Read Assassin's Creed: Brotherhood Online
Authors: Oliver Bowden
Tags: #Adventure, #Fantasy, #Thriller
At last he arrived at the garden where he had watched Lucrezia and her lover keep their tryst. In daylight he could see that her apartments were part of a complex. Larger and even grander ones stood beyond, and he guessed these to be the Pope’s. But as he was making in that direction he was interrupted by a conversation coming from within Lucrezia’s rooms. He made his way stealthily to the open window where the voices were coming from and listened. He could just see Lucrezia, apparently none the worse for wear after her ordeal in the cells, talking to the same attendant he’d seen her entrust with the information about her affair with Pietro, which he had passed on to her jealous brother—with evident success, to judge by Cesare’s fast return to Rome.
“I don’t understand it,” Lucrezia was saying irritably. “I ordered a fresh batch of cantarella only last night. Toffana was to have delivered it to me personally by noon. Did you see her? What’s going on?”
“I’m terribly sorry,
mia signora
, but I’ve just heard that the Pope intercepted the delivery. He’s taken it all for himself.”
“That old bastard. Where is he?”
“In his rooms. Madonna. There’s a meeting—”
“A meeting? With whom?”
The attendant hesitated. “With Cesare, Madonna.”
Lucrezia took this in, then said, half to herself: “That’s strange. My father didn’t tell me Cesare was back here again.”
Deep in thought, she left the room.
Alone, the attendant started to tidy up, rearranging tables and chairs while muttering under his breath.
Ezio waited a moment to see if there would be any more information useful to him, but all the attendant said was, “That woman gives me so much trouble…Why didn’t I stay in the stables, where I was well off? Call this a promotion?! I put my head on the block every time I run an errand.
And
I have to taste her food before she does, every time she sits down to a bloody meal.” He paused for a moment.
“What a family!” he added.
But Ezio had left before he could hear those last words. He slipped through the garden toward the Pope’s apartments and, since the single entrance was heavily guarded and he did not want to draw attention to himself—it wouldn’t be long before the bodies of the guards he’d killed downstairs were discovered—he found a place where he could climb to one of the principal windows of the building unobtrusively. His hunch that this would be a window giving on to the Pope’s principal chamber paid off, and it had a broad external sill on one end of which he could perch out of sight. Using the blade of his dagger, he was able to pry a sidelight open a fraction, so that he could hear anything that might be said.
Rodrigo—Pope Alexander VI—was alone in the room, standing by a table on which sat a large silver bowl full of red and yellow apples, whose position he adjusted nervously just as the door opened and Cesare entered, unannounced. He was clearly angry, and without any preamble he launched into a bitter diatribe.
“What the hell is going on?” he began.
“I don’t know what you mean,” replied his father, with reserve.
“Oh, yes, you do! My funds have been cut off, and my troops dispersed.”
“Ah. Well, you know that after your banker’s tragic…demise, Agostino Chigi took over all his affairs…”
Cesare laughed mirthlessly. “
Your
banker! I might have known! And my men?”
“Financial difficulties strike all of us from time to time, my boy, even those of us with armies and overweening ambition.”
“Are you going to get Chigi to release money for me or not?”
“No.”
“We’ll see about that!” Angrily, Cesare snatched an apple from the bowl. Ezio saw that the Pope was watching his son carefully.
“Chigi won’t help you,” said the Pope levelly. “And he’s too powerful for even you to bend to your will.”
“In that case,” said Cesare, sneering, “I’ll use the Piece of Eden to get what I want. It will render your help unnecessary.” He bit into the apple with a mean smile.
“That has been made abundantly clear to me already,” said the Pope drily. “By the way, I suppose you are aware that General Valois is dead?”
Cesare’s smile disappeared in a flash. “No. I have only just returned to Rome.” His tone became threatening. “Did you—?”
The Pope spread his hands. “What possible reason could I have had to kill him? Or was he plotting against me, perhaps, with my own, dear, brilliant,
treacherous
captain-general?”
Cesare took another bite of the apple. “I do not have to stand for this!” he snarled as he chewed.
“If you must know, the Assassins murdered him.”
Cesare swallowed, his eyes wide. Then his face went dark with fury. “Why did you not stop them?”
“As if I could! It was your decision to attack Monteriggioni, not mine. It’s high time you took responsibility for your misdeeds—if it’s not too late.”
“My
actions
, you mean,” replied Cesare proudly. “Despite the constant interference of failures like you!”
The younger man turned to go, but the Pope hurried around the table to block his way to the door.
“You’re not going anywhere,” Rodrigo growled. “And you are deluded.
I
have the Piece of Eden.”
“Liar! Get out of my way, you old fool!”
The Pope shook his head sadly. “I gave you everything I could—and yet it was never enough.”
At that instant, Ezio saw Lucrezia burst into the room, her eyes wild.
“Cesare!” she shrieked. “Be careful! He intends to poison you!”
Cesare froze. He looked at the apple in his hand, spitting out the chunk he had just bitten out, his expression a mask. Rodrigo’s own expression changed from one of triumph to one of fear. He backed away from his son, putting the table between them.
“Poison me?” said Cesare, his eyes boring into his father’s.
“You would not listen to reason!” stammered the Pope.
Cesare smiled as he advanced, very deliberately, on Rodrigo, saying, “Father. Dear Father. Do you not see? I control everything.
All
of it. If I want to live, despite your efforts, I shall live. And if there is anything—
anything
—I want, I take it!” He came close to the Pope and seized him by the collar, raising the poisoned apple in his hand. “For example, if I want you to die, you
die!
”
Pulling his father close he shoved the apple into his open mouth before he had time to close it, and, grabbing him by the head and jaw, forced his lips together and held them shut. Rodrigo struggled and choked on the apple, unable to breathe. He fell to the floor in agony and his two children coldly watched him die.
Cesare wasted no time; kneeling, he searched his dead father’s robes. There was nothing. He stood and bore down on his sister, who shrank from him.
“You—you must seek help. The poison is in you, too,” she cried.
“Not enough,” he barked hoarsely. “And do you think I am really such a fool as not to have taken a prophylactic antidote before coming here? I know what a devious old shit our father was, and how he’d react if he thought for a moment the real power was slipping away in my direction. Now, he said he had the Piece of Eden.”
“He—he—was telling the truth.”
Cesare slapped her. “Why was I not told?”
“You were away…he had it moved…he feared the Assassins might…”
Cesare slapped her again. “You plotted with him!”
“No! No! I thought he had sent messengers to tell you—”
“Liar!”
“I am telling the truth. I really thought you knew, or at least had been informed, of what he’d done.”
Cesare slapped her again, harder this time, so that she lost her balance and fell.
“Cesare!” she said as she struggled for breath, panic and fear in her eyes now. “Are you mad? I am Lucrezia! Your sister! Your friend! Your lover! Your queen!” And, rising, she put her hands timidly to his cheeks, to stroke them. His response was to grab her around the throat and shake her, as a terrier shakes a ferret.
“You’re nothing but a bitch!” He brought his face close to hers, thrusting it at her aggressively. “Now tell me,” he continued, his voice dangerously low. “Where. Is. It?”
Disbelief showed in her voice when she replied, gagging as she struggled to speak at all, “You…never loved me?”
His response was to let go of her throat and hit her again, this time close to the eye, with a closed fist.
“Where is the Apple?
The Apple!
” he screamed. “Tell me!”
She spat in his face and he grasped her arm and threw her to the floor, kicking her hard as he repeated his question, over and over again. Ezio tensed, forcing himself not to intervene though he was appalled at what he was witnessing. But he had to know the answer.
“All right! All right!” she said at last in a broken voice.
He pulled her to her feet and she placed her lips close to his ear, whispering, to Ezio’s fury.
Satisfied, Cesare pushed her away. “Smart decision, little sister.” She tried to cling to him but he pushed her away with a gesture of disgust and strode from the room.
As soon as he had gone, Ezio smashed through the window and landed close to Lucrezia, who, all the spirit apparently drained from her, slumped against the wall. Ezio quickly knelt by Rodrigo’s inert body and felt for his pulse.
There was none.
“Requiescat in pace,”
whispered Ezio, rising again and confronting Lucrezia. Looking at him she smiled bitterly, a little of the fire back in her eyes at the sight of him.
“You were there? All the time?”
Ezio nodded.
“Good,” she said. “I know where the bastard is going.”
“Tell me.”
“With pleasure. Saint Peter’s. The pavilion in the courtyard…”
“Thank you, Madonna.”
“Ezio—”
“Yes?”
“Be careful.”
Ezio raced along the Passetto di Borgo, a passageway that ran through the
rione
of Borgo and connected the Castel Sant’Angelo with the Vatican. He wished he’d been able to bring some of his men with him, or had had time to find a horse, but urgency lent his feet wings, and any guards he encountered were swiftly thrown aside in his headlong rush.
Once in the Vatican itself, he made his way to the pavilion in the courtyard Lucrezia had indicated. With Rodrigo gone, there was a fair chance that there’d be a new Pope on whom the Borgia could have no influence, since the College of Cardinals, apart from those members who’d been well and truly bought, were fed up and disgusted at being pushed around by this foreign family.
But he had to stop Cesare now, before he could get hold of the Apple and use its power, however dimly he might understand it, to regain all the ground he had lost.
Now was the time to strike his enemy down for good—and it was now or never.
Ezio reached the courtyard and found it deserted. He noticed that at its center, instead of a fountain, stood a large sandstone sculpture of a pinecone, in a stone cup, on a plinth. It stood perhaps ten feet high. He scanned the rest of the sunlit courtyard, but it was plain and bare, with a dusty white floor that burned his eyes with its brightness. There wasn’t even a colonnade, and the walls of the surrounding buildings had no decoration, though there were rows of narrow windows high up, and at ground level, one plain door on each side, all of which were closed. An unusually austere place.
He looked again at the pinecone and approached it. Peering closely, he could just discern a narrow gap between the dome of the cone and its body, running around the whole circumference. Climbing up the plinth, he found he was able to steady himself by gripping with his toes, and, holding on with one hand, he ran the other around the rim of the cone where the gap was, feeling carefully for any imperfection, which might possibly disclose a hidden trigger or button.
There! He’d found it. Gently he pressed it, and the top of the cone sprang open on hitherto hidden bronze hinges, firmly screwed into the soft stone and strengthened with cement. In the center of the hollow space that was now revealed, he saw a dark green leather bag. He fumbled at its drawstring with his hand, and the faint glow he saw within its depths confirmed his hopes: He had found the Apple!
His heart was in his mouth as he carefully lifted the bag free—he knew the Borgia, and there was no guarantee that it might not be booby-trapped, but he had to take that risk.
But where the hell was Cesare? The man had had a good few minutes’ start on him and had doubtless got here on horseback.
“I’ll take that,” cried a cold, cruel voice behind him. Bag in hand, Ezio dropped lightly to the ground and turned to confront Cesare, who had just burst through the southern wall door, followed by a troop of his personal guardsmen, who fanned out around the courtyard, surrounding Ezio.
Of course, Ezio thought, he didn’t reckon on competition. He had wasted time collecting backup.
“Beat you to it,” he taunted Cesare.
“It won’t do you any good, Ezio Auditore. You’ve been a thorn in my side too long. But it ends here. Now. My sword will take your life.”
He drew a modern schiavona with a basket hilt and took a step toward Ezio. But then, suddenly, he turned grey and clasped his stomach, dropping his sword as his knees buckled. Not a strong enough antidote, evidently, thought Ezio, breathing a sigh of relief.
“Guards!” croaked Cesare, struggling to stay on his feet.
There were ten of them, five armed with muskets. Ezio ducked and dived as they fired at him, the balls from their muskets cannoning into the floor and walls as Ezio skittered into cover behind a pillar. Whisking out the poison darts from his belt one by one, he sprang from his cover—close enough to the musketeers to hurl the darts. Cesare’s men weren’t expecting a ranged assault—they looked in bewildered surprise when Ezio launched the darts. The first three found their marks with polished ease—within seconds three guards were down—the poison was beautifully quick in its fatal effect. One of the musketeers, regaining a moment’s composure, hurled his weapon like a club—Ezio ducked, and the weapon went spiraling over his head. He quickly loosed the next two darts, and the musketeers were all down. Ezio had no time to retrieve his darts as Leonardo had advised. The five other guards, swordsmen, after recovering from their initial shock—for they’d assumed that their companions with the guns would have made short work of the Assassin—closed in quickly, wielding heavy falchions. Ezio, almost dancing among them as he avoided their clumsy blows—the swords were too heavy for fast work or much maneuverability—released the newly recrafted poison-blade and drew his own sword. Knowing he didn’t have much time to engage these men before Cesare made a move, Ezio’s fighting technique was more sparse and efficient than usual—he preferred to lock each opponent’s blade with his own sword and call into effect his poison-blade to finish the job. The first two fell without a whisper—at which point the remaining three decided their best attack was all at once. Ezio pulled back five quick paces, extending his sword up full and high, and charged forward at the nearest of the three oncoming guards. As he drew into range, Ezio skidded to his knees—sliding across the ground, under the blade of the baffled guard. The poison-blade nicked the man’s thigh—but only as Ezio was skidding past, barreling toward the remaining guards, his sword slashing at the tendons of their lower legs. Both men shrieked as Ezio’s blade tore through, and the men fell, their legs useless.