The Shadow of the Lion by Mercedes Lackey & Eric Flint & Dave Freer. Chapter 19, 20, 21, 22

Caesare toyed with his wineglass. It was only there to give him an excuse for being here; he didn’t intend to drink the vile stuff, not on top of lingering illness. He actually had landed on his feet; if he’d gone headfirst into Maria’s boat, he probably would have died anyway of a broken neck. As it was, he’d been limp enough to collect nothing worse than a few more bruises. He’d feigned worse, naturally, when he realized where he was. He’d have been a fool not to; he had no money, no resources, and a Montagnard death sentence on his head. Maria had realized as much the moment he landed next to her, and had kept him safely hidden, becoming more and more infatuated with him with every day that passed. For his part, he had seen to it that the infatuation was fed until it spread through her veins like a fever and overcame the tiniest vestige of her common sense. Love was the surest hold a man could have over an inexperienced girl like Maria.

He also made certain that she remained ever-conscious of the difference between their ranks. It made her unsure of her ability to keep him with her, without making her jealous. Jealousy might break the spell he had over her; self-doubt and the uncertainty of being worthy of him kept her eager to please.

“I believe you requested a meeting,” Caesare said lazily. “As I informed your contact.”

“Not a meeting with you,” Aleri snarled softly. “I was supposed to meet—” The Milanese agent broke off abruptly, muttering something under his breath. Caesare wasn’t certain, but he thought the phrase had been: that idiot monk!

Assuming he was correct, Caesare pretended to sip from his wine and then added: “What can you do, Francesco? And the German cretins call us ‘auslanders.’ As if they could find their own assholes here in Venice. But, like it or not, I am the ‘idiot monk’s’ chosen man for the job. Whatever the job might be.”

He set the glass of wine down on the table. “So why don’t you tell me about it, and save us both the useless recriminations. I don’t have any hard feelings, after all, despite being the injured party in the affair.”

Aleri’s features were not distorted. The only sign of the rage that Caesare had no doubt was filling the Montagnard was the coldness of his gaze. “Your services were always for sale, Caesare.” There was ice in Aleri’s voice, too. “Just like every other putta in this filthy city.”

Caesare did not rise to the bait; he’d been expecting it. Aleri was a true believer himself—which was odd, really, for a Milanese so close to Visconti—and that was his Achilles heel. He would do anything for faith; Caesare would do anything for money. They were two of a kind, and the joke was that Francesco didn’t even see it. “The job,” he prompted gently. “And my pay.”

Aleri, Caesare thought, was very near to throwing his own wineglass in his face. But . . . the memory of how good a duelist Caesare was prevented him. As good as Francesco was with a blade, Caesare was better—and they both knew it.

Instead, after a moment’s tense struggle with himself—for a moment, his face looked like a winter storm—Aleri reached into his cloak and brought out a leather purse. He slapped it down on the tabletop.

“I’d have hired a dog first, myself. But this incident you’re to organize and carry out is a fool’s business anyway. If the German cretin wants to hire a traitor for it, why not? It matters not to me.”

Caesare took the purse and made a little show of pouring the coins into his hand and counting them. Aleri scowled slightly. “Stop being a fool. You always were too clever for your own good. It’ll get you killed soon enough, and good riddance.”

Caesare didn’t rise to the bait. “Tell me about it,” he murmured. “The job, Francesco. Save the speeches for your faithful followers.”

* * *

By the time Aleri finished, Caesare was waging a fierce battle to keep from scowling himself.

That idiot monk! Typical German. Head as thick as a hog’s.

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