“If I don’t, why should she? She lives in Ferrara now. You could go and ask her, but it’s a long way north, and the Holy Father has forbidden her ever to return to Rome.”
“Do you see her?” asked Machiavelli.
Vannozza sighed. “As I said, Ferrara’s a long way north. I don’t care to travel much these days.”
She looked around the room, glancing at the servants who stood near the door, and occasionally at the water clock. She’d offered them no refreshment and seemed eager for them to go. She constantly kneaded her hands together. An unhappy woman, and ill at ease, but whether that was because she was concealing something, or because she was being forced to talk of people she’d clearly rather not talk about, Ezio could not say.
“I have—or, rather,had—eight grandchildren,” she said unexpectedly. Ezio and Machiavelli knew that Lucrezia had had several children by her various husbands, but few had survived childhood. People said that Lucrezia had never taken pregnancy very seriously, and indeed she had had a habit of partying and dancing right up to the moment of her accouchement. Had that alienated her from her mother? Cesare had a daughter, Louise, who was a child of four.
“Do you see any of them?” asked Machiavelli.
“No. Louise is still in Rome, I think, but her mother has made sure that she’s much more French than Italian.”
She rose then, and the servants, as if on cue, opened the room’s ornate double doors.
“I wish I could be of more assistance…”
“We thank you for your time,” said Machiavelli drily.
“There are other people you might like to talk to,” said Vannozza.
“We intend to visit thePrincesse d’Albret.”
Vannozza pressed her lips together.“Buona fortuna,” she said, without conviction. “You’d better hurry, too. I hear she’s making preparations to leave for France. Perhaps, if I’m lucky, she’ll come and say goodbye.”
Ezio and Machiavelli had risen, too, and made their farewells.
Once outside in the street, Machiavelli said, “I think we’ll have to use the Apple, Ezio.”
“Not yet.”
“Have it your own way, but I think you’re a fool. Let’s go and see the princess. Lucky we can both speak French.”
“Charlotte d’Albret won’t be leaving for France today. I’ve got men watching her palazzo, in any case. No, there’s someone else I want to see first. I’m surprised Vannozza didn’t mention her.”
“Who?”
“Giulia Farnese.”
“Doesn’t she live in Carbognano these days?”
“My spies tell me she’s in town. We have to take advantage of that.”
“What makes you think we’ll get any more out of her than we got out of Vannozza?”
Ezio smiled. “Giulia was Rodrigo’s last mistress. He was passionate about her!”
“I remember when the French captured her. He was beside himself. And then the French foolishly ransomed her for three thousand ducats. He’d have paid twenty times that amount to get her back. And he’d probably have struck any kind of deal they wanted. But I guess that’s what happens when your mistress is well over forty years younger than you are. You get besotted.”
“Didn’t stop him from dumping her when she turned twenty-five.”
“Yes. Too old for him by then! But let’s hurry.”
They made their way north through the narrow streets in the direction of the Quirinale.
On the way, Machiavelli noticed that Ezio was looking increasingly uneasy.
“What’s the matter?” he asked.
“Have you not noticed anything?”
“What?”
“Don’t look around!” Ezio was terse.
“No.”
“Then I think we’re being followed—by a woman.”
“Since when?”
“Since we left Vannozza’s palazzo.”
“One of her people?”
“Perhaps.”
“Alone?”
“Think so.”
“Then we’d better shake her.”
Impatient though they were to get on, they slowed their pace, looking in shop windows, even pausing at a wine booth. There, over the rim of his beaker, Ezio caught sight of a tall, athletically built blond woman dressed in a good but unassuming dark green robe of some lightweight material. She’d be able to move fast in clothes like that if the need arose.
“I’ve got her,” he said.
They both scanned the wall of the building against which the booth was erected. It was a new place, constructed in the fashionably rusticated style of large roughened slabs of stone separated by sunken joints. At intervals, iron rings for tethering horses had been set into the wall.
It was perfect.
They made their way to the back of the booth but there was no way out there.
“We’ll have to be quick,” said Machiavelli.
“Watch me!” replied Ezio, putting his beaker down on a table near the entrance. A few seconds later he was halfway up the wall, with Machiavelli close behind. Bystanders gaped as the two men, their capes fluttering in the breeze, disappeared over the rooftops, leaping across alleyways and streets, and sending tiles skittering down, to smash on the cobbles or flop in the mud of unmade lanes as the people below ducked or jumped out of the way.
Even if she’d been able to, the woman couldn’t climb vertical walls, however conveniently easy they were, in a long skirt, but Ezio saw that her dress had a carefully disguised slit to the thigh on one side, enabling her to run, and she was tearing through the streets after them, thrusting aside anyone who got in her way. Whoever she was, she was well trained.
But at last they lost her. Breathing hard, they came to a halt on the roof of San Niccolò de Portiis and lay down flat, keenly scanning the streets below. There seemed to be no one unduly suspicious among the various citizens in the streets, though Ezio thought he recognized two of La Volpe’s thieves working the crowd, using sharp little knives to cut purses. Presumably two not selected to go out into the surrounding countryside, but he’d have to ask Gilberto about it later.
“Let’s go down,” suggested Machiavelli.
“No—it’s easier to stay out of sight up here and we haven’t far to go.”
“She didn’t seem to have much trouble following us. Lucky for us there was that roof with a high wall around it, where we could change direction without her noticing.”
Ezio nodded. Whoever she was, she’d be reporting back by now. He wished she were on his side. As things stood, they’d have to get to the large apartment Giulia kept in Rome fast, and then out of the Quirinale district. Maybe he should detail a couple of his recruits to watch their backs on any future forays. The Borgia diehards were lying low under the new Pope’s tough regime—but only to lull the authorities into a false sense of security.
Giulia’s first husband, Orsino Orsini, had been happy to wink at the affair his nineteen-year-old wife had embarked on with the sixty-two-year-old Rodrigo Borgia. She had a daughter, Laura, but no one knew if she was the child of Orsino or Rodrigo. Rodrigo, despite being a Valencian by birth, had risen through the Church until he came to control the Vatican’s purse strings, and he had shown his gratitude to his delicious young mistress by installing her in a brand-new house (which she’d long since been obliged to quit) conveniently close to the Vatican, and by making her brother, Alessandro, a cardinal. The other cardinals called him “the Cardinal of the Skirts” behind his back, and of course never in Rodrigo’s presence. Giulia they called “the Bride of Christ.”
Ezio and Machiavelli dropped to the ground in the piazza that Giulia’s apartment block fronted. A couple of papal guards stood nearby. Otherwise the square was deserted. The guards’ tunics bore, on their shoulders, the crest of the della Rovere family—a massive oak tree, root and branch, now surmounted by the papal triple tiara and the keys of Saint Peter. But Ezio recognized the men. Six months earlier, they’d been in mulberry-and-yellow livery. Now, times had changed. They saluted him. He acknowledged them.