Read The Girl With the Painted Face Online

Authors: Gabrielle Kimm

Tags: #Fiction, #Historical, #Romance, #General, #Mystery & Detective, #Action & Adventure

The Girl With the Painted Face (55 page)

Sofia clasps her hands and presses them against her mouth. Tears sting in the corners of her eyes. Despite everything – despite the betrayal and the anger and the pain Angelo has caused – she knows he has walked away from them wrapped in a stinking fog of self-loathing and loneliness and her heart clenches tight at the thought of it. She wipes her eyes with the back of her index finger.

Beppe puts an arm around her shoulders and she leans in against him.

42

Fabio da Correggio laughs, and at the sight of his cousin’s gleeful, upturned mouth and the gleam of wetness along the line of the boy’s lower lip, Marco’s insides lurch painfully. Seated at his table under the window in the small Verona apartment, he forces himself to look back at the letter in front of him.

He will not beg.

‘And anyway, I won’t be long, Marco,’ Fabio says. ‘Like I said: he only has to deliver the finished painting. He says he just wants a companion for the journey. We won’t be more than a few weeks. I can’t turn down an adventure like this – God, I’ve wanted to go to Venezia for years! You’ll be happy here until I get back, won’t you?’

Marco hears the dismissal in Fabio’s voice and knows that the moment has come, the moment he has known all along would be inevitable. His hedonistic, self-centred, amoral tomcat of a cousin has tired of him. Their weeks in Verona have been wild and exhausting and – to Marco at least – exquisite, but, as he has known all along would happen, Fabio has finally lost interest. The young artist with whom he has been spending increasingly more of his time over the past few days has proved too much of an attraction to resist. Feigning a continuing concern with his letter, Marco smooths out the paper and frowns at the words scrawled illegibly upon it as though they have some significance for him.

‘Of course,’ he lies, glancing up and flashing a brief and wintry smile. ‘I’ll be here – I have plenty to do until your return.’

Fabio puffs a short breath. ‘Good. I’ve said I’ll meet Enrico later this evening. I might stay at his rooms, in fact, as we’re setting off at first light tomorrow. So, I might not see you again until I return from Venezia.’

Fully aware that Fabio might not choose to return at all, and that this might perhaps be the last time he ever lays eyes on the boy, Marco struggles with himself as a howling cry of despair balloons in his throat. Swallowing it down with an effort that leaves him light-headed, he gets to his feet. ‘Travel safely, Fabio,’ he says, forcing a smile. ‘I shall lay in some wine for your return.’

‘Excellent – oh, and steer clear of those boys we met last week, won’t you?’ Fabio says cheerfully. ‘They seemed most entertaining, but I got the feeling they might only be after your
scudi.

 

Standing in the little chapel, gazing down at Maddalena’s body with its smoothly domed belly, the swell almost hidden now beneath her finest silk and lawn, Paolo di Maccio finds that he cannot summon up any emotion at all. No anger; no desire for revenge; no sadness; no relief; no regret. Just a blankness. An absence of feelings. An empty space.

Maddalena’s panicked wail – the noise that woke him two nights ago and which has resonated in his head ever since – and the racking seizures that followed within minutes of her gasped-out pleas for help have left him shaken, he cannot deny that. But surprised – no, he was not surprised. Maddalena was carrying da Correggio’s child, and it was abundantly clear from his mocking taunts that evening at Franceschina that da Correggio had thoroughly enjoyed imparting the news. The reasons for her liaison with him were clear: the little brown bottle beneath Maddalena’s pillow and the upturned glass on her table both told their own story; the rumours had indeed been true. All in all, he thinks to himself now, as he runs a finger gently along the back of one of Maddalena’s thin, chilled hands, it has all probably worked itself out for the best.

Gripping his dead wife’s fingers in his for the briefest moment, he turns and leaves the little chapel.

43

‘A letter came for you earlier, Sofia,’ Vico says, flapping it out towards her as she returns from the market two mornings after Angelo’s departure. She takes it from him and he strides away. Still unable to read more than a few words, she hands it straight to Beppe. ‘Read it for me, please,’ she says. ‘Who is it from?’

Beppe cracks open the little blobbed seal and unfolds the letter. ‘What do you know?’ he says, grinning at Sofia. ‘It’s from Signora Andreini. You have a message from the Gelosi
themselves, no less.’

‘From Isabella? Oh, Beppe, read it for me – what does she say?’

Beppe clears his throat and reads.

 

‘Sofia,
cara
,
‘As I said I would, I have spoken with His Grace the Duke of Ferrara on your behalf – on behalf of the whole of the Coraggiosi troupe, in fact. Oh, my dear, you will be so happy – the duke is simply
outraged
at the injustice of the treatment you have received at the hands of his representatives in Bologna! While we were dining with him in the great hall at the Castello Estense after the Gelosi performance yesterday (you must believe me,
cara
, the duke’s palace is a truly frightening building – more like being in a prison than a castle, if you want an honest opinion…), I took the opportunity to put to him just how dreadfully you had all been treated. I made sure to paint a truly distressing picture of everything that had happened – and in the event Signor d’Este was deeply shocked, as indeed was the duchess.
‘I shall not tell you everything here, but suffice it to say, my dear, that Signor d’Este has for some time been concerned at the heavy-handed justice (or lack of it) in some of the cities in the Duchy of Ferrara, and Signor da Budrio is one of those on whom he has been keeping a very careful eye. This was, I understand, one injustice too many. He is even now instructing the said signore to rescind the banishment order forthwith and – are you sitting down, my dear? – perhaps just to underline how very much he disapproves of what has taken place, he intends to commission a performance from the Coraggiosi in the days leading up to Christmas! A greater honour I simply cannot imagine! I’m
so
happy to have been instrumental in obtaining it for you.
‘We in the Gelosi will all be heading off to France to perform at the French court next week and will be in France a year or more, otherwise I would insist on our spending some time together when you come to Ferrara. I am so very sad that you will not be joining us after all – but of course I understand. Perhaps particularly as actresses, we know all too well that the course of true love must triumph over all else, do you not think,
cara
? (And having met your charming Arlecchino, even briefly, I can
quite
see why you are staying put in Italy…)’

Here Beppe coughs and waves a hand in front of his face, feigning embarrassment, and Sofia laughs. Leaning forwards, she kisses his mouth. ‘Get on with it, will you?’

Straightening his face, he continues.

 

‘You will no doubt be receiving your invitation directly from the duke – but in case it is delayed for any reason, know that he is expecting you all at the
castello
for a performance a couple of days before Christmas. Put something
wonderful
together for him! I have told him how impressed I was, particularly with you, my dear.
‘Francesco and I send you all our fondest wishes, and Flaminio says I am to tell you that he is writing Colombina’s lines for his new scenario with you in mind – whether you are to play the role or not. You made a
great
impression on him,
cara
.
‘Your friend,
‘Isabella’

There is a moment’s silence, then Beppe whistles. ‘We must tell Ago and Cosima straight away – this is better news than we could possibly have hoped for.’

‘Is it true – does she mean it?’

‘I can’t imagine she would make up such a thing.’

‘I’m not sure I understand, though,’ Sofia says, puzzled. ‘Why on earth should someone as powerful as the Duke of Ferrara care at all about what has happened to someone like me? Someone he has never heard of?’

Beppe looks back at the letter. ‘Do you know what I think?’ he says, folding it back up and tapping his mouth with the folded edge. ‘I think it might just be that Signor d’Este was more struck by the teller of the tale than by the tale itself.’

‘What do you mean?’

He points the letter at her. ‘Well… she’s beautiful, isn’t she, Isabella Andreini?’

Sofia nods.

‘And very… excitable… and passionate. I think the duke might just have been swept away by her story and… well… decided to do whatever he thought might please her the most.’

‘Do you think so?’

‘Mmm. Not that it matters, though. All that matters is the commission. Come on, let’s go and tell Agostino.’

44

The Castello Estense, Ferrara, December

It has been an unusually cold December. Everyone in Ferrara is talking about how long it is since there has been such a freeze in the city and, since this morning’s particularly hard frost, the Ferrarese have only been venturing out when they absolutely have to, bundled in as many layers of clothing as they can gather together. Snow began to fall a couple of days ago, and now most of the city’s roofs are smoothly white. Many of the narrower streets have already been trodden into dirty grey ruts, but the piazza outside the front of the Castello Estense has been deliberately roped off and still lies pristine white, its surface broken only by the tiny three-toed prints of birds and one single child-sized boot-print, daringly placed inside the cordon, right at the far western edge.

Within the castle walls, in the great central
cortile
, the snow – undisturbed here by wind and scuffed by no more than the occasional passage of feet – lies thicker than elsewhere: each bare twig of the dozen or so potted cherry trees is plumply white, every sill of every window seems pillowed with snow and tiny scuffs of the stuff are clinging to each minute irregularity in the bricks of the massive castle walls, giving them an unusually soft, speckled appearance.

It is five days before Christmas. The afternoon light has not yet begun to fade, but the many lanterns and torches burning within the castle are already shining out into the shadowed
cortile
, and their yellow light is casting vivid blue-purple shadows across the snow into the darker corners.

Inside, at the far end of the long North Hall, below where a pretty wooden gallery stretches across the width of the wall, a stage is being set. Above the gallery is a fresco – a huge, vividly painted, beautiful depiction of a mythological scene – and all along the gallery’s balustrade, candles in little glass pots have been placed ready to be lit when the light finally fades.

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