"Give her my love, too," he said, which was a surprisingly suggestive remark from him.
As I disembarked, I heard the clock in the Piazza chime midnight. I set off toward the church like a ghost, for my boots made little sound on the stones and I had brought a half-lantern, rather than a torch, so its glow lit the pavement below me and not my face. Carnival is a bad time to wander the streets alone, for the riotous gangs of revelers can be dangerous. Almost every window was dark and I met no one except a quartet of merrymakers, fortunately all too drunk and aroused even to notice me. They went staggering by, sniggering and arguing, with the men blatantly pawing their companions, obviously prostitutes.
I turned south along the Calle Spadaria, walking slowly so I could scan the doorways. Celsi had not said right or left.
"Arghrraw!"
My rapier flashed into my hand, for the sound had been close and-yes!-two golden eyes shone in front of me, on the edge of my puddle of lamplight.
"Arghrraw…" it said again, more softly.
Find one rabid cat and of course you must expect many more, for they will bite one another. The city might be infested with them, although I had not heard anyone mention such a problem. I backed up a step.
The eyes advanced. "Arghrraw!"
"Now look here, Felix," I said sternly, having visions of needle teeth sunk in my ankle… But my mind must still have been grappling with the tarot and the quatrain because then I heard an inner voice that sounded much like the Maestro's: "Be not so proud as to spurn help at your feet."
A cat had led me to Alessa when she was ready to talk. A cat had found me refuge when the mob was after me. I backed up three steps.
"Arghrraw… Arghrraw…" The cat followed, softer still, but more urgent.
A door opened not ten feet ahead of me. Although the light escaping from the entrance was in truth very faint, it seemed to flood the alley. It was not even bright enough to illuminate the man emerging, but I knew his voice.
"I will tell them. Good night to you, lustrissimo."
"And to you, capitano," Sciara replied.
By that time I had closed my lantern and was backed into a doorway, trying to make myself as flat as paint. If the departing visitor turned in my direction he would be certain to see me, even in the dark calle, for it was so narrow I would be within arm's length of him. He would hear my heart thundering like a charge of heavy cavalry.
No. Saints be praised, vizio Filiberto Vasco went the other way, toward the Piazza and the Doges' Palace. His boots tapped off into the night, the puddle of light from his lantern danced around his feet, and Raffaino Sciara closed his door.
I stood where I was until I stopped shaking, which took several minutes. My tarot had warned me of the jack of swords, the quatrain had told me to accept help at my feet. Had the cat not delayed me, I would have rapped on that door while Vasco was standing on the other side of it, and I had no imaginable reason to be calling on Raffaino Sciara even in broad daylight, let alone at midnight. Had I been betrayed? Had Celsi reported what I planned? Or his servant? I assured myself that there were a dozen reasons why Missier Grande might have sent his lackey to ask Sciara something or tell Sciara something, and none of them need have anything to do with me.
For a third time cats had helped me-except that it must obviously be the same cat and more than just a cat. It might be a demon from hell, but I was going to give it the benefit of the doubt from now on. I opened my lantern and saw the cat sitting in the middle of the calle, watching me and licking a paw.
"Thanks, Felix."
"Arghrraw…" It stood up and paraded southward, tail high, until it stood in front of the door with the grille, Circospetto 's door, the door that vizio Vasco had just left.
A cat was telling me that it was safe to proceed and I was crazy.
No, I must trust my new helper, and Felix was now standing waiting for me, staring inquiringly as if wondering why I was taking so long. I walked over to it and bunched my knuckles to make the signal I had been told.
Knock! Knock! Rap-rap-rap.
I turned the half-lantern so my face would be visible.
I had to wait, but I had expected that little ploy.
"What do you want?" asked a whisper.
I could whisper too. "Information."
"This is a new departure for you, sier Alfeo."
It was Sciara. Even a whisper can be recognized. Any other time I would have given him a smart-alecky response but not tonight. Tonight I felt I had sunk too low to amuse anyone, even myself.
"Desperate times require desperate measures, lustrissimo. Are you going to let me in?"
The door opened a few inches in well-oiled silence. I pushed it wider and stepped into darkness beyond.
"Lock it!"
I turned the big key. Then I encountered a heavy curtain, and beyond that a very dimly lit corridor with another curtain, and finally a room. It was barely large enough to hold the table in the center, flanked by two chairs and bearing a lantern, but at last there was light enough for us to see each other. Another door at the far side presumably led to either Sciara's house or a back exit.
He looked even more like the Grim Reaper than usual, for I had never seen him except in his secretary's blue robe, whereas tonight he wore a black hat and cloak and his skull-like face seemed almost to float in the air. He did not sit or invite me to.
"Who taught you that knock, Alfeo?"
"No names, lustrissimo. You can help the one who sent me and no one else can."
The death's-head showed its teeth. "He is too mean to pay for what he wants you to buy."
"Not this time. Women are dying."
"He cares?"
"We both care and so should you."
Sciara was enjoying baiting me too much to stop yet. "If I knew anything that would help Their Excellencies catch the killer, clarissimo, do you think I would not have shared it with them?"
"Information can mean different things to different people. Are these word games part of the process or are you keeping me here until Vasco can return with the sbirri? You will have to explain my presence in your house, you know."
Sciara drummed thin fingers on the table. "Tell me what you want."
"To see the evidence that the Three used to find Zorzi Michiel guilty of patricide eight years ago."
His total lack of reaction was admirable. I might as well have asked if it was raining. Venetian magistrates, several hundred of them, are noblemen elected by the Grand Council and their terms of office are limited, all except the doge's. The clerks, guards, secretaries, ducal equerries, and all the rest who make the government work, are drawn from the citizen-by-birth class, and are employed for life, or in some cases until they reach sixty. Sciara has been Circospetto for as long as I can remember and knows everything. He could probably recite by rote the records I wanted to see, although I should not have believed him.
He pouted. "That file may be eight years old, but it has been attracting much attention of late. For me to remove it even briefly would be extremely dangerous."
"So now we're bargaining. Name your price." Yes, I was an impudent young puppy, but I was a clarissimo and he was only a lustrissimo. We nobles have our rights and arrogance is one of them. Humility would shell no cockles with Raffaino Sciara. His eyes shrank as if they were withdrawing into his head.
"You come here tomorrow night, a half hour later. If I do not answer, you go away and try again the next night. It may be several days before I manage to obtain the material you want to see, understand?"
I nodded, my mouth dry.
"When I do," he said, "you will look at the papers while I watch. You write nothing and take away nothing."
"Agreed."
"Five hundred ducats."
"Absurd! Two hundred."
He smiled. "Five hundred and not a soldo less. Fifty of that now."
He had me by the throat and we both knew it. He did not trust me any more than I trusted him and he must be enjoying watching me squirm.