Read The Secret of the Glass Online

Authors: Donna Russo Morin

Tags: #Venice (Italy), #Glass manufacture, #Venice (Italy) - History - 17th Century, #Historical, #Fiction, #Historical Fiction, #General, #Love Stories

The Secret of the Glass (4 page)

BOOK: The Secret of the Glass
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The winding waterways of Venice teemed with the long, narrow asymmetrical boats; close to ten thousand of them floated on the green liquid arteries of the city. Those privately owned, the many that belonged to the rich and noble, were distinctive with their bright colors and opulent cloth
felzi,
yet thousands more were for hire and it was but a momentary wait for the next available black boat.


Buongiorno,
signore. Where may I take you and your beautiful family?” the dark-haired gondolier asked as he helped each Fiolario onto his craft with a firm, large hand. Oriana and Lia giggled at his touch, their young, hungry scrutiny devouring his sculpted muscles so perfectly displayed under his Egyptian blue, skin-tight jerkin and crimson hose.

“All the way to the piazza, if you please,” Zeno called out with spirit and smiled playfully at his wife. He wielded his natural charm and merriment, enticing Viviana to catch the festive mood, as successfully as he had when first seducing her and winning her heart, enticing her away from her family to live the sequestered life with him on Murano. She was as enchanted now as then. With a small huff of surrender, Viviana relinquished and laughed along with her husband and Marcella as they took their seats on the cushioned bench closest to the gondolier.

“All the way?
Madonna mia,
how wonderful,” their gondolier cried, bowing low over an offered leg. “I am Pietro and you will have the most wonderful ride of your life.”

The beguiled Fiolarios applauded as Pietro set the oar into the
forcola,
the elaborately curved wooden oarlock, and began to drive the craft along.

“A-oel,”
he cried with a singsong cadence, announcing their departure and alerting the oarsmen on the nearby gondolas of their launch.

The girls sat in front of their elders on their own pillowed row of seats, staring in wide-eyed wonder at the mass of people floating by on the canals and walking along the adjacent
fondamenti
. With trembling nostrils, Sophia inhaled the aromas of cooking food, blooming flowers, and the ever-present dung-like earthy odor of the canals. How different the city seemed today than most, when she ambled along these passageways with one companion or another, conducting business on behalf of the glassworks and her aging father, who had no son to send in his stead. Her sisters turned and twisted in their seats, thrilled by the metropolitan sights so infrequently glimpsed, straining to see all its attractions, including their handsome boatman. They sighed with girlish exhalations as Pietro began to sing, his sweet tenor serenading them, the dulcet tones joining in the chorus with those of the other gondoliers.

As they turned off the smaller waterway and onto the Canalazzo, the modest and charming homes lining the jetty became large and magnificent
palazzi.
On their balconies and through their stained-glass windows, Sophia spied the sumptuously attired nobles in various stages of party preparations.

Passing beneath the Ponte de Rialto, they circled back inland on smaller canals, their muscular gondolier crouching deep beneath the low footbridges that crossed the thin waterways. Like bright and garish blossoms, the courtesans festooned almost every bridge and many of the balconies throughout the city, their powdered breasts bulging from their scant bodices, their young skin hardened and lined by layers of rouge and paint. Upon the quaysides they streamed through the crowds, the tarnished jewels of the Republic’s obsession with pleasure.

“You must hurry now,” Pietro urged as he brought his passengers to the dockside and helped them from his vehicle, accepting his fee from Zeno with a quick bow. “High Mass will begin soon.”

“Grazie,”
Zeno and Viviana called together, corralling their family, and stepping briskly away from the water’s edge.


Arrivederci,
Pietro.” Oriana and Lia waved daintily over their shoulders.

“Ciao, belle.”
Pietro smiled at them with a devil-may-care smirk, and Sophia grinned behind a hand as her sisters giggled with glee.

With the congested stream of people, the Fiolario family rushed into the stone-paved Piazza San Marco, the largest and most opulent open square in all of Venice. As the bells of the towering brick
campanile
began to peal, they surged forward with the jostling crowd toward the domed Basilica and its distinctive façade. An amalgamation of east and west design, its exterior encompassed capitals from Sicily, columns from Alexandria, and sculpture from Constantinople, festooned with marble pinnacles and crockets, all under the glory of huge golden domes that dominated the Venetian horizon. Squeezing tight against the throngs of worshippers, the family filtered through the massive Romanesque arching doorways and into the glowing interior, illuminated by thousands of candles whose light reflected off the gold mosaics and colored marble.

Only a smattering of empty seats remained, and the girls surrendered them to their elders with respect. Standing in one of the many rows of people lining up along the back, Sophia strained to see the front of the church. People filled every space of the building, uniquely designed in a cross of four equal arms, as opposed to the more popular Latin style found in most churches. She bowed her head to give thanks, allowing the chanting of prayers and singing of hymns to engulf and fill her. The cloying scent of the incense, emanating from the tendrils of smoke rising from the swaying, clacking gold censers, did little to mask the musky and bitter stench of so many infrequently washed bodies.

Sophia’s own whispered yet fervent prayers mingled with those of the hundreds of other parishioners. Her gratitude overwhelmed her, for the beauty of this day, the magnificence of her country and most of all, the love of her family. She felt a moment’s repentance, for choosing the life she had, for forsaking marriage and motherhood as both society and the church insisted was her duty. She squeezed her clenched hands together, feeling the slim, hard bones within them. God had given her the gift in these hands; surely he forgave her and loved her for using it.

Sophia sent a special prayer to Saint Mark, he who gave his life to spread the word of Jesus and whose remains lay entombed below them. His body—smuggled out of the heathens’ land by Venetian sailors and hidden amidst a cache of pork, rendering it untouchable to the Muslims—came to these shores hundreds of years ago, and his capacity to ignite the people’s passion remained as powerful as the day he arrived. He was their patron and the source of their strength.

The mass ended and cheerful voices joined rustling fabrics and the now restless and cramped congregation filled the aisles. Behind Doge Leonardo Donato, a tall, somber man and the Republic’s ninetieth ducal ruler, they emptied out into the already crowded piazza, where more celebrants, too many to fit into the Basilica, waited. Surrounded by black-robed senators and council members, bishops and priests, Doge Donato, sweating under full ducal regalia—a scarlet brocade robe, cape, and doge’s cap—strode past the Palazzo Ducale and into the smaller Piazzetta where they stopped between the two majestic marble columns.

The twelfth-century stone projectiles—“acquisitions” from Constantinople—marked the aperture of the Molo, the waterfront—the majestic gateway—of the grand city. Atop one stood the winged lion of St. Mark while upon the other St. Theodore, the former patron of the Republic, battled a crocodile. These imposing monuments were two of Venice’s greatest attractions, yet Sophia refused to look up to the top of the long, bright stone pillars. As a frightened child, she had seen men hanging upside down from a gibbet strung between them, and the horrifying sight had forever blighted their beauty in her eyes.

The Fiolario women slowed as they neared the shore, but Zeno urged them on.

“No, not this year. Today we will not just watch. We will be a part of this celebration.”

He smiled infectiously, urging them forward through the teeming masses to the ramp of a plumed and festooned barge. He dug in his pocket for the many golden coins to pay the family’s fare. Viviana opened her mouth to protest, snapping her jaw shut, offering a serene, if forced, smile in place of any harsh words.

With a wave to the crowd packing the piazzetta and overflowing into the larger piazza, Doge Donato stepped through the mam-mouth arch formed by the columns to board the
Bucintoro
with his chosen special guests. Among the contingent were not only the most powerful senators and council members of the land, but also the visiting kings, queens, and princes that Oriana so longed to see.

She grabbed Sophia’s arm. “Can you see any of them?”

Both young women strained to see across the water near the rail of their garlanded craft and onto the ceremonial galley.

Sophia pursed her lips and narrowed her eyes as she looked off into the distance. “
Sì,
I see someone. Oh, he is very handsome, very slim, and muscular. What’s this? He’s stopped…he’s looking around for…for something.”

“What?” Oriana popped with excitement. “
Che cosa?
What does he look for?”

Sophia stood on tiptoe and craned her neck back and forth to see over and around the heads in front of them. “He looks…he looks…for you.”

“Uffa!”
Oriana slapped Sophia’s arm, annoyed but laughing at her sister’s mischievous smile.

“Shh,” Sophia insisted with an indulgent sidelong grin. “The best and last part is coming. Wait until it’s over and we’ll find your prince for you.”

Oriana quieted, chastised, but took her sister’s hand in hers as the ceremony began.

Venice’s
Festa della Sensa
, Marriage to the Sea, had been celebrated for almost six hundred years. What began as a commemoration of the
Serenissima
’s naval prowess was now a tradition on Ascension Day to pay tribute to the sea that held their land in its loving embrace, a ceremony that paid homage to the power, prestige, and prosperity each brought to the other and their interdependence.

All the members of the procession were aboard, the bells began to peal, a cannon exploded on shore, and the
Bucintoro
began to sail out into the glistening blue waters amidst the cheering. The burgundy and gold ducal galley, constructed in the renowned
Arsenale,
was a floating palace, rebuilt once every century. Its wood shimmered, polished to a glossy finish, its flags bright and flapping in the midday sun. Every now and again, the golden trim sparkled as if kissed by the sun. The gilded mythological creatures rose in stark relief along the bright red sides of the long slim vessel. Forty-two crimson oars, each eleven meters long and manned by four
arsenaloti
—the craftsmen of the
Arsenale
, one of the greatest industrial complexes in the world—propelled the flagship, named for the ancient mythological word meaning “big centaur,” out toward the port.

The waters around them churned and the flotilla of boats of every shape and size including the barge carrying the Fiolarios, whirled around the
Bucintoro,
worker bees buzzing around the queen. Eagerly they followed it out to the Porto di Lido, where the deeper waters of the Adriatic waited, where the tip of the long curved sandbar ended. As the large boat stilled, the Bishop of Castello, the religious official who had presided over the ceremony since its inception, stood beside the Doge on the bow. Below them, adorning the prow, was the gilded wooden sculpture representing Venice dressed as Justice, with both a sword and scales.

From the Fiolarios’ perch a few boats away, the distinct figures of the two men were clearly visible, the short one in a black robe, purple sash, skull cap, and beard, and the taller one, with his gold embroidered cape furling out in the wind and distinctive head-dress upon his skull. Never more than when seen in profile, the ducal cap cast a unique silhouette; rising from the flat top front of the head, the back rose majestically to peak in a small horn shape, the elongated flaps extending down to cover the Doge’s ears.

Sophia and her family could see the Bishop raise his hands and form the sign of the cross, blessing the waters of the sea in peace and gratitude. His hand lowered, fumbled amidst the folds of his robes, and rose back up, the Blessed Ring now in his hands. As he turned to address the Doge, his words took wing on the wind. Mere mutated snippets of sound found the pilgrims on the shore, the melodious tones blending with the strains of madrigals performed by two groups of singers, one on each side of the towering columns. Every man, woman, and child in attendance knew the ancient words the Bishop intoned to
Il Serenissimo
on behalf of his people.

“Receive this ring as a token of sovereignty over the sea that you and your successors will be everlasting.”

Doge Donato stepped forward, accepted the token, and bowed in thanks. Gesturing to the crowd on the banks of the water, he held it high and his archetypically dour countenance broke into a grin.

“We espouse thee, O Sea, as a sign of true and perpetual domination.” The Doge’s pledge carried across the blue and green waters to the boats and farther on, to the shore, and the sea of anxious captives.

With a short swing of his long arm, he hurled the ring into the sea. For a moment it glittered against the bright azure sky, a reflection of the golden sun as bright as a star in the black heavens. It arced and fell into the waiting sea, the splash small yet resounding, sealing the marriage. The crowd roared, erupting into cheering jubilation as the small piece of jewelry splashed into the waters, to sink forever into its depths.

The Fiolario family hugged and kissed each other and many of the crowd around them, strangers who were no longer unfamiliar as they shared this moment of renewal and blessing, cheering and crying as one. These Venetians, forced together by the physical confines of their land, were bonded spiritually, perhaps more than the inhabitants of any vast kingdom. The applause and adulation continued until
La Maesta Nav,
the ship of majesty, returned to shore, disposing of its passengers amidst the exultant crowd. Only when the Doge, the Bishop, the government officials and honored guests passed through the throng, embracing and shaking hands, did the horde begin to disperse.

BOOK: The Secret of the Glass
3.92Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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