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Authors: Iris Johansen

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BOOK: The Wind Dancer
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Borgia laughed and for a moment his raddled face held a remnant of its comeliness
before he'd been afflicted with the pox. "As you intend to use me."

"No one uses you, my lord duke. Your mind is too quick not to perceive deception."

"Sweet words won't buy you what you want from me. We're too much alike." Borgia set
his goblet down on the Venetian carved table next to his gloves. "If Andreas owned the
Wind Dancer, why did no one know it? It would have increased his consequence to
possess such a treasure."

Damari shrugged. "He is a fool. His family brought the Wind Dancer from Persia over a
hundred years ago, and they regard themselves as guardians of the statue. The Wind
Dancer was kept in a tower room at the castle in Mandara. Even persons who were very
friendly with the family were never invited to see Wind Dancer."

"Then how did you come to know of it?"

"I was born in Mandara and I served as an officer under Lionello and his father before
him. I listened, I watched, I planned to form my own condotta, and I knew that when I
left Mandara I would take the Wind Dancer from them."

"I detect a lack of affection." Cesare smiled. "Your service with Andreas's condotti was
not to your liking?"

Damari swiftly hid the bitterness festering within him. Borgia's eyes were too sharp and
he would use any knowledge with lethal skill. "Lionello did not like my methods when I
served under him after his father died. He thought me fit to be only a common soldier for
the rest of my life. He was wrong. I have known from childhood that I was destined for
great things."

"Certainly a mistake in judgment. You are definitely not common." Borgia added,
"Though I understand your birth is not of the highest."

Typical of Borgia, Damari thought: a pat and then a sharp jab of the spurs. He quickly
smothered the fury surging through him and said, "A man is what he makes himself,
Your Magnificence. Look at what you've become since you shrugged off your cardinal's
cape. With the Wind Dancer in your hands nothing would be beyond your reach. If His
Holiness won't give you the armies you need for conquest, then take the statue to France.
Louis likes you well enough. Use the statue to turn his favor into armies to strike at Spain
or Florence or Rome."

"Rome?" Borgia's gaze narrowed on Damari's face. "You speak treason. You cannot
believe I would attack the papal states and my own father?"

"Yes, if it meant ruling a kingdom as vast as Charlemagne's."

A frown twisted Cesare's face. "You go too far, Damari."

"Men like us can never go too far, my lord. It's beyond the realm of possibility."

Borgia gazed at him a moment and then began to laugh again. "You're right, Damari.
There are no limits for a man with the stomach to do anything he must to seize what he
wants." He stood up and adjusted the chain bearing the bejeweled insignia of the Order of
St. Michael that hung low on his chest. The jewels were set off to great advantage by the
black velvet of his jerkin. "I will consider your terms for the Wind Dancer."

Damari rose to his feet. "Do not consider too long."

"By God, you're bold." Borgia's smile faded. "Don't make the mistake of taking the Wind
Dancer to another buyer, Damari. It would not be wise."

Damari bowed. "When may I expect to hear from you?"

"Soon. I must write my father for his views on acquiring the Wind Dancer. Who knows?
He may not be as mad to have it as you seem to think."

"Perhaps." Damari changed the subject. "Will you sup with me and then try out a little
Turkish servant girl I acquired recently? She's very beautiful and has many skills."

"I think not." Borgia started to don the black velvet mask he was seldom seen without in
public these days. He paused, a smile twisting his lips as he looked down at the mask in
his hands. "Perhaps we're not as alike as I thought, Damari. You are not as vain as I. Our
faces are both pitted and far from pretty, but you go uncovered into the world."

"I'm accustomed to my scars, since I had the pox when I was a small child."

"I have the pox still. The French pox." Borgia suddenly threw back his head and laughed.
"And I'd wager the little Sicilian wench who gave it to me was far more captivating than
the Turkish girl you so kindly offered. The bitch was almost worth it."

"You might say that there was a bitch connected with my pox as well, my lord," Damari
said. "So you can see our afflictions make us truly brothers in adversity. Are you sure
you won't stay and try Zaria? She's only fourteen and ripe as a plum fresh from the tree."

"Your little beauties have no spirit and often bear marks that spoil their comeliness. I'll
find a woman more to my liking elsewhere." Borgia slipped the mask over his face and
started for the door, his form supple, manly, and full of grace. "You should learn to
practice restraint."

"Why?" Damari smiled. "Have we not just agreed that men such as we should not be
bound by limits? Excess can be very exhilarating."

"You clearly find it so." Borgia paused at the door. "Remember, you will do nothing until
you hear from me. Buona sera, Damari."

Politeness called for Damari to accompany Borgia to the front entrance, but he had
already decided not to accord him that courtesy. Borgia must be made to regard him as an
equal from this day forward, not just a lackey trailing at his heels. "Buona sera, my lord."

Borgia hesitated and then closed the door behind him with a sharp click.

Damari smiled with supreme satisfaction as he turned and walked across the loggia to
gaze out at the night sky. All was going extraordinarily well. Borgia wanted the statue
and would crave it even more when Pope Alexander fired him with his own enthusiasm.
Perhaps it would be possible to gouge even more than a dukedom from the pope. What a
triumvirate the three of them would make! No army or country would be able to
withstand them. Of course, a triumvirate could not last forever, and one man always
emerged the leader in such an arrangement. Why should it not be he? As he had told
Borgia, he had known all his life he had a great destiny. How far he had come already!
He possessed a fine palazzo, this small but elegant house in Pisa, and a storehouse of
treasures he'd secreted from the pope's greedy hands.

And now he had the Wind Dancer.

"My lord, a messenger from Florence begs to see you."

Damari turned to frown at the lackey standing at the door of the loggia. "By what name?"

"Tommaso Santini."

"I know no Santini."

"He said to tell you the message was from Guido Caprino."

"Caprino," Damari murmured. A sudden memory of soft white skin and frightened blue
eyes wavered before him. Laurette. The thought of the whore sent a surge of heat to
harden his loins. Perhaps Caprino had another choice bit of merchandise to offer him.

"Send Santini in. I'll see what he has to say."

"I've sent the other whores on into the garden," Marco whispered as soon as Lion and
Sanchia reached the gates. "This is Maria. She says Rodrigo has come to the village and
used her before. I thought he might more easily be distracted by someone he knew."

The dark-haired woman leaning against the gates smiled confidently. "For enough gold I
could distract Satan himself, and Rodrigo has always found me pleasing." She held up
the jug of wine she was carrying. "And this will do no harm."

"Make sure he believes you to be Venus incarnate. Your task is to keep him from paying
any attention to Sanchia, to keep him so busy she'll be able to leave with no suspicion."
Lion turned to Sanchia. "You know where you're to go?"

"The south side of the maze." Sanchia moistened her lips with her tongue as she peered
through the tall iron gates. She could clearly discern the tall holly hedge looming
fortress-like in the distance. She hadn't expected the maze to be so large, stretching at
least three hundred feet in length and ninety feet in width, the hedges themselves rising to
a height of more than nine feet. "I suppose I should go now." She cast a glance at Lion
but his expression was impassive in the moonlight. She opened the gate. "You'll be here?
You won't leave me?"

"We'll be here." Lion's hand clenched on one of the iron bars of the gate.

She drew a deep breath and then turned and followed Maria in the direction of the maze.

Lion stood watching her until she disappeared beyond the corner of shrubbery.

"She has courage," Marco said, his gaze following Lion's.

"Yes."

Marco shifted restlessly. "I have no liking for this Lion. Sending a woman into danger
while we merely stand by--"

"Do you think I do?" Lion's tone was savage. "But she's the only person now who can
bring me the key that will give us the Wind Dancer."

Marco fell silent and the minutes stretched on. "It's a great service she does us. How will
you reward her if she does bring you the key?"

"What do you mean?"

"You told me she was a slave. Will you free her? It seems a fair--"

"No!"

Surprised at the violence in Lion's response, Marco asked, "Why not? You have no liking
for slavery. You refused to have slaves at Mandara. Surely it's--" He stopped as
comprehension dawned on him. "You use her in your bed."

"Is that so surprising?"

"No." Marco studied his brother, anxiety growing within him. He was aware that Lion
was never celibate when he was away from Mandara, and he had known many of the
women Lion had bedded. Without exception they had been knowledgeable in the ways of
carnal pleasure and as invulnerable and cynical as Lion himself. Courtesans, bored wives
looking for distractions, widows ripe and willing to enjoy the bed sport of which they'd
been deprived. Never had there been a woman as vulnerable and young as Sanchia, and
never had Lion's response been violent at the idea of parting with a leman. "You're
not--" He stopped. Dio, he had no right to ask this and yet he felt compelled. He began
again, "You're not going to take her to Mandara?"

"No."

Relief poured through Marco, followed immediately by a twinge of guilt. "It's not that I
don't wish you to have everything you want, Lion. It's simply--"

"I know." Lion's gaze wearily shifted from the maze to his brother's face. "Don't worry,
nothing has changed, Marco."

Marco had an uneasy feeling that a good many things had changed since Lion had gone
to Florence to find his thief, but he preferred to accept Lion's words as truth. "Perhaps
you could place Sanchia in a fine house in Pisa. Since you've acquired this passion for
shipbuilding, you spend more time in Pisa than Mandara anyway. It would be a solution
to--"

"Suppose we worry about solutions to other problems after we have the Wind Dancer
back," Lion cut in as his gaze returned to the maze. "The Wind Dancer is all that's
important right at this moment."

The false key had been exchanged for the key to the storehouse. Now Sanchia had only
to return the key ring to Rodrigo's belt.

Only? Panic swept through her at the thought of leaving the comparative safety of the
haven in the bushes across from the maze and venturing out once again to complete her
task. She had been unusually lucky to be able to quickly, quietly take the key ring and
carry it away into the shrubbery to make the switch. Only the fact that Rodrigo had been
occupied with pulling the teasing Maria into the maze had made it possible to whisk it
from his belt, but it would be madness to believe it would be as easy to replace it.

A shout of laughter followed by a squeal interrupted her thoughts and she turned toward
the labyrinth to see the other guard once again mounting the whore with the bronze-dyed
hair.

It was senseless to linger in the bushes cowering with fear. Rodrigo was still in the maze.
She had no choice but to go after him. She tucked the key ring in her belt and drew her
cloak more closely around her shoulders as she stepped boldly from the protection of the
shrubbery into the moonlight.

"Ho, there you are." Rodrigo Estaban strolled out of the maze, carrying the jug of wine
Maria had given him.

She froze. Had he discovered the keys were gone?

He lifted the jug to his lips and drank deeply before lowering the jug. "You shouldn't
have run away. I have enough for both of you. I'm from Spain, where they grow us men
as strong as bulls." He gestured toward the maze. "I left your friend so tired she was
barely able to swing her hips."

Sanchia quickly lowered her lashes to hide her relief. "I was waiting." She walked toward
him. "I didn't want to get in your way."

"I want you in my way. I've always liked redheads." He took a step forward. "Show me
your breasts. I want to see how you compare with Maria." He didn't wait for her to show
him but grasped the neck of her gown and ripped it downward with one tug, baring her
breasts. "Pretty. Not as big, but pretty... " His dark head lowered and his wet mouth
enveloped her left breast.

Violation. He smelled of garlic and wine and his teeth were hurting her. She felt... dirty.
Bile rose in Sanchia's throat as she clenched her fists to keep from pushing him away.

She blocked out all thought and feeling. The key ring. She had to return the key ring. Her
hands moved with purely automatic skill transferring the key ring back to Rodrigo's belt.
He didn't notice. He was grunting, making animal-like sounds, whispering vile promises.
She should be grateful he was so distracted, she told herself.

She wasn't grateful. She hated it.

The key ring back on his belt, she had to find a way to releasing herself and getting back
to Lion with the key. Dear God, where was Maria?

The man's head was lifting, his mouth leaving her breasts. "Come." He grasped her wrist
and pulled her toward the maze. "I want you to lie beside that other whore so that I can
take turns dipping betw--"

"Rodrigo, where did you go?" Maria emerged from the maze, her bodice still unlaced,
her large breasts pale and ripe in the moonlight. A sulky pout pursed her lips. "I close my
eyes for a minute and you're off to mount another woman. Send her away."

BOOK: The Wind Dancer
11.22Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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