It was the man from the terrible workshop in Venice, the place where she and Falco had discovered the tin basins filled with dismembered body parts. It was Angelo de Gradi.
He had followed her to Florence.
eighteen
“Nature works in circles. Trees lure prey and hide predators. Predators leave behind carcasses so that they might be absorbed into the soil and feed the trees.”
—THE BOOK OF THE ETERNAL ROSE
She recoiled in her chair. “What do you want?” she asked. De Gradi was blocking the doorway entirely. She looked around for an alternate escape route.
He stared at Cass. Deep lines formed in his tall forehead. “I was told a woman had taken ill. I’m a doctor.” He took a step toward her, narrowing his eyes. “Have we met before, Signorina . . . ?”
“I’m better now, thanks,” Cass said quickly, without giving her name. She jumped up and pushed roughly past de Gradi and out into the corridor. She needed to find Madalena.
Halfway down the corridor, Cass glanced over her shoulder. De Gradi wasn’t following her. She had never been officially introduced to the man who collected body parts and also served as Signor Dubois’s physician, but she had thought certainly that he knew of her and the trouble she had tried to cause for Dubois at Madalena’s wedding. Could it possibly be a coincidence that he was here, now, in Florence?
Cass fled back to the portego, which had grown even more crowded now that the sun had set and several guests had come inside from the garden. She didn’t see Madalena anywhere. Ribbons of smoke billowing from the tall red candles in the windowsill stung her eyes. She blinked hard.
Even in the dim lighting, the dresses and doublets of those in attendance glimmered like precious stones—bright sapphires and rubies spinning around the room. Cass’s headache hadn’t gone away, and the jumping flames and whirling colors weren’t helping. Worse, the candle smoke was melding with the scent of sweat and perfume, almost making her gag. She needed fresh air. She had to get out of the villa.
She’d just step outside onto the lawn. She knew she should find Siena and ask for company, but it wasn’t as if she were going to wander far.
Descending the spiral staircase to the first floor, Cass saw a pair of lanterns and a box of tinder on a table just inside the door. She lit one of the lanterns and slipped out into the night, following the walkway of stepping-stones that led across Belladonna’s lawn. The sky was full of stars, and she could just barely see the outline of another villa off to the west. It was late, and there was no candlelight glowing from its windows. Whoever lived there was likely tucked safely into bed.
There were other villas across the main road: tall houses of marble and stone that flanked the little church, which sat nestled back from the street. Still, they looked plain in comparison to Villa Briani’s splendor.
Cass stood in the grass, inhaling deeply. She was grateful for the occasional wisp of wind that blew through the damp curls at the nape of her neck. The pounding in her head was fading away.
She was surprisingly unafraid, all alone, wrapped in the starry darkness. The trees, the flowers, even the elaborately manicured hedges cast soft shadows in the light of her flickering lantern. Cass realized she hadn’t had the nightmare about Cristian since leaving Venice. She didn’t know if it was the change of scenery or the reappearance of Falco that had driven away those terrible nightly visions. Either way, she was grateful.
She glanced back at the front door of the villa. Was it possible Angelo de Gradi honestly didn’t know who she was?
Cass shook her head at her own stupidity. She had panicked for nothing. There was no reason for de Gradi to recognize her on sight. She had never given him her name at Dubois’s masquerade ball, and it wasn’t as if he could have identified her beneath the starling mask. He had no idea she knew so much about his activities in Venice, that he was paying peasant boys to steal bodies from graves and then dismembering the corpses in his Castello workshop.
But what was the corpse collector doing in Florence if he hadn’t followed her here? Dubois was still in Venice—as far as Cass knew. Had de Gradi come here on business for the Frenchman? Or was he working for Belladonna now?
Maybe Venice had run out of dead. Between the scourge of “vampires” in Florence and the persistence of the plague, there was certainly no shortage of fresh corpses here.
An idea occurred to her: Falco had undoubtedly crossed paths with de Gradi during Belladonna’s birthday party since the two were former business associates. He had to know why the physician was in Florence. Cass resolved to ask him.
Then she thought of the paintings he had made for Belladonna, and her headache came pounding back.
Something rustled in a grove of trees that ran along the northern edge of the property. Cass turned toward the noise, nearly dropping her lantern as a deer materialized from the inky blackness. It ambled to the edge of the lawn and bent down to nibble at the base of a freshly clipped hedge. Cass stifled a laugh. Belladonna seemed so protective of her plants. Eating them was probably not permitted.
“I won’t tell,” Cass said out loud. She had never seen a deer before, and she was spellbound, mesmerized by the graceful creature.
The deer raised its head and looked at her. Just for a moment. Then it turned, shaking its white tail as it loped back toward the wooded area.
“Wait!” Cass cried out. She took a small step forward. She wanted to admire the deer some more, to rest a hand on its flanks.
There! The deer paused at the edge of the trees, watching her from one deep brown eye. As she drew near, it turned and fled into the patch of darkness. Cass raised her lantern and stepped into the trees, careful to stick to the small path that had been cut amidst them.
Feathery branches brushed against her dress. The blackness fell around her like a curtain. Her lantern sliced away only the tiniest sliver of night, but Cass sensed that the deer was gone. She turned around to head back to the party.
And then she saw the eyes.
Yellow ones. Shining like copper pieces in the dark. Not one pair. Three. They were moving. Circling between her and the safety of Villa Briani.
Something growled, a deep throaty noise. She backed away slowly, farther into the darkness. The yellow eyes followed her. A snarl. The sound of snapping teeth. Cass resisted the urge to run. She didn’t know what the eyes belonged to—dogs or something much worse—but anything on four feet would easily outrun her if she tried to flee.
She continued backing slowly away from the animals, clutching her lantern as if it were a weapon. The trees thinned out, and Cass could see by the moonlight what was hunting her.
Wild dogs. The leader, deep gray, had its hackles raised and its sharp white teeth bared. Two lighter dogs, more brown in color, crouched low behind it.
Her heart beat painfully in her throat. The dogs were blocking her path back to the party. The closest neighboring villa was dark. Would anyone even answer if Cass made it to the front door without being attacked? Quickly, she considered other options. The chapel was across the road, just beyond a short stretch of meadow, and church doors were always unlocked. She inched her way backward, careful not to move too quickly. She must not let them know she was scared; she must not let them think she was prey.
The leader of the pack snarled again. The other dogs advanced. Cass knew she was running out of time. The animals were flanking her on both sides now. Any second they would attack. If she surprised them, could she possibly make it across the meadow to the church before one of them closed its jaws around the back of her neck? Three more steps, then four. The little chapel was so close . . .