This literary discovery very nearly distracted me from the fact that I was, quite frankly, uncovering a pretty hefty, personal disappointment. There was nothing in my mother’s box that had any monetary value whatsoever, nor was there-among all the papers I had looked at so far-the slightest suggestion of family valuables hidden elsewhere.
Perhaps I should have been ashamed of myself for thinking like this; perhaps I should have shown more appreciation for the fact that I was finally holding something in my hands that had belonged to my mother.
But I was too confused to be rational. What on earth had made Aunt Rose believe there was something tremendously valuable at stake-something worth a trip to what was, in her mind, the most dangerous of places, namely Italy? And why had my mother kept this box of paper in the belly of a bank? I felt silly now, especially thinking of the guy in the tracksuit. Of course he had not been following me. That, too, must have been a figment of my all too fertile imagination.
I started leafing through the earlier texts without enthusiasm. Two of them, “The Confessions of Friar Lorenzo” and “Giulietta’s Letters to Giannozza,” were nothing more than collections of fragmented phrases, such as, “I swear by the Virgin that I have acted in accordance with the will of Heaven” and “all the way to Siena in a coffin for fear of the Salimbeni bandits.”
“Maestro Ambrogio’s Journal” was more readable, but when I began leafing through it, I almost wished it wasn’t. Whoever this Maestro was, he had had a bad case of verbal diarrhea and had kept a journal about every single triviality that had happened to him-and, by the look of it, his friends, too-in the year 1340. As far as I could tell, it had nothing to do with me or with anything else in my mother’s box, for that matter.
That was when my eyes suddenly fell on a name in the middle of the Maestro’s text.
Giulietta Tolomei.
I frantically scrutinized the page under the bedside lamp. But no, I had not been mistaken; after some initial musings on the hardships of painting the perfect rose, the verbose Maestro Ambrogio had written page after page after page about a young woman who happened to have a name identical to mine. Coincidence?
Leaning back in my bed, I started reading from the beginning of the journal, occasionally checking the other fragmented texts for cross-reference. And so began my journey back to Siena in the year 1340, and my kinship with the woman who had shared my name.
II.I
And in this borrow’d likeness of shrunk death
Thou shalt continue two and forty hours
Siena , A.D. 1340
O H, THEY WERE FORTUNE’S FOOLS!
They had been on the road for three days, playing hide-and-seek with disaster and living on bread as hard as rock. Now, finally, on the hottest, most miserable day of summer, they were so close to their journey’s end that Friar Lorenzo could see the towers of Siena sprouting bewitchingly on the horizon ahead. And here, sadly, was where his rosary ran out of protective power.
Sitting on his horse cart, rocking wearily along behind his six mounted travel companions-all monks like himself-the young friar had just begun to envision the sizzling beef and soothing wine awaiting them at their destination when a dozen sinister-looking horsemen came galloping out of a vineyard in a cloud of dust to surround the small traveling party and block the road to all sides, swords drawn.
“Greetings, strangers!” bellowed their captain, toothless and grimy but lavishly dressed, no doubt in the clothes of previous victims. “Who trespasses on Salimbeni territory?”
Friar Lorenzo yanked on the reins of his cart to stop the horses, while his travel companions did their utmost to position themselves between the cart and the bandits.
“As you can see,” replied the most senior of the monks, holding out his shoddy cowl as proof, “we are but humble brothers from Florence, noble friend.”
“Huh.” The brigand leader looked around at the alleged monks, his eyes narrow. Eventually, his gaze settled on Friar Lorenzo’s frightened face. “What treasure on the cart back there?”
“Nothing of value to you,” responded the senior monk, backing up his horse a bit to better block the bandit’s access to the cart. “Please allow us passage. We are holy men and pose no threat to you or your kinsmen.”
“This is a Salimbeni road,” the captain pointed out, underlining his words with his blade-a signal for his comrades to move closer. “If you wish to use it, you must pay a toll. For your own safety.”
“We have paid five Salimbeni tolls already.”
The villain shrugged. “Protection is expensive.”
“But who,” argued the other with stubborn calm, “would attack a group of holy men bound for Rome?”
“Who? The worthless dogs of Tolomei!” The captain spat twice on the ground for good measure, and his men were quick to do the same. “Those thieving, raping, murdering bastards!”
“This is why,” observed the monk, “we should rather like to reach the city of Siena before dark.”
“She is not far,” nodded the brigand, “but her gates close early nowadays, on account of the grievous disruptions caused by the rabid dogs of Tolomei to the general disturbance of the fine and industrious people of Siena and even more so, I might add, to the grand and benevolent house of Salimbeni-in which dwells my noble master-in particular.”
The captain’s speech was received with supportive grunts from his gang.
“So, as you can surely appreciate,” he continued, “we do, in all humbleness of course, rule this road and most other roads in the general vicinity of this proud republic-of Siena, that is-and so my insightful advice to you, as a friend to another friend, is to hurry up and pay that toll now, so you can get on your way and slip inside the city before she closes, after which point innocent travelers like yourselves are likely to fall prey to the scoundrelous gangs of Tolomeis that come out to pillage and such-as shall not be specified in the face of holy men-after nightfall.”
There was a deep silence after the villain had spoken. Crouched on the cart behind his companions, holding the reins slack, Friar Lorenzo felt his heart hopping around inside his chest as if it was looking for a place to hide, and for a moment he thought he was going to faint. It had been one of those days-a scorching sun and not the slightest breeze-that reminded one of the horrors of Hell. And it did not help that they had run out of water many hours ago. If Friar Lorenzo had been in charge of the moneybag, he would readily have paid the villains anything in order to move on.
“Very well, then,” said the senior monk, as if he had felt Friar Lorenzo’s silent plea, “how much, then, for your protection?”
“Depends.” The villain grinned. “What do you have on that cart, and what is it worth to you?”
“It is a coffin, noble friend, and it contains the victim of a dreadful plague.”
Most of the brigands drew back at this news, but their captain was not so easily put off. “Well,” he said, his grin broadening, “let’s have a look, shall we.”
“I do not recommend it!” said the monk. “The coffin must remain sealed-those are our orders.”
“Orders?” exclaimed the captain. “Since when did humble monks get orders? And since when”-he paused for effect, nursing a smirk-“did they begin to ride horses bred in Lipicia?”
In the silence that followed his words, Friar Lorenzo felt his fortitude plunging like a lead weight to the very bottom of his soul, threatening to come out the other end.