Belladonna (18 page)

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Authors: Fiona Paul

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BOOK: Belladonna
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Cass stood and curtsied quickly, still half in a daze. “I am Cassandra Caravello,” she said. “I am acquainted with Fal—with Signor da Padova.” It was so odd to call Falco by his formal name.
Madalena introduced herself and gushed for a few moments about Signorina Briani’s beauty. The signorina looked amused, but reached in to give Mada’s gloved hand a squeeze before arranging her gossamer skirts and taking the empty seat at the table. She introduced her companions, but Cass forgot their names almost immediately, instead thinking of them as Pale, Gray, and Scarlet, because the woman with the sharp face wore a dress almost the exact same shade of red as Madalena’s.
Signor Mafei, the handsome butler, brought them each a cup of tea. Cass couldn’t keep from sneaking peeks at Belladonna out of the corner of her eye every few seconds. This couldn’t be Falco’s patroness. There had to be some mistake.
Bella laughed and all of the other women joined in. Cass forced a laugh too, although she hadn’t heard the quip. She tried to focus on Belladonna’s syrupy-slick voice, but all Bella seemed to be talking about was herself: her jewels, her newest treasures from abroad, her flowers, which apparently bloomed even in the winter. Cass’s mind kept wandering. How could she possibly look so young? How could she possibly be so gorgeous? Even Madalena looked plain here, a peasant girl next to Belladonna’s Venus. Her skin was practically glowing. She was perfect.
Well,
nearly
perfect. Cass’s eyes went to Belladonna’s hands, but they were tucked away in elbow-length silvery gloves. Was she really missing a finger? Cass felt a bizarre urge to tug at Bella’s gloves, to expose her single imperfection.
A fist of jealousy tightened inside of her. Falco had told her that he had gone to Florence to make a name for himself, so that he would someday be worthy of Cass. But could his eagerness to be close to Belladonna have a different—more selfish—cause?
Bella laughed again and her circle of admirers did too. Madalena, normally threatened by women who were more beautiful than she was, seemed to be hanging on Belladonna’s every word. Cass felt like she was watching a circle of rodents being hypnotized by a cobra. She found Belladonna’s icy perfection repellent.
A soft breeze rustled the nearest bush, loosening a couple of waxy green leaves that danced across the silken tablecloth and landed in her lap. Cass brushed them from her skirts. A rose petal had also ended up in her lap, and she couldn’t help but marvel at its coloring—pink on one side, purple on the other.
“Lovely, aren’t they?” Belladonna said. “They’re called Janus roses, since they have two faces.”
Cass noticed Gray and Scarlet staring at her resentfully. She let the petal flutter to the ground. “I’ve never seen roses like this. And the blooms are so large. Do you put something special in the soil?” Cass asked politely.
Belladonna smiled. “I do,” she said, “but it’s a secret. I’m very proud of my flowers, you see.” She reached up to pluck a large pink-and-purple Janus rose from the side of the wooden trellis. She tossed it in Cass’s direction. “They have the most exquisite fragrance.”
Cass flinched as the bloom landed heavily on the table. Everyone was still watching her. No one but Belladonna had spoken. Hesitantly, Cass reached toward the rose. She lifted it to her face. The scent was intoxicating—like sharp perfume and sweet sugar.
Something tickled her hand. She gasped. A hairy black-and-brown spider was making its way toward her wrist. She shrieked, dropped the rose, and frantically swatted at the creature. The spider ended up on the tablecloth. The other women squealed, leaning back in their chairs as the spider made its way across the table.
Only Belladonna sat calmly. Regally. She extended a gloved hand and gently picked up the spider by one of its tiny legs. Cass suddenly felt afraid, although she couldn’t say why. The tiny spider tried to wriggle free, but Bella’s delicate grip prevented it from escaping.
“You shouldn’t fear my little helper, ladies,” Belladonna said softly. She rose from her seat and carried the wriggling spider over to a cluster of rosebushes. She set the spider down on an open blossom. “Spiders protect my roses from harmful insects.” Belladonna spun a slow circle, her eyes tracing the periphery of her garden. “Many of nature’s creatures protect me and my exquisite flowers.”
The other women murmured uneasily as the spider disappeared into a sea of petals. Cass was breathing hard. Everything looked a little blurry. The rosebushes tangled together like a drawer full of precious jewels. Beyond them, muted yellow and white lilies waved in the breeze.
She raised a hand to the lily pendant around her throat. Belladonna’s mesmerizing garden—and her beauty—had almost distracted her from her true purpose. Luca. The Book of the Eternal Rose. But she could hardly ask to peruse Belladonna’s library in the middle of tea. Perhaps later Signorina Briani might offer her and Madalena a tour of the villa.
Cass sat back in her chair and tried to focus on the conversation. At least she was finally beginning to understand the Florentine accent. She hated asking people to repeat themselves. Scarlet mentioned the scourge of vampirism, and Belladonna launched into her own story of nearly being attacked one night as she returned home from a party in the city center.
“I wear this everywhere now,” she said, “even with gloves.” She held up her left arm so they could see a slender chain of silver encircling her wrist. Two tiny bronze keys dangled from the chain. She gave Cass a curious look. “Is Venice also overrun with vampires? I’ve heard the islands are crawling with ghosts and specters that sneak in and out of buildings with the tides.”
Cass frowned. If the Order truly consisted of people opposed to the Church, she would have assumed Belladonna would denounce the priests and their trials as Falco had done, but she seemed emphatically to believe in vampirism and the recent attacks.
Before Cass could reply, Scarlet said, “Venice, eh? I heard one of the most recent to go to the drowning platform was a Venetian donna.” She clucked her tongue. “How do you suppose she got
herself
attacked?”
“The same way all the ladies do, I’m sure,” Belladonna said drily. “By looking for something prettier than her husband to play with. Honestly, I think some of these girls actually
want
to be fed upon. An unusual fetish.”
“Speaking of pretty things to play with,” Gray started, “isn’t your new artist Venetian as well?”
Belladonna’s lips curled into a grin. “Yes, he is quite a find, isn’t he? A recommendation from a business associate.”
Cass felt her cheeks heating up. She quickly dropped her eyes and pretended to be fascinated by the pattern of lace on her cuffs.
“Though your physician is quite handsome too,” Gray said.
Belladonna smiled. “And he’s promised to make sure I never get buried alive again.”
This made Cass look up again. So the story was true.
“Is he still caring for Tatiana de Borello?” Pale asked. “I was wondering if her condition had improved.”
“Poor Tatiana.” Belladonna fixed her eyes on Cass and Madalena. “You mustn’t breathe a word of this to anyone,” she said. “A young girl’s life hangs in the balance.”
Mada leaned closer. Cass fought the urge to look away; Belladonna’s catlike eyes troubled her.
“Tatiana, the dear daughter of one of my closest friends, is clinging to life after a vampire attack. She’s pale as death and her heart beats much too quickly. My physician informed the priests that she doesn’t bear the marks, but that was a lie to spare her life. No one knows how or when she was bitten, but her parents have locked her away in their palazzo. As long as the priests believe she is unmarked, she won’t be called to trial.”
“But what if she turns into a vampire?” Mada asked, eyes wide.
“They’re keeping her tied down, dear, just in case,” Belladonna said. “Bound with silver. But if she were going to change, chances are she would have done so already. It’s been days. My physician thinks the bite may have infected her differently.”
Differently? Cass wasn’t sure what Belladonna meant. According to legend, if a vampire bit you, you either died or transformed. She shuddered at the thought of there being a third, perhaps even more gruesome, possibility.
After another half hour of idle chatter, Pale excused herself, saying she needed to be home before nightfall. Cass did her best to dawdle, sipping slowly at her tea, hoping the other women would make their good-byes. Scarlet left soon after Pale, and Gray was, by this time, struggling to conceal her yawns.
Cass let her eyes wander over Belladonna’s palatial villa, scanning each arched window for any hint of Falco. Did he live here? Did they take their meals together, sharing light banter across a table laden with delicacies?
Stop it.
That kind of thinking would serve no one, and get Cass nowhere. She needed to focus on finding the Book of the Eternal Rose.
“I’m afraid I must walk you back to your carriage soon,” Belladonna said abruptly, startling Cass from her reverie. Were she and Madalena being tossed out? “I have a meeting this evening,” the signorina continued. “But I insist that you both come back tomorrow, and bring your husband and father too, if they would like,” she told Mada. “I’m having a little party, and I would love to talk more with both of you. Especially you, Cassandra. Signor da Padova speaks quite fondly of you.”
Madalena arched an eyebrow at Cass. Cass ignored her. “We became friends when he did a portrait of me,” she said cautiously.
“I see.” Belladonna’s lips twitched. “I honestly think he’s grown as an artist, just in the few weeks he’s been here.” She rose from her seat. “Of course I work the poor boy to death,” she added.
“Would it be possible to see your library?” Cass blurted out. “Just for a moment? I’ve heard you’re quite the collector.”
“Certainly, dear,” Belladonna said. “In fact I can show you Signor da Padova’s most recent painting at the same time.” She clasped her hands together as she headed for the stairs.
Belladonna led the girls quickly through the villa, giving Cass and Mada scant time to marvel over the paintings, sculptures, and other odd bits of beauty scattered throughout the cavernous rooms.
“Where does that door lead?” Cass gestured toward a large wooden door at the end of the hallway, carved from top to bottom with images of Greek goddesses.
“To my chambers.” Belladonna smiled slowly. She adjusted the neckline of her dress. “But only certain guests get invited there.”
Cass blushed at the insinuation. It was odd that Signorina Briani was so beautiful and wealthy, but wasn’t married.
Maybe one man isn’t enough for her,
Cass thought.
Then they turned a corner and entered the library, and Cass couldn’t keep her jaw from dropping. Belladonna had more books than Cass had ever seen in one place before, perhaps even more books than the Doge of Venice. She quickly began to scan the shelves from a distance. Was the Book of the Eternal Rose tucked away in this room?
Her eyes didn’t get far before they settled on a large painting above the fireplace, just as Belladonna proclaimed proudly, “There it is.” It was Falco’s work—Cass could see it in the muted real-world colors and the sharp brushstrokes. It was a painting of Belladonna, dressed in voluminous gray skirts and a low-cut emerald bodice, her breasts peeking out over the lacy neckline.
Cass dropped her eyes. It wasn’t the revealing dress that bothered her. It was the way Bella’s body was arranged, reclined on a bed, with one hip rolled forward, hair hanging down over her exposed collarbone. Cass thought back to the night in Tommaso Vecellio’s studio, where she and Falco had shared their first kiss. He had insisted on painting her. His soft hands had seemed so purposeful as he arranged her body, as if his growing feelings had determined the tilt of her head and just the way a lock of damp hair should fall over the bare skin of her throat. Cass forced herself to look at the painting again. She wasn’t imagining things. Falco had positioned Belladonna’s body in exactly the same way. 
seventeen
“All pages pertaining to meetings, theories, subjects, and trials must be maintained in a single place, carefully guarded by the leader of the Order.”
—THE BOOK OF THE ETERNAL ROSE

 

Cass thought about the painting for the rest of the evening. She woke early the next day still thinking of it. Over and over, she replayed her terse conversation with Falco’s patroness in her head. “What a . . . lovely background,” Cass had managed to say when Belladonna had asked her opinion. “Such a unique color scheme.”
“That piece was actually painted in my bedchamber.” Belladonna had seemed very pleased to relay this fact. According to her, Falco had insisted on the location because the light through the southern windows was best for sitting. Belladonna had then raised a gloved hand to her forehead, adding that she had spent several excruciating days posing for the painting, saved from a cruel death from boredom only by Falco’s witty conversation.
“Signorina Cass. Am I hurting you?” Siena had finished lacing Cass into her favorite topaz gown and was now brushing her hair.
Cass snapped back to reality. She had unconsciously balled her hands into fists. “No. Why do you ask?”
Siena pulled Cass’s silver-plated hairbrush gently through a tangled area. “You’re making the most dreadful faces.”
“I’m sorry, Siena. I was just . . . thinking about something.” Cass took in a deep breath and uncurled her hands. She didn’t know if she was mad at Falco for painting his patroness exactly as he had painted Cass, or if she was angry with Belladonna for her baiting, suggestive remarks. All she knew was that she was in an exceptionally foul mood. Were it not for the chance to scour the library once again in search of the Book of the Eternal Rose, she might have decided to skip Belladonna’s party altogether.
Siena patted her shoulder awkwardly in a feeble attempt to soothe her. “Has there been any word from Signora Querini?”

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