur against the Jews, for a few days, mind, not a lot. Though the mob they did great damage and murdered many in the streets. Antonio did not ask his brother if the rumor was true, because he was not sure he wanted to know true answers. He, Antonio, was no innocent in the ways of the world, despite his youthful look and the comments of Francesco. He understood many things, including knowing when he must not understand if he was to sleep at night.

    As to the murders of the Jews in the streets and alleys, they had given respite from the seething of the savages among the Romans. But the respite all too brief. He knew from reports that it would not hold. The true cause of their troubles was the price of bread and wine. And with merchants being leery of loaning any more on credit... The idiotic war had to be wound down to restore credit balance or a new source of credit had to be found. A third was not given. He was aware his brother Francesco had some sort of plan, but Antonio was his own man, with his own beliefs and he crafted plans of his own making.

    ***


    Olympia woke with a start and looked about the bed. She was alone. Her hand found a dagger under the mattress and a pistol under the bed. She checked the firearm was loaded, before slipping off the bed into a defensive crouch.

    "I am on the balcony, alone, please try not to shoot me."

    Olympia relaxed her posture, slightly, and crouching still, made her way to the balcony and saw the man now known to all as Agostino of Australia, the Sea Wolf, was indeed alone. She stood to full height and then realized she was stark naked for a wind from balcony stung her body.

    "There is a warm robe on the chair by the door."

    Olympia was not used to having people in her mind, but made allowance for the Sea Wolf. She set down the weapon in her left hand, hefted the robe, slipped on a warm sheep skin lined left sleeve. Picked up the weapon. Set down the one in her right. Slipped on the right sleeve, and rearmed. She then put down the pistol into the robe's single pocket and tucked the dagger into the robe's cloth belt at the small of her back. Thus fortified she braved the balcony.

    There stood the Sea Wolf in an almost matching robe, admiring the world, without an eye patch.

    "Morning."

    "You really should put on the patch."

    "I will, but I like the sensation of the wind and sun upon my skin. Did we get any messages from Medici, Barberini, Mazarini or, uh, my sister?"

    "None as yet."

    "How many spies are in our household?"

    "Four. One spies for Medici. One for Barberini. One was hired by Spanish interests, though whether that of the crown or a competing court interest, I know not. And the fourth spies on us for Durazzo."

    "How sweet of the Durazzo."

    "This is how things are done in Italies."

    "Aye, I know."

    The Sea Wolf raised an arm and encompassed Olympia in a side hug. These displays of public affection and familiarity were proof still to Olympia that her man was shedding his Englishness in good measures.

    She waited for the warmth of his body to penetrate his robe and then hers, before she spoke on what she had meant to say last night, but held off until such a time as the Sea Wolf was more distracted:

    "You met with agents of the family Savelli."

    "Yes, in secret. Though nothing can escape you, can it?"

    "No, nothing can. May I know what...?"

    "I was going to make it a surprise, but if you insist..."

    "I insist."

    "Savelli are rather poor."

    "Have been, for a while."

    "They have things they wish to sell."

    "Pray continue."

    "You really hate surprises that much?"

    "I do not enjoy not knowing things. Tell me."

    "There is a box, there on the table it stands. If you hate surprises, take a gander."

    Olympia did not hate surprises, but once curious, she had to satisfy the urge. She came to the ornate jewelry casket, opened and withdrew a queer pistol. It was covered in gold leaf and looked worthy of a gift to a prince, or in this case a princess predisposed to weaponry. But that was not the strangest thing, for this was Italies, and many weapons here looked as if gold and silver were vomited upon them by Vulcan on a day of whimsy or much drinking (of ambrosia mayhap?).

    What the made pistol in Olympia's hand truly odd was the, uh, half split pomegranate work of metal surrounding the part of gun where barrel met the trigger. Inside the pomegranate seeds were hollow tubes filled with paper twists, containing by the smell, heft and the fact it was still a gun despite its weird shape: ball and powder. Olympia held the pistol in one hand and touched the pomegranate with the thumb of other. It revolved.

    Gradually, it dawned on Olympia that she held in her hand a flintlock of the sort she only read about. Henry VIII was said to own a fowling piece which could be reloaded quickly by switching barrels. Here some ingenious gunsmith had instead resolved to switch the shot itself by breaking the barrel in two. She counted the tubes in the pomegranate and blanched. Eight. She held in her hands a gun which when loaded could fire off eight shots before having to reload again. Bewildered she turned to look at the Sea Wolf. He, having seemingly mastered the art of reading her mind, gave a smile and nod.

    "Did you create this?"

    "What? Me? No, no, no. I know little of the way of guns, unfortunate. This came from Nuremberg. Apparently they have had these type of lethal toys for quite a while now."

    "It is no 'toy,' beloved. It is a... An army equipped with such weapons..."

    "... would be quite fearful for an hour, mayhap two, then run out of shot. And think of the expense. What you have in your hand cannot be done by a mere half-bright gunsmith. That there flintlock is the work of a master whose craft took time and not inconsiderable skill. To put that sort of weapon into the hands of 15,000 strong... it would take time and money."

    "So it would. But if were done..."

    "Oh if it could be done, the known world would lay prostrate at the feet of the man, or woman, behind such an army."

    A bell clanged somewhere softly before Olympia could rejoin. She hid the ornate pistol and took her much less ornate one and stalked forward. The hired help were used to her ways and her appearance did not shock them. The butler merely bowed and declared that someone calling himself "Salvatore Spadaforte" was at their doorstep and claimed to have a message from the sister of the Sea Wolf.
     
    Chapter 26
  • "I, uh, am not sure how to address you. I have always known you as 'Augustin,' while your good sister called you by another name, a name I was never allowed to say out loud. Still others in my hearing called you 'Sir Augustin of St. Ives.' And now I am told you are called 'Agostino of Australia' by some. While sailors and the men and women of the docks all call you 'Sea Wolf.'"

    "In light of our previous acquaintance you may call me 'Agostino.'"

    "Much obliged. The message your good sister gave you is in plain before you. But some things she bade me to say to you alone."

    "Speak."

    Salvatore licked his already moist lips and flicked the briefest glance at the armed copper haired woman.

    "Uh, I do not mean to... But she was quite insistent for you to be alone."

    "I hold no secrets before Lady Olympia."

    "As you wish. Ashley, that is Lady Ashley, does not trust Franciotti."

    "Continue."

    "She is much worried of their continued conduct towards her should you reject their scheme."

    "I understand. Tell her I shall not let her fall to harm. As to the Franciotti, tell them I shall assist."

    "Uh, will you?"

    "Sal, I shall not let my sister come to harm."

    "Yes, yes, but will you truly help Franciotti."

    "You may tell my sister that I shall ensure her safety. Good day."

    Salvatore opened his mouth just then, but Olympia's right hand found the butt of her old pistol. And Salvatore found himself bowing low and fleeing scene.


    "Jesu, the Franciotti? Our plans are...! Lucca? We are to waste your breath on that?"

    "She is my sister."

    "Aye, but if we interfere in the affairs of Lucca before we...! We shall lose our..."

    "I understand. But many things have changed since we departed Genoa and our plans now change as well. The Grand Duke is dead. As is the Pope."

    "Yes, yes, but Lucca is no Rome, or even Florence. We cannot..."

    "I know. Right now we have good will. We cannot squander on it so mean a place as Lucca."

    "What shall you do then?"

    "Listen to you. I understand the heavens and the oceans. But Italian politics... They're your seas."

    "And we're in deep waters. We must not act in haste. As you said, much has changed. The moment we set foot in Rome or Florence, we shall be drawn into such politics as to diminish you."

    "Therefore...?"

    "I do not follow."

    "We must not set foot in Rome or Florence."

    "Until?"

    "Until such a time as you think it is right for us to enter those hornets' nests."

    At this Olympia blinked. For the words of the Sea Wolf stirred in her a curious notion.


    That day and night, as Olympia worked out the finer points of her plan, more sealed letters arrived, bearing messages of promises, hints, half-truths and outright lies from Gian Carlo Medici, his brother Leopoldo, Antonio Barberini, his brother Taddeo, the head of the household Farnese (brother-in-law to Medici, and the principal figure in starting the Medici-Barberini conflict), then Doge of Venice and half dozen grandees of Spain. As well certain private individuals filled with lust for money who were heads of households of which you have never heard and this we will not waste your time. Though, in the interest of history (or at least gossip that passes for it in some academia), it does bear saying the Sea Wolf got a letter from one Lucy Hay, the Countess of Carlisle of England, the loveliest daughter of the wizard Earl of Northumberland. The letter's contents we shall not reveal in detail, since our tale is possibly read by those of an impressionable age, but we can say it contained hints of such a nature as to make us fear for the life for the beautiful Countess should Olympia have gotten to the letter first and read it. But the Sea Wolf read it himself, blushed several times and had it burned, lest it be discovered.

    The less intimate letters, written by male hand, were set aside for a discussion by both parties. But while Olympia busied herself with her plan, the Sea Wolf got to the business of crafting a joint-stock company to finance the second voyage to Australia with the help of the finest and most debased lawyers in the whole of Genoa. It was a dreary affair, punctuated by noxious Latin, discussion of fingers versus hands (please don't ask us to explain the last part), but the upshot of it was that the company was not done in the Sea Wolf's name, but that of the Durazzo. The Sea Wolf got 40% of the shares, to dispose of as he wished. The surviving crew of the two-ship fleet from first voyage was granted 10% to be spread out among them, and the rest (that is 50%) was to be sold by Durazzo (in conjunction with Grimaldi). To telescope ahead of our story, the shares sold out in three days and made the Durazzo rich beyond most of their wildest dreams, as a whole family. While the Sea Wolf became millionaire.


    By end of second day, when dusk came (we use the motions of the Sun to denote time instead of our previous use of prayers, for the individual involved in this sentence did not have much faith, though it may be most indecent of us to declare), Olympia had worked out her plans in detail and discussed them with the Sea Wolf, who nodded his ascent as mere formality. Olympia was quite prepared for combat, to defend her views, but the Sea Wolf meant what he had said, while there was a deck beneath his feet, he was master of his fates, while on the slippery as eel lands of Italies, he was a mere stranger in a much strange land filled with most dangerous people. Thus, the Sea Wolf agreed with all Olympia had outlined. And they then informed the Durazzo of what shall come next, as courtesy.

    Next day, dressed in wolf furs garbed he heartily despised, and sweating freely, the Sea Wolf declared that he had come to Genoa because it was a town and polity at peace and it fairly disgusted him that war was waged between good Christian now in Italies. He therefore declared he shall not set one foot in Florence, nor in Rome, until such a time as truce was declared between the two principal powers engaged in fratricidal conflict, made all the more dangerous to decent souls with the loss of a Holy Father and presence of a Vacant Seat in Rome, and instead, he would focus on his second voyage to the Gold Mines, and hoped that all will take advantage of the shares of the joint-stock company now going on sale. The effect the latter day portion of his speech we will not recount, for we had telescoped it earlier in this very chapter, but the first portion was a bolt of lightning that made him many friends, but also no few foes. For war hurts some and profits others.


    The mercenaries were certainly most furious when word got out to them by dribs and drabs, but in Rome and Florence, once the message was spread, there was rejoicing and petitions were written to celebrate the great Agostino of Australia, the mighty Sea Wolf as the Prince of Peace of Italies.


    Leopoldo seized the chance right away and declared in the midst of Florentine mob, to cheers, he would hold truce if only his Barberini partners in the senseless struggle would agree. The Doge of Venice breathed a sigh of relief in private and in public in equal measure and too endorsed peace. The head of the family Farnese spat fire, for he knew truce meant Castro would stay under Barberini occupation, but those members of his family who held Parma (in the North) much dear to their hearts than Castro quite agreed with the words and declaration of the Sea Wolf. So did the other junior partners of the Medicean coalition, who, after all these years could not intelligently describe the reason for the war or its reasonable objective.


    In Rome, Taddeo Barberini was confused. On the one hand, he wanted truce to give respite to his forces. On the other, he feared what such a respite would do to the Medicean armies now arrayed. Antonio Barberini was utmost delighted and even spread a rumor that the Sea Wolf acted on his notion. Francesco Barberini was opaque. He praised the idea of a truce in public and in private alike, but not even his brothers could know what went through his head.


    Meanwhile, the ruling entity of Spain (at least on paper, for in truth Spain was a beast of many backs, each ridden by a different grandee at cross purposes with his fellows) and the (much more centralized) Dutch East India Company both ignored the grand entreaties of truce and sent peevish notes to the Sea Wolf, declaring that Australia and Gold Mines of King Solomon were theirs and he had no right to mount the first expedition to it, much less a second. These notes were dully ignored by nearly all, and the grand fleet for the second voyage began to be slowly assembled, as the money trickled in, while the preliminary truce was being hammered out by seasoned diplomats armed with even more noxious Latin than what the Sea Wolf endured when creating the joint-stock company.


    The truce, while being officially debated and its council's location and terms deliberated upon, took, however, immediate hold upon the battlefields and sieges. No soldier, not even a mean mercenary of not much wit, would have any wish to be killed in a senseless slaughter. And with the truce looming, no one wanted to risk life and limb. Thus the truce came long before Latin stopped being spewed and discussions on the order of precedence of people entering the hall where the negotiations were to be conducted was settled. The latter point may seem much silly to us now, but it was such "disrespect" of people being seated ahead of those who thought it was their due to find the cushion chair with their asses before that of others that played no small part in inflaming the passions that lead to the start of the War of Castro in the first place.

    But even the most careful of plans can be torn asunder by any little thing, and so it was while it truce was being endlessly negotiated and the Franciotti grew more frantic still, and the Cardinal-Inquisitor Francesco Barberini plotted his own dark plots, did an incident occur which upended all these things.
     
    Chapter 27
  • Many things were said of the Cardinal-Inquisitor Francesco Barberini by the people of Rome. Most of what was said was quite vile and false. Viler even compared to what we have seen him in our tale. But where the false rumors truly ran wild, in their ridiculousness, were in regards to his intimate desires, which were quite simple. The Cardinal-Inquisitor enjoyed the company of young women in their early twenties who could speak French and practice it. Given the bacchanalian degeneracy of some of the others bearing the princely title of cardinal, this was rather tame and nearly chaste. And it was while on his way, by foot, to an assignation with a favored woman that it transpired his pathway was blocked by a cloaked man.

    The Cardinal-Inquisitor sighed and gestured.

    But nothing happened after that. That is, nothing happened that was planned by him, for his two bodyguards did not come to his aid to remove the obstacle. He frowned and glanced back and saw a pair of men sprawled on their backs, their pale dead faces with gaping open mouths reflecting moonlight.

    Another man would have ran right there and then, but the Cardinal-Inquisitor was of a different sort.

    "Whatever you are paid, I can quite easily double it."

    The cloaked man stepped forward and revealed his ill looking pock marked face.

    And then and only then, did Cardinal-Inquisitor took flight. He ran until his sides were aflame. He knew the Eternal City quite well and, even in a panicked run from a killer, he ducked into the alleys he knew would connect to safety. The trouble was, his lungs gave out before his legs could take him there, so he leaned in the shadow of a crumbling house and peered into the darkness in terror.

    The first blow came to his already inflamed side. He jerked up and sideways and collapsed to knees. The second blow came from a foot, not fist and smashed him in the spin and he fell face first into a puddle teeming with urine of the local children and stray dogs. He spluttered, spat and rolled to his other side (the one not hit with fist) and opened his mouth to negotiate with the pock marked fellow.

    The fellow planted a boot on his throat instead. Took out a stiletto. Proceeded to cut off the Cardinal-Inquisitor's ears, then some fingers, then a thumb and when the foaming at the mouth, screaming and yelping Cardinal-Inquisitor passed out from pain and shock, the fellow reached down, stuck a foul smelling rag under the man's nose, and watched as Cardinal-Inquisitor come to life, only for it to be extinguished when the blade struck those pained lungs. Blood jetted, then seeped and the Cardinal-Inquisitor Francesco Barberini died in a puddle of piss, blood and vomit, and not all of it his own.


    At dawn, the body was found. There was very little mourning in the streets of Rome, and instead when the Barberini guards came to reclaim the body they were pelted. One of the guards was young and an excitable sort and he let loose a pistol at the vague direction of his attackers, missed them all, and murdered a six year old child standing on a stall and cheering. The guards were massacred after that by a mad mob, and the disturbance spread throughout the Eternal City.

    Antonio Barberini was quite caught off guard, and thought of nothing but to retreat to Castel Sant'Angelo, a mighty citadel, then north of the city of Rome proper, but in doing so, he had conceded Rome to mobs, and they ran wild and committed gross offenses against any symbol of the family Barberini. Though even that was not strictly true, for certain fountains and pretty squares were left alone, while more than a few shops were looted that had no connection to the family Barberini at all.

    The Roman ghetto was by this point depopulated, and those who had come to loot it in the false name of seeking vengeance on the Barberini were laughed at by the knowing Christian locals, who called the would be looters tourists and worse things. All true denizens of Rome knew the surviving Jews of the Eternal City were huddled in their new enclave on a hill overlooking the people's square. And what mob managed to climb up the steep hill was soon disappointed, for the Jews up there had closed the gates to their new neighborhood and had armed guards patrolling thick walls. Though some wine fueled toughs screamed obscene things at the walls, one volley from the new ghetto's guards cleared the would be looters off they fled, leaving the Jews inside to breathe the first sigh of true relief since the last Pope had lived.

    Taddeo Barberini learned of the disturbances by day's end and it took two more for him to cobble together an army of German mercenaries and with such a force he finally did reach Rome, finding a town full of chaos and mob rule. He was unable to communicate with his surviving brother Antonio right away, and as such could not coordinate a response, even if he was in any carriage of mind to do more than to revenge himself and his family on the Roman people. As it was, he was not. And so he revenged himself. The mob did not organize much past some bands of looting, and the experienced German troops ran roughshod over them, and there commenced a pillage of the poorer parts of Rome that would make the vandals of the yesteryear blush.


    When the smoke cleared, the corpses dumped into the Tiber and the raped sobbing survivors kicked out of the buildings where the German forces made their home, Cardinal Guido Bentivoglio d'Aragona, a sometime friend of Barberini and an ally of French interests, left his fortified house on Quirinale, and with a heavy escort of rough looking fellows, came to visit the two brothers Barberini brooding up in Castel Sant'Angelo. After pleasantries were exchanged and health of families much inquired about, Bentivoglio struck blood:

    "You cannot remain in Rome as you are, lest you want the Eternal City to go up in flames."

    Antonio looked ill, while Taddeo blustered and even threatened, but the urbane diplomat Bentivoglio rode out the storm. And struck once more when Taddeo stopped to draw a breath.

    "I say again, unless you want this town to go dogs, or worse, Pamphili and his Spanish catamites, you must quit Rome. You have made yourself too odious. Antonio can remain up here in this Castel, with French and North Italian toughs, but you, Taddeo must leave for Castel Gandolfo with your filthy Germans and stay there for mayhap a year. Or Rome shall rebel once again, and much worse."

    Antonio looked more ill still, while Taddeo fairly exploded. Yet once again Bentivoglio waited it all out.

    "Taddeo, do you want your family to be destroyed? Do you want a Borgia Pope to sit upon St. Peter's Throne? Do you have wish for the fires of the Spanish Inquisition to destroy all that you and your uncle love and loved? If so, then stay here and fight on. But if you have any love for your cause, you must do as I say. A third is not given."

    This time Antonio restrained Taddeo and spoke:

    "If I am to be trapped up here at the Castel and Taddeo is to leave town, what of Rome?"

    "I am prepared, with a group of men who have no love for Spain to draw up a force to police Rome and bring it to peace and make it safe again for pilgrims and the flow of trade."

    "I see. We turn over Rome to you. You hold a conclave and be made Pope. And in return, we get to keep our wealth and nobody goes before courts of law?"

    "I... I had no wish to be so direct, my dearest Antonio, but that is about the size of it."

    "Bugger that! I say we stay and fight! I say we drown the city in a sea of blood!"

    "And shall you then sail across those corpses on a raft made of human skin, dear Taddeo? Pray, be sensible. You lost the battle, do not stay and lose the war."

    "I lost no battle!"

    "Taddeo..."

    "Bugger this! I lost no battle! I defeated every foe sent forth!"

    "But you could not defeat your nature, and now you made yourself a monster," calmly said Bentivoglio.

    "You... You... You dare?!"

    "I dare, because I can hold this city and help you keep your lives and land. You cannot. I shall now depart to admire the inner courtyard of this citadel. Call for me when you are ready. Thankee."

    And without permission or acknowledgement, the cardinal turned messenger decamped.


    "Antonio, we can fight and make right."

    "For a day or two, or a month at most. And then we shall be destroyed, all of us, not just us two. No, no, no, Taddeo, we must see the wisdom of Bentivoglio's plan."

    "Bugger him!"

    "I rather not, for if we are to remain free, healthy and in wealth, we must ensure Pamphili does not take the Triple Crown. Better to have Bentivoglio as our pope, than a bloody worshipper of the Court of Md."

    Taddeo raged on for a quart hour or more, but soon the part of his mind that could think cold thoughts prevailed over his warm blood and he settled and though bitter and disgusted, he agreed. Thus, the affair was settled in the Vatican upon the fate of Rome, for now.


    For while all this went on, the situation at the front grew even more restless. With the loss of Barberini prestige in Rome, and rumors circling of impeding collapse if outright collapses at every turn, more than a few mercenaries stationed near the Central Italies, decided to take home their pay from the locals and depart for better climes. Thus the massacres in Rome were followed by a series of sporadic slaughters in Farnese lands by Castro, and soon Medicean spies reported that the road to Rome was clear.

    This naturally caused a dilemma for the Medici. On the one hand, they were negotiating the truce, on another, the opportunity was too great to pass up. The only thing they feared was how the Sea Wolf would react, for the Sea Wolf at this time was the only credit worthy name in all of Italies, and his credibility at banks and among people was so high that to oppose him openly would be to invite trouble.


    As for the Sea Wolf, he was as bewildered by the events in Rome as was his copper haired companion, who saw all her careful plans collapse so much like a house of cards with the appearance of the corpse of one Francesco Barberini. She needed a full day to come up with a compromise, and so a full sennight after the Cardinal-Inquisitor died in a puddle of piss, blood and vomit, did the Sea Wolf address his flock:

    "Good people of the Most Serene Republic and the many visitors among you, of whom I am but one. The events in Rome are too shocking to contemplate. Much too shocking. But I think they fell upon us because we are without a strong leader. Our Holy Mother Church has a Vacant Seat. If we do not fill it, then do we not invite disturbances? If we are not unified by a strong leader, then are we not asking for our differences be exploited by others? If we are to prevent more shedding of good Catholic blood, then we must convene a conclave and elect a new Holy Father! But as Rome now appears to be too unsafe, we cannot in good conscience ask princes of our Church to journey there to cast their vote. No, no, no. We must hold a conclave in a safe and sound place..."

    At this the crowd roiled in murmur as the more intelligent among them could see where this went, but still dare not hope for what would transpire next.

    "And I can think of no safer place than right here, in Genoa!"

    This was met with cheers and screams and celebrations of such sort that some of the more aristocratic minded families feared a peasant revolt among the excited mobs of Genoa and had their villa gates shut closed and armed their amused servants. But no rebellion came, and soon even the aristos saw the benefit of a Genoese conclave and so it was proclaimed by all ruling bodies in the good city of Genoa.


    The declaration was not met with universal cheer in all parts of Italies, for Genoa was still considered an informal part of the Spanish Empire and as such, more than a few French minded man in the Curia thought Genoese conclave could only produce a Spanish puppet to sit upon St. Peter's throne. But to such troubles we shall return in due course, for lost among the excitement was the fate of Franciotti. Being an excitable and not entirely serious sort, they judged the events in Rome as good signal as any to launch their takeover of Lucca. It went about as well as you can imagine such an enterprise would go, 1,500 armed louts attempting to arrest Franciotti enemies while declaring the salvation of a republic not in need of saving. The Mansi family led the counter revolt and soon Franciotti were cut down in the streets as dogs and drowned as unwanted kittens. Cardinal Marco Antonio Franciotti fled the villa for the dubious safety of Rome, hoping to find a place by the side of Antonio Barberini, with whom he was on friendly terms, though more than a lifetime ago.


    When Mansi led forces reached the villa housing weary but somewhat defiant Ashley and terrified Salvatore Spadaforte, they ransacked the place and though more than a few scullery and kitchen maids were forced to endure the untender ardor of their roughhewn captors. At first sign of approaching assault to her own body, Lady Ashley stepped forward and declared in a shrill and broken, but understandable, sub-dialect of Tuscan then practiced near Lucca, that she was sister to the Great Sea Wolf, Agostino of Australia.

    This stopped her would be rapists in their tracks, though some were disinclined to believe her, but the fear held, and soon as Mansi family member was found, pulled off an unfortunate daughter of the now killed gardener, told to pull up his hose and bid to authenticate the familial claim of trembling with rage (and now more than a little scared) Ashley. The distaff Mansi did not know the Sea Wolf by sight, nor did he know of his relations, but he spoke English and all knew the Sea Wolf was once English before being claimed by Genoese. The distaff Mansi spoke a few words foreign with the strange woman in the villa, though discretion was to be best, and told his brave fellows to leave the woman alone, but to make it up to them, gave the daughter of the gardener and let them loot the art gallery upstairs. Mollified, the hired bandits turned liberators moved on, and Ashely vomited in relief and shuddered in the arms of no less relieved and even more scared Salvatore.

    "We must escape, Sal. We must escape. We must escape now. Before they change their mind, or try to take us hostage. Go on, find us a pair of horses. Go. Go on. Go now."

    This Salvatore attempted, but was stopped by a drunken Mansi hired oaf who was quite angry that he could not find a woman to use in the house that was not already taken by two dozen of his fellows, and so he knifed Sal in the kidneys twice, and left his yelping, bleeding corpse to stalk off in search of wine.
     
    Chapter 28
  • "They killed him. Jesu. They killed him, Ash. They..."

    The Sea Wolf took his sobbing, mud streaked twin sister into his arms. Her ample body shook. The Sea Wolf signaled with his eyes and the servants closed the door upon the tender scene. A disreputable looking peasant with a long and filthy mustache sulked in the yard and shrieked for pay.

    "Drove her up from docks, I did. Took her here straight from docks. Where is my coin?"

    The butler was about to speak, but stopped, for a shadow fell upon the yard.

    "Hey, I said, where is my...?"

    "Who are you?" asked a copper haired woman in men's clothes the peasant had not seen before. She wore two pistols at her belt, a sword, a dagger and her boots had steel toes. The first comment died on the peasant's blister covered lips, as did the second, for both contained an ill remark aimed at some woman who would presume to question him, the male of species. The third remark was more considered and contained just truth, devoid of nearly all commentary:

    "That there woman who done walked inside, she come off the boat, that is a ship, well, a fishing trawler, that done come up from down the coast, I thinks. She come up and says to take her to the place where the Sea Wolf lives. Says she is his twin sister, she does. And has no coin, but promises me..."

    "Did Agostino of Australia take this woman inside?"

    "Yes, Lady Olympia," said the butler.

    "Pay this man," she said and off she went.

    "You're not from here are you, stranger?" asked the butler.

    "What? No. I means, I came down from a place up North. People said there be jobs here, now that the Sea Wolf lives here. So ins I came and..."

    "Take the coin and leave."


    Olympia resisted the strong urge to burst inside and talk to the Sea Wolf, under some false pretense. She did not want him to be left all alone, with any man, and especially a woman. That the woman was his twin sister did more to inflame her jealousy, not less, for her opinion of Ashley was quite low and she knew from practice that the Sea Wolf's kindness could be much abused by those who drew upon his previous relation. She had already had to send away a merchant who recalled how he was the one who transported the twins down to Pisa from Marseille and wanted a small loan, very small, per him, to help him expand his newfound venture. Then there was a woman, well, a girl, who appeared one day, claiming to have known the Sea Wolf intimately in Siena, before he came to live in Florence. The girl came up to ask for a bit of coin as well in remembrance of passion past. Olympia still did not know whether she told truth or lies, but still had the girl killed regardless.

    At last the doors of inner chamber were opened and the Sea Wolf emerged. He looked to be in a dark mood, and best avoided, but Olympia took a risk, for she had to know what had transpired between him and his twin sister.

    "My wolf?"

    "Ashley was nearly massacred by Mansi bandits, when the Franciotti plans fell apart."

    "I see."

    "Her, uh, companion was killed and she was nearly, uh, assaulted."

    "I see."

    "Do you? My sister, my twin sister, my only living relative, uh, by blood. And she was nearly raped and killed as a, uh, um, afterthought in a fool scheme gone wrong drawn up by, uh, idiots whom I ignored for being, uh, idiots. Jesu! I nearly lost my twin! All because I was too busy scheming, uh, things of... The Devil take the...!"

    "Beloved. Servants can hear us."

    "Do I look like I give a shit?"

    "No, but I do. Permit us to talk more in your bed chamber."

    "No, Ashley sleeps there."

    "I see. Let us talk in my chamber then."


    As so they did. Where the Sea Wolf retold the story his twin shared. His face turned vermillion at several turns of tale and Olympia intervened here and then to steady her companion's mind with a warm application of a palm upon the back of his quite nervous hand.

    "My wolf, she is safe. That is the only things matters now."

    "Yes, yes, you're right. Though I feel quite shattered by this turn. She could have been killed not as a target, but as mere... nothing. She almost died for nothing. To think."

    "Best not to dwell on that. For if we think on such things... recall the poor captain of the 'Fortune' who survived all upheavals of our great adventure only to die from a badly cooked meal so near home."

    "Yes, yes, you are right. Life is so precious we must... Life is precious."

    "Aye, it is. Too precious to be left to chance. So we must plan. Such as this conclave?"

    "Yes, yes, you're right. Have the cardinals responded?"

    "Those of the Spanish party signal their delight. The French ones..."

    "Do what must be done. You are the master here, and I but a novice."

    "We must of the same mind here, my wolf. Let me share some thoughts." And share she did, and the Sea Wolf listened and made suggestions where he could and it pleased Olympia to see he heard all she had said, and could be made to disregard the misadventure of his twin sister.

    ***


    In Rome, Cardinal Antonio Barberini was in a rather laconic mood, and swayed a nearly empty goblet in his hand, when Cardinal Guido Bentivoglio d'Aragona came calling.

    "Well then, my good lord d'Aragona, it appears you still hold Rome, but no longer hold a grip upon the Triple Crown?"

    "Could you not crow about it least?"

    "I am not crowing, but merely pointing out that we did all you asked, and now... Now...!"

    "The situation is not as difficult as you make it seem."

    "We are to go to Genoa to choose the Pope! Genoa - the Spain's bordello!"

    "The cause of France is not yet lost. Nor that of your own family."

    "I see. You just neatly divorced the two."

    "What?"

    "You. You just hacked off my interests from that of your beloved France."

    "Do not read too much into my words, good Antonio. I merely meant we can still prevail."

    "By going into a lion's mouth?"

    "It worked out for the Christians did it not?"

    "Christian. Singular, not plural. It worked for one man, and he was a saint. I do not think we qualify."

    "Mayhap when we should speak when you are of a more sober mind."

    "Oh that could be a problem, given I have taken to drinking as Lord Bacchus cavorting the satyrs and the nymphs. Look here. If we go up there, we shall elect a Spanish pope. To tell yourself otherwise is to invite ridicule."

    "The Spanish party is not well led. There is much confusion among their number."

    "Ah, I see. So it is a question then of which bastard shall sit upon my uncle's chair. Perhaps we shall all get lucky and it won't be an utter bastard!"

    "Really, I should like to speak with you when you have drank some water with that wine."

    "Oh go to Devil. We are doomed."

    "We are not. But you are certainly finished if you do go up there with a sound plan and a clear mind."

    "What part of 'go to Devil?' do you find difficult to follow? Shall I say it in French, mon ami?"

    "You are no friend of mine, but we were once allies and could be again. When you are sober."

    ***


    "Gian Carlo, we must of one mind before I go to Genoa."

    "Dearest Leopoldo, you mean we have not been thus far?"

    "No, we have not. I, prompted by a baser urge, have seized power that was not mine to take and installed myself in Florence as if a sultan, while you sulked here and nursed a grievance that may taint our cause and only seeks to delight our many foes."

    His Highness Gian Carlo Medici blinked in lieu of gaping. As for his Excellency Cardinal Leopoldo Medici, he drew forth a chalice, got some wine and drank it all.

    "I sometimes wonder if we poor Medici get sick when telling too much truth, thus we must practice lies to breathe."

    Gian Carlo laughed, oh how he laughed, and it was as if a boulder fell from shoulder. The ill feeling for his brother which had reached tide highs suddenly fell well below all markers at the docks of his mind. He felt his chest expand now much more freely.

    "Jesu, but the truth can help at times."

    "Aye, Gian Carlo. That it can. I took power in Florence because I did not think you ready, and thereby wounded you. I must admit I took the throne with pleasure and enjoyed it. Enjoyed it much too much to turn it over to you when I should have. But all that ends. Florence is yours. You must take my place. You are the rightful heir, and you must see our family prosper."

    "Are you...? Do you have a malady?"

    "Do I sound as if I am a sick man?"

    "No, but you sound as if you are prepared to die."

    "I am off to go to conclave which makes the mines tended by Barbary captured slaves seem like a paradise. It is... You have no idea what it does. I have no idea either. Well, not entirely at least. I have some notion of what it shall be from past accounts of our family, and thus I must unburden myself to you. I must cleanse myself with truth and settle my affairs here, for the next days shall be filled with such lies. By Jesu, but I tremble."

    "How do you rate our chances?"

    "Rather well. We are not bootlicks of French ambition as were Barberini in these last decade. The Spaniards have no cause to hate us, and make no mistake it shall be Spaniards who shall hold the trumps."

    "Who do you think shall become Pope?"

    "Pamphili, unless the French party is prepared to fight to death. And it may come to that."

    "What does it do for us?"

    "Nothing bad, but nothing good, unless I can wring something out of him or that Agostino of Australia."

    "Can you?"

    "I do not know. But I know that regardless of the outcome, Florence will have a hard road to become what it once was. If we do not make trade flow and the price of wool recovers not... It shall be lean years and we will be forced to walk and talk small."

    "You now have me feeling ill again, brother, after feeling well when you spoke truth."

    "Truth has that effect as well, at times. Now then, let us speak of the economies of Florence and my dealing with the guilds. We must also speak of various plots our foes conceived in our fair city."

    ***


    Mazarini had his things all but nearly packed when a nervous lackey brought a velvet glove by way of summons. Mazarini dismissed the man and walked up a steep spiral staircase to find Anne of Austria, Queen Regent of the Kingdom of France, standing in a small chamber, looking pale and nervous.

    "My Queen."

    "Jules, what if they...? Suppose the Malcontents attempt to end your life?"

    "Oh they would not dare. Not in Genoa, my Queen. If anything, I am safer there than in Rome. In Rome, the populace would be seething and with the guards of town being French, my assassination would be blamed upon the irregularity of the French mercenaries, with none to take blame. Genoa, now Genoa is known as a Spanish haunt, though that'd be far from truth, for Genoa remembers it is part of the Spanish Empire only when it finds for that to be convenient. If a cardinal well known for being a friend to France were to fall in Genoa to an assassin's knife or poison, too many fingers would be too quick to point at Spain and their cat's paws. And in the middle of a conclave such an outrage would backfire immensely. It is a lion's den, make no mistake, my Queen. But it is no death sentence."

    The Queen breathed some relief, though not much. And, overcome with feeling, the august body moved towards that of Mazarini, but stopped well short. So it was upon Mazarini to close the distance and to take the trembling royalty in hand, press tight and kiss her on the mouth with passion.

    ***


    The peasant with the filthy mustache sat by his coach and day dreamed. Locals had deprived him from the best fares and all the fair spots from which to spot the coves in need of transport. This he understood and did not argue against. They were locals, and he was stranger. With time, they would think of him as local too, or he might be knifed, or he might have to knife another. Such was life. And sometimes fates were kind, such as when none wanted to ferry the hysteric woman come off the ship and it turned out to be twin sister to the Sea Wolf himself. And he had coin to prove his tale and already he had told it more than once, and some had gave him almost decent wine to hear him tell the tale. The adventure eased some of the troubles with the locals. Some, mind. But his knife was sharp and nearby, and he held no illusions, just some day dreams.

    "How much to be taken to the St. Catherine of Genoa church by the northwest wall?"

    The peasant puzzled, for that was near the old Jew quarter and no decent man wanted to go there upon arrival. Granted the Jews were all expelled an ancient time ago, but the prejudice remained, and no true Christian would wish to live there if he could help it. The peasant then turned to say as much to the man asking him, but did not speak his mind, for the fellow before him looked ill and pock marked and had a dark hint of bloody violence about him that the peasant saw in men come back from wars.

    "St. Catherine's out by the walls, you says?" he asked instead.

    The pock marked fellow gave nod.
     
    Chapter 29
  • The Sea Wolf shrugged off the wolf furs, stood and wetted his throat with weak wine enriched with a few peels of lemon. Then he sat back down and gestured. Olympia, dressed for the occasion in a more respectable and sober, if still male cavalier, black outfit trimmed with silver, said and did nothing. With a stifled groan, the Sea Wolf put on his wolf fur again and gestured once again.

    "Olimpia is next."

    "Ah, I had not realized you set an appointment for yourself with me. How amusing."

    "No, my wolf. It is a meeting set for Olimpia Maidalchini, sister-in-law to Cardinal Pamphili, and some would say his brain and dark heart. Here are the prepared materials."

    Notes passed, and the Sea Wolf read them. He looked up only once, despite a multi-paged array of facts fantastic before him about a woman more than a few cardinals of the French party called an apple squire, with implication being that a hapless Pamphili was her whore to lease. In truth, the relationship between the two was more complex, but that is neither here nor there, and we only mention the above most sordid view of the widow to illustrate the sheer visceral degree of opposition to Pamphili and his candidacy among the adherents of the anti-Spanish faction.

    "Let us not keep the lady waiting."

    "She is no lady, my wolf."

    The Sea Wolf gave a nod in lieu of having a conversation that would parch his throat again.

    Olimpia Maidalchini was ushered inside by a liveried lackey. All stood. All bowed and curtsied. Pleasant chats were had on family, weather, price of silk and the affairs in England, the last part was Olimpia's attempt at divining the loyalties of the English born Sea Wolf as to the rebellion then taking place upon that wet and sad rock jutting out in the North Seas full of angry madmen. But the Sea Wolf hid his thoughts and steeled his face, and soon (though not soon enough for the tired Sea Wolf), did the conversation turn to the true purpose of these and many, many, many other meetings Sea Wolf held in his new lair in these last three days: the conclave.

    "I shall not speak to the sagaciousness of labelled my dearest brother-in-law as member of the so called 'Spanish party,' but do wish it to be known, he is free of prejudice towards the Spanish or French interests, unlike the last pontiff. And my good brother-in-law only acquired the not entirely deserving reputation as a staunch defender of the interests of the His Most Catholic Majesty, Spain and its Empire because he opposed, on principle, the French intrigues perpetuated by the previous occupier of the Triple Crown."

    The Sea Wolf held his tongue, and Olympia spoke:

    "Are we to understand then that should Cardinal Pamphili were to take the throne of St. Peter, he would be neutral in his affairs with Paris and Madrid?"

    "Naturally, my good lady. My brother-in-law desires only peace and prosperity for all."

    Not much could be said of import after such a crude lie, and so the next half hour was spent on nonsense. Feeling herself losing her newly empowered audience, Olimpia eschewed the diplomatic tongue and struck out hard and plain:

    "If my dearest brother-in-law was chosen to become father of all princes in Christendom, he would admonish them in trying to seize lands by virtue of previous agreements made by pontiffs past and declare the New World open for discovery by those bold enough to seize their fates."

    The Sea Wolf beetled his brows at that. Olympia once again spoke on his behalf:

    "Cardinal Pamphili would revoke the Treaty of Tordesillas?"

    "He could not revoke that which he did not make. The notion that the world can be divided as if an apple between two parties, namely Portugal and Spain, is but a jest in our modern times regardless. No, no, he would merely rebuke. And call for all decent Christians to go forth and evangelize the savage lands of the heathen New World as they can best, provided the role of the Holy Mother Church is acknowledged. But, naturally we, for I dare to speak on my dearest brother-in-law's behalf in this, hold the notion of private property as quite important in all things proper and would likewise seek to acknowledge those individuals who have decent and legitimate claims to lands taken prior to my dearest brother-in-law's ascension, should it be the Lord's will."

    The noon time heat, the furs and wine all made the Sea Wolf be less diplomatic than Olympia wished:
    "Should Cardinal Pamphili become Pope, I would get Australia and Solomon Islands via a papal bull, while in return I grant rights to tithing of the lands discovered?"

    Olympia blanched at that, but Olimpia did not. She leaned forward and flashed almost good teeth.
    "Yes, my good brave Agostino."

    There was much feeling behind those words. Far too much for Olympia's taste and her hand found the handle of a hidden dagger at her belt. The Sea Wolf saw it, while Olimpia did not, for her eyes did find the Sea Wolf pleasant to the sight. Her own desires ran more to power true than base carnal lust, but she was a woman who liked men, and there were things to like in the barbarian half-civilized king sitting opposite her now, dressed as he was in wolf furs and good scarlet silks, a giant thick long sword at his manful belt, his one good eye blazing intelligence and raw power, while the other was covered by an embroidered patch, with exotic scars running near it. His boots were new and fat and the smell of rich leather stirred things in Olimpia's heart as well.

    And so with the two females of the species in his room thus occupied, it fell to the Sea Wolf to bring peace to the proceedings and this he did, by speaking gentle, low and of many unimportant things, and so the situation dissolved, with the desires unstated and no real promises made.

    "She's more whore than apple squire," hoarsely said Olympia when Olimpia was gone.

    The Sea Wolf held his tongue and got more wine.

    "Who is next?"

    "Cardinal Bentivoglio d'Aragona, but he does not come along. He has with him Bichi. Here are reports."

    And so the long day continued for the sweating Sea Wolf, while all of Genoa was abuzz with anticipation.

    ***


    Pilgrims, well-wishers, agents of influence, the curious and the bored all streamed alike into the port city and filled it to the brim. Landlords charged outrageous rents, and said a small prayer of thanks to the Sea Wolf each morning. The food sellers did trade brisk as well, to say nothing of jewelers called upon by the wealthy (visiting and local) who suddenly had cause to dazzle all near them with splendor at many social occasions sprung near the great event. The sellers of relics of dubious holy provenance were gleeful and celebrated newfound wealth as well. The vigils therefore were almost the only ones who groaned at the crowds, for nipping and foisting increased ten thousand percent fold and would have gone further still if not the easing of restrictions on the necessary amount taken to constitute a felony, that is a hanging crime. Two dozen thieves on gibbets later, and the number of disappeared coin purses and slit open sacks went down a more palatable statistic.

    But if trade fair and lawful went well, so did the kind that was frowned upon, if not outright illegal. The beguiling daughters of Eve walking the Genoese alleys and streets soon found many ready customers. There was a veritable explosion of the sales of tobacco, sold in shops and corners by tradesmen who were not always licensed and not entirely reputable, and brought in to port not always labeled as such (to avoid certain duties imposed on the Devil's weed). But all of this was not much commented upon as much as the wagering.

    A mania of gambling upon the outcome of the conclave seized the great port town, and soon every tavern had at least one almost reputable looking cove armed with a smudged leaflet listing the odds his backers were prepared to offer, for all 55 cardinals confirmed arriving (though some listed odds for all 60 princes of the Church regardless). The odds fluctuated wildly for the top half dozen favored candidates, and coin was spent well there by visitors and locals alike, but where money truly flowed in rivers of gold and silver were the longshots. Some of it was playing the odds, but for others it was a chance to support a favored son of their town or region and to gain moneys in the bargain as well.

    Take for example the good town of Ferrara. The town's favored son was Cardinal Guido Bentivoglio d'Aragona. But his odds were fixed at a rather discouraging (from the point of view of profit) eight-to-five (by at least a dozen taverns, though some offered as low as four-to-three and others thought him a nine-to-five odds). That is, at eight-to-five, one would have to risk five florins to gain eight. To gamble thus did not seem endearing, and so as much if not more money was bet on the other son of Ferrara, the 29 year old Cardinal Carlo Rosetti, whose dashing escape from Puritan mad England made him a hero to many, but whose candidacy was a truly mad thing to bandy about given his age. We talk of an epoch when young pontiffs were a thing of the past and seen as relics of a bygone wild and disreputable era. It was a time when to be under sixty was considered to be a great disability to preclude a man from ascending to the throne of St. Peter. So if all that was known, what would possess men and women of sound kidney to bet on a 29 year old? 157 to one odds, for one.

    And so it came to pass that the more mad followers of the Spanish party shunned betting on Roman by birth, but Spaniard by politic, Pamphili (one-to-eight odds) and instead bet on the Spanish Cardinal Albornoz, whose candidacy elicited anywhere between 65 to one and 57 to one odds in the wine sinks.

    And, the Germans, Bohemians and true devotees of the Holy Roman Empire's cause spread their bets almost evenly between longshots Ernst Adalbert von Harrach and Fabrizio Savelli, each man standing somewhere between 44 and one and 54 and one odds, depending on the moods of the agents in taverns and dens of iniquity. Harrach at 44 to one was seen as grotesquely overvalued by most serious odds setters, but the man was considered a lucky omen by Imperial supporters, for he went to Rome so rarely that when he arrived earlier in the year, Pope Urban VIII was said to have remarked it was an ill omen for him. And so it came to pass that the pontiff died soon thereafter. And what as an ill omen to the now dead standard bearer of the French cause was happiness to the Spanish and Imperial supporters. So they drove down the odds by betting so much on their man.

    As for Savelli, there was talk among sharps that he was overlooked and that a man on the right side of sixty, as far as the conclave was concerned, and who was pro-Spain and Roman-born, should get shorter odds and be much more favored. But Savellis were as poor as convicts and it was understood that to win this election (or any election for that matter) one would need a goodly amount of gold to bribe. Sure, sponsors and various interested parties would come and give one aid in such an endeavor, but personal wealth was regarded a necessity as well. Thus, the odds.

    ***


    While Genoa buzzed and the Sea Wolf's day grew longer still, the 88-to-one longshot Cardinal Antonio Barberini sat on a bed, in a respectable Genoese palace of a distant family friend. For a wonder, he was sober. It was the first time in a fortnight that he went to bed without consuming wine and broke his fast with a simple ale. His still living uncle, fellow cardinal and a man who shared his name - Cardinal Antonio Barberini, Senior - stood before him and spoke nonsense:

    "The Spanish party is much confused, and it important to note that of the 55 of our peers now in town, the vast majority were appointed by my good brother and you dear uncle. If we could marshal them... We can hold the Triple Crown, and hold it in our family. You could be the next pontiff, nephew!"

    Antonio gave a nod. There was no point in arguing. He knew what he had to do and he would do it. Antonio Sr. went on for some time, occasionally pausing and looking to him significantly as he outlined his harebrained scheme of so many wicked turns it would cause even a man paying attention to twist about. Each time it occurred, Antonio (Jr.) would not and that seemed to satisfy. Finally Antonio Sr. gave him a most significant look, and Antonio gave the gravest of nods and his living uncle left.

    Antonio wrote out a letter to his brother Taddeo, who this very moment held down Castel Sant'Angelo. Then signaled for the servants and they dressed him in the full regalia befitting a man of his stature. First went on the crimson cassock with thirty three buttons, one for each year the Redeemer lived. Then came the fascia sash belt, to remind him of his vow of chastity. That he could keep his face straight when it went made either made him quite serious about today indeed or simply distracted. Then came the snow white rochet, looking for all the world as if a bedsheet became intimate with surplice, except it was good enough to be trimmed with lace. They tied the ends over the back of his neck into several knots, then tied those into knots as well. Then they did the same for his sleeves. The under-footman holding the bottom of the world's queerest masculine chemise then released it and it cascaded down to Antonio's knees. The scarlet half-cape that went down to his elbows was put on next. Then skullcap. They forgot the pectoral cross suddenly realized Antonio and said as much. A mad dash was carried out and it was soon found by servants. It was put over Antonio in a hurry, then adjusted so it stayed over his heart. Then found the biretta and set it on his princely head. There were mirrors next and Antonio stared a puffy faced stranger dressed in finery and looking scared and pale. He gave a nod.

    Mazarini went through the same ritual, though he talked through it with his agents. He was given money by his Queen. Good coin with which to dispense freely. But he had sticky fingers and they performed an alchemy indeed. For French gold became New World silver somehow, with which he parted on bad terms to his not amused as such agents.

    Cardinal Pamphili was dressed in the same finery as others. His careful toilet overseen by his dearest sister-in-law Olimpia Maidalchini. Pamphili felt his heart pound against his ribs and thought of meadows to still himself. The possibility he would lead The Church was strong, and all he met since that filthy Barberini pegged out knew it. He saw how different they became when they treated with him and at first it pleased him, though he was not proud of it. But soon fear crept in. He was too far ahead. He was too much a leading candidate. Those crowned popes before going into conclave suffer more heartbreak than success and he had tried to talk of other candidates, first as a jest and then in deadly earnest. He talked up other leading members of the Spanish faction, and of the chance the French would organize a revolt. But it was to no avail. He knew it was his election to lose and the heart leapt at his throat each time he even thought of the word "conclave." If to wear a crown is no easy thing, then knowing it is yours to lose is no easier. And it was his to lose. Despite what he said, or he tried to make himself believe. It was his. And he could taste it.

    ***


    The last visitor left the Sea Wolf's lair and he drained the jug of wine and lemon. Olympia whispered words of wisdom and encouragement and decamped to ensure all went according to their master plan. He nodded and waited until she left to shrug off the oppressive furs and fling away the silly sword. The silks stayed on. They were pleasing. But the eye patch went. All at once, the sweat came, and in rivers as well. He rode out the rain storm. Then stalked to find a thick cloth to dry off. He was exhausted and the conclave proper would only begin next day, and that is when the true horse trading and betrayal would start warned Olympia.

    The Sea Wolf strode through the deserted private chambers of his apartments and went to a place that gave him peace, the charts and map room. Each time he could steal away from the affairs of state, he would go there and draw out his journey to Australia and back, and then he'd burn the chart for fear someone would bribe the servants to steal it. The secrets to the journey to Australia and the Gold Mines of King Solomon lay in his head and in his head alone. He walked into the cool room, sat and only then became aware of a stranger in the corner.

    A pock marked fellow stood and held a pistol aimed at him.
     
    Last edited:
    Chapter 30
  • With a considerable effort the Sea Wolf looked away from the barrel of the pistol pointed at him and studied the man holding it. He was an ill looking pock marked fellow, pale and rather nervous. The two stood across from each other saying and doing nothing for what seemed an eternity but it was only less than ten Hail Maries before the Sea Wolf spoke:

    "Well, shall we sit and talk about our sins?"

    The words made the fellow visibly recoil, but he held the pistol firm even though the ground beneath his feet seemed to shift for a bit and he had to find his bearing. The Sea Wolf did not move, backwards or forwards, but the middle and index finger of his left hand pointed to a set of chairs by the bay window.

    The fellow blinked and spared a side glance.

    The Sea Wolf did nothing.

    The fellow suddenly gave a weary nod and gestured with his non pistol hand.

    The Sea Wolf went towards the chair furthest from the fellow.

    "No, stop. Sit there."

    The Sea Wolf gave a nod and took the chair closest to the fellow.

    "Will you not sit as well?"

    "No, I prefer to stand."

    "As you wish."

    "Why are you not afraid?"

    "Oh but I am. I just do not show it. A habit. When storm smashes against your hull, and low on food and drink, and you have no idea where you are or how to get back home, while the eyes of your woman and your crew rest are upon you, you learn how to not show your fear true."

    The fellow gave a nod after a moment and asked:

    "You spokes of sins. What are yours?"

    "Oh they are manifold. Too many to list now. What of yours?"

    The fellow had begun to dry swallow, but somehow became interrupted, stopped and gave a nod again.

    "Same for me."

    They then shared a silence.

    The Sea Wolf spoke first again:

    "So what shall we talk about then, if not our sins?"

    "Why do you think I am here to talk?"

    "Because had you merely wanted to kill me, you would have already done it."

    The words came out even and the one good eye was steady. Idly, the fellow, who today has picked the name Jepp, wondered if the milky eyed man who was send to end him near Albano felt as queer as he did now, standing before a man who showed no fear of death. Then, remembering how that encountered ended, Jepp gripped his pistol tighter still and focused on the task at hand:

    "You killed a man."

    "Men, not man. An entire ship lost to a storm. Then those lost to disease and lack of..."

    "No, this one you shot yourself. Then stabbed."

    "The French Comte. An officer in the King's Guard. Ensign d'Artagnan. Yes, I recall."

    "You killed him, and you did it for nothing. Merely to make your crew fear and respect you."

    "No, there were other reasons."

    "Do not tell me it was to prevent people from seeing you as French agents!"

    "That was part of it as well."

    "You hardly touched a land ruled by Spain."

    "More happy accident than an intended plan. Spanish and Portu'gee colonies are more numerous than those of Dutch or other fair weather friends of France on either shore washed by the Atlantic. We, that is I, could not be sure we would not land upon a Spanish fort, bereft of water or of food or in need of medicinal assistance."

    "And for this you killed a man."

    "Yes, for over a hundred souls were under my care. If they did not respect me, they would oppose me and were they to do that in open seas, they would be lost and I along with them. So, to ensure their safety by establishing my authority, I shot a man in the stomach, then stabbed him to death, after goading him into flashing his blade so I would have a lawful excuse, if pressed by magistrates."

    All this was also said quiet even and without raising a voice. As was:

    "Have you never killed for reasons that may seem opaque to others, but made good sense to you?"

    Jepp nearly stumbled again, but the barrel of his pistol never wavered and stared at the Sea Wolf straight.

    "That is why I am here. Have you heard of the massesacch?"

    "Yes. The murders and the robberies perpetuated against Jews."

    "Yes. That. I gave a thought to those. To their true origins. It did not start off there though, my thoughts I mean. No, no, no, they did not. They started with the Roman ghetto. The dead there. It started with them. They... I found the man who was the cause for their deaths. But it did not end with him. No, it did not. It did not. It did not end. The pain. The oscillation. And… It led to me think of the other massacres. All of them. The ones that came with the War of Castro, and did not just happen at the ghetto of Rome."

    The Sea Wolf regarded the now quite nervous fellow opposite him coolly and gave a slight nod.

    The now freely perspiring Jepp, fueled by a brief pause and that nod, rambled on:

    "The Germans. They changed the war. Made it worse. The man who brought the Germans here, he was one and the same as who caused the deaths at the Roman ghetto. So it seemed the circle was complete, but as I said, it did not end with him. I felt it did not end with him. I knew it did not end. It was not him who was... It was not him. He was not the cause of misery."

    Jepp's eyes now took on a glaze and bore into the one good eye of the Sea Wolf. The Sea Wolf frowned. Thought on the matter for as long as it took to say ten Hail Maries. Then spoke:

    "Who was it then?"

    "You."

    "I?'

    "Yes, you. The man who brought the Germans here..."

    "Francesco Barberini. Let us not drown in pronouns, if you please."

    "Yes, yes, him. He brought the Germans because he feared the Medicean credit would overlap that of his own family and thereby the conflict would be lost. His own secretaries confirmed it. He explained his thoughts to some. And that credit, the Medicean credit that is, he thought would be extended by rumors of the gold from the Mines of King Solomon returned. You. You are the cause for change. You changed everything. You. You brought this all about. You."

    "And now I fear you lost me. Please elaborate."

    "The..."

    The Sea Wolf withdrew a pistol from the cushion of the chair upon which he sat and pointed it at Jepp, who in a rush to explain himself had gestured with both hands, in an Italian and Gallic nature, and since one of those hands held a gun, he swung the barrel away from the Sea Wolf in his animation, leaving himself open to mischief.

    The Sea Wolf fired without aiming, for at such a distance he could not miss. But missed he did. For Jepp, from a lifetime of instinct, ducked upon the flash of iron wrought in the Sea Wolf's hand.

    The Sea Wolf's shot went over Jepp's head and scored the wall.

    Jepp now fell back, stood straighter and brought up his own gun. He made no effort to hide or duck or to evade, for he knew that with the shot now wasted from the pistol in the Sea Wolf's hand, he had time enough to act in leisure. The Sea Wolf would not have the necessary time to reload his weapon nor reach for another gun.

    But the Sea Wolf did try to do either thing. He merely reached out with his left hand and adjusted the curious pomegranate in the midst of his pistol's barrel where the trigger met the cock. The pomegranate then revolved. And the Sea Wolf's right index finger pressed down on the trigger.

    The pistol ball tore through Jepp's left cheek. His hands reflexively came up to shield his bleeding and now hurt face, exposing his slim, and twisted by pain, torso to the Sea Wolf.

    The Sea Wolf's left hand turned the pomegranate again. The right hand made shot.

    Jepp's chest took the ball and he was slammed against the wall, at an angle most odd.

    The Sea Wolf's left hand turned the pomegranate yet again. The right pulled the trigger a fourth time.

    Jepp's chest took another ball and his body slid down the side of wall.

    The Sea Wolf fired one last shot. This one aimed with both hands at Jepp's heart. The ball went true.


    The servants ran into the room, armed with staves, swords and (to Sea Wolf's mirth) a fire poker.

    The Sea Wolf spoke with them as he reloaded his newfound toy, a twin of the one he gifted to Olympia.

    "Get that body out of here, and do so in a haste. Then send someone to clean up the mess. Oh and let us try to not speak of this to the lady of the house. For should she learn that a madman, armed, was able to sneak into my rooms past all of you..."

    The servants shuddered and threw themselves into their assigned tasks with a manic speed.

    The Sea Wolf slipped the lethal toy into his belt and walked out. He kept walking til he got to his twin sister's chamber (formerly his own). The room was unattended as his sister was out by docks, examining the new art being brought inside the town, for old habits die hard. He found her chamber pot. Took off his silks. Put the pot before a stool. Sat on the backless chair and aimed his face over the pot. Then, and only then, did he get sick. Once done, he tossed the pot, contents and the receptacle itself into a bin by the upper kitchens and walked off, feeling a tad jittery, but no longer sick.


    The deception did not last an hour. Olympia was told of the whole affair by her spies in the house. Thus, the Sea Wolf faced the ministrations of his quite emotional beloved, and bore them well, all people involved considered. He was as stoic as called upon and even managed to be laconic on the substance of his tale. But Olympia, who now knew him better than any human being alive, saw easily past the first layer of the mask. And so the Sea Wolf had to be most deft avoiding probing questions, while putting on a second mask and third in quick succession. And still those layers were torn down and soon a fifth mask was called upon and it was being torn to shreds, when suddenly, the logic bent to anger once again and the inquest moved on from the Sea Wolf to the horror stricken servants. Here Olympia vented her full spleen and who knew where it would all end, and with how many people beaten and mayhap butchered in blood hot, had not the Sea Wolf came into the common room while Olympia shook with rage and said:

    "The conclave shall start tonight, my lady."

    At this Olympia blinked, nodded and went off to change her dress. And the servants contemplated falling to their knees and declaring the Sea Wolf their new patron saint.

    ***


    "My lord Cardinal Mazarini, what brings you this shop?"

    "You, my good lady Ashley. I was wondering if we could speak still of the estate you had wanted on Ligurian coast?"

    "Oh that was in the distant past."

    "I see."

    "My lord Cardinal, if I may offer this bit of advice. Whatever you may think of me, and no matter what you have heard, I set a great store by loyalty. I have but one piece of flesh and blood who cares for me upon this shabby coil. He has a plan. You must treat with him to learn of it, or to amend it, and please be so good as to not seek me as an in-between. When I had feared he might be lost, and you were a man on the rise, I was prepared to deal with you and indeed did as such. Now, things have changed, and though the ides of fate came, but have not gone, I shall not treat with you here and now regarding conclave."

    "I see."

    "But surely my lord does not require such as me. The men of the French party easily outnumber Spain's inside the college. And as for this nonsense of Genoa being Spain's plaything... No one in this fair town forgets what it was meant when Spanish troops came and occupied it for more than a few years."

    "Nor do they forget what happened when the French troops came to, uh, liberate and lingered."

    "There is a difference between pox and chillbains. Both cause pain, but only one lingers for a lifetime."

    "And you say Spain...?"

    "I say now, mind. Me and I, alone. None else."

    "Yes, yes."

    "Spain is the pox of Italies, now."

    "I have never be so glad to be called my adopted nation chillbains in all my life."

    "I often leave men happy, my good lord."

    And with that, the twin sister of the Sea Wolf sashayed away, forcing the good cardinal to sit down, despite the hour growing near to him having to depart to the conclave himself.

    ***


    The cardinals arrived in dribs and drabs to the Cathedral of Genoa (that is the Cathedral of Saint Lorenzo). Some came alone. Others sought safety in numbers. Still others wanted to show they had a grouping of their peers and were its lead. But by dusk all 55 now in town arrived. Some were greeted by cheers from the mob outside, and some were showered with boos, and still others got stony silence and awkward murmur. "Roman cardinal, you say? Which one? They have sixteen in town now. Lante? Ah, I see. Well, I do not. No. Who is Lante? Oh, Marcello Lante della Rovere. Why did you call him Lante then? He is a della Rovere. Hush, there is a Medici. By Jesu, he is ugly! Check the odds on him."

    Lante, or Marcello Lante della Rovere as the fellows insisted, was the Dean of the College of Cardinals and it fell to him to pretend to organize the event, though all knew his role was to count the votes and try not to get denounced for it by the losing party. Still, he appeared sober, responsible and severe. There was an oration, prayer and all sorts of rituals which while quite important to all playing part would bore most of us to tears. Let us then get to the heart of the matter, the first round of voting.

    Two hours of the most vicious horse trading followed before the first vote. The kind that would make most gypsies blush and even the most vicious tradesmen walk away in sheer disgust. Coin, houses, land and courtesans were offered and withdrawn. Threats were made. And all this while the conclave was "sealed." In this case, the seal could be, uh, set aside for a palm of silver, if you were a mere diplomat or an idle rich man, but a fistful of gold was required if you were a known agent of the His Most Catholic Majesty or His Most Christian King. All did agree, however, that such convention would only last the first day and the first round of votes. After that, the price would go up mighty steep and only the most curious, rich or agents of Kings would be able to afford transgressions against the mighty seal.

    For his part, the Sea Wolf stayed away from the hustle and bustle and was seen at prayer in the Church of St. Augustin, asking for the cardinals to deliver a new pontiff soon. While Olympia made her way through the seal of conclave at will to ensure the next pontiff was to her, and thereby the Sea Wolf's, liking. The five Genoese cardinals huddled as a group at first, but it was hard, for Grimaldi expressed such a total French party line that he was soon shunned for being Mazarini's painfully obvious agent. The Romans, though most numerous, were most hopelessly divided between differing strains of Spanish parties and the French ones. Pamphili did little, for as we have said, he thought it was his vote to lose. While Bentivoglio d'Aragona did even less, for he wanted to be the conciliatory anti-Spanish candidate, as opposed to the more virulently anti-Spanish one, such as Giulio Cesare Sacchetti.

    And of the other cities and states, there were too few cardinals to form true blocks. Even the Florentines were not as one, for Antonio Barberini (Sr.) was one of them, having been born there and stressing the French faction beliefs, while Leopoldo feign neutrality and countered with his Spanish views. Of the French party from France, there were too few, but Mazarini, though Italian born, had them well in hand. And as for Spain, Cardinal Gil de Albornoz led his trio as if a pack of dogs, but it was a small pack, and when he struck first blood, he did not use them, but performed quite another trick entire.

    Before the all-important first vote could take place, the Spanish bulldog Albornoz stood on his hind legs, cleared his throat quite unnecessarily and produced a sheaf of notes, which he then proceeded to fan about while he delivered an oration which caused as much damage to the conclave as an infernal device.
     
    Chapter 31
  • "My fellow princes of the Holy Mother Church," snarled Alboronoz, "I have here, in writing, instructions from His Most Catholic Majesty, instructing me of his veto against the candidacy of Bentivoglio d'Aragona."

    Mouths gaped at that, then jowls and neck fat shook as men jumped to their feet and yelled. Albornoz then simply sat, content to have done the dirty work. As for the man in question, Cardinal Bentivoglio d'Aragona, he sat stunned. Mazarini's face revealed nothing. He instead scanned the room. The Spanish party knew of the veto, but not at whom it was aimed. Others were in shock. Leopoldo Medici's hideous face revealed nothing. Colonna, of the Holy Roman Empire's party, hid something. Which was to be expected. While Antonio Barberini (Sr.) looked poleaxed. But Antonio Barberini (Jr.) looked quite too much relaxed to Mazarini's gimlet eye. And it was Antonio the nephew of the last pontiff, who rose now to speak.

    "My Brother in Christ Albornoz, I ask you to withdraw the veto."

    "My Brother Barberini, I cannot. It is not my veto. It is my sovereign's."

    "My fellow princes of the Holy Mother Church, pray hold your silence while I speak. Brother Albornoz, the veto is not yours, of this you just admitted. Then you say our brothers must bow in submission to a force outside this room? You tell us to discard a worthy candidate not on any spiritual grounds?"

    "Brother Barberini, I have thought long and hard on this, and although I deplore the use of temporal concerns to influence matters spiritual, I ask my fellow princes of the Holy Mother Church this, is not the Church herself imperiled should we seek to oppose so powerful a secular ruler as His Most Catholic Majesty and do so openly as to defy his words?"

    "My fellow princes of the Holy Mother Church, I beg of your indulgence. Please cease your mutters. Please. Brother Albornoz, you speak of our Church imperiled then?"

    "Yes, Brother Barberini, and I do not do it lightly. I fear for should transpire if His Most Catholic Majesty withdraws his protection and we forfeit his gifts."

    That set off the murmurs needed, and the small part of Mazarini's mind, which enjoyed performance, could almost find some pleasure in what was transpiring. Two actors, one not so good - Albornoz - and one far too smooth - Antonio Barberini (Jr.) - were putting on a floor show for their brethren. The upshot is that Albornoz was able to threaten loss of benefices and pensions of greedy celibates without having to say it right away, and Antonio signaled to a not unintelligent audience that by his actions, he was in concert with the Spanish party now, throwing into confusion the French. Well, almost.

    Mazarini now stood tall.

    "Brothers Barberini and Albornoz, I implore you to together work out a way to revoke this veto."

    "Brother Mazarini, I cannot, for I am here to only speak for the Barberini family, not Spain."

    "And likewise, Brother Mazarini, I cannot, for my sovereign gave me his orders."

    "I see. Tell me, Brother Albornoz, what were His Most Catholic Majesty's objection to Bentivoglio d'Aragona? What in the conduct of our fellow prince of the Holy Mother Church is so infamous as to earn censure from Spain?"

    "Brother Mazarini, my sovereign did not share his mind with me. He gave me this veto in writing. I know not what possible reason would induce His Most Catholic Majesty to oppose the worthy candidacy of our good Brother d'Aragona."

    "Please brothers, sit and let me speak. I wish to understand the import of the words now uttered. Brother Albornoz, do you mean to say, in principle, a secular ruler of a strong state in Christendom, may impose his will upon the selection of a pontiff, and not clarify his thoughts upon the matter, so long as it is provided in writing?"

    "I... Yes, I suppose, I am arguing that, Brother Mazarini. Though I wish I did not."

    "I see. Would the Dean of the College of Cardinal be so good as to rule on such a view?"

    "Brother Mazarini, I am as disheartened by the view of Brother Albornoz..."

    "Not my view, Brother Lante. Not my view at all. But that of my sovereign."

    "Yes, Brother Albornoz, so I understand. So we all understand. But please Brother Lante, continue."

    "It is not possible to resist the will of so powerful a king as that of the Spanish Empire, my fellow princes of the Holy Mother Church, as not to imperil the stability of the Holy Mother Church herself, and so I fear we must chose the lesser of two evils and bow to the forces of temporal power over spiritual."

    "I see. Permit a question then, my good fellow princes of the Holy Mother Church. Do any of you present also hold any vetoes, in writing, from your mighty sovereigns?"

    There were silence, though an exchange of looks in the party from the Holy Roman Empire. They had no veto in writing from the Holy Roman Emperor. The Emperor was too busy fighting for the survival of Catholicism in the Germanies to have time to gather his cardinals and articulate a policy in writing. Or so Savelli said. The truth, his patron Ferdinand III, Holy Roman Emperor, King of Hungary and Croatia, King of Bohemia and Archduke of Austria, did not wish to antagonize France, for she and Sweden were the main financiers of the Protestant German polities opposing his rule in Christendom. The German War was on the verge of being peacefully resolved, to end the then twenty-five year slaughter, and it did not seem good practice for him to cause a row with French interest. But he could not state this openly, however, for he was bound by faith, gold and blood to His Most Catholic Majesty and the Spaniards helped him fight the aforementioned heretic Germans. Thus, prevarication.

    "I ask again, my fellow princes of the Holy Mother Church, we have now been told of one veto. Does anyone here hold yet another?"

    Silence followed yet again, though there were worried glances.

    Mazarini looked now straight at Albornoz, and gave a most curious smile.

    "Anyone?"

    Albornoz did not like that smile, but stared right back. He was on solid ground, though the enemy yielded far too quickly for his taste.

    "My fellow princes of the Holy Mother Church, I have a veto of my own," said Mazarini smiling still. "From His Most Christian King Louis XIV of France. It is in writing. And it opposes Pamphili."

    There followed an explosion of such noise, it was heard by the mob outside and many feared the worst.


    Inside the conclave itself, Mazarini sat back down and let the noise swirl. He had done his work as Albornoz. Far better it must be said, for it was a complete surprise. Well, the first phase of it at least. More would follow. Grimaldi, Bichi and a pair of tame French cardinals bided their time to disseminate the new French party line, but kept up the morale of his potential troops. Pamphili looked crushed and could not speak. Nor should have Albornoz, but he ranted and raved and reduced his standing greatly. Antonio Barberini (Sr.) nearly came to blows with his betrayer nephew, who gamely tried to pretend it was all part of Mazarini's master plan, including his goading of Albornoz. It was not. Well, the goading was to be part of the plan, but it was to come from another source. And certainly Mazarini did not plan for Antonio Barberini (Jr.) to behave so brazen. Nor did Mazarini plan for d'Aragona to be vetoed. It should have been Cardinal Sacchetti, then d'Aragona was to be the compromise. But such is life. So not everything had gone to plan, but Mazarini did his part in the first phase of it as we have said.

    Albornoz was finally quieted down by the more sober members of his party, while everyone present wrestled with the question foremost on all minds. Should there even be a vote right here and now then? Or did the twin grenades tossed into the room had produced such a fearful slaughter that it was time to retreat and lick one's wounds and come up with a compromise to soothe frayed nerves?

    Eyes turned to Mazarini for guidance, since Albornoz had failed himself and Lante was in shock.

    "My fellow princes of the Holy Mother Church, the eyes of Heaven and good Christians are upon us. We must conduct a vote. It is expected, is it not? Let us take a half hour to collect ourselves and do one vote today and see if we are guided to a great and wondrous choice on the very first ballot."

    The words put the Spanish party on an edge, but the French party was likewise weary. Those in the know were told d'Aragona was the palatable choice. But with him now discarded...? The Spaniards were in similar disarray. Pamphili was to their eye the only worthy candidate.

    Albornoz was soon quickly surrounded by his two fellow Spaniards, as well as Medici (Florence), Harrach (Germanies), Savelli (sometime counselor of the Holy Roman Emperor, though he called Rome home) and Colonna (though he was brother-in-law to Taddeo Barberini, he was an Imperial man).

    Mazarini was joined by Bichi (Siena), Grimaldi (Genoa) and his two tame French cardinals. The others pressed upon him, but were politely ignored, including the outraged d'Aragona, who demanded the veto be rescinded. Bichi pulled him aside and spoke in blunt terms intended to wound and end him.

    While d'Aragona struggled for breath, Pamphili sat like a great log. He could not think. He could not move. He could only stare blankly out. It had been his to lose and he had lost it before a vote cast.

    ***


    While conclave was in chaos, the Sea Wolf sat on a pew in St. Augustin's church and thought of many things, including his return voyage to Australia and what route he would take. He had guards on either side of him, and behind him and in front. But no one pressed him. Then all heads turned, for into the church had entered a hulking brute. He looked like a Turk, for Turk he was.

    The Turk made a beeline for the Sea Wolf. Some of the people thought they were about to see a murder and so hung back, but the guards of the Sea Wolf were bidden to stand down. The Turk approached the Sea Wolf, gave a bow and then a note. The Sea Wolf took it. It contained in Olympia's hand, "il gioco siciliano." The Sicilian Game. Or, is at has come to be known in our age: The Sicilian Defence. White chessmen made attack, but black countered most aggressively. The battle has been joined. One of the Sea Wolf's companions had an inkhorn in his buttonhole. Another kept a quill in his hatband. The Sea Wolf added a symbol to the back of the note to indicate approval and receipt and handed it off to the lumbering Turk. And so the Turk bowed and departed.

    It was quite useless to speak to the Turkish fellow, for his tongue was cut out. And he could not hear regardless for his eardrums were punctured. This was done by order of the Sultan now long dead, who did this not to punish the fellow, but to protect himself from plots, for the unfortunate brute was earmarked to be servant to the Sultan's youngest brother. And the Sultan, fearful he would be overthrown by a plot hatched by said brother, had every servant in his brother's household rendered deaf and mute. We mention this not to shock or titillate, but to admonish that the events we now describe took in a much more violent age than our own and we should not judge the machinations of the people mentioned here too harshly. Thus ends the editorial and we rejoin our tale.

    ***


    "Scrutineers, please take your positions."

    Two cardinals, each chosen by the party that professed it did not exist in the universal Church of utter brotherhood and love, stood and made their way to the altar. The first was Cardinal Bichi, while the other was Cardinal Alfonso de la Cueva-Benavides y Mendoza-Carrillo, marqués de Bedmar. The third man chosen was Cardinal Roma, who despite his curious name was born in Milan. He was most severe, despised nepotism and was held to be incorruptible. The three cardinals stood by an urn that had its top blocked by a golden chalice.

    The most senior cardinal then stood, barely, but stood. Held aloft his paper ballot and shuffled down to the urn and chalice. Muttered an oath. Dropped the ballot into chalice. Held the chalice up with a shaky hand. Muttered yet another oath. Tipped the ballot in the chalice into turn. Then set the chalice atop the urn, though with much difficulty and returned to his seat. 51 one men then followed. Then each scrutineer did same. Then, in the presence of all, each scrutineer gave a firm shake to the urn. Then the urn was set down. A second one obtained. Shown to be empty to all assembled and set next to the first. Cardinal Roma withdrew each ballot, one by one, as his two scrutineers did their count. After each ballot was counted out, it was placed into the second urn.

    "Fifty-five votes had been cast."

    Chairs were found and set by the altar. The three scrutineers sat. One by one, the votes were taken out of the second urn. Roma would show the ballot to his two fellow scrutineers, then announce for whom that particularly ballot was cast, then the paper ballot was pierced by a silver needle with silk thread and garlanded by Cueva, with Bichi watching.

    "The first vote is for Cardinal Sacchetti."

    That set off a murmur, surely the French party would not advance someone so loathed by Spain, after all that had transpired earlier in the day? But they did. As more and more votes came in for the suddenly pale Sacchetti.

    The Spanish candidate of choice, with doomed Pamphili now sidelined, was Francesco Cennini de' Salamandri (Siena). Cennini was 78 years young, and one of the last holdovers from the Paul V's papacy. As such, he treated Madrid as the Mussulmen did Mecca.

    Across from their respective seats Mazarini and Albornoz exchanged a bitter smile.

    With the loss of their favored prospects, each side now attempted to show the folly of their opposition by bringing forth an even more unpalatable choice so that the next ballot may give room for compromise. All eyes then turned on potential candidates who thus could fit and the next phase of the struggle was entered. Mazarini had instructed Grimaldi to have four men of the French party vote for Giambattista Altieri (Rome) to signal his compromise choice (and a 50 to one longshot per the taverns of Genoa). While Albornoz decided not to give the game away just yet, by having three men nominate a wholly unelectable Maculano (Tuscany). Maculano's politics ran not so much pro-Spain, as anti-Mazarini. And there was much bad blood between the two men. Thus, his nomination was both an insult to Mazarini and a signal that Albornoz would fight and fight to death for his true choice, once said choice was set to be revealed.


    While these cunning stratagems were made, the Sea Wolf, in his namesake's church still, was visited by soberly dressed Olympia herself:

    "All's well."

    "I had no doubt."

    "I did."

    "You should not. You are smarter than all of them combined."

    Olympia did not do well with compliments as we have told, but this one filled her hearth with warmth. There was to be some Devil's work ahead, and it helped to know you were on the side of angels as far as your beloved was concerned. But same could be said of Olimpia Maidalchini, who recovered her wits and now plotted afresh, still seized with a vision of her brother-in-law Pamphili wearing Triple Crown.
     
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    Chapter 32
  • "My good lady Ashley, I hope I do not interrupt?"

    "Lady Maidalchini, to what do I owe such pleasure?"

    "Permit first to say it was so good of you to see me on such short notice, that is, no notice at all. For I merely barged in here, accompanied by a retinue of brutish guards. And you were so sweet to let your guards let me pass and arrange for us to talk in private."

    "It seemed a Christian thing, my good lady."

    "Yes, indeed. May I speak plain? The hour grows most late and I shall have a busy morning on the morrow."

    "As you wish, my good lady."

    "Thankee. I have no wish to speak so direct, but my mind is most weary."

    "As you have said, my good lady."

    "I am told you collect art in advance of artists you think close to expiring, so that when they pass, you may sell at a profit from resulting fame of their death which may at times elude them in their life."

    Ashley frowned at that, but gave a nod. If this was speaking 'plain' and 'direct,' she could only imagine what would happen to the Tuscan tongue when Olimpia Maidalchini chose to be opaque.

    "Well, then may I give an advance warning? A certain artist of good fame from Tuscany shall be unwell. It would be good of you to prepare for that, and take advantage. For I will. Good night."

    Before Ashley could register that, the widow quit her rooms.


    The body of Cardinal Maculano, born of Tuscany, was found in his room when he had missed the morning prayers. He was alive, but barely thus. He was covered in several layers of vomit and feces. The doctors were called and begged for the man to be taken to his rooms outside the conclave's walls and to be treated there. They disagreed on the cause of his ailment and the potential of his miasma spreading to the other at the building, but all thought it be best to be safe than sorry. The cardinals fearfully huddled in cliques and there was talk of abandoning Genoa for a safer clime.

    That news did not as yet leak out to the good people of Genoa, but nonetheless rumors ran wild. They knew two sets of vote were held and that no pontiff was as yet elected and that the second most likely candidate was dead. Then the whole business of the vetoes was found out, and the market adjustments followed swift and fierce. Odds were revised, but not across the board and syndicates were in disarray.

    There was fear of disturbances by the men pretending to be in charge of the Most Serene Republic, but outside of a new wave of pickpocketing and robberies of men made insensible by drink at having lost moneys bet on vetoed d'Aragona and Pamphili, there were none, nor any rebellion organized.

    Yet a most pernicious rumor made the rounds and Olympia hastened to the Sea Wolf to alert him of it.


    "Olympia, pray sit, are you unwell?"

    "Maculano has been poisoned."

    "So it has been said. Odd. Who do you think…?"

    "That is why I came here. There are rumors of French doing him in..."

    "That would make no sense."

    "It gets worse. There is talk you were involved."

    "What?"

    "Maculano was the chief prosecutor of Galileo. There is talk you, as Galileo's disciple..."

    "By Jesu…!"

    "I know, beloved. Thus I'm here."

    "Do we issue a denial?"

    "No. For a start, none would believe it, and it would help the rumor spread. And second, it would set bad precedent. Deny one rumor, and you must deny them all. For if you fail to deny one after you denied half dozen and all will think it true for you did not deny that one."

    "So what we are we to do?"

    Olympia looked sideways and the Sea Wolf's guards made themselves scarce.

    "It was that bitch Maidalchini."

    "That… makes sense."

    "I am glad you see it."

    "I hardly could not. She accosted Ashley last night and told her and warned her of this."

    "What? Why did you not tell me then?"

    "Ashley did not understand the import of the message until after the report of sickness."

    "She failed to tell us of what…!"

    "Olympia, please."

    "Right. As I have said. It was Maidalchini."

    "So what would you have me do?"

    "Stay as sweet as you are now."

    "I say, did you just tell me to smile, look nice and not worry my pretty little head about it?"

    "I suppose. How did it feel?"

    By this point both of them were grinning. Then the Sea Wolf was not.

    "If you cannot tell me what you will do, then I cannot help."

    "If you do not know what I am about to do, you cannot talk me out of it."

    "Fair enough." And here the Sea Wolf gave as yet another wholly non-English embrace and held. Olympia allowed herself to go slack in his arms, but for a moment and no more. Then she gathered.

    ***


    "Good day, Brother Pamphili. Pray, be so good to sit."

    "Thankee, Brother Albornoz."

    "Tell your woman no more Roman shit."

    "I beg your pardon?"

    "I have not the time nor inclination to wear white gloves before you, my lord cardinal. Your woman did this. Be quiet and sit. This is not the time for remonstration. Sit, please. She poisoned Maculano. I said, sit. You may be one of the elect, but should my sovereign pull his support, you would be quite done. So sit now and listen, though you wish not. Sit. Thankee.

    "As I said, your woman poisoned Maculano to deny Spain a worthy candidate that was an alternative to you in the vote, but as a toss of a bone to a dog, she also now allows us to point the accusing finger at the French faction and gives us invective against Maculano's personal enemy - Mazarini. And I may use that to our advantage still. But, what she did, was heedless and quite dumb.

    "We are balanced a knife's edge. And this provocation - and what better word would one use to describe an alleged Spanish supporter poisoning a Spanish candidate to discredit the French cause but a 'provocation' - will breed retaliation. And a retaliation will in turn bring about an escalation. We need not that. Nod to signal understanding of what I have just said. I said 'nod,' not speak. The time for your speeches have not as yet come. Just nod. There. That is better.

    "Tell your woman to not do this sort of thing again, or I shall have to be unpleasant. And we have no wish for that, do we? Nod once to signal understanding and obeisance. Close your mouth and nod. There. Thankee. Now depart. Good day."

    Pamphili seethed all the way to his room and had he been a man of less temperate feeling, he would declared for the French right there and then, but Albornoz chose his victim well. Pamphili was of the Spanish party and with it he would rise or fall, and he could not and would not hurt the Madrid cause. But neither this abuse could he make himself forgive nor forget. And the time of reckoning would come.

    ***


    The officials from Madrid were pathetic and unprepared, thought Olimpia Maidalchini not entirely inaccurately. She was seated at the table with a trio of them now, swaggering toughs wearing leather corsets underneath their stern black clothes to appear tough and manly. It was enough to get sick. How easy it all would have been if Barberini were Spanish playthings. Then she and her dearest brother-in-law would gather the flower of the Roman aristocracy and oppose these dullards with full force. She would then be on the same side as the Sea Wolf. The thought made her smile, on the inside, where she hid. It would have been quite a triumph. With the gold and machinations of the brave and not entirely unhandsome barbarian standing by her faction, oh the things she could have done. But it was not to be. The Sea Wolf opposed Spanish interests. As did the remains of Barberini clan, excluding turncloak Antonio (Jr.). That meant, Pamphili and his wonderful array of ancient bloods were on the side of Spain. And she found herself in a room with principal agents of Madrid and its official parties. They were fools. Jesu, they were fools, she thought. Their master plan was to exclude d'Aragona and thereby cow the rest of cardinals into submission. There the plan did end. No backup, never mind a tertiary plot, nor a fourth. One plan. Just one plan, disguised with the all the cunning of a drunkard with a pair of shaking hands and piss stained breeches.

    They repulsed her, Widow Maidalchini had realized. These three bloodless, pale lipped creatures acting as if their family names were as ancient as her own. Dear me, such delusions among these dons, she mused. The one on her left for instance could trace his heritage to Christian clans fighting the Moors in the mountains since the Song of Roland. That his grandfather could not eat pork escaped the official scroll. But such evidence was preserved in her cabinet and ready to be used, should it be called upon. Or the fool on her right had predilection for young boys dressed as milk maids. Despite that, he once condemned a man to death for committing sodomy with a woman. A woman. Dear me. Hypocrisy did not disgust her, she knew it was a necessity in these cruel times, but there was no reason to kill the sodomite. He was from a weak family and had no gold. To destroy someone small spoke of a smallness. And that cannot be forgiven. As for the idiot sitting directly opposite, he gambled in cards, and did so badly. His vice of choice, an Irish game called poque. Chief trait of said game was to be able to bluff. One would think a skill found easily in diplomats, to say nothing of a diplomat in charge of the affairs of His Most Catholic Majesty. But, no. He was as terrible across the table felt as he was now across one laden with fruits and sweet liquors.

    "Do not concern yourself, good widow. We shall punish those pernicious frogs as yet for their vile poisoning of the good cardinal Maculano."

    The Widow gave a nod, and hid a smile. A child could have caught what she was all about, but these three were much worse than children. The rest of the conversation was perfectly banal. She smiled through it all, including the excruciating parting, with the degenerate gambler making a meal of her hand when he leaned to give it a kiss. She suppressed a shudder. She had worse paws.

    She rode in a palanquin in silence to her rooms. The impious and improbable thought reappeared again. She would go to the Sea Wolf and explain that Pamphili could be his agent still. The veto dropped, her man installed. Such vanity and nonsense should have left her at first blood, but here she was a mature woman in full juice of life and still she thought as such. That was the extent of desperation she felt, after meeting her so called allies. The only other unworthy thought, to scheme to get a doddering old man elected and then work on advancing Pamphili at next conclave after the next pope pegs out. Except, more than a few old men had turned sudden spry upon setting their bony behinds on the throne of St. Peter. Such was the power the seat held. Such was the power she herself too wanted, for her dearest brother-in-law, mind.

    Inside her rooms, the Widow was given the Arab wine, called coffee, by her silent servants, sprawled on a cushion and thought more. Then when the bath was drawn, she went to it, even though she did not feel sick at all. When the door closed, she felt queer and turned. Before her stood a hulking brute in ill-kempt clothes with glassy eyes and crooked smile. She backed up and nearly fell into the bath. She opened her mouth and the brute struck with his fist into her side. She fell to her knees and let loose and noiseless scream, all of her body seeming hurt and left without a breath. The brute then grabbed her by the hair and dunked her head into the bath, held her underwater til her lungs near gave out, jerked her spluttering, shocked and sobbing body out of water and gave a bigger smile still. Then he dipped her head under the waters of the bath again, and so on and so on, until the widow was half past dead. Then he grinned wide, still holding her by hair, made her kneel, pried open her slackened mouth and poured the same poison down her gullet that was fed to the more unwitting Maculano.

    The widow had by this point already voided her bowels and got sick, but she would get sicker still when her servants found her quite alone, stark naked, sobbing, shuddering and yelping on the wet floor of her bath.


    The brute sailed off in a skiff into the open seas that every night, his pockets full of gold. His departure was overseen by as nearly hulking Turk, who then came to Olympia and nodded. Olympia could not bring herself to nod back, and merely walked off. She thought of doves, for some reason, and puzzled at that. Then gave a sigh, gave order to her thoughts and went off to the cathedral. She had a peace to broker and a pontiff to elect. The doves would have to wait.
     
    Chapter 33
  • Cardinal Albornoz crossed himself, reflexively, and walked into the tiny garden. The pale moon light cast his shadow across the bushes. He avoided looking over his shoulder, but only just. Still his anxiety must have been quite evident, for Cardinal Colonna gave an ever slight cough to signal that he was still behind him. Albornoz willed himself to appear more at ease and reached the center of the garden in four steps. There stood cloaked Cardinal Mazarini, seconded by Cardinal Bichi. Both men had their hands well away from their belts. Albornoz aped the gesture. Colonna did the same. To the shock of all, including the speaker, Mazarini spoke plain, blunt and in a rough countryside Southern dialect of his long gone youth:

    "Spinola gets the throne, but three of your creature get made Prefect of Rites, of Regulars and the Council, provided you name them ahead of time and I approve. Bichi here gets made Cardinal-Inquisitor."

    As opening gambit it was bold and very to the point. So much so that Albornoz needed a half dozen Hail Maries to grasp it all. Cardinal Spinola was a Genoese and of the French party. He was in his early sixties, though how much, Albornoz could not recall. Spinola was an almost acceptable candidate for papacy, despite his French leanings. As for the other offers... Mazarini dash near gave away the store. The Prefect of the Sacred Congregation of Rites deliberated on submission for sainthood as well as met with the courtiers of kings coming to Rome. The Prefect of the Sacred Congregation for Consultations about Regulars was in charge of all monastic orders and lay organizations with affiliations to the papacy. And the Prefect of the Sacred Congregation of the Council was in charge of maintaining the Trident mass and cannons. Three of the most powerful positions in the papal bureaucracy were at a stroke his to pick, provided he could stomach a pro-French pope. The other charge though... bore thinking. Bichi was Cardinal-Inquisitor would mean spies would be under French control.

    Albornoz said nothing for twenty Hail Maries more, then spoke:

    "I would want the Cardinal-Inquisitor position as well."

    "Brother, I make no gambit. What you heard is what I have. No more."

    "This negotiation..."

    "This is no negotiation. It is an offer. Take it, or leave."

    Albornoz's mouth went slack at that. Colonna stepped up and gave a smile.

    "Surely..."

    "Keep you gob shut, pretty boy. This here is a meeting of the principals. You don't qualify," said Bichi almost casually. Colonna recoiled. Then his mouth knifed. But Bichi merely cracked his knuckles and gave a smile wide, to the pale faced horror of Colonna and amusement of Albornoz. Bichi was no brawler, and Albornoz knew of it. Bichi had come from the most refined families of Siena, and was a nephew of a prince of the Holy Mother Church in his own right before becoming bishop. But he was not a man to mince words or his oaths and there lurked in him a bestial presence. Not that of a wild animal, but of a well bred dog, straining at the leash to tear apart a hapless rabbit or a wayward fox. As Albornoz was himself part bulldog, he held a slight admiration for the trait even in his foes.

    "I cannot speak for others, Brother Mazarini."

    "Oh yes, you can, Brother Albornoz. Speak for them now. The offer will not stand at dawn."

    "And should dawn come then without my acceptance?"

    "I will push Altieri and I shall shove him down the throats of all my foes. And even if I do not have votes now, I will keep up the stalemate until your side breaks. And it will break."

    "Why say you that?"

    "Because I have more candidates than you. If Altieri will not work, I will put in Sacchetti, just to make you fight him even harder than Altieri and then will bring forth a third man as compromise. How many men do you have that can wear the Triple Crown without there being a riot in Rome? How many candidates can you present and not have the world laugh? You had Pamphili. I cut him down. Who is your second best man? Who is your third? How long until your van falls apart to age? All those doddering droolers made cardinal by Paul V are dodging coffins, but not for long. It is only a matter of time. It is on my side."

    Colonna's already pale face somehow became paler still, while Albornoz hid his turbulent emotions. He had underestimated Mazarini. First that trick with getting the veto and now this. The refined French loving weakling had some fangs and claws. And it was Albornoz's flesh he was no rending.

    "If I accept, I will need time to name the three for the offices."

    "No. Name them here and now. I need to know who shall name saints, keep the Mass pure and steal money from the monks."

    "You go too far, Brother."

    "Because I went far in my life. As you can hear from my native dialect. I was not born grandee. But I do aim to die as one. Now, Brother, please be so good as to give me those three names."

    "Brother Colonna here shall be in charge of Regulars, Cennini for the Mass and Montalto for the saints."

    Mazarini leaned his head slight back and Bichi stepped up and whispered. Mazarini did not expect to hear Montalto's name, for he was not a man of power, but Bichi gave the requisite composite sketch. Montalto was not as yet fifty and a coming comet, but comets come and go. Mazarini gave a nod.

    "Let us all go now, the four of us, together to Spinola and give happy news."

    Albornoz was not prepared for that, but felt himself yielding and gave nod. And thus Giovanni Domenico Spinola was elected at the morning vote by an overwhelming majority, though some held out, due to bitterness or general recalcitrant. And some, missed the vote entire to not be fait accompli to the show. Thus, Pamphili was not there, and neither was d'Aragona. D'Aragona licked his wounds at an apartment of a female friend and cried and need to be held dear. Pamphili held his sister-in-law, who cried and moaned and needed to be held most dear after the events of the previous night.


    The news of a pope to be declared went through the town of Genoa as if a storm. The good people of the city, and bad ones as well, to say nothing of pilgrims, gaping tourists and visiting merchantmen all rushed to the cathedral and spread rumors to amuse themselves and to relieve the tension. Then the way was cleared for the Sea Wolf, dressed in the colors of the Most Serene Republic, accompanied by the worthies of the town, including the former Doge of Genoa and head of House Durazzo grinning by his side. The two were given position of honor and fresh wave of gossip sprang through the nervous crowd. Durazzo grin was interpret as a good omen for the Most Serene Republic, but only the most naïve and hopeful would dare say it out loud, a Genoese born pontiff? Was it possible?


    Then all hushed as the doors of the Cathedral were flung open and Leopoldo Medici came out, his hideous face terrifying the more impressionable among the public. A murmur ran through the crowd, oh no, hopefully it not him? Is it? Then all took note he was still wearing scarlet habit and a sigh of relief greeted all but those who had bet on him (44 to one odds). Leopoldo spread his arms to await a hush, but got none, but still admirably boomed out:

    "Annuntio vobis gaudium magnum: Habemus Papam!
    Eminentissimum ac reverendissimum Dominum,
    Dominum Giovanni Sanctæ Romanæ Ecclesiæ Cardinalem Spinola,
    Qui sibi nomen imposuit Papa Zacharius Secundus!"

    Few in the crowd caught that the last name of the cardinal made pope was Spinola, and all attempted to figure out who was named Zacharius in the conclave, not realizing it was the papal regnal name chosen by the victorious Cardinal Spinola. Thus only few cheered at the news when Medici spoke, but then all fairly exploded when Cardinal Spinola did arrive, dressed all in white and beaming.

    There followed scenes of jubilation such as to make us put down our quill, for we cannot capture the spirit of the town of Genoa, which having given the world pontiffs in the centuries past, felt itself beleaguered and overlooked. The last Genoese pope had been the great Julius II. And what happened then? Some filthy Roman became Julius III and made a hash of things, miring the great name in controversy and ensuring no one named Julius followed suit since then. Before that, there was Innocent VIII, a figure from the halcyon past of the Republic of Genoa. And would you believe what happened then? Some fool Romagna aristo became Innocent IX and made an even bigger mess, this time in France by becoming a tool of Spanish faction. And though none could remember what the first Zacharius had done, all immediately pronounced the name as fine and good, though there were grumblings among those who are never quite happy even when they are in health and wealth warning all that it was only a matter of time until some Southron coxcomb would steal that name as well and besmirch it. But no one heard such grumblers on that day, and certainly not in that square, for the cheers shook walls and glass and there tears upon the faces of the grimmest of men.

    And in the midst of all this stood the Sea Wolf and it was he who was the first to step up the stairs and be allowed to kiss the papal ring, and all who were present understood what it signified - the Sea Wolf had given Genoa a pope and at that moment had the Sea Wolf declared that men and women should grab weapons and follow him, he could have marched halfway to Rome before the excitement would dissipate. But the Sea Wolf had no urge to declare as such, and he was one for travelling by sea, not land. And nothing in Rome much held him.


    That night, the Sea Wolf and Olympia broke their bed. The next morning the Sea Wolf was named the Count of Rome and Lord-Bishop of Albano, despite not residing in Rome, or Albano as yet, and never being ordained as priest. It may look quite impolite to us, but in that epoch there were cardinals who were never ordained as bishops nor as priests. And even Cardinal Mazarini started off as a mere priest and was only called bishop as a courtesy before coming cardinal. To say nothing of the English cardinals of the Holy Mother Church, who for one reason for another could not be ordained priests as well. But we digress. In the midst of all the jubilation, a papal bull was signed declaring Australia to be the Sea Wolf's and it was to be followed by a declaration of acknowledgement of the same by Paris, though Madrid stayed silent, despite all the best efforts of Olympia and her threats and gold.

    While the Sea Wolf was thus ennobled, his twin sister was quietly made a baronetess of St. Peter of the Sands of Genoa, a title of nobility that had to be invented, but the Durazzo, Grimaldi and Spinola families ensured it was done, though as we said under a cloak of silence. As for Olympia...


    Olympia walked inside the chamber of her now ennobled companion to find a jewelry casket standing atop a curious map of central Italies, depicting lands near Rome. The Sea Wolf removed the casket and pointed to a land near Lake Albano, in total silence. Olympia stared at the map and land and frowned.

    "Savelli held those lands. The principality of Albano. They were on the verge of selling it to Barberini, until present troubles came and they were good enough to sell to me instead. I had the lease signed in your name."

    "I see."

    "No, you do not. Not as yet. Albano carries with it a princely title."

    Olympia frowned yet again, then blinked, then gaped, then blinked again. The Sea Wolf now set the casket on the map as yet again. Took a step back and waited. Olympia, having lost her power of speech, reached out with trembling fingers to attempt to open the casket. It failed on the first, second, third and fourth try. But on the fifth she managed to push back the lid and let out a shuddering gasp.

    There, on a bed of velvet, sat a gold tiara.

    Olympia dared not touch it, so the Sea Wolf did. He picked it up and set it on her copper hair.

    "My princess."

    Olympia then burst in tears.


    Three months later, two and twenty ships departed Genoa for Australia. The flagship carried Lord-Bishop Count of Rome, Agostino the Sea Wolf, the Princess of Albano Olympia Anne de Breuil, and the hopes and cheers of an entire republic.

    On the soon distant land of Christendom they left behind the good Lady Ashley with authority to dispose of one tenth of the mass fortune the Sea Wolf now had, anxious Cardinal Mazarini preparing to fight for France, scheming Cardinal Pamphili anxious to revenge himself and his sister-in-law, the always anxious and perpetually scheming grandees and their factions in Madrid, hoping to destroy the Sea Wolf and bring ruin to his cause, to say nothing of the rebuilding and unbowed Medici, the shattered and vengeance seeking Franciotti, at war with themselves but not entirely destroyed Barberini and the weary people of Rome. But that is quite another tale for quite another time.


    The End.
     
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