Doctor Who and the Empire of Glass | Page 5

Andy Lane
with it as he rounded the corner. He was standing on the
tiny landing that lay between his own rooms on the second floor and his tenant's rooms
on the third. The rat was seven steps higher than he was, on a level with his face. Bright
afternoon sunlight streamed through the holes in the rotted window shutters, illuminating
it: fat and fearless, its black hair matted and its tail coiled like a pink worm. Zeno could
even see the avaricious, calculating gleam in its eye.
"Back to the Devil, you garbage-eating fiend," he snarled, and started up the stairs
towards it, stamping his boots on the wood. The rat watched for a moment, then calmly

turned and scuttled towards a hole in the plaster-covered laths of the wall. As Zeno
advanced past the stair, he thought he saw its whiskers twitching in the darkness. God
and the Doge alone knew how many rats infested his house. Hundreds perhaps. The
scrabbling of their claws kept him awake at night as they ran across the floor, scuttled
behind the walls and scrabbled between the joists of the ceiling. Rats were the bane of
Venice. Rats and Turks.
The door to the top floor of the house was closed, and Carlo pounded on it. "I've come for
the rent!" he shouted, but there was no sound from within. Perhaps his tenant had gone
out for a walk, or to buy some food, although Carlo hadn't heard him on the stairs.
Perhaps he was asleep. Grimani the barkeeper said that the man drank until he could
hardly stand up some nights, and the widow Carpaccio across the alley said she often saw
his lamp shining until sunrise. Carlo hadn't asked what the widow Carpaccio was doing
awake at that time: it was well known in the district of San Polo that she entertained
gentlemen in order to pay her bills. Carlo, on the other hand, was forced to depend on
those temporary visitors to Venice who wanted more freedom than that offered by a
hotel.
"The rent!" he shouted again, slamming the heel of his hand against the wood. "Do you
hear, you lazy slugabed?"
The door was suddenly pulled open. The room was dark, and smelled of sour wine, old
fruit and unwashed bedding. The scant light from the window down on the landing barely
illuminated the sullen figure of Carlo's tenant. His shirt was undone, and his breeches
were creased as if he had been sleeping in them.
"You fat oaf," he said in his haughty Florentine accent. "Unless you've come to tell me
that the Doge has finally granted me an audience, or that the lagoon is flooding, I'll have
your tongue for a garter."
Carlo stared blankly at his tenant's plump, bearded face for a few moments. He could
barely stop himself from picking the man up and throwing him bodily down the stairs.
What incredible arrogance! He'd been occupying Carlo's top floor and the roof platform
for two weeks now, and Carlo had yet to receive a pleasant word from him. Or any
money.
"You think you frighten me with your talk of the Doge?" Carlo snapped. "If you think I'm
going to waive the rent you owe me just to curry favour then your brain is addled and
your wits have run away."
"You'll get your money when I've got mine," the man said, running a hand through his
tousled hair. "The Doge will reward me well for what I can give him."
"If I could spend your promises then I'd be eating peacock tonight. If I don't get the
money owing to me by sundown, I'll throw you and your belongings into the canal!"
Carlo turned to go, but a hand descended on his shoulder, stopping him. He turned, ready
for an attack, but his tenant had twisted his mouth into what he probably hoped was an

ingratiating smile. The expression didn't look at home on his face: the fleshy lips beneath
that beard were more suited to a sneer.
"I... please, I apologize for my manner," the man said. "I find myself embarrassed by a
temporary shortage of funds, not a position that a gentleman of noble birth and breeding,
such as myself, is used to -"
"Not too embarrassed to drink your weight in wine every night," Carlo grumbled, slightly
mollified by the man's tone. "Or do you pay Grimani in stories too?"
"- but, as I was about to say, I have just enough left to pay you what I owe." He turned
away and disappeared into the gloom of his rooms. He was muttering something beneath
his breath: elaborate Florentine curses, no doubt. Carlo heard him rummage among his
possessions for a moment, then he was back, appearing suddenly in the slice of light
Continue reading on your phone by scaning this QR Code

 / 120
Tip: The current page has been bookmarked automatically. If you wish to continue reading later, just open the Dertz Homepage, and click on the 'continue reading' link at the bottom of the page.