"Marion, my dear," Kristoph said with a sardonic note in his
voice. "We are drinking coffee under a sunshade of a balcony café
on top of the Uffizi gallery in Florence, Italy. We have an unparalleled
view of some of the most admired architecture on this planet…."
He paused and glanced around at the stupendous view. Even the top of the
Citadel in the middle of Gallifrey's capitol wasn't as impressive as this.
From here, El Duomo, the great dome of the Santa Maria del Fiore, dominated
the rooftops in its red tiled glory, defying architects down the centuries
to emulate Brunelleschi's gravity defying achievement. Closer to them,
directly across the Piazza Della Signoria was the Palazzo Vecchio with
its off-centre clock tower. All round were glorious examples of renaissance
architecture that the founders of the Capitol could not have begun to
imagine.
And besides, there was no café on top of the Gallifreyan Citadel!
"So why, my dear, with wo much to admire, are you engrossed in a
Google search on your tablet?"
Marion looked up from her activities and smiled as she belatedly looked
around at the view.
"It's just something I've been thinking about since we were in the
Piazza del Duomo, earlier. The Baptistry of Saint John…. Beautiful
building. It would be the highlight of any other plaza in the world, but
totally overshadowed by the cathedral."
"Yes, it is a very impressive building," Kristoph admitted.
"I'm running out of superlatives to describe places in this city.
Magnificent, impressive, wonderful…."
"It was something about the doors," Marion continued. "Not
the tourist entrance. I mean the huge bronze doors…"
"The doors with ten splendid panels depicting stories from the Old
Testament, designed by Lorenzo Ghiberti in 1402 and known as the Gates
of Paradise after Michelangelo declared them to be so glorious…."
Marion said nothing in response to that. Of course, he had everything
right, including the date and the correct pronunciation of Ghiberti without
looking at any leaflet or guide book.
"Yes, I know the doors you mean," he added with a gentle laugh.
"The grand entrance to the Panopticon used to resemble it in my grandfather's
time, but they went for dark wood in recent centuries. The panels were
rather different, of course."
"All the time I was looking at it, with all the tourists snapping
pictures, I kept thinking I recognised the doors, not just from a guide
book or a film or anything, but actually seeing them. But this is the
first time we've been to Florence, and we haven't been to any of the other
places listed as having copies – the Grace Cathedral in San Francisco,
the Kazan Cathedral in Saint Petersburg and the Nelson-Atkins Museum of
Art in Kansas City."
She definitely HAD looked up the information online. She wasn't that good.
"They sound interesting places in their own right, but we haven't
been to any of them," Kristoph agreed.
"We've been to San Francisco, but for their millennium fireworks.
We didn't see any cathedrals."
"You must have imagined it, then?"
"No… I figured it out," Marion said with a wry smile.
"I think the writers of the website are being a bit elitist. They
missed one. There is a copy of the Gates of Paradise in the Harris Library
and Art Gallery, in Preston, Lancashire."
Kristoph laughed softly at the absurdity of such a thing being less than
forty miles from where they had lived in Liverpool.
"I don't think we've visited there, either," he pointed out.
"No… not together. But I went there when I was at school…
which isn't so long ago as it is for you. There was a special exhibition
of Turner paintings going on there, including the Fighting Temeraire on
loan from the National Gallery. Our headmistress insisted we all went
to see it. The Harris is quite an impressive building. Lots of classical
pillars and pediments on the outside. It wouldn't be out of place in any
Italian Piazza, and inside there is a huge rotunda with galleris all around.
There is a Foucault Pendulum demonstrating the rotation of the Earth and
a copy of Lorenzo Ghiberti's Gates of Paradise."
She passed her tablet to Kristoph in confirmation of her assertion. He
nodded in agreement.
"The Gates clash somewhat with the late Victorian neo-classical style
of the building," he said. "But, indeed, you are quite right.
And I think you must be right about the elitism of the Florentine tourism
website. An industrial town in the north-west of England deserves to be
recognised as much as San Francisco, St. Petersburg or Kansas City. Very
remiss of them. And very well remembered, my dear."
"I was more interested in the pendulum at the time," Marion
admitted. "But I certainly remember the 'Gates'. And they should
be mentioned. Even Wikipedia missed it."
"Shall we forgive them long enough to do some more exploring this
afternoon?" Kristoph suggested. "I've got something in mind
that you'll like. It's something most ordinary tourists don't get to do,
because it costs quite a bit of money. I'm buying us VIP status and I'm
not telling you how much it costs because you worry about such things."
He was teasing her with mention of money. He knew she always quietly kept
a note of what these trips to remarkable but expensive tourist spots cost.
She never explained that she was wondering if they would be able to be
so free to explore the world if Kristoph had really been the English literature
professor she first took him to be. She was weighing up how much more
colourful and eventful her life was with an aristocrat whose family money
came from diamonds and gold mined on another world.
By her calculations her life was already very much enhanced by his wealth.
This VIP experience she had been promised would have to be quite special.
At first, as they waited with a small group of other important visitors
on the first floor of the Uffizi she wondered what COULD be worth the
extra money. They had already admired all that the gallery had to show
before going for coffee and sandwiches on the roof.
An assistant curator called to them in English and German since those
were the nationalities of the mixed party of well-dressed men and women.
She led them to a plain brown door with no indications of what lay behind
it and fumbled for a half minute with the key before pushing the door
open and ushering her small group inside.
And then Marion knew what the fuss was all about.
She was in the Vasari corridor.
She had read about it. She had seen it in documentaries about the Renaissance.
She recognised the portrait of the architect, Giorgio Vasari, before the
guide pointed it out.
But the corridor was not open to the general public. If you weren't an
art historian in the employ of the British Broadcasting Corporation it
really did cost a lot to be allowed to join a private tour. This was Kristoph
really being ostentatious with his wealth.
"The Vasari Corridor was commissioned by Cosimo I de Medici, the
Grand Duke of Tuscany, so that he and his family could cross from the
Palazzo Pitti to the Uffizi, then the town hall and magistrates, and from
there, onto the Palazzo Vecchio, seat of Florentine government, without
having to set foot in the streets where assassins were a constant threat."
The guide summed up the entire raison d'être of the corridor in
one long sentence as she led them on. The walls and ceiling of the corridor
were a uniform white and hung with a dizzying array of portraits dating
from the Renaissance period onwards. Some were by undoubtedly famous artists,
others by more obscure ones that needed far more knowledge of the subject
than Marion could summon up from memory.
In truth, she admitted to herself, there were rather too many portraits
and too many of them, especially the older ones from when art was more
tightly defined than it was in the twentieth century, looked pretty much
the same. She found herself far more interested in looking out of the
small windows that were placed at regular intervals to let in natural
light long before the invention of electricity. As the corridor left the
Uffizi and carried on past what would otherwise have been waterfront properties
she looked out across the Arno river. Below the corridor here was a series
of open arches where ordinary mortals without VIP passes could walk or
loiter.
A sharp turn and a slight rise in the floor level brought them onto the
Ponte Vecchio. As Marion was able to know thanks to the absorption of
harmless but useful TARDIS radiation, vecchio simply meant 'old' –
the old palace, the old bridge. The guide explained that the bridge in
Renaissance Florence had been the site of a rather smelly meat market
which the corridor had been built right across. The Medici's ruthlessly
evicted the butchers in favour of jewellers and goldsmiths. Those same
trades still went on today, but with world famous brand names on the shop
fronts.
Part way across the bridge was a wide, panoramic window. Here, the guide
stopped to allow the visitors to admire the view downriver. She explained
that Mussolini had installed these big, modern windows and had invited
Adolf Hitler to admire the view from them.
He had clearly been impressed. When every other bridge on the Arno was
bombed as part of the attempt to subdue Italy, the Fuhrer ordered that
the Ponte Vecchio should be spared.
The Guide told this story cheerfully, then noticed an odd expression on
the faces of the German tourists and swallowed nervously.
It wasn't really a thing to celebrate, Marion thought. More than bridges
suffered in the war and saving one with a pretty view hardly made Hitler
a compassionate man.
Kristoph looked down at the walkway of the bridge below. He noticed one
figure making his way purposefully through crowds of dawdling tourists.
He recognised him at once, keeping his covert watch upon them as usual.
The group moved on, the Germans and English all silently deciding not
to be concerned so long as the Italian guide didn't talk about the war
any further.
Instead, she told them that the corridor was now passing around the last
of four medieval towers that used to guard the bridge. The owner of this
one refused to let the corridor smash through it and Cosimo I, despite
being a Medici, a family known for murderous action against their enemies,
gave way this once and allowed the corridor to take a detour.
"He's just as bad as Hitler," Marion thought. "One moment
of charity in a lifetime of tyranny!"
Beside her, Kristoph smiled as he caught her thoughts.
"The Medici had couches to rest on along the way," he noted.
"Are you all right to carry on without such respite, my dear?"
"Yes, but I'm glad this tour ends in the garden. I'll be able to
sit down, then."
The next highlight of the tour was a change from the white walls and endless
portraits when it opened up into a balcony overlooking the beautiful interior
of the Santa Felicità Church. Here, the guide explained, the Medici
family could attend Mass in secrecy and safety, far above the ordinary
Florentines.
There was no Mass just now, only sacred music played through speakers
and a few devout people praying.
Then, to everyone's dismay, two men ran down the aisle grappling and fighting
each other. The fight had clearly begun outside and spilled into the church.
It looked an equal match between two men who had fought with fists and
feet before and knew how to hurt each other. Neither said anything intelligible,
fists being eloquent enough.
"My apologies," the tour guide said after half a minute of startled
attention by her visitors. "Normally this is a place to enjoy a little
peaceful contemplation, but on this occasion we should perhaps move on."
One of the Germans and an Englishman both looked disappointed, as If they
might have liked to see who won the sacrilegious fight, but their wives
pulled them away. Curiously, Kristoph also looked back once more at the
disgraceful scene before catching up.
They were almost done, now, anyway. A very short walk beyond the church
brought them across a road and then down a stairway to a security door
with a guard who opened it for the guests. Bright sunlight lay beyond
and set everyone blinking as they stepped out into the walled Boboli Gardens
behind the Pitti Palace. Most of the tourists headed towards the museum.
Marion decided she would be happy to sit quietly in the sunshine for a
while and found a bench beside a refreshing fountain.
"You wouldn't like to explore the Buontilenti grotto?" Kristoph
asked, pointing to a curious cave entrance not far from the quiet seat.
Marion looked at the jagged stalactites over the dark entrance like the
teeth of a giant, open-mouthed creature. It was an art treasure of Florence,
but a strangely repellent one.
"No, I've had enough of roofs over me for a while," she said.
"I'm enjoying the sunshine. You can go, if you like."
That was just what Kristoph had hoped. He walked casually towards the
grotto. Deep inside its dimly lit confines he nodded in acknowledgment
of his fellow Time Lord waiting there.
"The scrap in the church was unintentional," he said apologetically.
"I really didn't need witnesses when I was getting ready to get him
into a stasis box for interrogation, later."
"You got him, in the end?"
"Yes."
"Will you tell me how these would-be assassins know where to find
us every time?" Kristoph asked.
"I don't know. When I question this one, I will attempt to find out."
"If we have been betrayed by any Time Lord of my knowledge…."
Kristoph began.
"The one responsible is not of your knowledge, nor are his supporters.
They are either unborn or still children in your time, My Lord. It is
forbidden to use foreknowledge against children, even if they may grow
up to be the worst among us. It is for me to resolve this problem. And
I shall, with the help of Rassilon…."
"I will trust you. But Marion and I cannot forever wander in tourist
spots. We must go home, evenually."
"It will be resolved, soon. You have my vow - under the Seal of Prydonian,
as a Time Lord of Gallifrey."
That was a most formal vow, a geas of the most unbreakable sort. Kristoph
accepted it with confidence.
"The coffee at the Uffizi was over-priced for the tiny cups it was
served in," he said. "I think Marion and I will find out if
the Pitti can do better. Good day to you."
They bowed formally and Kristoph turned away. He wasn't at all surprised
to hear the sound of a TARDIS dematerialising somewhere in one of the
inner caves. He felt the warm Italian sunlight on his face as he rejoined
Marion and they followed the scent of espresso from the open air café
where their fellow Ccorridor visitors had already settled.
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