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iancaldwell&dustinthomason.theruleoffour-第17章

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ention。 When Francesco's ship finally did e to port; old Genovese could hardly believe his eyes。
 Why would a nobleman trouble himself over such a trivial little bark; he wrote; this grubby runt…duckling of a boat? What could it be carrying that a man of quality would possibly give a dirty damn about?
 And when he learned that it had e around Gibraltar; carrying goods from the north; Genovese was nearly apoplectic。 He filled his little book with filthy swears; saying that Colonna was a syphilitic madman; and that only a dunce or a lunatic would believe that anything of value had ever e from a place like Paris。
 According to Richard Curry; only two other entries referred to Colonna。 In the first; Genovese recorded a conversation he overheard between Colonna and a Florentine architect who was the Roman's only regular visitor。 In it; Francesco alluded to a book he was writing; in which he chronicled the turmoil of recent days。 Genovese; still gripped with fear; made a careful note of it。
 The second entry; made three days later; was more cryptic; but even more reminiscent of the letter I found with my father。 By then; Genovese had convinced himself that Colonna was truly mad。 The Roman refused to let his men unload the ship in daylight; insisting that the freight could only be moved safely at dusk。 Many of the wooden cargo cases; the portmaster observed; were light enough to be carried by a woman or an old man; and he taxed himself to think of a spice or metal that would be shipped in this way。 Gradually Genovese began to suspect that Colonna's associates…the architect and a pair of brothers; also from Florence…were henchmen or mercenaries in some dark plot。 When a rumor seemed to confirm his fear; he feverishly wrote it down。
 It is said that Antonio and the thief are not this man's first victims; but that Colonna has had two other men killed at his whim。 I do not know who they are; and have not yet heard their names spoken; but I am sure it must be about this cargo of his。 They learned of its contents; and he feared their betrayal。 I am convinced of it now: fear is the thing that moves this man。 His eyes betray him; even if his men do not。
 According to my father; Curry made less of the second entry than of the first; which he believed might be a reference to the writing of the Hypnerotomachia。 If true; then the story the thief had discovered among Colonna's belongings; the details of which Genovese never bothered to record; might have been an early draft of the manuscript。
 But Taft; who by then was pursuing the Hypnerotomachia from his own angles; assembling huge catalogs of textual references into a concordance; so that every word of Colonna's could be traced to its origins; failed to see any possible relevance to the chicken…scratch notes the portmaster claimed to see Colonna keeping。 Such a ridiculous story; he said; could never shed light on the profound mystery of the great book。 He quickly treated the discovery the same way he'd treated every other book he'd read on the subject: as kindling for the fire。
 His frustration; I think; was rooted in more than his feelings about the diary。 He had seen the balance of power shift against him; the chemistry of his work with Richard Curry depose as my father lured Curry into new approaches and alternative possibilities。
 And so a struggle ensued; a battle of influence; in which my father and Vincent Taft conceived the hatred for each other that would last until the end of my father's life。 Taft; feeling that he had nothing to lose; vilified my father's work in an attempt to win Curry back to his side。 My father; feeling that Curry was withering under Taft's pressure; responded in kind。 In one month; the work of the previous ten was undone。 Whatever progress the three men had made together unraveled into separate ownerships; neither Taft nor my father wanting anything to do with what the other had contributed。
 Curry; through it all; clung to Genovese's diary。 It mystified him; how his friends had let petty grudges promise their focus。 He possessed; in his youth; the same virtue he would later see and admire in Paul: a mitment to truth; and a great impatience with distraction。 Of the three men; I think it was Curry who'd fallen hardest for Colonna's book; Curry who wanted most of all to solve it。 Maybe because my father and Taft were still university men; they saw something academic in the Hypnerotomachia。 They knew a scholar's life could be spent in the service of a single book; and it dulled their sense of urgency。 Only Richard Curry; the art dealer; maintained his furious pace。 He must have sensed his future even then。 His life in books was fleeting。
  
 Not one but two events brought matters to a head。 The first occurred when my father went back to Columbus to clear his head。 Three days before returning to New York he stumbled; quite literally; across a coed from Ohio State。 She and her Pi Beta Phi sisters were in the midst of a book drive; soliciting donations from local shops as part of a yearly charity event; and at the door to my grandfather's bookstore their paths crossed before either of them realized it。 In a feathery explosion of pages and paperbacks; my mother and father fell to the floor; and the needle of destiny tightened its stitch and shuttled on。
 By the time he arrived back in Manhattan; my father was irretrievably lost; thunderstruck by his encounter with the long…haired; azure…eyed sorority girl who called him Tiger and was alluding not to Princeton but to Blake。 Even before meeting her; he knew that he'd had enough of Taft。 He also knew that Richard Curry had struck out on a path of his own; fixated on the portmaster's diary。 Now the call of home nagged。 With his father ailing; and with a woman in his one true port; my father returned to Manhattan only to gather his belongings and say good…bye。 His years on the East Coast; which had begun so promisingly at Princeton with Richard Curry; were drawing to a close。
 When he arrived at their weekly meeting place; though; prepared to deliver the news; my father found himself in the wake of another bombshell。 During his absence; Taft and Curry had argued the first night; and fought physically the next。 The old football captain proved no match for bear…size Vincent Taft; who took one swing at the younger man and broke his nose。 Then; on the evening before my father returned; Curry left his apartment; eyes black and nose bandaged; to have dinner with a woman from his gallery。 When he returned to the apartment that night; documents from the auction house; along with all of his Hypnerotomachia research; were gone。 His most carefully guarded possession; the portmaster's diary; had vanished with them。
 Curry was quick with accusations; but Taft denied each one。 The police; citing a string of local burglaries; took little interest in the disappearance of a few old books。 But my father; arriving in the middle of it all; sided instantly with Curry。 Both of them told Taft that they wanted nothing more to do with him; my father then explained that he had a ticket for Columbus in the morning; and that he intended not to return。 He and Richard Curry spoke their farewells even as Taft looked silently on。
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