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by Steve Berry Ballantine, 2007 Click here for more information about this author. |
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Venice, Italy
Sunday, April 19
12:15 a.m.
Enrico Vincenti stared at the accused and asked, “Any thing to say to
this Council?”
The man from Florence seemed unconcerned by the question. “How about
you and your League cram it.”
Vincenti was curious. “You apparently think we’re to be taken lightly.”
“Fat man, I have friends.” The Florentine actually seemed proud
of the fact. “Lots of them.”
He made clear, “Your friends are of no concern to us. But your treachery?
That’s another matter.”
The Florentine had dressed for the occasion, sporting an expensive Zanetti
suit, Charvet shirt, Prada tie, and the obligatory Gucci shoes. Vincenti realized
that the ensemble cost more than most people earned in a year.
“Tell you what,” the Florentine said. “I’ll leave and
we’ll forget all about this . . . whatever this is . . . and you people
can go back and do whatever it is you do.”
None of the nine seated beside Vincenti said a word. He’d warned them
to expect arrogance. The Florentine had been hired to handle a chore in central
Asia, a job the Council had deemed vitally important. Unfortunately, the Florentine
had modified the assignment to suit his greed. Luckily, the deception had been
discovered and countermeasures taken.
“You believe your associates will actually stand with you?” Vincenti
asked.
“You’re not that naive, are you, fat man? They’re the ones
who told me to do it.”
He again ignored the reference to his girth. “That’s not what they
said.”
Those associates were an international crime syndicate that had many times
proven useful to the Council. The Florentine was contracted help and the Council
had overlooked the syndicate’s deception in order to make a point to the
liar standing before them. Which would make a point to the syndicate as well.
And it had. Already the fee owed had been waived and the Council’s hefty
deposit returned. Unlike the Florentine, those associates understood precisely
who they were dealing with.
“What do you know of us?” Vincenti asked.
The Italian shrugged. “A bunch of rich people who like to play.”
The bravado amused Vincenti. Four men stood behind the Florentine, each armed,
which explained why the ingrate thought himself safe. As a condition to his
appearing, he’d insisted on them coming.
“Seven hundred years ago,” Vincenti said, “a Council of Ten
oversaw Venice. They were men supposedly too mature to be swayed by passion
or temptation, charged with maintaining public safety and quelling political
opposition. And that’s precisely what they did. For centuries. They took
evidence in secret, pronounced sentences, and carried out executions, all in
the name of the Venetian state.”
“You think I care about this history lesson?”
Vincenti folded his hands in his lap. “You should care.”
“This mausoleum is depressing. It belong to you?”
True, the villa lacked the charm of a house that had once been a family home,
but tsars, emperors, archdukes, and crowned heads had all stayed under its roof.
Even Napoleon had occupied one of the bedrooms. So he said with pride, “It
belongs to us.”
“You need a decorator. Are we through here?”
“I’d like to finish what I was explaining.”
The Italian gestured with his hands. “Get on with it. I want some sleep.”
“We, too, are a Council of Ten. Like the original, we employ Inquisitors
to enforce our decisions.” He gestured and three men stepped forward from
the far side of the salon. “Like the originals, our rule is absolute.”
“You’re not the government.”
“No. We’re something else altogether.”
Still the Florentine seemed unimpressed. “I came here in the middle of
the night because I was ordered to by my associates. Not because I’m impressed.
I brought these four to protect me. So your Inquisitors might find it difficult
to enforce anything.”
Vincenti pushed himself up from the chair. “I think something needs to
be made clear. You were hired to handle a task. You decided to change that assignment
to suit your own purpose.”
“Unless all of you intend on leaving here in a box. I’d say we
just forget about it.”
Vincenti’s patience had worn thin. He genuinely disliked this part of
his official duties. He gestured and the four men who’d come with the
Florentine grabbed the idiot.
A smug look evolved into one of surprise.
The Florentine was disarmed while three of the men restrained him. An Inquisitor
approached and, with a roll of thick tape, bound the accused’s struggling
arms behind his back, his legs and knees together, and wrapped his face, sealing
his mouth. The three then released their grip and the Florentine’s thick
frame thudded to the rug.
“This Council has found you guilty of treason to our League,” Vincenti
said. He gestured again and a set of double doors swung open. A casket of rich
lacquered wood was wheeled in, its lid hinged open. The Florentine’s eyes
went wide as he apparently realized his fate.
Vincenti stepped close.
“Five hundred years ago traitors to the state were sealed into rooms
above the Doge’s palace, built of wood and lead, exposed to the elements—they
became known as the coffins.” He paused and allowed his words to take
hold. “Horrible places. Most who entered died. You took our money while,
at the same time, trying to make more for yourself.”
He shook his head. “Not to be. And, by the way, your associates decided
you were the price they would pay to keep peace with us.”
The Florentine fought his restraints with a renewed vigor, his protests stifled
by the tape across his mouth. One of the Inquisitors led the four men who’d
come with the Florentine from the room. Their job was done. The other two Inquisitors
lifted the struggling problem and tossed him into the coffin.
Vincenti stared down into the box and read exactly what the Florentine’s
eyes were saying. No question he’d betrayed the Council, but he’d
only done what Vincenti, not those associates, had ordered him to do. Vincenti
was the one who changed the assignment, and the Florentine had only appeared
before the Council because Vincenti had privately told him not to worry. Just
a dog and pony show. No problem. Play along. It would all be resolved in an
hour.
“Fat man?” Vincenti asked. “Arrivederci.”
And he slammed the lid shut.
Copenhagen
Malone watched as the flames descending the staircase stopped three quarters
of the way down, showing no signs of advancing farther. He stood before one
of the windows and searched for something to hurl through the plate glass. The
only chairs he spotted were too close to the fire. The second mechanism continued
to prowl the ground floor, exhaling mist. He was hesitant to move. Stripping
off his clothes was an option, but his hair and skin also stank with the chemical.
Three thuds on the plate-glass window startled him.
He whirled and, a foot away, a familiar face stared back.
Cassiopeia Vitt.
What was she doing here? His eyes surely betrayed his surprise, but he came
straight to the point and yelled, “I need to get out of here.”
She pointed to the door.
He intertwined his fingers and signaled that it was locked.
She motioned for him to stand back.
As he did, sparks popped from the underside of the roaming gizmo. He darted
straight for the thing and kicked it over. Beneath he spotted wheels and mechanical
works.
He heard a pop, then another, and realized what Cassiopeia was doing.
Shooting the window.
Then he saw something he’d not noticed before. Atop the museum’s
display cases lay sealed plastic bags filled with a clear liquid.
The window fractured.
No choice.
He risked the flames and grabbed one of the chairs he’d earlier noticed,
slinging it into the damaged glass. The window shattered as the chair found
the street beyond.
The roving mechanism righted itself.
One of the sparks caught and blue flames began to consume the ground floor,
advancing in every direction, including straight for him.
He bolted forward and leaped out the open window, landing on his feet.
Cassiopeia stood three feet away.
He’d felt the change in pressure when the window shattered. He knew a
little about fires. Right now flames were being supercharged by a rush of new
oxygen. Pressure differences were also having an effect. Firefighters called
it flashover.
And those plastic bags atop the cases.
He knew what they contained.
He grabbed Cassiopeia’s hand and yanked her across the street.
“What are you doing?” she asked.
“Time for a swim.”
They leaped from the brick parapet, just as a fireball surged from the museum.