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Archive for June, 2009

Chapter Three, Update Five

Monday, June 22nd, 2009

Buono sat in the bow, stuffing bread in his mouth as the other men rowed. He watched the sand bar at Chioggia slip past on his right and realized that he had never been so far from home in his life. Every beat of the oars brought him still farther. He knew he would have to pull an oar himself soon. For now, Buono watched green hills and sand beaches roll by as he left Ravenna and Venice further and further behind.

 

“You’re the new man,” a cheerful voice behind him said.

 

Buono turned. He saw a tanned and care-lined face surrounded by grey-shot hair. The other man’s beard was bushy and untrimmed. He wore a soft black cap and dull, dark robes.

 

“I’m Elihu. Physician. How did you fare against Achilles?”

 

Buono laughed. “You mean before he lifted me up over his head, or after? Didn’t you see?”

 

“No, no,” Elihu said, scratching the side of his nose with a long fingernail. “I never watch fighting if I can help it. I can tell enough from the results.”

 

“What do you see, physician?”

 

Elihu studied the marks on Buono’s face. “You stood too close to him. Let me have your left hand.”

 

“My chest hurts the most,” Buono said, “He–”

 

“Quiet,” Elihu ordered. He put his fingers on the vein in Buono’s wrist and counted the seconds to himself. “echad…shtayim…shalosh…arba…” Buono didn’t recognize the language.

 

“Fluttering. Like a bird with a broken wing,” Elihu said. “You shouldn’t drink so much.”

 

“You can tell I was drinking?”

 

“I can tell a lot of things. How did you hurt your kidney?”

 

“What?” Buono had to think about it. “Oh– that was before. Someone punched me.”

 

Elihu nodded slowly. “I didn’t think Achilles did that to you. From the look of your face, he was quite gentle.”

 

“Gentle?! He nearly crushed my heart!”

 

“Tch. Your heart is fine.” Elihu rummaged in a large bag. “I can give you a draught to help your bile. Drink  plenty of clean water if you can get it. No more wine today.”

 

“All right,” Buono agreed.

 

“Close your eyes, please.”

 

Buono did it. An instant later he screamed–every cut and mark Achilles had made on his face was burning. The stabbing pain shot through his head and made his teeth rattle. He opened his eyes, and saw Elihu taking a white cloth away from his face.

 

“What — what was that?” Buono demanded.

 

“Try to keep your face clean,” Elihu answered. “And remember what I said about the water.”

 

“What are you?” Buono asked. “Some kind of sorcerer?”

 

“Tch. You’re smarter than that, I think. By the way, you owe me a denarius.”

 

“I haven’t–”

 

“Don’t worry,” Elihu said, “Master Achilles will take it from your pay. Shalom! Welcome aboard the ship Sant’Agata.”

Chapter Three, Update Four

Thursday, June 18th, 2009

Achilles lowered Buono to the deck. “You have my mercy. What did you say your name was?”

 

“It’s Buono.” He sat on the deck, afraid he’d fall if he tried to stand. He turned his head to Paolo. “Now what?”

 

Paolo laughed. “So eager! Rest. You’ve had a hard day, Buono. I’ll have the physician look at you. Tomorrow you row, unless this good north wind holds.”

 

“But– I failed.”

 

Achilles grinned down at Buono. “I like this one, Captain.” He offered his right hand and Buono took it. He let Achilles pull him to his feet.

 

“You mean, you think you had to beat him to join my crew?” Paolo said. “You? Ha! Just look at him! He’s magnificent! No. Achilles is my rowing-master and first mate. I keep an orderly ship. I don’t have time for every malcontent who wants to measure his cock. Every man in the crew has fought Achilles, and he’s beaten them all. Every man who gets the idea to challenge his authority already knows how it will turn out.”

 

“I think I could have known that without the lesson. But what if someone ever beats Achilles?” Buono asked.

 

“Well, I had another rowing-master before him,” Paolo said. “That one’s name was Hector.”

 

“You’re joking.”

 

“Perhaps I am.” Paolo turned to the assembled crew. “You lot! What are you staring at? We’ve fallen a point off the wind. Back to work!”

 

The crew dispersed, leaving Buono and Achilles alone on the fore-deck. Achilles still gripped Buono’s hand, steadying him.

 

“I think you made a mark on my neck, Buono.”

 

“I’m sorry.”

 

“Don’t be. It was a fair strike. I should have respected you more, kept my chin down.” Achilles paused. “There is a saying in my country: ‘Do not make a smaller man scared, for he will find a way to kill you.’ Are you scared of me, Buono?”

 

“Master Achilles, I am too hungry to be scared.”

 

“Ah, that explains it. We have another saying: ‘Always fight with your belly empty!’”

 

Achilles called for bread, and a sailor brought half a loaf to the foredeck. Just then the wind began to fail. The great white sail went limp as air spilled from it.

 

“Man the benches!” Achilleus shouted. The crew jumped to their positions and grasped the oars. Achilles barked the stroke and they rowed in unison.

 

“And you!” Achilles pointed to Buono, tearing at the bread with his teeth. Buono froze with a ragged hunk of it hanging from his mouth. “You, keep a watch off the bow. Sing out if you see any more rowboats!” Achilles laughed from his belly, a deep bass rumble. “Heigh! Ho! Heigh! Ho!” he called to the rowers. The galley churned on south, out of the Malamocco channel and into the Adriatic Sea.

Chapter Three, Update Three

Tuesday, June 16th, 2009

“Fight him?”

 

Paolo nodded. “That’s right.”

 

“You look tired, landsman,” Achilles said, “Don’t worry, this won’t take long.”

 

“What do… How do we…” Buono stammered.

 

“God’s balls, how stupid are you?” Paolo said. “You fight until you can’t fight anymore. Now begin!”

 

Achilles eased into a crouch and spread his arms. The span was enormous. Smooth, hard muscles like tree-roots bulged in his thighs and his calves were thick-edged iron plates.

 

Buono stood stiff-legged on the flat soles of his feet and raised his hands. The sleeves of his tunic fell to his shoulders.

 

“Come on,” Achilles said. “Knock me down.”

 

It looked impossible. Then Buono remembered the way to cut down a tree: strike low. He rushed at Achilles, waving his arms. At the last moment he dropped down and grabbed for one huge thigh with both arms.

 

Achilles pushed him off with one broad hand. It caught Buono in the same spot where he’d been puched earlier. He wheezed and toppled backwards. His head struck the deck with a ‘crack’.

 

Achilles grinned. “Good idea. But you’re too slow and weak.” He stepped back and let Buono get up.

 

The crew hooted and whistled at Buono. He rubbed the hurt on the back of his head. His fingers came away blood-stained. Buono wobbled, ready to faint. Achilles came closer. There was the smile again, bright white in his deep-brown face.

 

Buono clenched his right hand into a fist. He sunk down into a crouch. “You’re enjoying this, aren’t you?”

 

“Not really.” Achilles shrugged. “But it has to be–” Buono’s fist slammed into his throat, choking off his words. Achilles dodged as Buono swatted at him a second time, and a third. He put his hands up and made two fists. He wasn’t smiling anymore.

 

“I like you, landsman.” Achilles snapped a jab into Buono’s temple. “Really, I do.” Two more jabs peppered his right cheek. “Most of them just try to run.” Buono raised his hands to block. Achilles hit him anyway. “At least you faced me. But as I said, you’re too slow and weak.” He slapped Buono’s face aside, then came down with a hammer-fist on his chest.

 

Buono dropped to a knee, gasping.

 

“Come on, landsman. Do you have one more trick? Just one more? I want to know what it is.” 

 

Buono saw Achilles looming over him as a hazy, dark cloud. His head felt as light and empty as his stomach and his chest burned with raw pain. He lurched toward Achilles, trying to clinch with him. Achilles raised his knee into Buono’s belly. He collapsed into the big man, sucking air.

 

Achilles clucked his tongue. He seized Buono’s tunic collar in one hand and his leg in the other. With a snap and a twist, Achilles lifted Buono’s body to his chest. He bent his legs and sprang up, driving Buono over his head. Achilles locked his elbows and held him there.

 

“What now, landsman?” Achilles asked. “Do you still want to join this crew? Or shall I put you back in your rowboat?”

 

“Yes! No! I mean, I submit. I give up! I can’t fight any more– I can’t. Please!”

 

The crew was silent. Achilles glanced at Paolo.

 

“Put him down,” the captain ordered.

 

 

 

 

Chapter Three, Update Two

Sunday, June 14th, 2009

It took Buono a moment to realize he wasn’t falling into the sea with the oar. The rope was still attached to the ship.

 

“Are you going to pull me up?” he called.

 

“No!”

 

Buono sighed. His arms burned and his fingers felt ready to crack. He was afraid that if he let go with either hand he wouldn’t be able to grip the rope again.

 

The ship’s side was made of wooden planks stitched together with hide and caulked with pitch. Buono kicked off his other sandal and dug his toes into a seam in the planking. He pushed up from his toes, hanging away from the vertical surface of the ship’s side, and pulled himself up the rope a hand’s- breadth at a time.

 

Finally Buono reached the rail. He got his head and shoulders up above it and looked around the deck. It was filled with rowing benches. Most of the men sat idle on them. A few sailors minded the incomprehensible system of lines that controlled the sail. No one made a move to help Buono. He noticed that someone had tied the end of his rope to some kind of peg. He dragged on the rope and managed to swing his leg over the rail.

 

The sailors waited until Buono clambered aboard, shaking and barefoot. A man who’d been trimming rope-ends and tying them together sheathed a big knife and approached Buono.

 

“So you finally got yourself aboard. I suppose I should welcome you.”


“No thanks to you!” Buono retorted.

 

“Oh?” The sailor pointed the ship’s rail. “That lubbers’ knot you made slipped off the oar as soon as you threw it. Two men dove for your line and held it fast while another belay’d it to the pin. After that, we figured we’d done enough.”

 

“Is that so?”

 

“Yes. Honestly, we wanted to see what landsmans’ foolishness you’d try next. Now, what made you so desperate as to wreck a perfectly good rowboat?”

 

“I wanted to see Paolo. He told me I should come find him.”

 

The sailor raised an eyebrow. “He owes you money, then?”

 

“Actually I owe him money. And my life.” Buono said.

 

The sailor rolled his eyes. “Oh God. One of those.” He led Buono past the mast and the rowing benches to a raised section of deck near the stern. Two men held the steering-oars on either side of the ship. Captain Paolo stood in the center. When he saw Buono he nearly doubled over chuckling.

 

“You! Clearly the Lord must want you to live, but you shouldn’t tempt Him so many times in one day.”

 

“You said I should come find you. You didn’t say you were sailing for Syracuse.”

 

“I didn’t think you’d take so long,” Paolo said. “My God you did get drunk, didn’t you? You got very drunk.”

 

“I’m not proud of it,” Buono admitted. “But here I am.”

 

“Well, I don’t take passengers.” Paolo said.

 

“Then I’ll join your crew.”

 

The sailors laughed and pointed at Buono. “Him? Look what he did to the damned rowboat!”

 

“He’s a Jonah!”

 

“He’s worse than a Jonah, the man’s a curse!”

 

Paolo quieted them with a raised hand. “He’s a stupid, goat-buggering landsman but he rowed to the one spot he couldn’t fail to meet us and he got himself aboard. If he could do that with nothing but shit between his ears, imagine what he might be capable of!”

 

“Was that a compliment?” Buono asked.

 

“Of the highest sort,” Paolo said. “And now Master Achilles will pay you another.” He took Buono by the arm and walked him to the front of the ship.

 

“Achilles! Achilles!” the crew chanted. They rushed from the benches to form a ring in front of the mast.  A man stepped out from their midst, a head higher than Buono and half again as wide. His skin was light brown like an olive stone. He stared deep black eyes at Buono over a thin arrow of a nose. Short kinks of black hair framed his head like a crown.

 

He shrugged his arms and shoulders out of his buff-colord tunic and let the top fall to his waist. His upper chest was a dark slab of muscle and his arms were like thick-knotted rope.

 

“Buono, you called yourself, yes?” Paolo said. “Buono, this is Achilles. Achilles, Buono.”

 

Achilles showed Buono a wide smile of ice-white teeth. “How do you do.”

 

“If you want to join my crew,” Paolo said, “you’ll have to fight Achilles.”

Chapter Three, Update One

Saturday, June 13th, 2009

THREE

 

 

“You! In the boat!” a man hailed from the ship’s bow-post. “Get out of the channel!”

 

“I want to come aboard!” Buono replied. He waved his arms vigorously, rocking the little boat from side to side. “Stop the ship!”

 

“You stupid goat-sucking landsman! We’re under sail!”

 

The thick timber of the galley’s bow-post aimed squarely at the middle of Buono’s boat. A man-high wake rolled from either side of the bow.

 

“Oh my.” Buono stepped down from the bench into the boat’s bottom, pitching the craft to one side and nearly hurling himself into the water. He fell to his knees and gripped both gunwales. Buono picked up one oar and looked for the other– it was gone.

 

“Get out of the way, landsman!”

 

The galley was bearing down. Its huge sail towered over Buono. Wthout quite knowing why he was doing it, he untied a coil of line from the stern. He looped one end around the oar-shaft and made a knot.

 

“Ai! Ai! Collision! Ai!” The sailor in the ship’s bow was close enough for Buono to see an angry vein pulse in his forehead.

 

Buono stood, holding the oar over his shoulder like a spear. His left hand held the other end of the line. Spray from the ship’s bow stung his face. Buono reared back and heaved the oar blade-first. It struck the edge of the ship’s rail and tumbled over.

 

The rowboat shattered with a crunch as the ship’s bow tore through it. Gray splintered planks littered the water’s surface. Buono held the line tight in both hands. His body banged into the ship’s side.

 

“Pull me up!” Buono screamed. “Please!” His numb fingers slipped down the rope. The frothing wake bathed his legs and carried away one of his sandals.

 

A laughing face appeared over the ship’s rail. “Here, landsman–this belongs to you!”

 

Buono watched as the oar he’d thrown aboard the ship sailed over the rail and into the sea.

Buono makes it to Italian Wikipedia!

Thursday, June 11th, 2009

A while ago I had another version of the Saint Mark’s Body website containing detailed character descriptions and excerpts from the yet-unpublished novel. Someone must have read them while looking up information on the legendary/historical person, Buono da Malamocco. This helpful person then updated the Italian Wikipedia article on Buono, filling in many of the unknowns about him and the theft of Saint Mark’s body with inventions from my novel!

Here’s my Babelfish- assisted translation. I’ve highlighted all the parts which were completely made up by me - including Rustico’s given name and the name of their ship. The article writer made a couple of mistakes even cribbing my made-up history: Buono has three daughters in 827 and no sons, and he has assumed that “ben Moische” is Elihu and Rebekah’s surname, when actually it means “Son of Moses” and applies to Elihu only.

Color Coding:

RED: I made it up completely.

BLUE: I put it in the book as an educated guess: I made it up but it could well have been true.

BLACK: comes from the legends I heard from other sources

[ ] means I’m not too sure of the word.

 “Buono” da Malamocco (Metamauco) Legendary Personage

Named Tribune by the tenth doge of Venice Agnello Partecipazio after the war of 810 against the Frank Pepin, king of Italy, was made spokesman for the people and guarantor of social justice. The tribunes were inviolable in the times of the Empire.

The house of Buono was, as was traditional, open day and night to listen to every kind of [problem]. For the joy of his wife Magdalena wife and their three sons, when Buono was not at sea, he would take his station very seriously and remained seated on a simple bench for hours to listen to his [concittadini].

Buono da Metamauco was with then-Tribune Agnello Partecipazio and Andrea the Torcellan called “Rustico”, on one of the Venetian galleys that faced victoriously, in a brave and hopeless battle, that took place not far from the Rialtine islands, against Pepin’s ships that entered the lagoon in 810 in lagoon with a fleet from neighboring Ravenna.

He then remained in the seafaring world, arming a ship the “San Nicola” and travelling as her captain, [among] the Venetian merchants, throughout the Mediterranean and especially the Eastern routes to Alexandria and Constantinople.

Everyone knew that only the expert Venetians could hope to navigate in winter in the open sea and without stars.

The “San Nicola” had a crew of companions: a former carpenter who became a skillful merchant “Rustico” Andrea of Torcello, who since 822 was also his partner, and even first mate of the San Nicola and an old Hebrew doctor who fights with both against the Franks, Elihu ben Moische.

In November 827 on orders of the new doge Giustiniano Partecipazio, contrary to the decree of the Byzantine Emperor Leo V the Armenian (813 - 820) and ratified by the same Duke Giustiniano, that forbade commerce with the Arabs, [setting out with] the fleet of 10 ships, with which they were partners, in the first days of December 827 from Venice, berthing in the port of Alexandria, Egypt, with the mission to steal to the relics of Saint Mark the Evangelist.

They successfully hid the bones of the saint within a cask filled with cuts of pork and cauliflowers, thus to avoid the Muslim customs controls, who with the cry “Kinzir - Kinzir” (pig, pig) went away spitting.

They arrived in Venice in glory, [traditionally] on 31 January 828. 

Doge Giustinian paid Buono and Rustico 100 pounds of silver with which the two heroes, according to tradtion, finished the construction of the oratory of the church of Saint Mark in Torcello.
Crew of the San Nicola:
Buono da Malamocco (Captain) Andrea da Torcello, “Rustico” (First Mate) Pietro, (Second Mate) Giacomo (sailor) Emilio (sailor) Giuseppe “Giusto” Baseio (Doge’s official) Brutus, “Brutto” (soldier) Hubert called  “Franco” du Gascoyne (soldier) Elihu ben Moische (Physician) Rebekah (apprentice physician) Nikos (sailor) Medes (sailor)

Chapter Two, Update Six

Wednesday, June 10th, 2009

Buono didn’t think; he ran. He sprinted down the dock to a weather-faded grey rowboat and jumped in.

“Hey! Thief!” the old woman cried, “That’s Andro’s boat! Andro the woodcutter!”

Buono untied the boat and pushed off from the dock. “I’m sorry! He’ll get it back, I promise!”

“Oh he will, all right! Then he’ll rip your prick off and beat you to death with it!”

The galley sculled away from the land with twenty oars. Buono had but two. He rowed just a few strokes and knew he could never catch up. Then he remembered: Paolo was going to Syracuse.

Buono slid around on the bench and banged the oars into the side, thrashing and staggering through the water towards the afternoon sun. The galley continued on northwest, out to sea. The old woman shook her fist at Buono from the shore, dancing right and left in his vision as his uneven strokes jerked the bow of the boat.

He snapped his head around to look over his shoulder. He could see his goal– a red-stained wooden pole sticking up out of the water. When he was aimed straight at it he turned around and looked at the old woman. He adjusted his stroke to keep her centered in his view. The boat straightened and picked up speed. Buono risked a glance to his left; the galley was turning south towards him just as he’d hoped it would. He smiled and rowed faster, leaning his back to pull the strokes as he’d seen others do.

Wood cracked, and the force of impact threw Buono into the bottom of the boat. He smashed his hand between the oar-handle and the gunwale. He sucked on his knuckles and looked up to see the red pole several yards away. The boat had struck a submerged rock.

Buono pushed off the rock with the blade of an oar. He rowed around the rock and past the pole. He had reached the Malamocco Channel, the one safe passage south past the island’s western tip. A line or red poles driven deep into the lagoon’s muddy bottom marked the way.

To the north, the galley crew pulled their oars from the water. Buono watched men climb her mast and let the sail go. The great square of linen fluttered down and filled with the north wind. A thin green wake foamed up from either side of the bow.

Buono paddled out into the middle of the channel. He was lucky to have found the narrowest section, where there was scarcely room between the poles for one big ship to pass. He pulled his oars into the boat, then stretched his aching back and rubbed his sore biceps.

The galley’s sail was bright and full like a square moon. The ship soared through the water, bearing down on Buono’s little grey boat. He could hear men shouting and see them pointing at him. Gingerly, Buono stood up on the rowing-bench and waved.

“Dear Lord,” Buono prayed, “Let this be the right Paolo. Else into Thy hands I commend my spirit.”

Chapter Two, Update Five

Monday, June 8th, 2009

He staggered back towards the docks. Buono wasn’t drunk any more,  but his head felt light and he needed to concentrate to stay upright. He wshed he’d bought some bread with part of Paolo’s fifty nummi.  He had fasted all the previous day to prepare for his tonsuring, and nothing but wine and some seawater had passed his lips since then. As a noviate he had taken fasting well. It brought him a sharp focus for prayer. He also got a certain dark satisfaction watching fat-faced Pio suffer through the fast-days.

Now it was Buono who suffered. He did not dare to pray, and the belly-full of wine only reminded him how hungry he was. Hunger heightened all of his senses. His growling stomach boomed in his ears and he cringed from the sun’s light. His skin itched where his damp under-tunic had dried to it. His own stench disgusted him.

For the second time that day Buono jumped into the lagoon. This time he stayed near shore. He soaked himself up to his neck until the worst of the filth floated away.

When he walked out of the sea again in his dripping clothes, an old woman dropped her basket of laundry in alarm.

“The Virgin save me! What evil are you doing, hiding down there like that?”

“No evil, I was only washing my clothes,” Buono answered.

“Most people take them off first.”

Buono laughed. “Then I’d really have given you a surprise, wouldn’t I?”

The crone drew in a sharp breath. “You mean to rape me, don’t you? Help! Someone!”

“No! No, I swear, I won’t hurt you.”

“Then what do you want?”

“Food,” Buono admitted. “I’m hungry.”

“I’ve not a crust for you. You might try the monestary.” The old woman put her basket on her shoulder and turned away.

“I need to find Paolo,” Buono muttered.

“Paolo, you say?” She stopped and looked at Buono over her shoulder. “Which Paolo?”

“Which?” Buono repeated.

“Not Old Blind Paolo?”

“No, not that one.”

“Paolo the Hunchback?”

“Not him either.”

“What does he look like?” She asked.

“Middle years, a wide face,” Buono said.  “He shaves it but not close. Hair is bald in the front, the back black and wooly.”

The old woman frowned. “Not Paolo the Buggerer? How did he act? Queer? You do seem a bit…”

“I– I don’t think it was that one. He saved me from drowning and gave me fifty nummi.”

“That could have been Paolo the Buggerer.”

Buono shook his head. “Let’s say it wasn’t, shall we?”

“Then it has to be Paolo da Siracusa.”

“He’s from Syracuse?”

“Yes,” she said, “and that’s where he’s going. Won’t be back for months.”

 

The old woman pointed east along the shore. A sleek galley had just left the quay. Dozens of oars splashed in the water as it pulled away, out to sea.

Chapter Two, Update Four

Friday, June 5th, 2009

Buono had never been a drinker. He raced to the bottom of the jug, tossing back wine as fast as he could fill his cup. The wine was the only thing in Buono’s belly and he could hear it sloshing around as he swayed from side to side on the bench.

He tried to pour out one last drink but missed the cup entirely. Buono reached out to steady the jug and lost his balance. His head crashed into the table.  He let it rest there, soaking his hair in the puddle of spilled wine. It felt strangely comfortable. He closed his eyes and let the sick-sweet, acid smell of the wine fill his nostrils. The wine worked as well as Buono had hoped: he did not dream.

“Hey, Innkeeper! Some dinner for my men, there!”

The shout roused Buono. He opened one eye and watched sideways as a group of sailors entered the inn. It had to be after noon, time for the mid-day meal.

“Shove these drunks aside and make some room!” one of the mariners bellowed. Rough hands closed on Buono’s shoulders.

“Christ, the stink!  This one’s pissed himself!” The hands released him and the sailors took another table.

Buono woke again when the innkeeper brought a clattering tray of hot stew to the sailors. “What’s the news from Genoa?” the innkeeper asked them.

 

“Carlo. Carlo-by-God’s-nutsack-King of the Franks,” the sailors’ captain said. “They say he’s coming to Rome.”

 

“Rome? Why-ever for?” the innkeeper dutifully asked.

 

“You know how he saved Pope Leo’s holy ass last year? Well, they had a big council way up in Germania last year. Oh, yes, Carlo made them all come—but they still wanted to cut out Leo’s tongue and blind him. So now the great Carlo is coming to Rome himself.”

 

“I heard a man say Carlo wants to be made Roman Emperor,” another sailor added.

 

“Hmm. I doubt the Roman Empress is going to like that,” the innkeeper ventured.

 

“Her? Ha!” the captain slurped his stew and brown gravy ran into his beard. “Those Greek assholes in Constantinople calling themselves Imperator Romanii is a joke that stopped being funny a long time ago. This is about as far West as anyone gives bugger-all about the Emperess Irene.”

 

“This is about as far East as anyone’s going to give bugger-all about Emperor Carlo,” the other sailor said.

 

The captain laughed. “Hey, innkeeper! Which one will you serve? I want to know. Emperor Carlo or Empress Irene?”

 

The innkeeper puffed his chest. “I’m Venetian, aren’t I? Bugger them both.”

 

“Venice! Bugger the world!” the captain roared. The sailors drained their cups and sent the innkeeper scurrying for more wine.

 

Buono lifted his head from the table and belched. His hair was matted with wine and his empty stomach churned. He realized the sailor was right: he had indeed pissed himself.

 

“That’s no way to answer a toast.” The captain motioned to his men. A pair of sailors with thick legs and crushing fingers lifted Buono up by his armpits.

 

“What’s your name?” the captain demanded.

 

“Buo— pardon me. It’s Buono.”

 

“Buono? You? Another joke. Not funny.” The captain smashed a meaty fist under Buono’s ribs.

 

Buono bent and wheezed. Bile surged up from his belly but he kept it in his mouth. He straightened and returned the captain’s frozen stare.

 

“Well? Didn’t I hit you hard enough, boy?”

 

“Oh, I’ll piss blood all right,” Buono replied. “But I’m a Venetian too, you Giudecca sheep-reamer.”

 

The captain laughed. “All right. All right, Buono the Venetian. I’ll let you walk out of here, if you can.”

 

Buono nodded and turned. He willed one step to follow the next until he stood outside in the afternoon sun.

Chapter Two, Update Three

Wednesday, June 3rd, 2009

Awake under the olive tree, Buono sucked air in hoarse gasps. He pushed himself up off the ground and sat against the tree trunk. Sunlight shone through his white under-tunic hanging on the branch. He hadn’t slept long: the sun had barely moved, and the under-tunic was still damp.  He put it on anyway. The discomfort would keep him from falling asleep and dreaming again.

 

Buono picked up a few small bronze coins, his change from buying the grey tunic. He clenched them in his fist and left the olive grove.

 

Malamocco was a low, swampy island in the Venetian lagoon. Its first settlers hadn’t come by choice: they fled the Huns in the last days of the old Roman Empire. Waves of invasion scoured the mainland, but no one bothered the Venetians. It wasn’t worth building a boat.

That was hundreds of years ago. The town Buono entered was still just a collection of wooden shacks by the sea. The only buildings of any substance were the monastery and the Doge’s palace. Buono didn’t have any use for either of those places. He walked into a tavern with smoke-stained walls and a packed-dirt floor. Some drunks left over from the night before lay slumped over the tables. Flies buzzed around puddles of spilled drink and vomit.

 

Buono sat at a rough-hewn bench. A groggy, fat innkeeper with a blue-white face approached him.

 

“Morning. I’ve got one good bed left, if you don’t mind sharing with a snorer.”

 

Buono shook his head. “No bed. How much wine can I get for this?” He slapped his coins down on the table.

 

“It’s a bit early, isn’t it?” the innkeeper asked.

 

“I just dreamed the Lord Christ in a rowboat made my own brother drown me.”

 

The innkeeper nodded slowly. “That’d shake any man. You know, you should go up the hill and talk to—”

 

“Just bring the… the damned wine. Please.”

 

The innkeeper shrugged. A minute later he put a clay jug and a wooden cup in front of Buono. Buono poured the wine. It smelled like wet doghair and vinegar. He drained the cup and it burned in his empty stomach. He gasped for air and poured another. Buono’s belly gurgled in protest.

 

One of the snoozing men stirred. “Hey, brother, could you—”

 

“I’m not your brother,” Buono said, tossing back half the cup.

 

“Sure, sure, I was just—”

 

“Go get buggered, would you?” Buono drank the rest and poured a third cup. It was beginning to taste better. He felt his head begin to float above his shoulders.

 

“Asshole,” the other man said. He laid his head on the table and went back to sleep.


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