“I think,” Filippo interposed, “that our Excellency is in some error. This gentleman is Lazzaro Biancomonte, a poet of whom Italy will one day be proud, despite the fact that for a time he acted as the Lord Giovanni Sforza’s Fool.”
Ramiro looked at his interlocutor, as the mastiff may look at the lap dog. He grunted, and blew out his cheeks.
“There is yet another part he played,” said he, “as I have good cause to remember—for he is the only man that can boast of having unhorsed Ramiro del’ Orca. He was for a brief season the Lord Giovanni Sforza himself.”
“How?” asked the profoundly amazed Filippo, whilst all present pressed closer to miss nothing of the disclosure that seemed to impend. Myself, I groaned. There was naught that I could say to stem the tide of revelation that was coming.
“Do you then keep this paladin here arrayed like a clerk?” quoth Ramiro in his sardonic way. “And can it be that the secret of his feat of arms has been guarded so well that you are still in ignorance of it?”
Filippo’s wits worked swiftly, and swiftly they pieced together the hints that Ramiro had let fall.
“You will tell us,” said he, “that the fight in the streets of Pesaro, in which your Excellency’s party suffered defeat, was led by Biancomonte in the armour of Giovanni Sforza?”
Ramiro looked at him with that displeasure with which the jester visits the man who by anticipation robs his story of its points.
“It was known to you?” growled he.
“Not so. I have but learnt it from you. But it nowise astonishes me.”