2 - Painted Veil (28 page)

Read 2 - Painted Veil Online

Authors: Beverle Graves Myers

Tags: #rt, #gvpl, #Mystery & Detective, #Historical, #Fiction, #Opera/ Italy/ 18th century/ Fiction

BOOK: 2 - Painted Veil
9.19Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

Just as the last candle winked out, a hissing sound came out of the darkness above, and tongues of silvery-blue flame shot out from the tops of the podium’s pillars. I heard a chorus of horrified gasps and the sound of chairs being overturned as the musicians rushed to see if their roof was on fire. I raised my voice: “Calm yourselves, it’s all part of the show.”

Very slowly, with infinite grace, a fantastic figure uncurled itself from behind the balcony’s rail. Amid bright sparks, a slender form sheathed in shimmering gold stretched to full height and stood as still as a statue. Wings fashioned of hundreds of glittering feathers capped its shoulders, and a mask of seraphic countenance hid its face. I smiled; Liya had outdone herself.

In the spectral light of Aldo’s erupting pyrotechnics, the Savio and Messer Grande parted their lips and stared in astonishment. Morelli’s gaze locked onto mine. Beyond anger or hate, it was a penetrating ray of pure loathing. As murmured “oh’s” and “ah’s” sped around the hall, I broke the nobleman’s gaze and craned my neck toward the ceiling. With Torani and Aldo manipulating guy wires from the deserted room behind the balcony, Liya mounted the railing and stepped out into thin air. My beautiful Jewess could have had a calling as a theatrical performer. Without a hint of fear or awkwardness, her golden figure seemed to hover in space before she spread the Seraph’s wings in a few dazzling passes over our heads. My heart swelled with pride as she spiraled down and came to rest squarely in front of Morelli.

Though the hall was filled with hundreds of guests, not one human sound was audible above the sputtering hiss of the fire pots. It was as if the room was holding its collective breath, totally focused on what the golden apparition would do next.

Light from the blue flames danced across Morelli’s face—a mask of cold, disciplined fury. I wondered what the nobleman must be thinking as he faced a copy of his own deceitful creation. Now that he knew I had plumbed the secrets of his temple, his brain must be reeling. What else did I know? How much could I prove?

Liya delivered her lines with steely precision. “I have descended from the heavenly realm with a burning truth that will not be denied. A murderer prowls this hall, the hall of his illustrious ancestors. He parades before you in the guise of an upright citizen but his mask of virtue hides a foul secret.”

Morelli’s face contorted. When Liya paused for breath, he threw up his arms, suddenly sounding very much like Dr. Palantinus. “This is nonsense. I didn’t authorize this lunatic charade. Get some light in here. Fabrizio, where are you? Someone remove this woman and this fool of a eunuch at once.”

Morelli’s words broke the spell. Around us, everyone started chattering at once. Liya spread her hands uncertainly; her wings drooped to brush the floor. The Savio glared at her under his shaggy brows. As the fire pots began to run out of fuel and the room darkened again, Messer Grande seized my arm. “I’ll call my boys to deal with this one,” he said.

“No!” I whirled out of his grasp and leapt to Liya’s side. I wielded the force of my voice like a weapon. “Listen to us. Leonardo Morelli is not what he seems. By day he plays the proper patrician, but by night, he masquerades as a Magister called Dr. Palantinus. He hired Luca Cavalieri to help him hoodwink the rich and superstitious at the Temple of the Golden Seraphim. Some of you in this very room have been duped by their false Seraphim scheme. Morelli killed Luca when the painter tried to extort money from him.”

My voice screeched in anger. “You are a murderer, Morelli. You killed Luca and set a mob on Isacco Del’Vecchio to hide your evil deed. Admit it. Tell the truth for once in your life.”

Morelli stared at me with the glittering, overbright eyes of a madman, but he didn’t speak.

Another high voice rang out. “Tito knows what he is saying. I’ve been to Palantinus’ temple. Morelli is a rogue and a charlatan.” It was Florio, but he was the only one to speak up for me.

Morelli regained his composure. Though he had never been on the stage, he was a showman through and through, and he was giving the performance of his life. In imperious tones, he said, “How dare you accuse me of such nonsense, Amato? When they clipped your balls, they must have damaged your brain as well. You’ve let yourself become so besotted with the painter’s murder that you’ve destroyed your career and everything else you possess."

The Savio nodded darkly and I felt Messer Grande’s strong fingers digging into my arm again.

It was time to play my last card. Messer Grande twisted my arm behind my back, but I used my other to point toward the hall’s arched entrance. I threw the nobleman a challenging smile and raised my voice to a carrying, crystal-clear pitch. “If you won’t submit to your own oracle, then heed the truth from your next visitor.”

Chapter 29

A woman screamed, then several others.

I couldn’t blame them. The sight at the archway was enough to make the breath catch in my throat, and I knew what to expect.

Coming toward us, moving smoothly and silently over the polished terrazzo, was an impossibly tall, dark figure. A cowled garment concealed its face and every part of its form except for one hand. That glistening white member was streaked with an oily, green film and pocked with tiny scabs, like something dead that had decayed in water. The apparition held a branched candelabrum at arm’s length.

Messer Grande relaxed his grip on my arm, eyes bulging and mouth agape. At my other side, the Savio whispered hoarsely, “What on earth?” Morelli remained silent, a rigid figure of bottled-up rage.

I glanced at Liya. She had pushed her golden mask to the top of her head. Her own face was calm and composed. I heartened when she sent me a small, sideways smile.

With a rustle of black robes, the towering figure glided to a halt a few paces from us. The hideous hand moved the flaming candles from side to side to inspect our little group. We all shrank back when an unearthly whisper issued from the unformed blackness that should have been a face.

“Signor Morelli,” the figure intoned. “We meet again. You’re looking well. Murder must become you.”

I trained my eyes on the nobleman. Morelli swallowed hard and seemed barely able to force his words past his lips. “This is just another trick. Another theater person got up in fancy dress. Show your face and end this farce.”

Emitting a stench of stagnant canal water, the ghostly horror merely burbled a deep laugh in reply.

Morelli raised a sneer. “You can’t fool me. I know who you are. You must be Tito’s friend, that Englishman who hangs around the theater like a great dolt who doesn’t have anything better to do.”

“What? He’s not talking about me, is he?” Gussie stepped out of the crowd that circled the pool of light around us. Annetta clutched his arm and drew him back.

The faceless figure laughed once more. “Wrong again, Morelli. But it is at the theater that we last met. Can’t you guess who I am? Don’t you know me? We were so close. Just a few short weeks ago, you had your hands around my neck, choking the life out of me.”

The hood fell away as if by magic. A ghastly visage sprang from its folds—slick, pasty flesh; dark, matted hair; and a damp collar and neckcloth torn loose from a bruised throat. A hideous flap of bloody scalp hung down over one ear. The decomposing features were familiar to all of us.

“Luca!” Morelli’s proud patrician mask fell away. He looked like a frightened child awakened by a nightmare. “No, it’s impossible. You can’t be here,” he blubbered. “You were dead. I saw your body in the palace storeroom.” Morelli drew back against the Savio’s stalwart bulk, spreading his hands in front of his face, voice rising to a horrified whine. “You were dead. I know it. I made sure. I rolled your body out of the boat and watched it sink beneath the water.”

“There,” I yelled. Messer Grande dropped my arm. He and the Savio traded a startled look. I couldn’t resist gloating. “There you have it. Do you believe me now—now that you’ve heard it from the murderer’s own mouth?”

Morelli leaped like a stag bounding from a thicket. The Savio lunged and grabbed the back of his jacket, but Morelli wriggled away and the Savio was left holding an empty garment. The guests who had watched the flying Seraph and hooded phantom in frozen awe suddenly panicked. Someone started a stampede for the archway. Screaming aristocrats stumbled and tripped in the darkness.

Luca’s specter yelled, “This way,” then took off. I dove into the crowd to follow. Barely conscious of Liya on my heels, I pushed scurrying bodies aside, straining to keep pace with the light from the phantom’s lurching candelabrum.

Somehow we made it out of the reception hall into the foyer. The crowd was fighting its way through the tall, narrow entry that led out to the waiting gondolas. Morelli had turned the opposite way.

I can’t recall ever taking part in a stranger chase. As the desperate nobleman sprinted into the depths of the
palazzo
, the foul-smelling murder victim, trailing his black cloak and wisps of smoke from the now extinguished candles, strove to close the gap between them. Following, I pumped my long legs with a winged Seraph on one side and a very confused Messer Grande on the other. The aging Savio, bright medals dancing on his heaving chest, brought up the rear.

We pounded up one stairway, then down another and another. Morelli and his closest pursuer suddenly disappeared into a side passage. Liya, Messer Grande, and I crashed into each other as we all tried to round the corner and squeeze into the narrow corridor at the same time. The police chief swore furiously as he ripped Liya’s delicate feathers from his gold uniform buttons and pushed her aside. By the time we reached the open door at the end of the passage, the Savio had caught up with us.

Beyond the doorway, voices clashed in anger. We stepped into the room. It must have been Morelli’s private study
cum
library. Bookshelves stretched from floor to ceiling on three walls. The fourth held an ornately carved cabinet and a wide writing desk flanked by a pair of standing lamps. Morelli had wedged himself between the desk and a bookcase like a cornered animal.

Silvio Cavalieri, Luca’s look-alike brother whom Gussie had fetched from Padua, deposited the candelabrum on the desk and flung his black cloak aside. It puddled on the flagstone floor like a spill of tar. Silvio stood tall in costume boots atop thick, built-up soles. With his features so like Luca’s and the corpse-like cosmetic effects created by Benito, he could have been a specter from the pits of Hell.

“You thought you could get away with it,” he said savagely, stabbing a grisly finger toward Morelli. “Just strangle Luca and go on with your life like nothing happened. But Tito found you out. You’ll pay for my brother’s murder. They’ll hang you from a gibbet on the Piazza and I’ll be watching from the front row.”

Messer Grande hitched up his belt and approached Morelli with a determined step.

“No, stop. You can’t take me away,” the cowering nobleman gasped. “I’m a Morelli. My family has been in Venice since the relics of St. Mark were enshrined in the Basilica. How can you even think of arresting me?”

The Savio was leaning against a bookcase with his hand to his midsection. Still huffing and puffing, he said, “You dumped Luca Cavalieri’s body in the lagoon. We all heard you admit it. It looks like Tito was right. The Jew didn’t kill Luca. You did.”

Messer Grande curled his lip at me, but began to advance toward Morelli again. I heard the swish of satin skirts behind me. It was Isabella. Pale and trembling, she leaned against the doorframe as if her knees might give way at any moment. Gussie and Annetta appeared right behind her. My friend steadied the noblewoman with a strong arm.

Morelli stood a little straighter. His eyes darted around the room and came to rest on the Savio. “Excellency, I didn’t know what I was saying back there. I was startled. Who wouldn’t be with all those histrionics going on? Of course I knew Luca was dead. I was there when we viewed his body in the Doge’s storeroom, you remember. I knew
someone
had tossed him into the lagoon. I didn’t mean to say that I had.” He extended an open palm to the Savio. “You see, don’t you? Amato threw out all this nonsense about false magicians and… what was it, a golden temple? I hardly knew what I was saying. I was… shocked, confused.”

Messer Grande halted again, looking toward the Savio for instructions. The old military man frowned and scratched his head. “This whole thing is very far-fetched,” he said.

Morelli’s eyes brightened. “And scandalous. A singing eunuch from the Cannaregio accusing a patrician of the Golden Book. What is Venice coming to?”

The Savio eyed me dubiously. Patrician blood flowed in his veins as surely as it did in Morelli’s. They were brothers of pride and distinction; their ancestors had deliberated together on the Great Council for centuries. Was the Savio going to let their shared social standing override the admission he had heard with his own ears?

Liya must have been thinking the same thing. Wings trembling, she marched up to the Savio and raised her chin. “If the accusation is baseless, why did Morelli run?”

The Savio arched his shaggy eyebrows, questioning Morelli. The harried nobleman took a tentative step forward. He opened his mouth, then shut it. Silvio peeled off the flap of linen soaked with calf’s blood that Benito had gummed to his scalp. He flung the rag on the desk in front of Morelli like a would-be duelist throwing down a gauntlet.

Morelli swayed on his feet. He was exhausted and desperate, but he wasn’t beaten. He pounded a fist on the desktop. “I won’t be questioned by a filthy, wanton Jewess who shouldn’t even be outside the ghetto walls. Look at her. She’s half-naked. She should be ashamed.”

The Savio sighed. “I’m the one who’s asking you. I’m willing to listen if you can give me a good explanation. If you deny Tito’s accusation, why did you run?”

Before Morelli could form a reply, another voice broke in. “I don’t understand,” said Isabella as she released Gussie’s arm and moved to the center of the study. “What is my husband accused of? What did the show signify?”

I took both of her hands in mine. “Signora, I have no wish to cause you distress, but justice must be served. I believe that your husband is guilty of the murder of Luca Cavalieri.”

She furrowed her lovely brow. “The scene painter at the theater? The murder the Jew was hanged for?”

I nodded. Behind me, Morelli snapped, “Lies, all lies. Don’t listen to him.”

Isabella squeezed my hands. “No, I want to hear. What makes you think Leonardo would do such a thing?”

“Luca had blackmailed others. I believe that he was trying the same trick with your husband. Have you heard of the Brotherhood of the Golden Seraphim?”

She shook her head.

“It’s a secret society, with a heavy initiation fee. Your husband created it. As Dr. Palantinus, the Grand Magister, he collects fees for promises of health, wealth, and knowledge of the future.”

“But, how? The State Inquisitors would never allow a patrician to charge money for occult activities. Leonardo would have been hauled before the Tribunal.”

“Dr. Palantinus is very discreet. He always wears a mask—the beaked mask of a medieval plague doctor. No one would ever connect the exceedingly proper Leonardo Morelli with the charlatan Palantinus.”

“But you do.”

“Yes, and you helped me.” I continued as a puzzled frown spread over her face. “The Jew dazed Luca with a blow from a bronze statue of Venus, but it was your husband that finished the painter off and dumped his corpse in the lagoon. When Luca’s body resurfaced, he needed a scapegoat. The tainted wells had already turned the city into a powder keg with a short fuse. Morelli indulged his hatred of the Jewish race by authoring a pamphlet that put flame to the fuse.”

I stopped to glance at Liya. Her mouth was set in a solemn line. She gave a small nod, telling me to go on. Isabella’s eyes never left my face.

“A mob burned the Del’Vecchios’ home and dragged Liya’s cousin Isacco away to his death. Gussie and I traced the authorship of the pamphlet to the mysterious Dr. Palantinus. It contained one unique phrase—‘Hebrew swindlers who make capons of us all.’ Have you ever heard your husband use those words? Others have.”

Isabella shuddered. Her breath caught in a sob. She shot one feverish glance toward Morelli, then turned and ran from the room. She knew what those words signified. I imagined that the revelation of her husband’s guilt overwhelmed her and that she couldn’t bear to look at him another minute. She would probably run to her suite, throw herself on the bed, and flood her pillow with tears. I would send Annetta to check on her later.

The Savio was rubbing his chin. “So, Tito, you believe that Morelli is Palantinus because of some words in a pamphlet.”

I swallowed hard. “That’s not all. It’s a matter of record that his father sold his inheritance to a Jew. Morelli has been hungry for revenge on the Jews ever since.”

“Morelli is not the only man in Venice to carry a grudge against the Hebrew race,” the Savio countered. He looked Liya’s golden sheath up and down, letting his eyes linger on the swell of her hips under the clinging fabric, then directed an apologetic bow in her direction. “Sorry my dear, but you know it’s true.”

Liya folded her wings tightly around her and gave me an imploring look. Silvio glowered at the floor, his hands balled into fists. Gussie and Annetta shook their heads at the doorway. I felt like tearing my hair from my scalp. “But I tell you, Excellency, Morelli is Palantinus. And he strangled Luca after Isacco felled the painter with a blow from the bronze statue.”

The Savio shrugged. “If you could just produce some tangible proof. Where is this statue? A bronze of Diana, is it?”

“No, not Diana,” Liya whispered fiercely. “It’s a statue of Venus. I was with Luca when he bought it. Isacco dropped it before he ran away from Luca’s studio.”

“It was not there the next morning.” I sighed. “The statue probably went to the bottom of the lagoon with Luca.”

“No, not at all.” Isabella returned on a dead run, pushing through Gussie and Annetta. “The Venus isn’t in the lagoon. I have it right here.” Panting, she used her flat palm as a support to display the sculpture before a phalanx of astonished eyes.

The bronze Venus was portrayed in the manner of the ancients, as a nubile nude of sensuous grace, one hand to her upswept braids, the other held modestly before the space where the curves of her thighs came together. I could see why it had reminded Luca so strongly of Liya.

I glanced toward the living Venus sheathed in gold instead of bronze. Her expression had changed from worry to radiance. “Oh, yes,” she breathed. “That is Luca’s statue.”

“Where did you get it?” the Savio quickly questioned.

Isabella moved to one of the bookshelves and indicated a row of tall volumes. “Right here. Leonardo fashioned a hiding place for her behind these books.”

Other books

The Considine Curse by Gareth P. Jones
Ice Blue by Anne Stuart
Stricken Desire by S.K Logsdon
Unforgettable by Laylah Roberts
The Spring Cleaning Murders by Dorothy Cannell
The Death Trust by David Rollins
Pain by Keith Wailoo