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The Shadow of the Lion by Mercedes Lackey & Eric Flint & Dave Freer. Chapter 58, 59, 60, 61

He hadn’t had a decent talk with Marco since Maria’s return from captivity. Marco had gotten back from looking for Luciano Marina even later than Caesare had returned from his visit to Casa Capuletti. Marco, at least, had been sober. Benito sighed. Marco was walking around with that moonstruck look on his face again. Doubtless yet another girl. Benito couldn’t understand it. Girls were . . . interesting. But not this walk-into-walls-and-die-for-you stuff. And what did he mean by that “One person’s trouble is another person’s delight”? Benito sighed again. More trouble for Benito and the rest of them no doubt. But right now the sun was warm and the chestnut-flour castagnaccio was superb.

He was halfway through his lunch when he saw Maria tie up down below. So far as he knew she had no business with Casa Ventuccio today, so he wasn’t much surprised when she strolled up the steps and planted herself beside him; feet dangling, like his, over the edge, the rest of her hugging the bottom railing.

“Bite?” he said, offering her a piece of castagnaccio to be sociable. It didn’t pay to be less than polite to Maria at any time—but most especially Benito walked softly these days. What with her being short-fused and in a muddle over Caesare Aldanto, and them being short of cash, and Benito’s brother more than half the cause of both—and now this Dandelo thing—

“No,” she said shortly. “I ate.”

He shrugged. She’d say her say when she was ready; he wasn’t about to push her.

He kept watch on her out the corner of his eye all the same. After living these months with Caesare Aldanto, Benito knew Maria Garavelli about as well as he knew anybody—and the storm warnings were definitely out. The sleeves of her dark blue dress were pushed up over her elbows, which only happened when she was nervy; her battered hat was pulled down low on her forehead, like she was trying to keep her eyes from being read. But Benito was close enough for a good view, and he could see that her square jaw was tensed, her dark eyes gone darker with brooding, her broad shoulders hunched, her fists clenching and unclenching—storm-warnings for sure.

Well, she and Caesare had “celebrated” her return from captivity in the Casa Dandelo two days ago with an almighty fight. Things definitely hadn’t been right between the two of them lately. He should talk it through with Marco, but he’d barely seen Marco since the night Maria had gotten back.

“You’ve got the sneak thief’s ways, Benito Valdosta,” she said at last, softly, so softly her voice hardly carried to Benito.

Benito tensed up himself; in all of Venice only Alberto Ventuccio, Maria Garavelli, and Caesare Aldanto knew his real name, his and Marco’s. Only they knew that Marco Felluci and Benito Oro were real brothers; were Marco and Benito of the Case Vecchie, the last of the longi family Valdosta. Only those three knew that the boys had fled from assassins who had killed their mother, and were still very probably under death sentence from Duke Visconti for the things their dead mother Lorendana might have told them and the names and faces they knew. Even the Ventuccio cousins didn’t know.

For Maria Garavelli to be using his real name—this was serious.

“I ain’t no sneak thief,” he said shortly. “‘Less Caesare wants a job done. It don’t pay, ‘cept to buy a piece of rope at nubbing cheat. Unless you’re real good.” He thought of Valentina, of Claudia, their skills and bravado, with raw envy. “I’m good; I ain’t that good.”

“What if I wanted you to turn sneak thief for a bit . . . for me?” came the unexpected question.

“Huh? For you?” he responded, turning to stare at her, his jaw slack with surprise.

She moved her head slowly to meet his astonished gaze. “Casa Dandelo,” she said tersely.

He nodded, understanding her then. Somebody—Montagnards, likely—had kidnapped the redoubtable Maria Garavelli; had kidnapped her, and truly, truly, frightened her, something Benito had never thought possible. She said that nothing else had happened. Benito believed her, but most of the canalers didn’t. They assumed Maria had been molested, maybe raped, and was lying about it out of shame.

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Categories: Eric, Flint
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