He must have been waiting for that near-stumble; the smaller man’s rapier-which he had drawn back when he planted his front foot-jetted forward, but not directly at the tall man’s midriff. Instead, it shot out on an intercept trajectory: though the thrust seemed slightly ahead of its target when it began, the taller man’s forward stumble brought him into alignment with it, the blade transfixing him just two inches under the sternum.
The tall man’s half-stagger became a full stagger, and in the second it took him to reorient himself, he felt the blade go in again, just beneath and outside the lower right extreme of his groin. He felt a hot spurting there, felt an onset of vertigo, and then noticed-almost calmly-the tip of the rapier disappearing under his own chin. He smelled hay-quite strongly-and thought he might be falling…
A second after Rombaldo’s agent fell to the floor of the stable, two of the Hibernians came in. “Don Ruy,” one of them muttered, worried, “I thought you said you would call us when-”
Ruy Sanchez de Casador y Ortiz shrugged. “There was no time, and there was no need. But I note and appreciate your concern.” He could not resist smoothing the left wing of his mustache, which had become slightly displaced by the brief swordplay. “You have seen to the other one?”
“Yes, sir. He was writing a message, as you suspected. And there is a boy already waiting in the tavern to receive it, apparently.”
“Then we do not have very long. When the messenger boy eventually inquires if his services are actually required, the innkeep will no doubt check the message-writer’s room and find his body. Did you remove the message itself?”
“Yes.”
“Excellent. Now, let us hide this one under the straw and leave. It will take some time to catch up with the rest of our group, and my wife will no doubt be getting worried about me.”
Sharon looked down for the third time. The toe of Ruy’s left boot was spotless, still somewhat moist from a recent cleaning, but just past the ankle, slightly behind where Ruy would be able to see it, was a telltale smear of blood. The smallest bit, not even enough to shed a drop upon the floor. But as an EMT, Sharon Nichols had seen plenty of blood, enough so that she didn’t miss it when her eyes roved across it, no matter the backdrop.
Sharon remained silent. Not only was she reluctant to interrupt Ruy’s report to the clerics gathered round the modest fire; she wasn’t sure she wanted to start down a path of questions that could not help but bring the other, ominous side of her husband into high relief. He had been a Spanish soldier on at least three, perhaps four, continents over the course of more than thirty years. That was a job which, within a year or two, either hardened a man to unthinkable cruelties, or drove him away. And her charming, sexy, amusing, effervescent Ruyfeelthy Sanchez as she had dubbed him during his first amorous advances-was not one of the ones who had fled the ranks, but had gone on to successes and triumphs in them.
How many innocents had he been ordered to kill? Because after all, that was often the duty of soldiers in this time, particularly Spanish soldiers. How many more had he slain during his varied service as a confidential agent for several of Spain’s cardinals and diplomats? The gentle, passionate, loving hands of Ruy were always immaculately clean when they touched her, yet, at moments like this, they also seemed indelibly stained with the blood of multitudes. Many of those notional corpses, which she now imagined littering the road behind him, had no doubt deserved to die. But not all. Possibly not even most. Sharon closed her eyes and did not open them again until they were raised beyond where she could see the faintly stained boot that bore witness to the prior life and deeds of Ruy Sanchez de Casador y Ortiz.
Who was explaining, “So the ambassadora and I decided not to alert anyone else to the fact that the two men who arrived with Father Wadding and his escorts were, in fact, enemy agents in disguise. We needed enough time to surreptitiously organize a tracking party, while also ensuring that sufficient security forces remained behind with the main group.”
Antonio Barberini still seemed amazed at the entire course of events. “But when did you suspect these two of being disguised agents?”
Wadding coughed lightly. Vitelleschi might have smiled, or it might have been a momentary facial tic.
Ruy shrugged. “Father Wadding told me of his suspicions as soon as he arrived.”
Barberini swiveled to stare at the Irish priest. “You? You knew they were assassins, Father Wadding?”
“You needn’t sound so stunned, Nephew,” chided Urban through a smile. “A priest who comes from, and has constant involvement in the affairs of, occupied Ireland is no stranger to duplicity and subterfuges.”
Wadding shrugged. “Our one horse threw a shoe after our second day journeying north from the Po. Threw it while we were overnighting in a stable, no less. The subsequent appearance of two mule-drivers who’d just lost a contract seemed an even more providential event than our Lord is wont to orchestrate.”
“They did not betray themselves in their actions?”
“Not directly, but there were intimations that they were not what they seemed.”
“Such as?” Mazzare’s interest was keen, clinical.
“Such as their enthusiasm for their work as mule-drivers, and for conversation with us. I mean no slight to mule-drivers as a class, but I have not found them to be exemplars of industry and motivation. They have much the same pace and personality as the creatures they tend, I find.
“That was not the case with these two. The were lively, alert, and not so much familiar with the animals as they were determined to make a good job of it. And whereas most teamsters and ostlers are of a taciturn nature, these two were quite talkative and inquisitive-except with each other. I found them an odd example of their trade.”
“And on this alone you ordered their deaths?” Barberini’s stare at Ruy was now tinged by horror.
“No, Your Eminence. There was more. When we offered them a commission to continue on with us-pure theater, of course-they declined, saying they had to return in great haste to the Po. Another impending job, according to them. Yet they had never inquired of Father Wadding or his party how long the job of escorting them was going to take; they were simply happy to take their daily wage as it came. But now, suddenly, they had urgent business back by the Po? No, we knew what they were. But just to be sure, on an occasion when one was sharing wine with me and the other was relieving himself in the bushes, I had Taggart check their bags.” Ruy spread his hands atop his knees. “Mule-drivers are much skilled in stick, staff, and cudgel; they wield them every day as the media whereby they impart their tender encouragements to the lagging creatures in their team. What Taggart found instead were: one well-hidden hanger, two couteaux-breche, two eight-inch daggers, and a garrote. These are not the weapons of mule-drivers, Your Eminence, of this you may be certain.”
“So you suspect they saw Father Wadding arrive on the northern bank of the Po, trailed him, lamed his one horse, and then serendipitously arrived as the solution to his sudden lack of sufficient transportation?”
“Exactly. And when they pleaded the necessity of returning to the same town on the Po, we simply followed. Albeit at some distance; assassins are, themselves, inherently untrusting souls.”
The silence that usurped the final piece of Ruy’s narrative-how that surreptitious pursuit had ended-was long, and not entirely comfortable.
“So,” exhaled Cardinal Barberini, “it seems the danger has been averted. Narrowly, perhaps, but averted.”
“Yes, Your Eminence,” agreed Ruy in a voice that was full of unspoken caveats. “For now.”