"No, I will have them with me," Monsignor Roman Scarlotti almost bleated as he held the parcels closer to his chest. And then, realizing that the driver was only trying to be helpful, he added in a calmer voice, "Thank you, my son, but these I must keep close to me."
The driver shrugged and opened the back door of the all-terrain vehicle that had seen its best days. The monsignor hesitated to enter the backseat of vehicle, a maneuver that was made difficult by the bundles he carried in his arm but would not let anyone else hold.
Waiting for the monsignor to struggle into the vehicle, I looked up the cliff face above the small Swiss town of Flüelen, nestled on the shore of Lake Lucerne between the water and a towering cliff that rose to the alps behind. The driver had said that our destination, the Ettal Monastery, was up at the top of the cliff somewhere and had waved his hand in that direction. He said it could be seen from here, but I couldn't discern the monastery's stone walls from the cliff rocks. I suspect that this had been the plan when the monastery was first built in the sixteenth century—that many a plundering enemy had just not seen it and had passed it by. I was sure that you had to know what you were looking for to pick the form of the monastery out from here.
"Here, let me hold them while you get in, Monsignor, and I will hand them to you." I tried to sound soothing. He'd been holding onto my forearm tight with his free hand. "I'll be right here with them," I added.
Looking relieved, he said, "Thank you, Father John," but he still gave the parcels a nervous look after he'd handed them to me, gathered his cassock about him, and folded himself in the seat. I was probably the only one Scarlotti would trust in this way, and I could sympathize with that. He was the assistant art curator of the Vatican, and I was his assistant. The parcels he clutched were four art works that either were priceless or forgeries. He suspected forgeries, but that wasn't his call, and so the two works claimed to be by Hieronymus Bosch and those of Pieter Bruegel and Fra Angelico had to be given full respect and protection until they were shown not to be worth it.
Scarlotti was usually a man who was fully in command of himself and of those around him. He was tall, slim, handsome, and aristocratic, having descended from the counts of Lombardy. Age—he was in his early fifties—had only added to his dignity. At the same time he was a secretive, remote man, considered to be cold as ice. I worked closely and amicably enough with him, though, to know that he was holding himself in reserve—that he was a man of deep emotion and passion who, because of his obligations, had to continually hold himself in check. I was quite sure that I had been chosen as his assistant because he wanted me near him—that he wanted to touch me; that, in fact, he wanted to fuck me.
I knew, intimately, what he had to hold himself in check from, because I could see his need and desires in his eyes. It was the same look that other priests at the Vatican gave me and that some of them had built on. If they were important enough and could advance me, I opened my legs to them. Scarlotti was an important figure in the Vatican. Any time he wanted, I would let him fuck me.
The paintings, as well wrapped as they were, were not unmanageably large, and, when Scarlotti held the bottom edges of them on his lap, they extended outward almost to his knees but didn't rise as far as his chin. As the vehicle lurched off for what was going to be an unseemingly steep incline drive up the road to the top of the cliff, one of Scarlotti's arms embraced the paintings but his other hand rested again on my forearm. He had been wearing gloves, but he had stripped the glove of that hand off and had pushed the sleeve of my cassock up so that he was laying flesh on flesh. He'd never had the courage to do that before, although I knew that he wanted that and more, but he was so concerned with the situation that I don't think he was aware of the connection. But maybe he was and was exhibiting that strength of reserve he was notable for.
The connection was electric, though. I could feel him trembling, and I felt the sensuality of the long, slim fingers kneading the flesh of my forearm. The driver was in the front seat of the vehicle, with a glass window separating the passenger compartment from him. He wouldn't know if I unbuttoned my cassock at the crotch and moved Scarlotti's hand to where I knew he longed to put it. But I wouldn't do that. Scarlotti would have to make the first move. It wasn't a case where I would be unwilling or had not done it before. I would not have made my way to the Vatican and within the walls of the Vatican as young as I was, not yet twenty-five, if I had not lain under priests who could advance my standing. And I knew from the moment that Scarlotti had asked for me to be made his assistant that he wanted more than a secretary. But he had made no move—at least not yet.
"Thank you for offering to help me, Father John," he murmured. "You are such a help to me."
"You know I would do anything you wished of me," I answered. "Anything." I could feel him trembling through his hand on my forearm, but yet he didn't make the move I was sure he wanted to make.
It was quite possible, I thought, that he had arranged for me to come with him to Switzerland to declare and act on his desires. Perhaps he was intimidated by being in the Vatican and always in contention for advancement and always under scrutiny. I could have told him that fucking young priests wouldn't be counted against him in the Vatican—oh how I could speak to that—but perhaps being an Italian from an old noble family had been holding him in check in Italy. Perhaps here in Switzerland, away from the center of the church . . .
I wasn't especially anxious to get his cock inside me—other than after that had happened, I will have gained control over him—but I was getting anxious to have it done and his name added to my list of supporters in the Vatican.
* * * *
The Ettal Monastery was bleak and foreboding, not a place where I would normally have thought that one of the world's leading experts in medieval church art would reside. But Brother Otto Kepler wasn't the usual sort of art expert. He wasn't even the usual sort of monk.