Read Veritas (Atto Melani) Online

Authors: Rita Monaldi,Francesco Sorti

Veritas (Atto Melani) (53 page)

Ugonio desperately stretched out his hooked hands towards the ring. Then he lowered his head: if he had had the slightest idea of doing a bunk, now he knew that it would cost him his precious
keys.

“Now listen carefully, Ugonio. We saw Ciezeber performing strange rites in the wood,” I announced, glancing meaningfully towards Cloridia, who was caressing our son’s head, as
he was clearly scared.

My wife went out, taking the boy into the cloisters, to spare him from hearing this grim conversation.

I started up again, recounting the arcane rituals that we had seen the dervish performing, right up to the point when Ciezeber had pulled out his little knife from his bundle of things and the
small mass of dark stuff. At the end I fixed my pupils questioningly on Ugonio’s. He was still highly offended by the loss of his key ring and drummed his yellow, claw-like fingers on the
table nearby. Then he said:

“I cannot furnish Your Presumption with any furtherances. My dealifyings with the dervishite are only on businesses, and wholly licit swindlifications. But I was able to identificate the
little knife and the black objection that Ciezeber extricatified in the forestal woodiness, and which you have descripted with such claret.”

“So you know what I’m talking about?” I said, taking heart.

“Undoubtfully. I had notified the peculiarousness of the dervishite’s paraphernations.”

“And so? Did you work out what that stuff was for?”

“To be more padre than parricide, I can ensure you, after careful exanimation, that they are instrumentations of an insanitary purpose.”

“They’ve got something to do with diseases?” asked Simonis.

“Are you deaf, by any chance?” asked Ugonio impatiently, casting a longing look at the key ring I still held in my hands.

“Ah, they’re medical instruments,” I muttered in disappointment.

“I confirmate.”

How had I failed to think of that? Cloridia had even told me that some dervishes were also healers. And what we had witnessed in the wood near the Place with No Name must have been a mystic
ritual to confer greater power on their treatments. In the dervish’s operations I had sought a trace of the poison which, under the false name of smallpox, was killing the Emperor; now I
discovered that it was the exact opposite, a therapeutic intervention.

I was stuck midstream. I had not yet managed to find any proof of my suspicions with regard to Atto Melani, the Ottoman embassy and the secret poisoning of Joseph I. And yet I had to find
something: I had to
do
something, damn it, I repeated to myself as I observed Ugonio and wondered how to proceed. If by ill chance someone were to discover Atto Melani, the enemy agent, I
would end up on the gallows with him. The mystery of the head remained unsolved, and this – by now it was clear – was the key to everything, but I still had to find a way to drag the
truth out of the
corpisantaro
. There was another path, which might lead to the truth.

“Ugonio, have you ever heard of the Golden Apple?”

He caught his breath. He was not expecting that question.

“It is a complicable and horrendiful story,” he said at last.

According to Ugonio, the whole thing had begun three years earlier. As we already knew from Frosch, in 1708 a sister of Joseph the Victorious, Anna Maria, had married the King of Portugal, John
V. After a few months, the young Queen had heard from the ladies of her new court of a strange popular belief. Spain’s war of succession, which was raging throughout Europe, would only be won
by the Empire if the original Golden Orb or Apple of Justinian, which guaranteed the supremacy of the Christian West, were to be placed on the tallest spire of the most sacred church of the
Caesarean capital – which is to say, the bell tower of the Cathedral of St Stephen: substituting, that is, the sacrilegious orb created and mounted on the bell tower by Suleiman. In some
mysterious fashion Justinian’s Golden Orb had ended up in Spain, and then had gone on to Portugal. That was not all. Emperor Ferdinand I had had a holy cross placed on top of Suleiman’s
orb after a rather disconcerting episode: as soon as the Sultan had abandoned the siege of the Caesarean capital, there had appeared in the sky, in full daylight, none other than the Archangel
Michael, who, with the blazing tip of his unsheathed sword, had engraved in letters of fire a mysterious message at the top of the spire, on the pedestal supporting the sacrilegious orb.

“The Archangel Michael is the very figure who traditionally holds the Imperial Orb in one hand, while he drives out Lucifer with his sword in the shape of the holy cross,” I said in
amazement, recalling Koloman Szupán’s tale.

“Exactly,” said Ugonio.

The
corpisantaro
went on. Seven times the Archangel pointed his sword at the pedestal, and seven were the words he engraved there. The sparks from his sword were seen by a multitude of
the faithful gathered in the square before the Cathedral of St Stephen. They testified without a shadow of a doubt to the truth of the miraculous event, and the Emperor at once sent two labourers
to the spire to make a faithful copy of what the Archangel had written there. The two labourers were carefully chosen among the illiterate, so that no one apart from the Emperor would be aware of
the secret. What they delivered to him troubled him to such an extent that he spent the whole night praying in the Caesarean chapel, prostrate, with his face to the ground, and the next day he
ordered that the holy cross of the Redeemer should be placed immediately on top of the sacrilegious orb, thus transforming it into the Imperial Orb of the Archangel Michael. Ferdinand I chose never
to confide to anyone what the Archangel had written, and took his secret with him to the tomb. After his death several attempts were made to send someone up there to read the message on the spire,
but various misfortunes rendered all attempts vain: one person tumbled from the tower, another was blinded by a sudden flash from the sky, another one fell,
et cetera et cetera
. It was
even rumoured that a priest of the Cathedral Chapter, on a night of full moon, had ventured up there, but nothing further was heard. The story related that the Archangel’s message concluded
with an express imposition of silence.

These tales of the Golden Apple and the Archangel Michael were reported to Joseph I’s sister, the new bride of the King of Portugal. And so it was that a flying Ship had set out from
Lisbon, equipped with a highly secret system of propulsion and driven by a mysterious and unidentified figure, whose mission it was to put the true Golden Apple in its place, on the highest point
of St Stephen’s, and at the same time to read the Archangel’s mysterious message.

Simonis and I exchanged glances: Ugonio’s tale tallied with the accounts of the students. Hristo, Populescu, Koloman and their friends had established that, according to the legends, the
Golden Apple was the symbol (but maybe something more) of the power of the West. They had learned that the mysterious object dated back to Justinian; that it had been buried in Constantinople with
Eyyub, Mahomet’s standard-bearer; that it had then ended up in Spain; that during the first siege of Vienna, Suleiman had had another one made. And finally, that Ferdinand I had had a holy
cross placed on Suleiman’s orb, which had enraged the Sultan. And recently, we ourselves had read in Frosch’s gazette that the Flying Ship had arrived in 1709 from Portugal, steered by
a person nobody knew, and that it had got stuck – it just so happened – on the spire of St Stephen’s. These things could not just be coincidences.

There was something else that tied in curiously with these events, which only I knew about: the mysterious flying helmsman, mentioned in the Diary of Vienna as a presumed Brazilian priest, in
fact had all the characteristics of the strange individual I had met in Rome eleven years earlier, during my second adventure with Atto Melani: the violinist Albicastro, who, it just so happened,
always played the same melody known as
folia
, a dance that originated in Portugal.

“Let’s sum things up,” I said. “While all these strange things are happening in Portugal, the Agha is received by Prince Eugene and tells him
soli soli soli ad pomum
venimus aureum
. Meanwhile, your Ciezeber plans to chop off –”

“Just a momentum.”

Ugonio asked me to repeat the sentence that the Turkish ambassador had pronounced in front of Eugene of Savoy.

“It is an indicative phraseology, incontrovertebrate and plause-worthy.”

“What?” asked Simonis.

“He says the Turks’ message is perfectly clear,” I translated.

There was no doubt, the
corpisantaro
declared with conviction: the Ottomans, too, had come to Vienna to get back the Golden Apple. Only in this sense had they “come to the
pomum aureum
”, as the Latin phrase used by the Agha said literally.

“It may be so,” I admitted, “but why did they declare it to Eugene?”

“I ignorify that,” Ugonis merely said, shrugging.

“And where is the Golden Apple now?”

“I have besought it highly and lowly and with undefaltering fast-steadness. Some insinufy that the driver, before they threw him into deep dudgeon, snuggled it into the Flying Ship.
Misluckily I have not catched a glint of it there. The guardian and his feline ferocities are too snoopivigilant.”

“So where is it?”

“To be more padre than parricide, I hope to be able to beseek it more caringfully. I’m also doing my utfulmost to get a deacon of the cathedral to speak: he is obsessified with
sacred relishes. Tomorrow, in exchange for a
corpus santus
he will perhaps belch forth the Archangel’s phrase.”

“That’s the way. Give him Adam’s apple core,” Simonis scoffed.

My assistant and I had hardly any time to discuss the encounter with the old
corpisantaro
; a few minutes after he had left, the Chormaisterin herself came and knocked at our door. She
had heard what had happened, since her sisters had told her about the attack on Cloridia, the subsequent chase and finally the chaotic arrest of Ugonio. I explained how things had gone, taking care
to play down my relations with the
corpisantaro
. I said he was a minor thief I had met long before in Rome, whom I had decided to forgive as a compatriot. Much more important was the news
that Camilla herself gave us:

“Let us all thank the Lord,” she declared with a sigh, “the Emperor is much better. His illness seems to be progressing well, the doctors foresee that in a few days’ time
His Majesty will not only be out of danger but restored to full health.”

The public prayers that had begun the day before throughout the city, and especially in St Stephen’s, had had an effect. For this reason they would continue to recite the sacred orations
for another six days, that heaven might grant in full the imperial subjects’ prayers. But in particular they had commenced the oration of the Forty Hours, which had been recited a few years
earlier when Archduke Charles, Joseph’s younger brother, had fallen dangerously ill; on that occasion, too, the illness had passed with the help of God. The oration could only be done by men,
it lasted a week and prayers had to be recited six hours a day, in shifts which were divided (it hardly needs saying) by social classes. On the first day, the Sunday that had just passed, the
imperial family had started the prayers. Today it was the turn of the nobility, then the five social classes would pray, obviously during working-hours: from eight to eleven and from three to six.
The oration would be concluded by us artisans and traders with all our employees. The women, during this period, were exhorted to pray in church as fervently as possible.

We all rejoiced at the splendid news. Simonis and I embraced poor Camilla, who had been suffering so grievously until that moment and who was already preparing herself for the long prayer vigils
that awaited her for the whole week. We had not slept and nor had we had breakfast, but the news revived our spirits and our senses.

“Today is Monday, Simonis.”

“To work, Signor Master,” answered my assistant, with his slightly foolish smile that always inspired such confidence.

Work, of course. But we both knew that what was really calling us was the mystery of the Golden Apple. The key to our doubts awaited us at Neugebäu, in the Place with No Name.

7 of the clock: the Bell of the Turks, also called the Peal of the Oration, rings.

The road was finally clear of snow. The news of the improvement in the poor Emperor’s health was, I thought, truly welcome. But the dark shadow of misfortune and death
that those days had cast over us was far from dissipated. As we trudged along I still pondered on the terrible end of Hristo and Dànilo Danilovitsch, and the suspicious origins of the
illness of Joseph the Victorious – and such unexpected facts as the revelation that Hadji-Tanjov was an Ottoman subject. Not to mention the highly mysterious indications left by the Bulgarian
student of a link between
soli soli soli
and checkmate . . .

The nocturnal quarrel with Abbot Melani had yet to be settled; my suspicions were far from allayed. Sooner or later Atto and I would talk again, and then perhaps I would get a clearer view of
his shady conduct. It was true that he had been taken seriously ill when I accused him of conspiring for Joseph’s death, but that could have been the perturbation of a guilty man caught
red-handed, rather than that of an innocent man wrongly accused. Or again, it could have been a skilful performance to get out of a tight spot, playing the part of the guileless innocent: I was all
too familiar with the prodigious acting skills of the old hypocrite, impostor and trickster.

Other books

The Perfect Bride by Brenda Joyce
Cowboy Under the Mistletoe by Linda Goodnight
Immortal Heat by Lanette Curington
Struggle by P.A. Jones
Dragon Moon by Alan F. Troop
Blood Moon by Goldie McBride