The Shadow of the Lion by Mercedes Lackey & Eric Flint & Dave Freer. Chapter 11, 12, 13, 14

The packet was slit, and the hooded woman gave a little crow of unpleasant glee . . . before hastily sweeping the vials back into the packet. Not for the first time Kat wondered what they were doing in this business. It had started with letters to and from the Jewish community. After all, her great-grandfather had been a Jew, even if he’d married out of the faith and the family were good Petrine Christians now. Somehow needs had driven things to this. When she’d been a child she’d often gone to meet the Strega with Grandpapa. She suspected that Grandpapa had been halfway to being a convert. But they’d been a different community then. Gentler.

The woman motioned her henchman forward. He reached inside his cloak and produced . . . money. That was always a relief. Kat knew she could get killed instead. Silently, he counted out ducats.

Kat slipped them into a washleather pouch, and slipped the pouch between her breasts.

Obviously, her pleasure in receiving the cargo had loosed the woman’s tongue. “You deliver to many?”

Kat shook her head. “I really don’t think I should say.”

“Understood. But I will make it worth a great deal, a very great deal indeed, to know of one man. Ten times your fee, if you tell me where I can find him. His name is Marina. Dottore Luciano Marina. This is how he looks.”

The woman flicked a handful of powder into the air and an image appeared therein. The man had an arrogant tilt to his head, but a kindly face. There was a wiry youthfulness about the face, which didn’t match the eyes. The eyes looked as if they’d seen a lot.

Kat remembered it well. He had been a great figure of learning at the Accademia before he disappeared, Grandpapa had said. And her favorite tutor, as a girl.

Kat shook her head. “He hasn’t been around since I was about fourteen.”

“He is still around.” The woman spoke very firmly, more to herself than Kat. “I can feel him. I just can’t pin him to a place.”

Kat shrugged, and looked at the desk. She must have lost a strand of hair there—not something you wanted to leave with the Strega. She twitched it off the table and into a pocket while the hooded woman’s attention was still distracted.

“Haven’t seen him for years,” she repeated.

The woman appeared to notice her again. “You may leave,” she said imperiously.

* * *

Outside, with the wind from the storm ripping and yowling between the buildings and the first heavy drops beginning to splat onto the water, Kat shook herself. The money would help. But the hole that the Casa Montescue was in meant that they’d have to continue with this. She flicked the bowline loose and began sculling.

As she came out onto the Grand Canal, she realized that she should have left earlier. Ahead the rain was coming down like a solid dark wall, obliterating all light. The water in the Grand Canal was already chopped into endless dancing myriad-peaked waves. Water slopped over the gunwales as Kat struggled to turn back into the relative shelter of the smaller canal she’d emerged from. There was no going home until this was over. She might as well find somewhere to try to keep dry. Even here angry gusts were rattling and shaking at hastily slammed shutters. This was no time to be outside, never mind in a boat. The nearby church of San Zan Degola was small and poor, but it would be open.

She moored the gondola to a post, hitched up her skirts, and ran for the shelter. The storm wouldn’t last.

Chapter 14

Rain. The watcher in the reed bank noticed it without caring too much about it. His name was Harrow, and he was, by nature, a predator. When intent on a target he was not distracted by discomfort. The slim, willowy figure out there in the lightning-torn darkness wasn’t his prey, but Harrow stalked him anyway from long habit. This marshland was not Harrow’s environment, and the only way he’d learn it was to practice, to hone his inborn skills.

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