“They did Florence a great service,” Lorenzo di Medici said drily. “Gelding him and stuffing his cock and balls in his mouth were most fitting. But now let us get back to whatever problem it is you are having regarding Bianca, and we will see if we can help.”
“Signore, you know the Turkish merchant Prince Amir ibn Jem?”
“A charming and intelligent man, and an honest, reputable merchant. Yes, I know him quite well, Gio. Why?”
“My late son-in-law would not allow us to see Bianca for some months after the wedding. Then finally one day my wife was permitted to enter his palazzo. She found our daughter abused, sick, and terrified of her husband. Rovere was in the courts that day. Orianna did not hesitate. She removed Bianca from her husband’s home immediately and hid her in the convent of Santa Maria del Fiore until we were able to send her secretly to a small villa down by the sea that had been part of my mother’s dowry. She has lived there ever since. Her neighbor is Prince Amir.”
“They have become lovers,” Lorenzo Medici said astutely.
“Yes, after Rovere’s death but not before, my daughter swore to her mother. We wish to make a new marriage for Bianca, but she refuses to return to Florence or even discuss the matter. She would remain with the prince, and he would take her as a wife,” the silk merchant said in a distraught voice. “Such a thing cannot be, my lord. It cannot!”
“No,” Lorenzo di Medici agreed slowly, “it cannot. He is an infidel for all of his charm and good reputation among our community. But how do you expect me to help you with this problem, Giovanni Pietro d’Angelo?”
“Can you not send to his grandfather, the sultan, with all speed requesting that he recall Prince Amir to Turkey, my lord? If he were gone, my wife is certain we could bring Bianca to see reason,” the silk merchant said. “She has no calling to the Church, and so she must be married again. Her grandfather in Venice is even now seeking a suitable match for her. That was where we intended marrying her before Rovere blackmailed us.”
“I can send to the sultan with such a request, of course,” the di Medici replied, “but it would be weeks before this matter could be settled and Prince Amir gone. In the meantime, he could get your daughter with child, and such a thing would make her unmarriageable, for no man of good family would accept her as his wife then.”
“Then what are we to do, my lord?” the silk merchant asked despairingly. “What are we to do? I wish this man no harm, but he cannot have my daughter. My wife cannot eat or sleep for her distress in this matter.”
“However,” Lorenzo di Medici continued as if his guest had not even spoken, “we could secretly jail Prince Amir in the Palazzo della Signoria until his grandfather sends his Janissaries to escort him home. No one need know he is there. I will personally see that he is treated with all the respect due to his rank. Once he has disappeared, you can retrieve your daughter and make happier plans for her. Would that suit you, Giovanni Pietro d’Angelo?” Lorenzo di Medici smiled as he saw relief filling the silk merchant’s face.
“My lord! It is a brilliant plan! How can I thank you?”
“It is actually a small thing for me, Gio,” Lorenzo di Medici replied. “I know how to approach Sultan Mehmet, for my father’s many years as a diplomat and my own small experience serving the republic taught me how to deal with great rulers. Make no mistake, Gio; Mehmet the Conqueror is a great ruler and an intelligent man for all he is an infidel. Sending Prince Amir away is a sacrifice on my part, for I have always enjoyed his company, and the treasures he has found for me over the past few years are unequaled. No other dealer in antiquities has ever been so successful. But while we can share our courtesans and whores with an infidel, we cannot give them or allow them to take our daughters. I have never known him to care enough about a woman to want her for a wife. He is unlikely to give Bianca up, and from what you have said, Bianca will not give him up willingly. She must be protected for her own sake. As for what you owe me...” He paused as if thinking. “There will come a day when I ask a favor of you, Giovanni Pietro d’Angelo, and you will not refuse me, no matter the price.”
Once Sebastiano Rovere had said almost the exact same words to him, and he had agreed for the sake of his family. But Lorenzo di Medici was not Rovere. He was a man of honor, more powerful, his family more dangerous, and the price would be correspondingly higher, it was true. But Bianca must be saved from her infidel lover before it was too late. “I agree,” he said quietly. “I will not refuse the favor you require of me when you need it, my lord.” He stood and held out his hand to Lorenzo.
The great man stood and accepted the silk merchant’s hand as they shook in agreement. Then the two men sat again to drink their wine. When he had finally drained the goblet, Giovanni Pietro d’Angelo arose once more, thanking Lorenzo di Medici for his kindness. He returned home to tell his wife the matter would shortly be settled.
Orianna didn’t ask him for any details. Sometimes it was better not to know. She knew what she needed to know. Prince Amir would be removed from Bianca’s sphere. Orianna would shortly regain her eldest daughter’s company. Then she would make a wonderful marriage for Bianca, and Bianca would be truly happy again.
But Bianca was happy as Amir made arrangements for them to leave the republic and sail to Turkey. He had already seen to a vessel to take them to Constantinople. He had just one more trip to Florence to put his warehouse into the hands of his two employees, who were being told he was seeking new antiquities for his business. As he had taken such trips twice before, they had no suspicion that anything was different. Later he would inform them that he did not mean to return.
“I wish you didn’t have to go to the city,” Bianca told him the morning of his departure. “Why can you not simply send a message to your men?”
“Because neither of them reads very well,” he explained. “Actually only one of them can understand the bills of lading. They do better and are more reassured when their instructions are verbal, my love. They would consider it odd if I went off without speaking to them. Then they would gossip with others about it, and who knows what would be thought of my disappearance. So let me go and speak with them, Bianca. Krikor will come with me and I shall not linger. Two days at the most.” He kissed her a lingering kiss, breaking away with a sigh. “Soon we shall be at my palace and you will be happy, beloved,” he told her. Then he was gone.
Bianca was all packed and ready to depart. She waited two days, three days, and then a week went by. He had been delayed, of course, she thought, but he might have sent word to her.How like a man, she thought and she smiled. He probably expected with each new day that he would be leaving, and what a waste a messenger would be. But when the week ended and there was no sign of Prince Amir, Bianca took her horse and rode down the beach to the neighboring villa. When she arrived, she discovered to her shock that it was all closed up and deserted. As she walked around the outside of the house, she could see that heavy wooden shutters had been placed over the windows and the doors. She managed to peer through a crack in a kitchen window. Inside, the ovens and fireplace were cold, without fire. There was no sign of life whatsoever.
What had happened? Why was his home closed up when they had not gone yet? Frightened, Bianca returned to Luce Stellare to see if her own servants knew anything. They didn’t and were as surprised as she was, but that evening one of the young local menservants who enjoyed the housemaid Pia’s company arrived at the kitchen door. They brought him to Bianca to tell his story.
“Three days after the master departed for the city,” he began, “an official bearing the insignia of the di Medici family came to the villa. He paid us a full year’s wages, instructed us to close the house immediately and return to our own village. He remained the night while we accomplished the necessary tasks and then left with us seeing the villa was secured. That is all that I know or can tell you. The only one of the servants not one of us was Krikor, and he had gone with Prince Amir,madonna.”
“Thank you,” Bianca told the servingman. “I see my family’s hand in this,” she told Agata. “They have somehow managed to involve the di Medici in all of this.”
“Then you are lost,” Agata replied.
“No! The vessel that was to take us to Turkey is due off our coast in just a few days’ time. We are getting on that vessel, Agata. We will go to Turkey, and we will find our way to Prince Amir’s palace, where we will await his arrival. He will come home eventually. I know he will! Lorenzo di Medici would not harm him, nor has my father the stomach for assassination.”
“Travel alone? Without the prince? Are you mad?” Agata demanded to know. “We will be murdered, or taken into slavery without his protection.”
“I shall tell the ship’s captain that Prince Amir was suddenly called home, and took the overland route; that he has instructed the captain to deliver me off the coast nearest the Moonlight Serai because traveling by sea will be easier for me. We will get to where we are going safely, Agata. I do not intend to allow my parents to make another marriage for me, no matter their well-meaning intentions.”
“God and his blessed Mother help us,” Agata said.
Bianca laughed. “I wish I could see my mother’s face when she discovers that I am gone for all her manipulations.”
But the next morning a troop of men-at-arms in the company of an official, all wearing the insignia of the di Medici, arrived at Luce Stellare.