interest in her. Then one day he formed a colleganza with your father.’

Alberoni used the familiar word describing the sort of business partnership that many Venetian merchants entered into with each other. I myself had pulled together many a colleganza to fund my enterprises. Often they worked, and the partners walked away with the spoils. Sometimes they failed, and were the cause of acrimony and argument over what had been lost.

‘Sarpi and my father lost money?’

‘Yes. And Guido accused Agostino of cheating, making a profit and stealing the proceeds all for himself. The argument got quite heated, and Sarpi stormed out threatening vengeance. I thought he had cooled off because it was weeks before… Agostino’s death.’

‘But I recall my mother and father arguing on the day before his death. That is what convinced me it was all to do with her.’

‘Yes, I think your mother, typically, was trying to pour oil on the troubled waters of his dispute with his cousin. But Agostino would have none of it.’ He sighed. ‘You know how pig-headed your father was. After all, you have inherited that trait of his.’

In other circumstances I would have berated the friar for suggesting I had inherited anything from my father. Least of all an unwelcome character trait. But tonight I wanted to learn the truth.

‘You think Sarpi poisoned my father?’

‘I know so. An anonymous denunciation was made against him. He was arrested a few days later, tortured and confessed in the Doge’s prison. He was executed for his deed.’

Once again, torture and confession reared their ugly heads.

‘Why did I never learn of this?’

‘I suppose your mother did not want you — a child — to be tainted with the sordid nature of the matter. Family killing family over money and possessions. She did it for the best of reasons, I am sure. It is a shame that it left you for all these years with a false picture of your father. And your mother. Now I must say goodnight. I am dog-tired after a long journey to get back here.’

I waved a hand, and watched the friar drag his exhausted limbs across the courtyard and into the room that had been set aside for him. Slowly my wine-befuddled mind began to turn over everything that had been said that evening. Of family disputes over money, and of Prester John’s knights, who had planned a long-term strategy to achieve what they wanted. Gradually, a picture began to emerge out of the threads we had left hanging when Alberoni burst into our conversation earlier concerning Old Geng’s death, and that of his son. I knew what I had to do, and realized I would have a busy night ahead of me. There would be no time for sleep.

TWENTY-SIX

Have a mouth as sharp as a dagger, but a heart as soft as tofu.

I must have fallen asleep at some point, because Lin woke me in the morning. He looked perturbed, in so far as he was able in that reserved way of his. His eyes shone at least, even if his face showed calm. I shrugged his hand off my arm and tried to turn over and reach for Gurbesu. But the other side of the bed was empty, so I assumed it was later than I thought. Gurbesu was an early riser usually. Lin was insistent, however.

‘Nick, you must get up. Doctor Sun has escaped.’

This got my attention and I groaned, levering myself upright. I dragged open a bleary eye.

‘Escaped, you say? How is that possible?’

‘The gaoler is drunk and must have forgotten to lock the cell door properly after he took Sun his food in the evening.’

By now I was fully alert.

‘What were you doing at the prison so early?’

Lin looked a little rueful.

‘I found some aspects of his story that you retold last night too fanciful for my liking.’

He meant, in his own polite way, that he hadn’t believed me. Or at least my interpretation of Sun’s story. I was not offended — it was a strange tale.

‘Go on.’

‘I thought that if I could speak to him in the cold light of day I might get closer to the truth. There are aspects of the day of Old Geng’s death that still worry me. Things that don’t fit together.’

I was going to ask him what he meant, but he hurried on with his recounting of the events of that morning.

‘When I got to the prison, I could see that one of the doors was ajar. I just assumed at first that it was Wenbo’s cell that had been left open after his body had been removed. As I had been with you when we found him dead, I should have remembered which cell it was, and which was the doctor’s. Under the mistaken impression that the doctor would be tucked up safely in his cell, I looked in each of the other ones. But they were all empty, save for the last one in the row. And that housed a fat, young man who stunk of rice wine and was snoring. He was clearly sleeping off a drunken rampage that had resulted in him being thrown into the cell. Anyway, it was not Doctor Sun. I went back to the open cell and saw a lamp still burning on an upturned log. I remembered about your kindness over Sun’s fear of the dark, and realized this was his cell. So I went in search of the gaoler, only to find him in a stupor with a jug of wine beside his bed. His keys had been discarded on the floor.’

Lin was unusually angry at the turn of events, and I could understand why. If Sun had absconded, our last witness had gone, and our case lay in tatters again. But I still had other plans to bring the matter to a satisfactory conclusion. In the meantime it would do no harm for Lin to occupy himself with hunting down the doctor.

‘Go to Li Wen-Tao, Chu-Tsai. Throw your weight about, and get him to allocate some of his resources to finding the doctor. Ultimately, it was his responsibility for ensuring the safe imprisonment of Sun. He will suffer if the man is not found again.’

Lin stopped his pacing of my room and calmed a little.

‘You are right. It will be the end of his lacklustre career if he can’t find him. I will do what you suggest right away.’

He left my bedroom to go and harass the prefect, giving me the chance to get dressed. And select a sharp dagger to stick in the belt of my Mongol coat. I was sure I was going to need it as matters came to a head. I next went in search of Gurbesu, who had undertaken to look after Jianxu. Finding her wasn’t difficult as she was sitting snoozing in the courtyard catching the rays of the weak autumn sun. As I approached, she opened one eye and squinted at me. She couldn’t help but notice my dagger and gave it a pointed look.

‘Are you expecting trouble, Nick?’

‘Sun has escaped. The gaoler was drunk.’

She stood up abruptly, knowing what the loss of our only witness meant to me.

‘That is a disaster. But you can’t expect any trouble from his quarter, can you? He will be halfway to the south by now, if he has any sense.’

I nodded in agreement.

‘I suppose so, but there is no harm in being cautious.’ I looked around. ‘Is Jianxu safe?’

Gurbesu indicated with a thumb pointed over her shoulder that Jianxu was safely closeted in the small room at the rear of the house.

‘Yes. Should Sun have any reason to seek her out, he will have to come past me. But why worry about him? You don’t think he is the killer, do you? I mean, if it was the same person who killed both Old Geng and Wenbo, then it couldn’t be him. He was locked in the next cell when the boy was killed. And, according to his testimony that you retold to us last night, he was in fear of his own life.’

‘You’re right. It’s not him I am really worried about. It’s…’

I thought I saw a movement from the direction of Jianxu’s room, and moved Gurbesu away a little.

‘It’s Madam Gao.’

Maybe I said it too loud, I couldn’t be sure, but the slim figure I assumed was Jianxu slipped back into the shadows as I said the name. Gurbesu was surprised, but not extremely so.

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