that the addictiveness is totally exaggerated, and she was always readier to believe the people she wished to emulate than she was to believe people who love her.'
He turned to his desk again and picked up another document. 'There is another reason. Angelina has her ear to the network of gossips and rumor. I wanted her away in isolation before news of this one reached her ears.'
The document bore the seal of Ferrara. 'Word from your grandfather. Caesare Aldanto has been seen in Constantinople.'
Benito went cold, and quite sober.
Petro shook his head, and once again, it was in that implacable manner that warned of dire and inescapable consequences if his will was ignored.
'You are not, and for two reasons. First, after Caesare had seen the Emperor Alexius, he reembarked on a ship. Bound, most likely, for Odessa. So he is no longer in Constantinople for you to find. And for a second reason, both the Council of Ten and your grandfather have placed considerable prices on his head. We have more competent assassins in our pay than you would be. And in this case we will not hesitate to use them.'
Benito looked mulish. 'I know his ways. How he operates. They don't.'
'That may be true,' said Petro calmly. 'But he is not where you can find him now, and what is more, even if you could, there is no reason to believe that he is not . . . contaminated.
'What has this got to do with Angelina?' asked Marco.
Petro raised his eyebrows. 'We know how Aldanto works. How he uses women and . . .' he looked pointedly at the two boys, 'intermediaries. Angelina still claims he was wrongfully accused, and refuses to accept he was in any way responsible for the attack on the Republic. Just by being part of
Marco bit his lip. And then he stepped up to the desk, took up the quill, dabbed it in the ink and signed. 'I'll go up and try to see her now. I still feel she's getting a very poor choice in all of this,' he said, sadness tingeing his voice.
Benito raised his eyes to heaven again. He loved Marco dearly, but . . . Here Marco had just received the freedom to marry the girl of his dreams, had his mistakes corrected, and he was worrying about the cause of those troubles. No doubt he'd be worrying about Aldanto next.
Well, if Caesare Aldanto ever came within Benito's reach, Benito would make sure his former idol was very dead. They'd been used, and the worst was they'd been grateful to be used by the traitor and murderer. And he owed Aldanto for Maria's account too. He turned to follow his brother.
Petro put a heavy hand on his shoulder. 'I want to talk to you, too, Benito. Seeing as you're here.'
He led Benito to the mullioned windows of his study. They could see out along the quays, busy with canal boats and lighters, to the forest of masts of the ships at anchor in the Bacino San Marco. Benito knew it was the merchant-prince's favorite view. But instead Petro pointed to the quay-side, to a solitary man lying in squalor against a bollard. 'I know that man. He used to be good boatswain. Made a pretty penny or two out of various
'So?' Benito replied, though he had a good idea what was coming. 'Sir,' he added belatedly.
Petro sighed. 'He can't find a job, even when ships are desperate for crew. If he doesn't drink, he shakes and hallucinates. He'll do absolutely anything for another glass of wine. He doesn't care how bad the wine is. Just so long as it is wine. We don't like to admit it, but too much wine can be as bad as black lotos. It just takes a bit longer. Are you going to turn out like that old soak? Because it can happen to you too. Like my sister, you are not immune. You're behaving just like her at the moment.'
Nothing Petro could have chosen to say would have made more of an impression than that last line. For the second time that day, Benito felt something hit him with a distinct sense of shock, hit him in a way that made him grow very cold for a moment. Finally Benito shook his head.
Petro patted the shoulder. 'Good. Because I don't think you'd fit into a monastery any better than Angelina is going to enjoy that convent.'
'I'd drive 'em all mad. Sir.'
Dorma managed a smile. 'I'm far more inclined to send you out to factor in one of Dorma's trading posts Outremer, now that spring is coming, than keep you here or send you to a monastery. I've told mother that I'm wasting my time trying to make you into a
'More like a rapier out of a cabbage,' said Benito gloomily. 'But the truth to tell, Petro, I really want to get out of here. I don't care where to, but out of Venice. And out of this 'education.' It doesn't suit me and I don't suit it.'
Petro sat himself down again. 'Very well. After your brother's wedding. And only if you learn to pull in your horns a bit. I've no objection to some wild oats, but it was only your status as my ward, and something of a hero in the last attack on Venice, that kept you out of jail last night. And you know Venice; there's only so long that you can trade on that before they start treating you exactly as you deserve.'
Benito nodded. He really had to find out just what he'd done last night. 'I've always had a fancy for Negroponte.'
Petro gave a snort of laughter. 'Benito, you are to subtle maneuvering what a randy stallion is to subtle seduction. If you asked for Golden Horn, Petro might smell a rat, eh? But Negroponte . . . is close enough to Constantinople? Not a chance, Benito. Not a chance.'
Benito grinned, in spite of feeling somewhere in the bottom of his stomach that his world was not right, and probably never would be again. 'It works on other people, Petro.'