Blow (9 page)

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Authors: Daniel Nayeri

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BOOK: Blow
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The emotions were coming three at a time now for Brutessa. Envy. Insecurity. Panic. The desire to read more fashion magazines and learn 57 seduction secrets. She swung her arms in no discernible rhythm or direction, punching herself as often as not, charging around the room.

I got a rush call to the scene. I expected one or all three of them to be breathless by the time I got there. But no, I arrived as Giacomo covered Chloe with his body and Brutessa ran around hiccuping and sending shards of anything that got in her way into the air. I wasn’t there long before one of her wild swings connected with Giacomo’s head and sent him flying into a dresser. His body landed with a toothy clack on the floorboards.

Both Chloe and Brutessa froze. I was already walking up to him to say hello when his back heaved a few unexpected breaths.

Brutessa expressed her first grief by rushing up to the body of Giacomo and wailing like an orca. She alternately beat her own head and nibbled on the unconscious man’s toes. Chloe had the intuition that Brutessa wouldn’t hurt him. She would be of better use if she escaped. She edged toward the door, slowly, in between the phlegmy sobs of the pirate queen. Meanwhile, messengers had been dispatched across the palace to inform the prince that his war general had gone insane . . . more insane.

Chloe slipped across the hall, into a broom closet, just as the prince arrived at full gallop. Prince Dimple Pimple slid off his horse and tied the reins on the doorknob of the broom closet. Chloe held her breath. The prince marched into the room to see Brutessa weeping and Giacomo unconscious.

Thankfully, a violist in the prince’s soundtrack entourage had some medical training. From what he could tell, the knock had jostled Giacomo’s brain loose. He’d make it but barely, and only if he didn’t suffer another concussion for a while. Even a strong shake would push him over the brink.

At this point I had to leave. The prince was the first to notice that Chloe was gone. The kazooist in his entourage performed a cartoon surprise noise. Then Brutessa made him eat the kazoo. I rushed the musician to Dora. When she asked him his name, he did a disappointed
wah-wah-waaaah.
Then I returned to the castle and found Chloe.

The reason I had to stay with her is obvious, or it should be, if you’ve ever been in love. Giacomo could have shoved off at any minute, stepped through my door, answered the eternal footman, yours truly. But if he did, the part I was interested in wasn’t with him in that bed. He’d already given it away. So when I came to collect for one Mr. Giacomo “Co-Co” Chianti, good servant, novice marble painter, a guide on the most excellent way, well, I wouldn’t find it lying there with him. I’d have to find Chloe first.

And I’d honestly hate to, but I’d have to take it from her.

W
HILE
G
IACOMO WAS
ailing in his delirious half-sleep, Chloe snuck through the northeast wing. I kept back, out of sight. Poor girl had already met me once. When the prince noticed her gone, he ordered a search party to find her and put Brutessa in the group, which implied biting her face off when they did. Then he ordered his carriage to the north tower.

In the meantime, Babbo stood at Pierre’s sewing station and held up a swatch of fabric as though it was a dirty tissue. “You know what makes me think your job is useless, Pierre?” said Babbo. “It’s that you essentially make a replica of nature. It’s like tracing someone else’s paintings.”

Pierre sat in Babbo’s chair, with his feet propped on the marble-painting table. The glass rods were piled by an unused burner. Paints sat in clean tubs in manufactured rows. Neither of the men had moved a single ingredient from its position. Pierre responded, “You wouldn’t know craftsmanship if it was on a dinner menu, you boar. You make toys for children. Choke hazards at that.”

“You realize that I can grow more flowers on a compost heap than you could make in a lifetime?”

“I gag just looking at them.”

They heard the carriage wheels careen around the tower and the prince’s high-heeled boots on the stone. The door slammed open, but the old rivals were far too busy to acknowledge Dimple Pimple.

“What would you do without a
real
flower to copy?”

“What would you do without the money-rich and taste-poor middle class?”

The prince cleared his throat. His trumpeter and his bass drummer remixed a few beats. But Babbo and Pierre had decades of snipes saved up. They shouted over the intro music.

“I always knew you flower quilters were sycophants to actual florists. It’s obvious the vases would be better with my painted marbles and a few votives to accent the light.”

Pierre’s mustache twitched. “You, you . . . hairy man! You’ve got those glassblowers of Murano over-blowing vases into every fat shape so they need filler. And that’s what you make, decorative packing peanuts!”

The prince shouted “—!” The men didn’t notice.

“You make forgeries of true beauty.”

“You wouldn’t know beauty if it was on a dinner menu.”

“See? You said that already. You’ve begun copying
yourself.

“Your work looks like deer pellets.”

“That’s good. I could spread the pellets in my garden and grow flowers for you to steal.”

The prince had his trumpets blast the two men into silence. They looked irritated.

“What?” said the two men.

The prince asked if they were ever going to get to work. Pierre answered, “Of course not.”

Babbo added, “I’d like brioche toast with my omelet tomorrow.”

“That does sound nice. I’d like some, too,” said Pierre. Then he turned to Babbo and said, “What do you think, a sweet Italian sausage inside?”

“Yes, with basil and
fleur de sel,
” added Babbo, “and cracked pepper on the side.”

“Perfect,” said Pierre.

The two legends of house decoratives looked at Prince Kaiser with “That will be all” eyebrows. Prince Kaiser Dimple Pimple considered shoving both of them out of the tower window. Then he considered the diplomatic unrest of killing two national treasures. And the expense alone of cleaning the memorial tribute that fans would build around his castle. All those stuffed bears and tacky painted signs. And gum, why do people think prayer walls need gum to be effective?

The prince ground his heel into the stone as he turned. It scraped like a mortar and pestle. As he strutted out, he told them to keep an eye on the courtyard below their tower. The men didn’t ask why, but he answered, anyway. Because that’s where he’d execute Chloe and Giacomo.

A few minutes later, Babbo and Pierre could make out the figures of their two children trudging across the courtyard with hoods over their heads.

Babbo and Pierre were fear-stricken and held hands as they watched from the tower high above the scaffold. The two young lovers also held hands so that Chloe could support Giacomo in his wobbly half-conscious state. They ascended the stairs toward a portly middle-aged executioner in traditional costume (no shirt, black hood). He had a berserker sword twice the size of his body, used for breaking a cavalry or crushing a boulder. He leaned on it as though it didn’t weigh anything.

Giacomo and Chloe looked up beseechingly at their fathers. One could just imagine their horrified expression under the black hoods they wore. Then they kneeled on the block, forsaken.

Babbo chewed on his own mustache. The executioner sighed and raised his sword. Pierre pulled at the remnants of his hair and said, “Tell him we’ll do what he says. Tell him —” Babbo inflated his lungs to shout into the courtyard. “WAIT!”

But it was too late. The executioner had made his swing. The massive sword lopped off both the prisoners’ heads. They bounced.

Babbo beat his chest. Pierre’s heart shattered again along the same cracks as the first time. Chloe walked up behind them and leaned her chin on Pierre’s shoulder. “What’re you watching?” she said.

Babbo and Pierre whipped around. They bellowed their joy, hugged Chloe, and wept some more. Chloe never got the answer to her question, which would have been something like, “An elaborate staged execution of you and your boyfriend.” When the prince looked up from the edge of the courtyard and didn’t see the faces of the two craftsmen dotting the window frame, he was again furious.

The prince had dragged Vlad the Regaler from his loft in Moscow and even let him direct, as well as star, in the charade. Vlad had played the executioner, a silent yet emotionally complex role.

The victims were actually cantaloupes inside the hoods. The two supporting actors ducked their heads into their collars and let the melons fall. I was there by sheer coincidence. A pigeon flying overhead got a bug in its throat, choked, and crashed onto the courtyard stones not ten seconds later.

Prince Kaiser stormed off, ordered the doctors out of Giacomo’s room, and almost killed him when he grabbed Giacomo by the hair and said in his ear, “—.”

It was pretty standard evil-guy stuff. Something like: “As soon as this is over, I will butcher you personally. I’ll give your body to Brutessa for dinner, and I’ll bronze Chloe into a naked statue on my front lawn.”

Okay, maybe not so standard.

In the tower, Chloe explained everything to the dads. Her plan, for now, was to nurse Giacomo back to health. After that, escape. She would sneak around the castle in search of food and medicine. There were plenty of empty rooms to hide in now that so many artists had been murdered. But more than anything, she needed Babbo and Pierre to quit angering the prince. They would have to work together. Pierre took off his glasses and cleaned them on his sleeve. Babbo looked off into the far corner of the ceiling. “Isn’t their some
other
way?” said Pierre.

“Yeah,” said Babbo. “Couldn’t we just stop throwing things at each other?”

“We’re geniuses, you know,” said Pierre.

“We have genius ways,” added Babbo.

“No,” said Chloe. Pierre’s mustache twitched. Chloe’s freckle above her lip twitched even more. “I love him,” said Chloe, “and I love you. Now, sit.” After all her years of acquiescence, Chloe had finally stood up for herself. Nobody could refuse her, especially not those two. Giovanni Babbo Chianti and Pierre Vouvray finally had to agree on something.

As she left, she leaned up and kissed Babbo on the cheek. Then she hugged her father and kissed him twice. “Please be good, Daddy.”

“Be safe,” he said.

“Don’t worry,” she said. “You forget I’ve wilted once already. Fate must have a different plan for me than simply getting beheaded and dropped in a ditch.”

This happens a lot with people who refer to me as Fate. But as I said, I don’t do any of the planning. And I’ve found plenty of people lying in ditches. I have a huge tramp collection. But it was nice of her to comfort Pierre.

She rushed out. Babbo was still blushing, with a hand on his cheek. He jostled Pierre with a pat on the back and said, “She’s wonderful.”

“I know,” said Pierre. “It’s yours that’s the problem.”

“Nope,” said Babbo. “They’ll have fat and talented babies.”

Prince Kaiser and Chloe almost passed each other in the hall. As she ran down the grand stairway, Chloe heard the thunder of hoofbeats and raced back up the stairs. She stayed barely in front of the horses as she circled the massive tower. Finally, she reached the landing and flattened herself to the wall on the left. Prince Kaiser’s horse galloped up the stairs and went right. Chloe snuck back down as Prince Kaiser dismounted the horse, kicked open the door, and blitzed into the room. The prince was so enraged that he was willing to wreck his own plans and kill both of the old artists. Instead, he found Babbo and Pierre bent over their tables, working in silence. They looked quite similar, actually, in their finely tuned focus. The prince opened his mouth to shout, rethought the idea, and closed it again. Babbo’s precision, as he cut a marble in half with the Hair from the Chest of the Monster Bernardo the Hammer, was not something to interrupt. Likewise, Pierre was stitching the stamens on a posy of baby’s breath — a process so delicate it required even the baby to stop breathing. The prince didn’t have anything to do but wheel back around a second time and leave.

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