"Fine," said Pietro shortly, aware that his best doublet was his best no longer. The teen looked familiar. The previous night had been chaotic — with all his father's luggage to bestow and his brother running about pointing out the windows, Pietro hadn't caught half the names thrown at him. Embarrassment mounting, he tried to remember…
"Montecchio," supplied the comely youth. "Mariotto Montecchio."
"Yes. You had the baby hawk."
Montecchio's smile was dazzling. "I'm training it so I can hunt with the Capitano. Maybe you can join us next time?"
Giving up on the doublet, Pietro nodded eagerly. "I'd like that." He'd missed the revelry last night, consigned to unpacking. The Alaghieri
Not that Pietro really enjoyed hunting. Like soldiering, it was more that he wished he were the kind of man who did. It seemed to be something he should love.
Montecchio looked him up and down, checking the length of his arms. "We'll get you a sparrow hawk. It'll match the feather in your — " Mariotto's brows knit together as he glanced at Pietro's head. "Where's your hat?"
Pietro ran a hand up and discovered his head was bare. Looking about, he spied his fine plumed hat a few feet away, wilted and trampled.
Montecchio leapt forward to snatch it out from under boots and sandals. "I am so very sorry," he said gravely, and he did look genuinely pained. Mariotto took attire seriously.
Pietro did his best to smile as he took the limp cloth with its broken feather out of Montecchio's hands. "It doesn't matter. It wasn't a very nice cap."
It had been a very nice cap. A trifle, surely, but Pietro was allowed few trifles. His father had an austere code that applied to all things, including dress. Pietro had barely managed to win the right to wear the doublet and hose, which his father viewed as extravagant and showy. The hat had been a gift from the great Pisan lord Uguccione della Faggiuola, who knew all about young men and their vanity. Pietro had convinced his father that refusing the gift would have been an insult. "I only wear the hat out of respect for your patron, Father," he'd said. Somehow the old cynic had bought it.
Now that gift was crushed and covered with dirt.
"I'll replace it," declared Mariotto.
"You don't — "
Mariotto insisted. "It's your first day here! No, we're going to the best haberdasher in the city. Follow me!"
Not to agree would have been churlish.
The late morning sun warmed Pietro's back as he ducked and weaved through the myriad enticements of the Piazza delle Erbe, trying to keep up. (
It was so loud! Anvils chimed in their workshops. Monkeys hopped around in cages, hawks screamed, hounds barked, all underscored by guitars, lutes, flutes, viols, rebecs, tambourines, and the voices of the troubadors. It was Nimrod's Tower come to life, cacophonous pandemonium. A seller of headstones was immediately replaced by a purveyor of sweet pasties who held his samples in the air, enticingly aromatic. Under the law, a vendor couldn't physically accost a traveler, but this only increased the assault on the other senses, and the huge signs that hung over the stalls were worse than grabbing hands. Each proclaimed the trade of the stall owner, even as the owner shouted insults at the vendor across the way.
Above the signs, in row after row of low balconies, men capered and shouted to friends below, watching the course of various arguments and fistfights, making loud bets as to the outcome.
Mariotto easily navigated the shops and stalls, using shortcuts through alleys and leaping over barrels that blocked their path. Pietro followed him down a sidestreet perfumed with mulled wines and spiced meats. Trying to keep up, Pietro continued to make the proper protestations. "Actually, I was on an errand for my father."
Mariotto grinned. "Something devilish?"
Pietro laughed because he was expected to. "I have to order him some new sandals."