Read Lucianna Online

Authors: Bertrice Small

Tags: #Historical Romance, #Love Story, #Romance, #Italy, #England, #Medieval Romance

Lucianna (7 page)

BOOK: Lucianna
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The other merchants voiced their agreement and approval of such a plan. Thinking for a moment, Giovanni Pietro d’Angelo decided that Carlo Alberti’s idea was a rather excellent one. Why he hadn’t thought of it himself, he didn’t know. “I will agree to your proposal,” he said, “and send Luca with his sister. Now let us vote on the matter.”

They voted. While a few disliked the idea, the majority voted in favor of opening a small shop in London to represent their guild, with Lucianna Pietro d’Angelo and her brother Luca as their representatives. They all knew her, and they could be certain she would be a fair deputy for them, for she was, after all, her father’s daughter. And her brother would preserve the dignity of their guild.

When it had been decided, one among them said, “Now go home and tell your wife what you have done, Gio,” and there was much amused laughter.

He would tell her tonight, but not before he had spoken to Lucianna. He climbed into his litter chair, and directed it to his daughter’s house. Two torchbearers ran before him, and two behind him as they hurried through the darkening streets to quickly reach her home. He climbed out of his chair and said to them, “I will not be long.”

Lucianna was surprised to see her father at such an hour. She ushered him inside into the small library and invited him to sit. “What is it, Father? Is all well at home?” She handed him a small goblet.

“I have had the temerity to rearrange your life tonight, Lucianna,” he began, and sipped his wine. He held up his hand quickly. “Nay, no marriage, for I respect your wishes on that, Daughter.”

“Then what have you done?” she asked, smiling. As long as it was not another marriage, she was content.

“You are going to England, Lucianna,” he began.

Her eyes widened in surprise, but he quickly continued.

“The earl told me before he departed that Milan was intending to set up a shop in London to display their silks so English tradesmen might order in the comfort of their own city, and not go through the trouble of traveling to Italy. It is, therefore, necessary that Florence do the same thing. The guild has chosen you, at my suggestion, to serve as our deputy in London. I thought perhaps you might enjoy being away from your mother, and her constant planning, for a while.

“I am also sending Luca with you so you may teach him the business of the silk trade. With Marco’s disinterest and inability to learn, I did not consider it a bad idea for Luca to give up the military and learn our ways. That will please your mother. The earl thought it a good idea for a woman to represent us. It sets us apart from Milan. You will have far more charm than whoever speaks for them. Of course, it will be considered that your brother is in charge, but you will not allow him to abuse his authority, I suspect,” her father said with a chuckle.

Lucianna gave him a mischievous smile. “No, I will not,” she said, and added, “Mother does not know, does she? I do not doubt, however, that she will be glad to see Luca gone from the military.”

“Nay, but when I go home, I must tell her,” he replied. Then he chuckled again. “A bit of both sweet and sour for your mother to digest. She will not be happy to lose you, but she will be happy and relieved to have her precious youngest son freed of his warlike pursuits. It is Luca’s happiness you and I must consider.”

“There are no wars now to entertain him,” Lucianna said. “I think he only chose the military because Marco was the heir, and Giorgio had chosen the church. He is quick to learn.” Then she considered England, and the Earl of Lisle. “If I go to London,” she said to her father, “will it not appear as if I am chasing after Roberto?”

“I believe the Englishman is interested in having you for his wife,” Giovanni Pietro d’Angelo said quietly, surprising Lucianna. “He asked me for my permission to court you, Lucianna. I explained to him that since you are a widow, the choices you made would be up to you. I do not know if he was swept away by the charm and beauty of Italy, or if upon returning home to England, he simply forgot you. But nonetheless, let us get your mother more interested in arranging Serena’s life rather than rearranging yours. Unless, of course, there is someone you favor now.”

“No,” Lucianna told her father. “There is none here I would happily marry. Perhaps Roberto has forgotten me, but I will not know unless we have the opportunity to meet again, will I?”

“Then you will go?”

“What of your shop? Marco will simply not pay attention to the business of the silk trade. I cannot, in good conscience, leave it in his hands, Father.”

“I shall go back into the shop full-time, Daughter. And I believe I have a clever way of detaching
Signorina
Clarinda from your brother. I shall pay his wages to his wife, and instruct her to give him enough coin to walk about with his friends, but not enough to support his greedy mistress.”

“He will be heartbroken,” Lucianna said.

“But hopefully he will see the wench for what she really is,” her father answered. “He will swear off women for the interim, and put his mind on his business before finding another mistress.”

Lucianna laughed. “It is already autumn. When am I to go?”

“As quickly as possible. I want your mother to have no time to attempt to thwart me, Daughter. I am used to Orianna’s bouts of pique.”

“Let me call in Balia and see if she is willing to come with me.”

“I believe she will be,” he answered as his daughter opened the library door and called for her personal servant.

She was already seated again by the time the older woman entered the chamber. “Yes, mistress? How may I serve you?”

Lucianna quickly explained, and then finished by asking, “Will you come with me, Balia?”

“Of course I will,” Balia said. “Who else would look after you if I didn’t? When do we leave?”

“As quickly as possible, to avoid familial difficulties,” Lucianna told her. “How quickly can we be packed? We will take my clothing, jewelry, and bed linens. They are mine. Everything else was Alfredo’s and his first wife’s. I don’t want it,” Lucianna said. “I will lock up the house when I go. It is here if I ever come back, but if I do not, then I will sell it.”

“You don’t want to give it to Norberto?” her father asked.

“No. He may buy it if he so desires should I sell, but the house is part of my inheritance from Fredo. I will not just give it to his son,” Lucianna said. “He has his own home, given him by his wife’s parents, for she did not wish to live with her in-laws and look after them. That is why Fredo left me the house outright and not Norberto.” Then she asked her father, “By what manner shall we travel?”

“I think overland to the coast facing what is called the English Channel, and then across that body of water to England itself. I will have my bankers, the Kiras, notify their London branch to see you have both a small shop and a separate house nearby that is furnished for your comfort. They will help you settle yourself. You will carry with you a letter to the English king, announcing your presence and Luca’s as the representatives of the guild of Florentine silk merchants. There will be other letters for the more important of the London guilds so that your presence and authority are known to them. Ask the Kiras to suggest someone to help you in the shop. Accept their advice, but I will speak with you again before you depart. Balia, how long will it take you to make ready?” he asked.

“Six days, sir,” Lucianna’s serving woman said. “I will have it all packed and ready in six days.”

“Excellent!” he approved. “We will not tell your mother when you are going, Lucianna. She will, therefore, have less time to meddle. As for Luca, he will meet you somewhere along the road. I am very proud of you, Daughter. This is a great challenge, but I know that you will be successful in this endeavor. You do not have to come to the shop in these last few days, for you will need time to prepare yourself, and direct Balia.”

“I will come tomorrow, Father,” she said. “Let me speak with Marco before you do. And he must know that Luca comes with me.”

“Very well,” her father said, standing. “I must go home now, and give your mother this exciting news. I hope I shall be able to gain a bit of sleep this night,” he chuckled. Then, Balia escorting him, he left his daughter’s house, climbed into his litter, and reluctantly directed them home to inform his wife that their third daughter was going to England.

Orianna behaved exactly as he had anticipated. “Are you mad?” she demanded. “A woman? You are sending a delicate woman to represent the silk merchants of Florence in London? I will not allow it! I will not, Gio!”

“My dear, you have no voice in this matter,” he told her, infuriating her further. “This is the decision of the guild. Do you want us to lose more business than we have already lost to Milan? Besides, I will arrange to have Luca sell his commission in the army, and go with Lucianna. She will teach him our trade, and he will be saved from the military. Certainly you are pleased by that, my dear.”

Orianna considered his words. Then she said, “You cannot turn my daughter, the granddaughter of a prince, into a tradeswoman.”

“She enjoys it,” he replied. “You would have her sit here in Florence while you seek another husband for her, though they are only interested in her inherited wealth? No! You will not force my clever daughter into a boring and dull life because that suits you. No! She is going to London. With luck, she may attract her earl again.”

“Are you foolish enough to believe that an English earl will have a tradeswoman for a wife? A mistress, perhaps, but certainly not a wife. Gio, the man is a personal friend of his king!”

“He asked my permission to direct his attentions towards Lucianna the day he had dinner with us,” her husband countered.

“You never told me that!” Orianna said, very surprised.

“No, I did not. I did not want you interfering, Wife. We have had four daughters, but I claim this third daughter of ours as mine alone. You have the other three, Orianna. Lucianna is mine. Now I will not discuss this with you further. I am tired and wish only for my bed. Good night, my dear.” He kissed her forehead and then left her.

Orianna was astounded by what she had learned, what he had said to her this night. Lucianna his? She thought on it and had to admit to herself that their third daughter was very much like her father. She was quiet, and thoughtful, rarely if ever revealing her private thoughts. She had been obedient in all things asked of her, even marrying without complaint a man old enough to be her grandfather.

It was only upon her husband’s death that she had become independent.

Yes, Orianna realized, Lucianna was more Gio’s than hers. Still, she didn’t want her daughter leaving Florence unless it was in the keeping of a husband. But she knew she would not get that wish. Was her daughter pleased to have been given such a position that would take her from Florence? Yes, she probably was very delighted, and she would take the wretched Balia with her. Orianna didn’t like Balia. She came from the Allibatore household and was entirely loyal to Lucianna. She would not spy on her mistress for Orianna. It was difficult to know exactly what her daughter was doing if she didn’t have someone who would report to her. Who in England would, and then write to her? Orianna realized she would have to resign herself to whatever her daughter would write. If she would write.
I will have to write to her quite regularly so she will be forced to answer me back,
she realized. It was very bothersome, yet she would do it. Then she considered that Luca would be with his sister. If Lucianna was her father’s daughter, her twin brother, Luca, was his mother’s child. Luca would keep her informed of what was happening in England if she asked him.

The next morning, her husband ate his breakfast and then departed for his shop for the first time in several months. Orianna realized he would have to go regularly once Lucianna was no longer there. Even she was willing to admit that Marco’s mind was not on their business. Gio would have to work hard to train him, but she was equally certain he already had a plan.

At the silk shop, Giovanni found Lucianna already opening up. “Good morning, Father. You actually look rested this morning.”

“I said my piece. Your mother said hers, and then I told her I would not argue the point, so I went to bed,” he explained. “Where is your brother, Lucianna?”

“It is Monday,” she explained. “Marco does not come into the shop until after ten o’clock on Mondays.”

“That will change,” Master Pietro d’Angelo said grimly. “You will not yet have spoken to him, then.”

She shook her head. “But I will.”

When Marco finally arrived, he was surprised to find his father in the shop. He greeted them both, announcing, “I cannot remain long today, Lucianna. I am taking Clarinda to the races.”

“You are a shop merchant,” his father said. “You do not have time to take your mistress to the races, Marco. Do you suddenly think you are a Medici, that you may lollygag about?”

“I promised her, Father, and besides, Lucianna is always here for those seeking silks,” Marco said, and she could see her father was very angry with her brother’s words.

“But shortly I will not be here, Brother,” she told him. “What will you do then?”

“What? Why will you not be here? I depend upon you, Lucianna. You cannot leave me.”

“I have been chosen by the guild to represent them in London. A small shop is being opened in which to display the fine silks of Florence. That way the London merchants may see our wares and order directly from us, rather than travel here. The Milanese are also opening a shop.”

“A woman?” Marco was surprised. “Why can they not send a man? It’s unheard of for a woman to go. Tell them no!”

Lucianna laughed. “I am very honored to have been chosen, and I am excited to go, Brother. The greatest benefit, of course, will be to get away from our mother’s constant matchmaking and carping. You should also know that Luca will be leaving the military and coming with me to England to learn our trade.”

“But I can’t do this without you,” he said, ignoring most of her words. Then he realized she had said Luca would be with her.
Luca?

BOOK: Lucianna
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