A Bolt From the Blue

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Authors: Diane A. S. Stuckart
fruitless.
    Leonardo and my father must have had the same thought, for I found them waiting for me at the garden gate. “How did you fare, my boy?” Leonardo asked at my approach.
    “I was quite diligent, Master, but I fear I bring no news. I discovered no one out of place, nor anyone who hinted by his actions that he was guilty of murder.” With an anxious look at my father, I asked, “Did the guards notice anyone trying to flee the castle grounds with undue haste?”
    “It would seem I was the sole one the guards observed behaving oddly,” he replied with no little chagrin. “So intent was I in trying to discover that poor boy’s assassin that I did not realize my own actions might be looked at with suspicion. The captain of the guard questioned me thoroughly himself.”
    My father gave a wry snort at the memory.
    “An unpleasant fellow, he was . . . foreign, and quite large, with blond mustaches,” he proclaimed, describing the man I knew as the new captain of Il Moro’s guard. “At any second, I expected the point of his sword to appear at my throat and for him to lead me away. I had to invoke Signor Leonardo’s name several times before he was content to leave me be.”
    With a sidelong look at the Master, he added, “I fear that I misled him with my reasons for my haste. Since I am but a visitor here in Milan, I hesitated to speak the word murder aloud when I did not have you there to bear witness in my behalf. Instead, I told him that one of your apprentices had been sent on a fool’s errand, and that I was trying find the boy before he wasted a day wandering about the city looking for a merchant who did not exist.”
    The Master gave a brisk nod of approval.
    “I can see where our young Dino has learned his clever ways. It is well that you kept your peace, Signor Angelo. But we should not tarry in sight of all where we might draw suspicion,” he added and pulled open the gate. “Let us return to the garden so that we may discuss what must happen next.”
    Once inside, he closed the gate behind us again and stood before it as if barring our escape. I was glad to focus on him rather than gaze toward the spot near the boulder where I knew Constantin lay. But for the moment, the Master’s attention was for my father.
    “As I said, Signor Angelo, you spoke prudently when you suggested we would do well not to fling about words such as murder . Until we know the reason that my apprentice met so cruel a fate, we must keep such speculation to ourselves.
    “And that is why we must make haste to remove Constantin’s body from the garden and carry him far from the castle grounds.”

6

    . . . for us wretched mortals, there avails not any flight . . .
    —Leonardo da Vinci, Codex Atlanticus
     
     
     
     
     
    M y gasp was audible, even as my tongue momentarily failed me. As for my father, his mild features darkened in outrage.
    “I cannot permit such a travesty, signore,” he decreed, his tone defiant. “The boy is dead, and by another man’s hand. We cannot pretend this did not happen. We must discover the villain responsible and bring him to justice.”
    “Master, surely you cannot mean to abandon Constantin’s body,” I cried before he could answer, having finally regained my voice. “He is—was—my friend and your loyal apprentice. He deserves better than to be left for a carrion eater’s feast! Why can you not go to Il Moro’s guard and tell them of this crime so that they might attempt to find his killer?”
    Leonardo raised a hand in protest, his expression as stern as my father’s. “Temper your outrage, and I shall explain further . . . but first, I must show you what I discovered tucked into Constantin’s purse as I was settling him beneath a cloth.”
    He reached into his tunic and withdrew a thin sheaf of folded papers. Smoothing their creases, he wordlessly proffered them for my father’s examination. He began to peruse them, while I shamelessly gazed over his shoulder to see

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