The policeman swung an arm toward the large vessel in front of them. “That’s the one we want, the Aleppo.” Its wharf teemed with carts and people. Men working pulleys hoisted large crates into the hold. On deck, the crew busied themselves checking the rigging, rolling barrels, or repairing sails.
Hoards of men and women pushed their way up a crowded plank. As they boarded, two men stopped them. “Checking credentials,” Badali said. Serafina visored her eyes looking for the shoemaker and his family.
“Look over there.” Badali indicated a group of carabinieri close to the stack who appeared to be talking to the ship’s officers. One flapped papers toward the gangplank.
“Let’s get down there,” Rosa said. “Can’t do anything from here. My guards will stay with the carriage.”
They walked for a few meters until Serafina saw an empty cart and asked the driver to take them down to the dock.
He shook his head. “Wharf restricted to passengers.”
Rosa intervened with coins and the cart’s wheels crunched gravel as they made their way down a steep road to the harbor.
“Boarding’s slow today,” one of the workers told them as they walked alongside the line of people waiting to board. “Shouldn’t be taking this long.” He wore a Phrygian cap and drooled in Rosa’s direction.
Without warning, the queue stalled. A moan went up from the line. Squinting up, Serafina saw carabinieri muscling their way down the steps, against the tide of oncoming passengers. Slowly they reached the bottom of the gangplank and clambered onto the wharf a few meters from where Serafina’s group stood.
With a shock, she saw them, the shoemaker and his family, surrounded by the military police. Badali and Serafina inched forward. She heard shouting and saw Graziella holding her baby and railing against her captors. Teo huddled against his father. Like a huge snake slithering away, the other passengers distanced themselves from the altercation.
“Terrible mistake,” Serafina heard Graziella say. Her voice sliced through the air like a bullet.
One of the carabinieri tried to placate her. “Orders are to hold your husband for questioning. Won’t take long and you can be on your way.”
“Take him, not us, you idiot!” Graziella rocked back and forth, flung her arms like a wild woman.
“But my dear lady,” the carabiniere began again.
She screamed it now, her arm pointing to her husband. “Take him!”
“Can’t. You’re on the same ticket, madam. ‘Rodolfo Pandolfina, party of four,’ it says.”
Graziella’s face mottled. “Don’t be pigheaded, man! Give me the ticket! Take him. He’s the one you want.” She grabbed for the ticket in the officer’s hand.
The shoemaker mopped his brow. “Be reasonable, my dear. Think of the children.”
“Damn you and your reason. That’s all I hear!”
Teo clung to his mother’s sleeve. “It’s all right, Mama. Please don’t shout. Not again, please!”
Graziella jerked herself free from her son’s grasp and spat her words. “Here, make yourself useful.” She thrust the baby into Teo’s arms.
Teo stood for a moment, facing away from his mother, looking out to sea. Slowly he rocked his brother.
Serafina ran to them, enveloped the boy and the baby, and backed away from the shouting to a safe distance. She hugged Teo and the baby to her side until they were buried in her voluminous skirts.
The whole world seemed to still, except for a woman gone mad. Graziella was screaming, her neck raw with congestion. People looked on, frozen.
So swiftly that Serafina thought her mind played its tricks again, Graziella reached into her reticule and withdrew a silver object. She aimed it at her husband and bellowed. He stood fast to the spot, opening and closing his mouth.
“Delayed until I could stand it no longer. Like glue, your mind. Finally! Finally I found someone to kill him. Almost succeeded. Would have, too, but for you.”
Graziella pulled the trigger.
Soft, the sound of the shot, it seemed no louder than a puff of wind.
Rodolfo fell, a blossom of red on his chest.
Graziella put the barrel to her temple.
Another puff of wind.
CHAPTER FORTY-THREE
They were silent as the coach rolled out of Messina. Rosa sat opposite Serafina who held the baby. Teo sat beside her, staring straight ahead.
Rosa told the driver to stop at the inn where they stayed last night. She asked for a wet nurse. They fed the horses and the baby and were off.
In a while, Teo lifted his face to Serafina. “Why?”
She looked at Rosa who said, “Tell him.”
Serafina did. Afterward, she said, “No one has the words to say how much your parents suffered. No one has the words to explain why your mother did what she did. No one has the words to take away your hurt.”
His tears began. Serafina was relieved. Handing the baby to Rosa, she wrapped her arms around the boy and held him so tight that she feared his bones would crack. She prayed to the Madonna. She did not interrupt his sobbing. She repeated her account of the event several times on the way home, holding him each time he wept.
CHAPTER FORTY-FOUR
Thursday, February 21, 1867
A splinter of the rising sun bounced off shop windows as she opened Loffredo’s door. The maid was clearing his breakfast. When she saw Serafina, her mouth formed a scorpion’s smile and she scuttled out of the room.
Loffredo glanced up at Serafina. “I heard.”
“Poor woman.”
“Poor Rodolfo. Imagine having to live with her sickness.” Loffredo gazed at her. “The children?”
“With us. Vicenzu’s suggestion. He wants Teo to work for him after school. Teo clings to him. And Rosa hired a wet nurse for the baby.” She swallowed and stepped closer. “But you and I cannot continue. Forgive me.”
He glanced down at his desk. “Nothing to forgive,” he mumbled.
“Perhaps another-”
“Don’t, Fina.”
“Promise we’ll be friends?” She wouldn’t blame him if he didn’t answer.
He looked up. “Of course. Couldn’t bear to lose you.”
Serafina leaned over and kissed his cheek, his mouth. She felt the cleansing flame of desire.