Medieval 6: Giovanni 7 Sabotage, part 3 of 3

In Bologna, one whole side of the big tent collapsed. The mast-like pole on that side remained sound and they had rope to replace the main rope that broke. They picked up plenty of new rope in Ferrara after the tightrope incident, but they had to cancel the performance that evening.

“Another cut rope,” Oberon confirmed.

“Anyone seen walking around with a knife in their hand?” Giovanni asked.

“Vader,” Sibelius suggested.

“He’s the knife thrower,” Leonora said with a roll of her eyes. “He always has knives on him.”

“I got my sheers for cutting the cloth,” Needles admitted.

“Gabriella uses plenty of knives around the cooking fires,” Baklovani said.

Giovanni held up his hands until they quieted. “And Rugello carries the sword that he swallows. All that is understood. What I mean is, has anyone been seen carrying knives or sharp instruments that doesn’t normally use them?”

Everyone quieted. They had to think. After a moment, several heads began to shake before Baklovani had a thought. “Well…” Baklovani hesitated and looked at Constantine.

Constantine nodded before he talked. “Baklovani and I were talking with Rostanzio the magician about the need to help out when we put up and take down the tents.”

“You know, he always says he has to protect his digits,” Baklovani interrupted.

Constantine nodded. “He says if he hurts his fingers he won’t be able to properly do his sleight of hand tricks.”

“Not that his tricks are that good or all that hard to figure out.” Baklovani chuckled.

“Get on with it,” Leonora and Giovanni said more or less at the same time.

“Well…” Baklovani hedged again, but Constantine got the message.

“We were out behind the tent of wonders and we saw Umberto walking with Rugello’s sword.”

“You know, the one he won’t let anyone touch,” Baklovani had to add his interruption.

“Rostanzio said as much. We all teased Umberto that he was going to be in big trouble but he said Rugello asked him to fetch it and stomped off. That dd not sound right then. It sounds less right now that I have said it out loud.”

“Come on,” Giovanni said, and the whole group went to find Rostanzio before it got dark. He confirmed the story and followed them to find Rugello. “So, you asked Umberto to fetch your sword?” he asked Rugello but interrupted himself. “When was that?” He asked Constantine.

“About two-thirty. We just finished the show of wonders.”

“And the tent collapsed around three just as the show in the circus tent began,” Leonora said.

“What is this all about?” Rugello asked.

“Never mind. Did you ask Umberto to fetch your sword around two thirty?”

“No,” Rugello answered honestly. “No one should be touching my sword.” He huffed so everyone understood, not to say they did not already understand. He huffed again to underline his sentiment, then he joined the crowd, and Piccolo who was there came too. He asked Constantine what was going on and Constantine carefully explained what he understood as they fetched Madam Figiori from her tent on the midway.

Madam Figiori said, “Umberto is by the food at a table waiting for supper to be called.” She said that before anyone asked her anything. The whole group trooped down to the food area and cornered Umberto. Umberto took one look at the crowd and began to cry.

“It was Corriden,” he said. “After the poison of Berlio failed, he offered me so much money to disrupt the circus. He never expected you to continue and be successful. He wants you to fail and plans to add some of the acts to his own circus lineup. he promised me a good place and more money.” He paused to wipe his tears and his runny nose. “I don’t know what I was thinking. When I almost killed my friend Constantine, I sent word to Corriden that I was not going to help him anymore. But he sent Damien all the way to Bologna to threaten me. He said he would expose me and I would no longer have a place in any circus. I didn’t know what to do.”

“Is Damien still around here?” Baklovani asked. He worried, thinking since Umberto got exposed, Damien himself might sneak onto the circus grounds and sabotage something, but Umberto shook his head.

“I am sure he is not. He came up with the idea to collapse the big tent but I am sure he meant during a performance and I am sure he hoped the mast would break. I cut the line that would bring down part of the tent without putting a strain on the mast. I am sorry. I am so sorry.”

“Me too,” Giovanni said. “Get your things and leave. I hope Corriden has a place for you in his circus because you are no longer welcome here.” Giovanni asked Piccolo and Rugello to follow Umberto. “And make sure he does not hurt anyone else of break anything on his way out of town.”

Leonora looked at Giovanni and actually complained. “That was too easy. We did not have to threaten him or anything.”

“I know,” Giovanni agreed, and he smiled at Leonora’s use of the word “We”. “I expected a good mystery, a slate of suspects and following the clues.” Leonora nodded.

“And denial,” Oberon said. “And catching the saboteur with the knife in his hand. And a struggle for possession of the knife. And coming in at the last minute to save the day.”

“But that is not the way things usually go,” Rostanzio said, honestly enough.

“No, but neither is a confession without first going through some period of denial,” Giovanni said. “All it takes, though, is a witness of either the act or something out of place and that points the finger.”

“Yes, and…” Oberon started again but paused when Madam Figiori stood and headed toward the cooking fire. “Where are you going in the middle of my pontificating?”

“Supper is ready,” she answered. “I am hungry and tired in that order.”

Portence came out from behind the table where they sold honey buns and cakes to the visitors, and she rang the big bell for supper. Nicholi, Gregori, and Rosa came running, though Madam Figiori got first in line.

************************

MONDAY

The Don Giovanni Circus finds some success, but life becomes difficult between Giovanni and Leonora. Until Monday, Happy Reading

*

Medieval 6: Giovanni 3 Down and Out, part 2 of 2

In the morning, Giovanni sat on the steps to his house and stared out at the very big barn, the stables, the workhouse, the tents, the wagons, and the animals that covered the property. He did not know if he was ready to run a circus. It was a big undertaking for an eighteen-year-old. He honestly did not know what to do. He feared he might lose the circus to Corriden if the people decided not to take directions from a boy, as he thought of himself. Fortunately, the feeling did not last long as he heard from Lady Alice of Avalon. She spoke directly into his mind from wherever she was, in the universe, out of the universe, in the past, or in the future. She said, “Just do your best. That is all we can ever do.”

Deep inside his heart, Giovanni reached out to the many lives he lived in the past and the future. Perhaps they reached out to him in his time of grieving and need. He remembered becoming the Nameless god to confront the Flesh Eaters in the north. It was an interesting experience, to be a different person for a while, though in a sense it was still him. He lived Nameless’ life a couple of thousand years ago. He died and moved on from him into the next life, and the next life, and the one after that. It was also interesting that Giovanni was able to reach back in time and borrow that life for his need. Up until that point he had no idea he could do that—trade lives with other lives he once lived. He thought maybe Nameless kind of forced himself on the ten-year-old boy. Nameless was a god. He could do that. But just as well, Giovanni thought. He imagined it would not have been safe to face the Flesh Eaters as anything less than a god. Right now, though, he needed someone who knew something about running a circus.

Giovanni reached down to his feet and pulled up a handful of grass that grew there. He easily held the clump of grass in his hand, like it was all grass and all one, but when he opened his hand, the individual strands of grass blew away on the wind, all going in their own direction, all headed back to the ground from whence they came.

Giovanni remembered most of the lifetimes nearest his own time, with only a few gaps in that memory. He remembered Greta, the wise woman of Dacia in the time of Marcus Aurelius. Festuscato Cassius Agitus, who called himself the last senator of Rome, and Gerraint, King of Cornwall, who hung out with King Arthur, Percival, and the rest of the round table. Margueritte, Margravine of the Saxon March actually grew up on the border of Brittany in the time of Charles Martel, and she got followed by Genevieve who became the Margravine of Provence under Charlemagne.

He remembered Genevieve had to deal with space alien Apes, the sworn enemies of the Flesh Eaters. The Apes were a kind and gentle people, and vegetarian. It was in his next life, Elgar the Saxon, where he first had to deal with Flesh Eaters. He could not let them live. They tried to start a colony and would have multiplied at an alarming rate. Anyway, after that, he lived as Kirstie before Yasmina, two girls who only had minor inconveniences with the Apes and Flesh Eaters. And now, Giovanni.

He wondered why he thought through all that. None of them knew anything about running a circus.

Giovanni turned his thoughts to the future… Well, some future and some past. There were six lifetimes in particular that always seemed to be available no matter what life he was living. Lady Alice of Avalon showed up in his lives on a regular basis, and the Captain, her male counterpart showed up often enough. Alice and the Captain were what they called genetic reflections, which was like identical twins of the opposite sex if that made any sense.

He remembered the Princess from the past and the Storyteller from the future. They went together for some reason, kind of like partners in time. Then there were their two genetic reflections. Diogenes of Macedonia went with the Princess. Doctor Mishka who fought in both world wars in the twentieth century went with the Storyteller who was lucky not to have to fight in any war.

Giovanni paused. He thought the good doctor could have come. He could have traded places with her through time and she could have cured his father. He started to get angry again until he heard from Mishka, speaking down through time and into his head.

“Not authorized to do that,” Mishka said. “I am sorry about your father. We all go through that. But anyway, there is no magical-medical cure for being stabbed to death.”

Oh yeah, Giovanni thought rather sheepishly. He wondered if he had a genetic reflection somewhere in time. He imagined she must be in the future somewhere. No idea where or when. Anyway, these lifetimes did not know any more about the circus than the others, though Alice keeping Avalon running was a bit like a circus. She had to deal with all those fairies, elves, goblins, dwarfs, and sprites of the air, water, and fire, and what a confusing mess that could be. He let out a small laugh when Corriden, with Porto and Damien of course, came to face him. He saw some of the others hovering around in the background, in particular Berlio the magician and his wife Priscilla.

“We took a vote,” Corriden began. “We decided we are not going to take orders from a boy. I’m sorry about your father, but we have to think about our future.”

“What do you intend?” Giovanni asked. For some reason, this did not come as a surprise.

Corriden paused to glance back at his supporters. “I will be running the circus. If you are good, you can continue as ringmaster, but all the decisions and money will be mine to control.”

“You understand the big tent, the circus tent, in fact, all of the tents, the booths for the midway, the wagons, the things in the workshop and barn and all of the animals belong to me. I am the Don Giovanni now and as the only son of my father, I own it all. You understand?”

Corriden nodded but his words suggested otherwise. “They all belong to the circus.”

“Wrong.” Giovanni shouted and stood on the step so he looked down on Corriden, Damien, and Porto. “They are my property and all of it stays here with me. And for that matter, this whole swamp, the buildings, the fishing village, and all is my property, and right now you are trespassing.”

Corriden nearly growled. “This was not unanticipated.”

“Nor was this,” Giovanni said. “I’ll tell you what. You can take the two wagons Father said would have to be replaced for the new season, and I’ll be generous. You can have two oxen to haul them. Then I want you and every one that is going with you to pack your personal items and be off my property in two hours.”

“That is not right,” Corriden complained. “That is not nearly enough time.” He pulled a knife.

Giovanni called out and became dressed in the armor of the Kairos, complete with a sword at his back. He pulled the sword, not that he knew exactly how to use it, but pointing it at Corriden’s throat was all he needed to do to make the point. “I am not asking,” he said, doing his best to control the anger in his voice and the tears in his eyes. “Two hours.”

Corriden did growl, but he put his knife away. He turned to walk off and Giovanni yelled. “And if you take any of my things, I will come with the watch and have you arrested as a thief and thrown in jail.”

Corriden waved that he heard before he began to shout. “Get your things, just personal items. We are going to the farm. Porto and Damien. Get two oxen for these wagons and get them ready to go.”

It took six hours for everyone to leave but by then, Giovanni had gotten four men from the fishing village to watch and make sure the deserters did not take anything more than their personal items. Many appeared to be having second thoughts, but the thrust of the crowd was to follow Corriden, so they left. The cook was the last to leave, around sundown. She cooked for the circus for ten years, and cried a little, though some of those tears may have been for what Giovanni now called the chuck wagon. She had to leave her wagon and portable oven behind, and all the food with it.

************************

*