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"Excellency, the Countess of Treviso; I am her servant."
"And the man who sent her to the work--his name?"
"Andrea, Count of Pisa, Excellency."
The priest stepped back as one whose curiosity was entirely satisfied.
"Ah! I thought so. And the price they paid you, knave?"
"Forty silver ducats, Excellency,"
"Ho, ho! so that is the price of a friar in Venice."
The _bravo_ sought to join in the jest.
"Had they known it was the Prince of Iseo, it had been a hundred thousand, Excellency."
Fra Giovanni did not listen to him. His quick brain was solving a strange problem--the problem of the price that these people, in their turn, should pay to Venice. When he had solved it, he turned to the cringing figure at his feet.
"Signor Rocca," he said, "do you know of what I am thinking?"
"Of mercy, Excellency; of mercy for one who has not deserved it."
"But who can deserve it?"
"Excellency, hearken to me. I swear by all the saints--"
"In whose name you blaspheme, rascal. Have I not heard your oath in Naples when the irons seared your flesh? Shall I listen again when the fire is being made ready, and there is burning coal beneath the bed you will lie upon to-night, Signor Rocca?"
"Oh! for G.o.d's sake, Excellency!"
"Not so; for the sake of Venice, rather."
"I will be your slave--I swear it on the cross--I will give my life--"
"Your precious life, Signor Rocca!--nay, what a profligate you are!"
Fra Giovanni's tone, perhaps, betrayed him. The trembling man began to take heart a little.
"Prove me Excellency," he whined; "prove me here and now."
The friar made a pretence of debating it. After a little spell of silence he bade the other rise.
"Come," he said, "your legs catch cold, my friend, and will burn slowly. Stretch them here upon the Campo while I ask you some questions. And remember, for every lie you tell me there shall be another wedge in the boot you are about to wear. You understand that, signore?"
"Excellency, the man that could lie to the Prince of Iseo has yet to be born."
It was a compliment spoken from the very heart; but the priest ignored it.
"Let us not speak of others, but of you and your friends. And, firstly, of the woman who sent you. She is now--"
"In the Palazzo Pisani waiting news of you."
"You were to carry that news to her?"
"And to receive my wage, Excellency. But I did not know what work it was--Holy G.o.d, I would not have come for--"
Fra Giovanni cut him short with a gesture of impatience.
"Tell me," he exclaimed, "the Count of Pisa, is he not the woman's lover?"
"They say so, signore."
"And he is at her house to-night?"
The man shook his head.
"Before Heaven, I do not know, Excellency. An hour ago, he sat at a cafe in the great square."
"And the woman--was she alone when you left her?"
"There were three with her to sup."
The priest nodded his head.
"It is good!" he said; "we shall even presume to sup with her."
"To sup with her--but they will kill you, Excellency!"
"Ho, ho! see how this a.s.sa.s.sin is concerned for my life.
"Certainly I am. Have you not given me mine twice? I implore you not to go to the house--"
He would have said more, but the splash of an oar in the narrow ca.n.a.l by which they walked cut short his entreaties. A gondola was approaching them; the cry of the gondolier, awakening echoes beneath the eaves of the old houses, gave to Fra Giovanni that inspiration he had been seeking now for some minutes.
"Rocca Zicani," he exclaimed, standing suddenly as the warning cry, "_Stale_," became more distinct, "I am going to put your professions to the proof."
"Excellency, I will do anything--"
"Then, if you would wake to-morrow with a head upon your shoulders, enter that gondola, and go back to those who sent you. Demand your wage of them--"
"But, Excellency--"
"Demand your wage of them," persisted the priest, sternly, "and say that the man who was their enemy lies dead before the church of San Salvatore. You understand me?"
A curious look came into the _bravo's_ eyes.
"Saint John!" he cried, "that I should have followed such a one as you, Excellency!"