The Shadow of the Lion by Mercedes Lackey & Eric Flint & Dave Freer. Chapter 7, 8, 9, 10

She moved the gondola quietly along to the Campo San Felice. And the boy detached himself from the shadows and dropped into the boat, almost without rocking it. He moved as lightly as the thief he undoubtedly was. She shuddered. This was a scary world that she was forced to move in.

They did a magnificent duet.

“I’m sorry I was late. Problems.”

“You were late . . . ?”

“You were late . . . ?”

“Why are you repeating everything I say?” snapped Katerina.

“I’m not. I was late. . . .” Benito burst out laughing. “So, we were both late, huh?”

“I was delayed,” said Katerina, sourly. “Unavoidably.”

Benito grinned. “Me too. So, let’s get to it.”

Tight-lipped, Katerina poled away. The shabby gondola prow cut a silent notch through the still water. After a while, though, she found herself almost smiling. For all his ragamuffin ways, there was undoubtedly something a little charming about young Benito.

* * *

From the high windows of the Imperial embassy, streamers of light spilled whitely onto the thin mist-shroud clinging to the dark canal-water. Inside the building all might be warmth, light, music, and occasional trills of laughter. Here, in the shadowy darkness of the side canal, it was cold. Katerina shivered. At least she didn’t have to get into it.

“So what are you waiting for?” she hissed. “Get on with it and we can get out of here.”

The boy did not look eager. The way he was taking off his jacket spelled reluctance. She could understand that. She wouldn’t want to get into the smelly cold dark water either. She gritted her teeth. If necessary she would.

* * *

Benito looked doubtfully at the canal water as he dropped his jacket into the boat. It wasn’t so much the swimming part, as the getting into the water that he hated. It was all right when you had the sun on your back, or when things were dire, but just to do it in cold blood on a misty night . . . The worst part was when the water got to your upper thighs. “Do you want to do it instead?” he asked, crossly. “I’m just wary. It’s early in the evening for no one to be around.”

Katerina shook her head, irritably. “The Schiopettieri did a clear-out here earlier. They’re doing regular patrols. We’ve got a bit of time before the next one comes through. Get a move on.”

He shrugged. No sense in asking her where she got such precise information. She wouldn’t tell him, and he wasn’t sure he wanted to know. He stripped off, down to his breeches. No sense in getting all his clothes wet.

He slipped into the water. It was cold, even at this time of the year. A couple of deep breaths and he duck-dived under the water. Swimming down for the bottom he forced himself to open his eyes. He might as well have kept them closed. Well, up was dimly lighter. His hands touched ooze. He felt around and realized this was not going to be an easy job after all. The water-door was plainly where the embassy threw out its garbage. He went up, breaking water with relief.

Katerina was a dark figure against the lights. “Did you find it?” she hissed anxiously.

Benito shook his head. “No.”

He heard her sharp intake of breath. “It must be there. It must.” There was more than a hint of desperation in her voice.

“Yeah, maybe,” he agreed hastily. “But look, there is lots of rubbish on the bottom. You got something heavy I can use to keep myself down there?”

She had the rock in a rope bag that did the poor-man’s duty for an anchor. It gave him something to pull down on, and a point to feel around. That was a broken pot. That was . . . eughh. He pulled his hand back from something rotten enough to crumble. It took willpower to feel again. And then he screamed. Underwater. Which is never a good idea. Something slimy and snakelike had slithered up his arm. By the time his conscious mind had worked that out, he was already spluttering and pulling himself up into the boat. He nearly had the gondola over in his haste. “Saint Marco, Saint Theresa . . .”

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