The Shadow of the Lion by Mercedes Lackey & Eric Flint & Dave Freer. Prologue. Chapter 1, 2

She looked across, not without a certain envy, at the ornate marble-faced building. She was startled to realize there was someone on the third-floor balcony of the Casa Brunelli.

“Lie still,” Kat said between clenched teeth to the wrigglesome urchin next to her. “There is someone on the balcony up there.”

To give him credit, the boy didn’t peer. He froze. “Who?”

“How would I know? You . . . you canal-brat. It’s hard to make out anything in this light. A man, by the way he stands.”

“He must have seen us come in,” whispered the boy. Kat could feel him tense next to her. Getting ready to run.

“Stay still!” She hissed.

Benito’s dark eyes flickered nervously. Then she felt him tense again. “They’re stopping. They’re coming here!”

Kat reached for the slipknot on the cord. “How do you know?”

The boy’s eyes darted. “You can see the reflection in the window,” he mumbled.

It was true enough. The two Schiopettieri oarships were slowing. Backing water. The vessels behind them . . . weren’t Venice-built. She’d swear to that. Whoever made them needed lessons in shipbuilding. Tubs. But tubs bright with steel. So much so that it was a miracle they didn’t tip over. That would’ve emptied all the armored men, in bright triple-cross-enameled breastplates and their gilt-trimmed helmets, into the canal.

Benito and Katerina gaped, forgetting the watcher on the balcony. The Teutonic Knights of the Holy Trinity. The fabled Arm Militant of the Pauline Orders. The soldiers of God who beat back the Huns, the Norse, and the various Slavic and Magyar pagans and heretics on the northern and eastern frontiers of Christendom. The borders of Emperor Charles Fredrik’s Holy Roman Empire rested squarely on their steel shoulders. Those breastplates were unmistakable, a legend across the Christian world. And they were half feared, as well as admired and respected, by the southern and Mediterranean folk who generally followed the Petrine currents in the Church.

“What the hell are they doing here?” Benito got it out seconds before Kat. His voice had more admiration in it than Katerina Montescue would have voiced.

“Going to the Imperial embassy, by the looks of it,” said Katerina with relief.

Benito too sounded more relaxed. “I always wanted to be a knight.”

Katerina shook her head. “Fighting trolls and hellspawn in the frozen northlands? Dealing with pagan Russian and Tatar princes and their demons? And—even worse—the heretic Grand Duchy of Lithuania and the Kingdom of Hungary and their sorcerers and shamans? Ha! It’s dark half the year up there. And they look silly in that armor. It’s no good anyway. One of the new pistols from Spain will put a ball right through it. Besides, they take the sons of the nobility of the Empire, not canal-brats.”

The boy looked militant. “I’m more than just a ‘canal-brat.’ My father . . .”

“Was the Holy Grand Metropolitan of Rome himself,” snapped Katerina. “And your mother was the Duchess of Milan, and just a canal-side puttana in her spare time. Now shut up. They still wouldn’t be pleased to find us here. The Schiopettieri would run us in and beat us up just for being in this part of town.”

The boy bit his lip. His dark eyes fumed at her. But he lay still. Katerina turned her attention back to the pageant reflected in the windows of the Casa Brunelli. With shock she recognized the file of gray-cassocked and hooded men filing out of the embassy onto the stone-faced landing. Even in the poor light there was no mistaking the white triple crosses on the backs of those cassocks. The monastic Servants of the Holy Trinity did not inspire the same awe as their sibling Paulines, the Knights, did. They simply inspired fear and distrust. Especially for Katerina Montescue. And they weren’t an unfamiliar sight in Venice. Their war on the Jews and the Strega was not officially sanctioned by the Doge. On the other hand, Doge Giorgio Foscari was turning a very blind eye. Well, at his age your thoughts started turning more to Heaven than earth anyway. And the Servants claimed to be the custodians of the keys to Heaven. Kat suppressed a chuckle. That had gotten Metropolitan Michael very steamed up in the pulpit last Mass. Rome and the Holy Grand Metropolitan did not approve of the strident claims of the Paulines.

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