But Toni was frowning, and gazing not down toward the town where the sounds came from, but more to the right. Yes, Alfredo could feel it too. Something was happening, something with fire in it, halfway up the hill, about where the Casa di Sala must be…
…and then, from that point, a burst of light, brilliant even in the bright sunshine. With it one dense ferocious impulse, a blast of pure power, not coming from the mountain but bursting from a single center with huge, astounding force. Light-dazzled, stunned, they saw only dimly the blast-wave traveling up the hill, tossing the treetops about as if in a hurricane. The sound of the explosion reached them first, a long, immense, roaring bellow. Before it ended, the blast, an almost solid wave of roasting air, knocked them flat.
Alfredo pushed himself groaningly up out of the darkness and stared down the hill. Half the trees in the wood seemed to be down. Several fires had started. Beyond that stood an uprushing column of dark smoke, rising and rising, which at its top widened into a pale, churning cloud like a child’s drawing of a tree. In only one way was it like the fire of the mountain: It was filled with the same rage.
Toni was already on his feet, staring. He raised both arms high and gave a great wordless shout, a call, a summons.
At the sound the air became full of the Angels of Fire, as usual almost invisible in the afternoon sunlight, but still blazingly there. They hovered, waiting for Toni. He called again and swept his arms down and outward. Remove, he told them. They turned and streamed away toward the strange, still rising cloud until they hovered in a ring around its top. Nets of fire fell from each of them, joined themselves, narrowed in a fiery mesh around the column, bright against its blackness all the way down to the ground. The Angels rose again, picking up cloud and column and, at its base, the sun-bright ball of heat from which it sprang, and bore the whole thing up and away toward the sun.
Alfredo watched the burning mass dwindle to a spark and vanish.
“Well done!” he whispered, stammering with wonder. “How did you…What…? Oh, I think I know. That was the salamander’s furnace. As long as it had the salamander in it…But it started to change as soon as we took the salamander out, and last time I went it was too hot to get near.”
Toni nodded. That was something he’d already known—not guessed, as Alfredo had—just as he had understood the menace of the cloud and known how to overcome it. That knowledge and that power were part of his inheritance. He was now truly Master of the Mountain, come into his birthright. His whole stance expressed his Mastership as he stood gazing down the slope and out over the strait. But then, with a sudden, urgent movement he turned to Alfredo. His whole face was full of questioning worry. His mouth struggled to shape a word.
“Annetta? Your mother?” said Alfredo. “I told her not to follow Uncle Giorgio back, to find somewhere safe, in case there’s an eruption. She told me where, and I said we’d go and look for her there.”
Toni nodded doubtfully, but settled down beside Alfredo to finish their meal. The mule had bolted again, but was too tired to go far and was standing a little way off, braying pitifully for its companion. The town bells still clamored their alarm. Dazedly Alfredo began to wonder what he should do now, how much he dared tell anyone. He glanced up when Toni gave a grunt and rose. The second mule was shambling back across the hillside. The first one staggered to meet it.
“I suppose we’d better go and tell people it’s all over,” said Alfredo.
As he scrambled down toward the mules, it struck him that perhaps he now knew why the two brothers had quarrelled. Uncle Giorgio needed two people to manage the mules, and so had tricked Father into helping him, and when Father had realized what was really happening he’d tried to stop it. Those were the two angry voices the salamander had heard. So it was up here, on this mountainside, that the terrible rift between them had opened, loosing the raging fires between them.
Well, maybe. He would ask the salamanders about it sometime.
The mules seemed relieved to be caught but it took a while to coax them close enough to the lava flow to make a start down the path, scrambling every so often round or over tangles of fallen branches. The flow had now ceased moving, but there were places where the twists of the path took them too close to stand the heat and they had to pick their way down through the trees. The sun was setting by the time they came out onto the old driveway and made their way home along it.
But Casa di Sala was gone. The lava had reached it, buried it and then piled itself up on the terrace below and there finally solidified. There was no sign of the explosion in the furnace room, so that must have happened just before the lava covered everything. Nothing was left. The mountain had made it all part of itself.
They gazed at it for a while and then, without a word, headed on downhill. Alfredo found he was thinking more coherently. What next? Take the mules to the inn. Find Annetta, if possible. Then Signor Pozzarelli. Tell him just enough of the truth to make him understand that the mountain still had a Master. …
As it turned out, Annetta found them, climbing up toward them through the dusk, leading the third mule. Toni ran to meet her, and she flung her arms round him and hugged him, sobbing with relief. After a while he took her by the shoulders and gently pushed her away from him and stood erect, gazing down into her face. His mouth worked. The syllables when they came were slow and grating, like the hinges of a long-closed door, but the word was unmistakable.
“Mama.”
Her face turned white under its tan. Her mouth fell open. She stared at Toni, who simply stood there, smiling and confident. She turned to Alfredo.
“The tears of the salamander,” he said. “My uncle could have done it long ago. He was a horrible man. He killed my family and my friends on the Bonaventura. He was going to steal my body from me. But what he did to Toni—I think it’s worse than anything. His own son!
“Casa di Sala is gone, Annetta. All gone. The mountain’s buried it. We’re going on down.”
It was dusk when they reached the town. It was still in an uproar, windows smashed in by the blast from the furnace, roofs stripped of their tiles, bells stopping and starting, people standing in the streets guarding piles of their precious possessions, ready to flee, others dragging loads toward the harbor in the hope of finding space on some boat, yet others just standing around exchanging rumors. At the inn Annetta made as if to stay with the mules, but Alfredo said, “No. You’ve got to come too.”
One tower of the church had fallen. The square in front was crowded, groups of people standing waiting for news, others hurrying on errands, others on their knees praying. Alfredo pushed and wriggled his way through and up the steps to Signor Pozzarelli’s door and banged the knocker.
“You’ll get a flea in your ear, sonny,” somebody called. “Doesn’t know any more than anyone else.”
And indeed the door was opened by Signor Pozzarelli himself, his face red with anger, his mouth opened to yell.
“Signor di Sala is dead,” said Alfredo firmly.
Signor Pozzarelli bit himself short and stared. He obviously hadn’t recognized Alfredo till he spoke, and no wonder, a filthy boy in torn peasant clothes, Toni just as bad, and equally unrecognizable, and the dumb servant woman.
“Where…? What…?” he stammered. “The mountain…”
“Can we come in? I’ll tell you what happened.”
“The woman? The idiot?”
“Yes, please. He isn’t an idiot. And he was there.”
Signor Pozzarelli snorted, shaking his head in bafflement, but let them through and led them into his office. Both windows were smashed in. Glass littered the floor. Without offering any of them a chair he settled himself behind his desk.