Venom (14 page)

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Authors: Fiona Paul

Tags: #Mystery, #Young Adult, #Romance, #Fantasy, #Historical, #Thriller

BOOK: Venom
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Idiota,
” Cass murmured, before closing the wooden doors with a soft click. The corner of her velvet coverlet caught her eye. It was folded backward, on top of her mattress, exposing a chasm of darkness under her bed. Cass’s heart started pounding. Her legs felt weak and unsteady as she tiptoed over to the bed. With one hand on her chest, she bent down and peered into the inky blackness. Slipper was playing with the ribbon that bound the bundle of letters Cass kept hidden there. The stack of folded parchment represented almost all that remained of Cass’s mother. Years’ worth of letters, sent from various trips abroad. “Silly cat,” she said. “You scared me half to death.” Slipper looked up and mewed plaintively, his eyes winking in the dark.

As Cass moved back toward her desk, her heartbeat slowing again, a flickering light from outside the window caught her attention. She could see a small golden circle moving slowly through the graveyard. A lantern. Was it Falco?

Cass felt her fear melt away at the idea of seeing him again. She squinted into the darkness. For a minute, she saw nothing. Then he materialized, as if floating out of the dark. Several feet below her, Falco stood on the mossy lawn, shrouded in darkness, except for the bit of light cast from her window. Where had his lantern gone? Probably he had accidentally put it out while fooling around. He pulled his arm back as if to throw something and then stopped in mid-motion when he saw Cass looking down at him.

“Signorina,” he called up, giving her a grand theatrical wave. He tossed a smooth stone up in the air and tried to catch it behind his back.

His voice was thick, as though he’d been drinking. Cass held a finger to her lips and then gestured toward the back of the villa. She wondered how long he had been hanging around on the island. Had he seen her aunt leave that afternoon? Did he know she was in the big house alone, with only the servants? Cass’s skin tingled.

But she could trust him. She knew it. She could
feel
it.

Cass descended to the lower level of the villa. Water sometimes seeped through cracks in the stone floor after a particularly strong rainstorm. Right now the floor was dry. One whole side of the villa’s first floor was used for Agnese’s personal storage. Cass couldn’t imagine that the old woman’s belongings even came close to filling it up, but her aunt always kept the room locked.

As Cass crept past the butler’s office, she heard a soft snoring sound from behind the door. Bortolo must have fallen asleep doing the house inventory again. Cass headed into the kitchen. She lit a candle and held it up to the tiny window. Peeking through the thick glass, Cass saw Falco’s distorted form just outside the servants’ door.

“Cassssssaaaandra.” He stretched her name out playfully as he knocked on the door.

At this rate he was going to wake up the whole villa. Cass slipped outside, shutting the door behind her with a firm click. “You need to be quiet,” she said, shielding her candle from the night breeze. For a moment, neither of them spoke. Cass tried to slow her breathing.
There’s no reason to be nervous.
And yet, for some reason, she couldn’t catch her breath.

“My aunt is gone,” she blurted out, blushing when she realized how it sounded.

Falco’s eyes widened in fake shock. “Well, then perhaps I should ask for a tour of the house.” He grinned, clearly relishing Cass’s embarrassment. “Can we start with your bedroom?”

“What did you bring me?” she asked quickly, willing the color from her cheeks as she pointed at the large cloth bag slung over Falco’s shoulder.

He raised his eyebrows. “A special disguise.” He tossed the bag in Cass’s direction.

Cass reached out to catch it with one hand, and the candle sputtered out. “Remember.
Silenzio,
” she said, slowly opening the door and allowing Falco to pass into the house in front of her. She followed him into the kitchen.

Her breath caught in her chest as a form materialized from the shadows, lunging at Falco and Cass, knocking them both to the stone floor. There was a metallic clatter and a quick shout. Someone’s knee, or maybe elbow, smacked into her breastbone. She gasped, unable to scream. The dark was a shroud, a tomb; she couldn’t see her fingers in front of her eyes. All she could hear was an occasional grunt as Falco wrestled with the mysterious figure. Cass threw herself
at what she hoped was the attacker. Her fingers closed around a handful of hair. Long, silky, women’s hair. It felt suspiciously like…

“Siena?” Cass gaped as the moon emerged from a tangle of clouds, illuminating the face of her lady’s maid. “What are you
doing
?”

“Protecting you from an intruder.” The lady’s maid scrambled to her feet and then bent low to pull Cass off the ground with surprising strength. Siena’s keen blue eyes looked Cass over from head to toe. “Are you all right?”

“Is this how you always welcome your guests, Cassandra?” Falco said ruefully, rubbing his head. He stood just behind Siena. A steel saucepan lay at his feet. Evidently Siena had clocked him with it. Cass fought back the urge to giggle. So her lady’s maid wasn’t as docile and frail as Cass had always imagined.

Siena’s head snapped around at the sound of Falco’s voice. “Who are
you
?”

“This is Falco. He’s my…friend,” Cass said. She closed and bolted the kitchen door.

Siena relit the candle with unsteady hands. She looked back and forth from Cass to the boy. A look of guilt passed across her face. “I’m sorry, Signorina. I thought…” She bit her lip. “Well, it’s just that today at the marketplace everyone was talking about the kidnapper…”

Cass steadied herself against a countertop. “What are you talking about? What kidnapper?”

“One of the servants from Signor Dubois’s estate,” Siena said. “Feliciana told me. Her name was Sophia. She disappeared right out of her room last night. She didn’t leave on her own. All of her belongings are still there.”

Cass and Falco exchanged a look. The disappearance was
probably a coincidence, but still. “Did someone call the town guard?” Cass asked.

“Of course. A waste of everybody’s time,” Siena sniffed. “Showed up half drunk after dinner. Only spent five minutes in Sophia’s room. Some of the other girls said Sophia had been ill in the mornings recently, maybe with child.” Siena stuttered a little bit over the last words, her eyes flitting to Falco. “They didn’t investigate any further. Figured her for a runaway. Said the rettori wouldn’t care about a runaway servant.”

Falco gave Cass a knowing look. “What did I tell you? If the councilmen won’t properly investigate a servant’s disappearance from one of the most well-known estates in Venice, they surely won’t waste their time on a common prostitute—or, at best, a brand-new courtesan.”

“Courtesan?” Siena looked back and forth from Cass to Falco. “Has a courtesan gone missing?”

Before Cass could respond, a plaintive yowl echoed through the drafty kitchen. It seemed to be coming from the direction of the entrance hall.

“Slipper?” Cass turned toward the noise.

“I’ll fetch him, Signorina.” Siena scooted past Falco and into the corridor that led to the front of the villa.

“We should tell her,” Cass whispered, once Siena had disappeared.

“What reason do we have to tell anyone? I’m still wishing you hadn’t told
me.

“She might be able to help,” Cass said in a low voice. “When it comes to the goings-on of Venice, the servants know almost as much as the Senate. Maybe more.” She craned her neck to peer through
the doorway. The dark had seemingly swallowed Siena whole. “And, if we don’t tell her, she’s going to think you and I are…”

Falco smirked. “We couldn’t have that now, could we? Lord knows I don’t want to give the woman reason to attack me again.” He touched the crown of his head gingerly and winced. “But what makes you think we can trust her?”

Cass had to look away when Falco took God’s name in vain. How could he do that so casually? Her fingers went to her waist, but she’d already removed her rosary for the night. She’d say a prayer for him later, she decided. “She covered for me last night. She didn’t tell Agnese I’d snuck out.”

A smile played at Falco’s lips. He brushed an unruly lock of Cass’s hair back from the left side of her face. “How did you manage to get caught in the first place?” he asked.

“Long story.” Cass still hadn’t found his nude drawing, and she didn’t want to confess to having lost it. She hoped it would turn up before Agnese got back. If the old woman found it, she might keel over on the spot.

Siena returned with Slipper cradled against her chest. “The silly cat managed to get his head caught between two of the posts on the banister again,” she explained. “Probably scared himself half to death.”

Cass took Slipper into her arms. “Poor thing.” She rubbed his neck and he began to purr.

Falco reached out to touch the white spot between Slipper’s green eyes. “Mangy beast,” he said. He nodded toward Siena. “Tell her what you want to tell her then, Cass.”

Cass gave Siena a quick summary of what she and Falco had discovered at the graveyard. The maid’s eyes got bigger and bigger as
Cass relayed finding the open crypt door and the body, and then receiving the note. “But Signorina Cass, you might be in danger!”

“That’s why we’re going to figure out who’s responsible,” Cass said, with more confidence than she felt.

“Speaking of which…” Falco nodded at the costume bag, which Cass had completely forgotten. A silky garment, trimmed with lace and beaded elaborately, had fallen out during the scuffle.

Siena looked down, and even in the flickering light, Cass could see that her pale skin went bright pink. The lady’s maid knelt to retrieve the outfit, a low-cut satin chemise. She pressed the clothing into Cass’s hands without meeting her eyes.

Cass felt her own face get red. “It’s—it’s just a costume. We’re going to try to locate some of the dead girl’s patrons.”

“You mean you’re going to masquerade as a…” The shy maid couldn’t choke out the rest.

“Hired woman,” Cass confirmed, wondering if it would have been easier just to let Siena believe that she and Falco had met up for a tryst. She wasn’t sure which would have been more scandalizing. “I know it’s dangerous, but it’s more dangerous to do nothing while a madman plots against me. And Falco will be by my side the whole time. Please don’t tell my aunt.”

Siena didn’t say anything for a minute. She looked back and forth from Cass to Falco. Finally, she nodded. And then, to Cass’s amazement, her red face lit up with a huge smile. “You’ll need me to do your hair, Signorina.”

“Hair?” Cass wasn’t sure she had heard correctly. “What are you talking about?”

“Your hair and your makeup.” Siena reached out to stroke Cass’s thick hair. “Otherwise, no one will believe you are anything other
than a noblewoman. I’ll put the sides in braids, and twist the back into a knot.”

Falco nodded approvingly at Siena. “Excellent idea. We want to make sure everyone can see that beautiful face tonight.”

Cass thought her skin might turn permanently red if she continued blushing. She led Falco into the portego, lighting a pair of tall red candles so that Falco could see to move about the room. “Wait here,” she said firmly. “And don’t break anything. Oh, and don’t touch the harp. My aunt cares more about that thing than about her own pulse.”

In her bedroom, Cass was surprised by how fun Siena seemed to find the whole adventure. Maybe the girl had a wild side after all. Siena pulled Cass’s stays extra tight and slid the shiny teal bodice over her head. Black lace highlighted sheer sleeves, and the neckline plunged so low that the tops of Cass’s breasts threatened to spill out. The skirt was made of alternating layers of black silk and shimmery turquoise material. Cass tried to adjust the top for better coverage and Siena laughed.

“You’re not going to fool anyone if you don’t act the part,” Siena said. She grabbed an ivory comb and parted Cass’s hair. She fashioned it quickly into delicate fishbone braids and wrapped them around the back of Cass’s head. “Now makeup!” Siena left Cass in front of the mirror and returned with a small black satchel. From it she produced crystal containers of lip color, eye color, and cheek rouge made from powdered minerals and crushed rose petals.

“Where did you get all this?” Cass asked.

“From Feliciana. She gave me some of her old things when she moved to the Dubois estate.”

“So why don’t you ever wear it?” Cass closed her eyes as her lady’s maid painted her lids with smoky gray color.

“It wouldn’t be appropriate for someone like me,” Siena said. Now it was her turn to blush. Cass knew she meant it wouldn’t be appropriate for someone of her station.

Cass tried to hold her mouth still as Siena started rubbing a glossy red crème on her lips. “But I wouldn’t care,” she said, through barely parted lips. She could not necessarily say the same of Agnese—but still, Siena was meant to be Cass’s companion.

“Maybe not, but it would be foolish of me to masquerade as my sister,” Siena said simply. “I am not beautiful like she is.”

Cass waited for Siena to finish coloring her lips before responding. “You are beautiful,” she said. It was true. Siena’s features weren’t quite as striking as her older sister’s, and sure, her ears were a little big for her face, but she had perfect alabaster skin and shiny flaxen hair. It occurred to Cass that Siena must feel the same way about Feliciana that Cass often felt about Madalena. Like she just didn’t measure up.

Siena smiled shyly. “Thank you, Signorina. You are very kind.” She placed a glass stopper back on a tiny circular pot. “All finished. Don’t look, though. You and your man must be surprised together.”

“Siena,” Cass cautioned quickly. “He is not my man.”

“If he looked at me the way he looks at you, I would not be so quick to denounce him,” Siena teased, her eyes brightening in a way that reminded Cass quite a bit of Feliciana. She stepped back from Cass and gave a satisfied nod. “And now—for me. Shall I change into something more revealing as well?”

Cass realized that Siena intended to accompany her. “I—I think it’s better if Falco and I go off on our own.”

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