"My cousin! My cousin!" he was saying, and his grin was within six inches of my face. "You have come, as I begged to help me in my great triumph!"
His right arm, clasping me around the body, had slid under my loosened mantle. Now it pressed something against the middle of my back—something round and iron-hard. The muzzle of a gun. If I moved quickly, or denied him, I would die on the instant.
With that pistol-bearing hand urging me forward, as though he still embraced me in loving fashion, he led me to the head of the table, and there kept me beside him.
"This is my kinsman Leo, gentlemen," he introduced me to the company. "He is the man I told you of, whose wonders you have heard speak of in times past. He has more scientific miracles at his fingertips than all the saints in the calendar."
"I know him," said a fragile, shiftyeyed man in black and crimson. "He was once pointed out to me at the palace, and it was said that Lorenzo set great store by him."
"Are you then satisfied?" Guaracco asked the company. "With him as our helper hereafter, can we fail?"
"If he is true to us—" offered another.
"I vouch for that," promised Guaracco, his gun prodding me.
Their silence gave him consent, and he went on:
"All is agreed then. By this time tomorrow night we shall be in full possession of Florence, and in a position to dictate to Tuscany as a whole. The oppressors will have shed their last drop of blood, the magistrates will speak and act only as we see fit to bid them."
His embrace relaxed, his pistol ceased to dig into my backbone, but I knew that it was still at the ready in his hand.
"The people?" asked a thickset man in a leather doublet. His eyes burned from under black brows the width of a thumb.
"The people will offer no trouble, even if we cannot rouse them," Guaracco returned. "Was it not you, Captain Montesecce, who have had charge of gathering two thousand hired soldiers outside the walls?"
"I had charge, and I have done so," replied the man addressed as Captain Montesecco. "It is well we strike at once, ere so many armed men cause suspicion. Yet, Florentines are many and valiant—"
"We can count on many supporters in the city," interrupted the fragile man in black and crimson. "We Pazzi have servants and dependents to the amount of several hundred. Our houses are close together in one quarter, and a rising of our households would mean the rising of all that part of Florence."
AS he mentioned his family name I was able to identify him as Francesco de Pazzi. He was one of a family of Florentine bankers, not as rich or powerful as the Medici, but quite ambitious.
"All of us stand ready," he was continuing, "with influence, men and arms—all, that is, but my cousin Guglielmo. You, Ser Guaracco, advised against telling him of our plan."
Guaracco's rufous head nodded. "He is married to Lorenzo's sister. Later, with his brother-in-law and the rest out of the way, Guglielmo will be glad to join us. But not now. Your uncle, Giacopo, the head of the Pazzi—what is his temper tqhight?"
"Of course, I did not bring him here," said Francesco de Pazzi, "for he has archaic ideas about fair play. Howbeit, he knows that there is to be an arising against the Medici whom he has ever hated as upstarts and thieves. He will lead the muster of our men."
Another of the group about the table gave a little nod of approval. He was tall and high-shouldered, a scraggy-necked fellow in a purple houppelande, and he had a shallow, pinched jaw, like a trowel.
"What is my task?" he inquired eagerly, as though concerned lest all the blood be spilt by other hands.
"A task worthy of Francesco Salviati of Pisa," Guaracco flattered him. "I rely upon your eloquence and courage. Either may suffice ; both will be invincible."
"You intend," said Pazzi, "to assign him to the palace?"
Guaracco nodded. "I shall put some of my best blades in your charge, Salviati," he announced. "At the appointed time, go to the Palazzo Publico, where the magistrates live and sit in judgment. Look, I will draw a diagram."
Dipping pen in ink, he began to sketch on a white sheet for all to see. "Once up the stairs," he instructed, "you come into a hall. There ask the guard to summon the magistrate of the day. While he is gone, let your men pass through this door which you will see upon your left hand." He pointed with his pen. "It leads to an antechamber large enough for them all to wait. The magistrate will arrive, and you will tell him that liberty is at hand for Florence. If he will, he can join us. If not, call forth your band to make him see wisdom."
"And my assignment?" prompted yet another, one of three who sat together at the right hand of Guaracco. He was a youngish, hook-nosed fellow in good clothes, with a look about him of fine breeding gone slovenly. "I have a sure hand with a dagger, mind."
"I mind it well, Ser Bernardo," Guaracco said, and smiled. "You and Ser Francesco de Pazzi will strike down Giuliano, and see that he does not rise again. Have I your approval, Bernardo Bandini?" It was plain that he had it, and he turned his smile toward Captain Montesecco. "Our friend the captain promises to deal Lorenzo his death."
"And I miss stroke, may my sword arm wither!" vowed the sturdy soldier.
"Meanwhile"—and Guaraeco's eyes slid toward me—"we have with us a fighter the nonpareil of any. Leo, my kinsman, known as Luca, the admiral of freebooters who has lashed the Moslems to their kennels for six years. He is famed, admired, and he knows more about warfare than any man living. I will place him as our general!"
CHAPTER XIX
The Conspiracy
QUITE well I knew now why Guaracco had thought to drag me into his scheme. He would serve himself with my brains and skill, as so often before. It was one more item
that made his plot complete. Even I, within minutes, saw how the rebellion would succeed.
The conspiracy was not for a single blow but several, all accomplished at the same moment. Lorenzo and Giuliano, the heads of the Medici were to be assassinated. The Palazzo Publico would be seized and the officers there taken into custody by armed men. The adherents of the plotters would rise in an impressive manner swaying the unsuspecting and perhaps dissatisfied citizenry by their cries and promises.
And to guard against the forming of a violent resistance two thousand mercenaries were ready to march into the city.
It could not fail. With the fall of Lorenzo's power my exile and danger would be past. Yet my paramount impulse was to cry out against so ruthless a measure.
But if I spoke so my life would be forfeit. I would not live to get out of the room. I remained silent while Captain Montesecco asked when and where the Medici brothers were to be struck down.
"Tomorrow morning," said Guaracco. "At church."
"Church?" repeated the captain sharply.
"Aye that. Tomorrow is Sunday, you will remember. We cannot be sure of getting them together at any other time. Cardinal Riario * is to say mass at the cathedral, which will insure their attendance. We will be ready for them, each nearest his man.
At the moment when the host is elevated, and all attention directed thither—"
"Now, nay!" The leather-clad figure started from the chair. Montesecco's black brows lifted into horrified arches. "I cannot draw swords at that holy moment. God would be watching me !"
Guaracco chuckled, and so did Francesco Salviati, the trowel-jawed man in purple. But Montesecco was not to be laughed out of his impulse.
"I have sworn to help," he admitted, "and I shall do so, or my name is not Giovanni Battista Montesecco. I will command the mercenaries, raid the palace, help to rouse the city—but I cannot and will not do murder in the cathedral !"
"The man of blood shows himself blood-drawn," sneered Pazzi.
"Say you so?" gritted the captain. "If you will take a sword in hand, Messer Francesco, you will end up more blood-drawn than I."
But Guaracco caught Montesecco's leather-clad shoulder in a big, placating hand.
"None call you coward, Ser Giovanni," he assured the mercenary. "Withdraw this part of it if you will�
�none will blame you—and we can use your talents elsewhere. Bernardo Bandini, you are still ready to deal with Giuliano?"
*Cardinal Riario was a nephew of Sixtus IV, then Pope of Rome. Some have tried to connect him with the Pazii conspiracy, but the great mass of evidence shows that he had no other connection than that a cardinal's presence at the cathedral would insure the presence of the two brothers Medici.
Guaracco's wise glance shifted to the two men who had not yet spoken. Both were clad in black, and their faces were somber to match. "What do you say, Antonio Maffei? Methinks you lived once in Volterra, which Lorenzo saw fit to sack and destroy?"
My mind leaped back to Volterra. Guaracco had managed its destruction primarily so as to get a crystal of alum for our unsuccessful time reflector, but he must have other plans in connection with that apparently senseless cruelty. For one, he had discredited me when I might have been as a stumbling block.
HE was able now also to use the incident against Lorenzo. For Antonio Maffei was saying, with a growling relish, that the smell of Lorenzo de Medici's blood would smell sweet to the saints in heaven.
"He is a devil," he garnished the conceit, "and merits urging to hell."
"Your gossip, Stefano da Bagnone there, will help you?" asked Guaracco.
"You make a sign of assent, Stefano, as I take it. And I may provide a third for your dagger party."
Again he glanced sidelong at me. "We need not speak further tonight, gentlemen. Let us meet early on the morrow, and then to work."
He let them out by a rearward door.
Of the group he detained Francesco de Pazzi for a moment, advising him strongly to keep an eye on Captain Montesecco, who had turned strangely squeamish for a professional killer.
Then, when all were gone, he wheeled upon me with a sultry grin of welcome.
"Welcome home, boy," he cried. "Fine things are to be our doing within the twenty-four hours."
"Murder, you mean?" I flung at him. "Anarchy? Riot?" I walked close to him. "Lisa, under your power of will, brought me hither. I demand that you free her, and at once. She and I will depart before another hour is passed."
"I think not," he said, in his familiar easy manner of a master, but I snarled in scorn.
"I am vastly different from the man you lyingly accused to Lorenzo. I am a killer. Bring on your dwarfs, and see if they frighten me. I came here only to take Lisa away, and by the Saints I shall do so."
"Lisa?" he repeated. "Where is she?"
And I realized that I did not know.
"I was beforehand with you," he continued. "I hold her a hostage for your good will and support. Yet all may be well." He waved toward a chair. "Sit down."
I did so, and he talked. The Pazzi, he said, powerful and extravagant, were on the verge of bankruptcy. They slavishly sought to work under him for overthrow of the Medici, forgetting that when the overthrowing was complete Guaracco would rule through them and could, in good time, overthrow them also.
"Florence is as good as mine tonight," he said. "After Florence, other states. All Italy." He beckoned. "Come." He led the way down some rough stairs to the cellar where we had once worked together. It seemed stacked with firewood, until he kindled a lantern. Then I saw the stacks were of weapons. There were rifles and bayonets; boxes of grenades; machine guns; canisters that must hold high explosives and many another baleful thing.
Toward Guaracco I turned a wondering face, and he laughed the old superior laugh.
"I quarried these weapons, or the knowledge to make them, from that bemused mind of yours, Leo. I had two years to delve into your trances, and six more to forge and fashion. What ordinary army could stand against me?"
"You have soldiers?" I asked him.
"When first you came, you saw the worshipers I governed by tricks of deviltry. Those, and more like them, will rally at my call to use these arms. After that— But Leo, you cannot demur longer. You and I cannot succeed without each other."
Again he plunged ahead with the wild sketch of his plans. After the subjugation of Italy, the subjugation of France and Spain; a united and submissive Europe w«uld toil for Guaracco, its lord of lords; Cristofor Colombo would be sought out, given his fleet and sent to America to win its wealth.
"Once you fancied such an empire," he reminded me. "Am I not the true master sorcerer, with whom all things come to pass?"
"Not all things," I demurred. "I remember that I told the defeat for such a master—death. It will come to you."
His eyes turned frigid. "Seek not to kill me, unless you want to lose Lisa. Join me and she is yours. Otherwise I may give her to Bernardo Bandini for stabbing Giuliano. Or I might use her to persuade that overgodly mercenary, Montesecco. You can have her only if you are my devoted lieutenant."
"Lisa loves me," I said stoutly.
"Only at my bidding. My will commands her."
I gazed at him as though I had never seen him before.
Not that I had not known him from the first day as a dangerous scoundrel; not that I had not always hated and feared him ; but at last I knew that I must not delay. He must die, for the sake of Lisa and myself and all the world.
In one motion I bared my sword and darted it at him. He reeled back with a cry, but no blood came. My point had turned against a concealed shirt of mail. He extended his arm, dangling the lantern above an open cask. "There is powder inside," he warned. "Attack, and—"
I hesitated only a second, then turned at the sound of pattering feet. His two dwarfs were at me, ducking under the sweep of my sword to close in. But I brought down the pommel of my weapon upon the head of the hunchback, even as he shortened his own blade to thrust. Down he fell, and I sprang across him and darted upstairs.
"Lisa! Lisa!" I cried. Only the roared curses of Guaracco answered me. He was pursuing, a rifle in his hands.
"You cannot catch me!" I yelled, on inspiration. "I go back to my prison!" I gained the front door and ran out. Away I fled, passed Verrocchio's Cottega, around a corner to a broader street, and toward the heart of Florence.
For I had only pretended that I was fleeing the city.
What now ? Seek Lorenzo and warn him? Dared I show my face to him?
Ahead of me loomed the Palazzo Publico, destined for a stirring scene of tomorrow's uprising. I had a sudden hope and plan.
Unbuckling my sword, I hid it in a bush. Boldly I went to a side door and knocked. A porter opened to me.
"I am the locksmith," I said. "I come to fix the antechamber door."
"I heard no orders," he temporized, but allowed me to enter and mount the stairs to the upper floor. Here was a reception hall and a door opening to the left. Guaracco had designated it as an ambush for the bravos who would follow Francesco Salviati. I examined its heavy lock, and with my dagger made shift to drag it partially from the door. Still watched by the suspicious porter, I tinkered with its inner works.
"Now it will serve," I told him, and went my way.
TO all appearances I left the lock as it bad been. But I had bent a spring and pried out a rivet. Any man or men, going into that room and closing the door behind, could not get out again without the aid of even a better locksmith than I.
After that, I sought a livery stable, and with a few coins that were left in my pouch hired a horse. Somehow I wheedled my way past the watch at a gate, and made the best time darkness would allow to the old familiar country house which Guaracco still kept.
A single caretaker opened to my thunderous knocking. Without ceremony I drew my sword and swore to cut out his liver if he forestalled me by word or deed. He tremblingly made submission, and I locked him in a closet. Then I took a lamp down to the cellar workshop where Guaracco had tested my scientific knowledge on our first day of acquaintance.
It was in a dusty turmoil, but in a corner among odds and ends of machinery was what I had hoped to find —the remains of our unsuccessful time reflector. I checked the battery, found it in bad shape, but materials were at hand to freshen it. When I had re
stored it to power, I procured salt from the kitchen and mixed a great basin of brine. Finally I attached two wires to the terminals of the battery, and thrust their ends into the liquid.
I watched carefully. Electrolysis commenced. The bubbles that rose at the negative wire would be liberated hydrogen. Those at the positive end were what I wanted. From a bench I brought a glass bottle, holding more than half a gallon, filled it with brine and inverted it above this stream of bubbles. Steadily the gas crowded out the salt water, showing greenish yellow. I stoppered the bottle as it filled, then charged a second and a third. Finally I drew the wires out.
The bottles had earlike rings at their necks, and I strung them on a girdle under my cloak.
They were now a weapon for me that Guaracco had not dreamed of; for I had produced chlorine gas, such as had poisoned armies in the World war, the war that was still centuries ahead of me.
As I finished the work, Sunday dawned grayly. I released the frightened caretaker, and rode once more to Florence.
CHAPTER XX
Turmoil
UNDOUBTEDLY, as I have said, Il Duomo—Saint Mary's of the Flower—was the second cathedral in all Christendom. I was there gasbottles and all, the next morning before Cardinal Riario began to say mass.
I tried to lose myself among the throngs of worshipers who strolled most informally among the banks of seats in the octagonal choir space beneath the great open dome. For once
I was glad of the natural darkness that clung in the cathedral, lighted only by the ornate upper windows. At the high altar the cardinal, young and handsome for all his high dignity, was intoning the service. I found a shadow beside a carved wooden screen, and tried to shrink my height by bowing my shoulders under my mantle.
More worshipers appeared, and more, brave in all the colors and fabrics of Sabbath costume. A tall, ruddy head and beard showed among them—Guaracco, I saw at once. In my heart I prayed that he fail to see me, and he did. He was looking for other things, and perhaps he believed that I had indeed fled Florence.
Manly Wade Wellman - Novel 1940 Page 13