
Sunday, April 26th, Anno Domini 1478
A crowd of ten thousand were gathered in the Basilica di Santa Maria del Fiore, and the Agnus dei had just begun. In the front of the congregation in a railed in private area, was Lorenzo de Medici, his wife Clarice, and children Lucrezia, Piero, Maddalena and Giovanni. Arriving late, Guliano de Medici was coming in the large doors at the front of the Duomo. There was another man there, Augustinus Venucinni, yabbering on about being posted to some position or another. His family was moderately opposed to the Medici, and as a result, Lorenzo just ignored him.
The chant finished, and the priest elevated the host toward the gathered congregation and the priest, began to chant
“Per ipsum et cum ipso et in ipso est tibi Deo Patri omnipotenti in unitate Spiritus Sancti omnis honor et gloria per omnia saecula saeculorum”
With that, it began. Baroncelli, a somewhat husky man in red, with a goatee, produced a knife, and approached Guliano de Medici. He stabbed the startled Guliano in the chest, knocking him to the floor and allowing a long-haired bearded man dressed in fur-lined black to draw his own knife and lay upon the wounded Guliano eighteen more times. Fransesco de Pazzi stabbed him with such mouth-frothing zeal that one thrust skittered across the already-dead man's ribs and slid into the murderer's own calf.
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The assembled congregation erupted into surprise and alarm, weapons were drawn as men streamed into the Duomo, and allies of the Medici began fighting for their lives. Lorenzo whipped around to see what the commotion was, when Stefano de Bagone, an elderly priest, laid a hand on his shoulder. Lorenzo turned. Doing so, saved his life, as the stiletto intended to stab through his neck and into his heart instead buried itself in his upper jaw and clawed painfully down his jawbone. The elder of the house of Medici, Signore of Florence and roman Propraetor drew his own sword and kicked the priest in the chest, throwing him back to slam into the railing, and retreated. He heard movement behind him, and the sound of another blade leaving its scabbard as another priest, younger and bearing a shaven head and thin beard—Antonio Maffei—drew another sword and came at him.
Thinking quickly, Lorenzo threw off his cloak and wrapped it around his left arm, and used it as a shield. Where was Guliano? He thought to himself as he backed away, and tried to circle back around to his wife and children, but there were already men there. One had Clarice pinned down, the other had drawn a dagger across Piero's throat. It was then that someone came to his rescue. A wolfish looking young man in nice but simply constructed garments, carrying a sword and buckler engaged the priests, another, Venucinni, did the same. This freed Lorenzo to take a few steps forward and drive the narrow point of his blade into the eye-socket of the man who had just killed his son, and drop-kick the other, sending blood and teeth all over the polished floors of the cathedral. Withdrawing his sword—and the bastard's eye—he made the killing blow against the other by driving it into the now-sprawled out man's heart.
“Grieving must wait” Lorenzo told his wife, who had managed to get up, and was now weeping over the lifeless and blood-drained body of little Piero. He pried her off the little boy, and gathered up his children.
“Get to the Sacristy, Nicollo and I will cover you.” with that, he rejoined Machiavelli and Venucinni, who had just fended off simultaneous attacks on his person. As more of their attackers joined in, the two became a wall of steel. A hired thug lunged, and Lorenzo batted the blade aside with his now tattered cape and drove his blade through his stomach, leaving him writhing in agony on the floor. Machiavelli broke another man's face with his buckler, but it was still a fighting retreat toward the safety of the sacristy and its iron doors. They reached them after a few minutes, getting the children and Clarice inside, then Lorenzo—who by this time was suffering the effects of blood loss—and finally, Nicollo Machiavelli and Augustinus, who shut and barred the doors behind them.
...

At the Palazzo dela Signoria, the Gonfaloniere Cesare Petrucci was sitting down to lunch, when one of his servants came in.
“My Lord, Archibishop Salviati is here with a message from the Pope” Cesare rolled his eyes. He had been dealing with business since dawn and had not eaten, and nothing would interrupt his lunch.
“Put his body guard in the usual room, and have him wait in my antichamber.” he commanded absently, and went back to his meal.
Salviati, in full clerical regalia, was lead into this little reception room, and left to stew for half an hour or so. It dawned on him that he had no idea of the Medici were dead yet, and the full gravity of his situation finally dawned on him as the adrenaline wore off. He blanched pale, and began to sweat. When Petruci came in, he was a wreck.
“How dare you treat an archbiishop and emissary of his Holyness the Pope of Rome in this fashion!” he barked. Petrucci frowned and made a supplicating gesture
“My apologies your eminence, I was tied up with matters of state and completed my duties as quickly as I was able. To what pleasure to we owe the visit of a papal emissary?”
Salviai stammered. He could not for the life of him remember the signal for his guard captain in the other room to summon his body guard to take the Signoria hostage.
“Your eminence?” the gonfaloniere pressed, concerned. Something was wrong. With that, Salviati bolted from the room screaming toward his captain Bracciolini.
“Strike now!”.
Petrucci, who had followed him out reacted without hesitation. He drew his sword and tackled the Archbishop to the floor
“Guards!” he called out, and men guarding the doorway on the opposite side of the room intercepted Braccciolini and forced him against the wall at the points of their halberds. One of the servants ran up the stairs to the top of the tower, and started ringing the great alarm bell that would muster the city militia, and order the gates to the city closed.
When Salviati's contingent of thirty heavily armed mercenaries heard the commotion outside, they tried to get out of their waiting room, only to find that the doors could only be opened from the outside. This was a safety measure for exactly this type of scenario. It took only a few minutes before they noticed the holes in the ceiling through which their death would come. They began to panic, and tried to force the reinforced iron doors to no effect. Ten minutes later, boiling water was poured through the murder holes in the ceiling, and the screaming started.
…
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In the courtyard outside, Jacobo de Pazzi, the elder of the Pazzi Family came riding into the Plaza in full battle army at the front of an armored column calling “Liberta! Liberta!”... to find no crowds, and the fortified tower barred against entry, and the battlements manned. So manned in fact, that soon all he heard was the malevolent buzz of crossbow bolts, the shouts of guns, and the screaming deaths of this men. He turned, and retreated. However, he did not get far before pikemen, mobilized by the general alarm cornered him, killed his horse, and took him captive.
Outside the city, a mercenary army lead by Montesecco, charged with taking control of the city by surprise entered the cleared area around the city by the southern gate, only to find the gates sealed and the barbicane manned. They were greeted by the loud retort of cannon fire, and the whirring death of bows fired from long range. Not having the numbers to assault the city, let alone lay siege to it, they retreated, but not before the Condotieri Montesecco caught an arrow to the shoulder and was left behind.
…
Inside the Duomo, the seventy men who had poured inside to murder Medici supporters were being driven back. The defense, organized on the fly by the scion of one of Lorenzo's accountants had formed a loose battle line and had forced them against the south wall. Daggers lashed out, cloaks were used as shields or to blind and distract foes, rapiers brought swift death. The floor ran slick with blood, and the Pazzi's patsies had lost. One by one, they dropped their weapons and yielded. Baroncelli had already been taken prisoner, and lay gagged and hog-tied by the main door, Fransesco had escaped, as had the two priests. Ezio Auditore strode forward, hero of the day and de-facto leader of the defense, and accepted the surrender of the mercenaries.
“I accept your surrender, but do not expect mercy from the Medici” he said, as he walked up to the mercenary commander, a man in middle age and unarmored. He made the sign of the cross in the air in front of him “requiescat in pace” he remarked, before knocking the man unconscious with the hilt of his sword. With that, he walked over to the corpse of Guliano de Medici, and covered it with a cloak taken off a fallen mercenary, then turned to another noble.
“Go get the Medici, he is going to be... very busy”
….............................................................................................................................................
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Lorenzo and his wife stood over the fresh corpses of Guliano and Piero in the Palazzo de Medici as servants took bricks out of the wall in order to pass the bodies through the wall to bring them to the funeral services, as was the tradition in Florence. Clarice was wailing uncontrollably, Lorenzo had his arms around her, and while he only wept stoically, it was obvious that he wept to avoid losing control in his rage. At least obvious to someone like Machiavelli, who stood in the door way. This could not be permitted to go unpunished, but the Romans would demand that the Vengeance of the Medici would follow a certain decorum. The Pazzi had a senator in Rome, and if things were done wrong, that would lead to trouble.
“Signore?” he spoke. No answer “Lorenzo” he said a bit more forcefully. Lorenzo in turn, slowly turned his head
“What?”
“We must act Signore. Otherwise you may lose support.”
“What does it matter?! My son is dead, my brother is dead”
“Yes Signore, use your rage to protect your wife and other children. The populace is on your side, but they are fickle. If you show weakness, albeit understandable, you could lose it, and the actions of the Pazzi could come to be viewed as bold instead of treasonous” Lorenzo sighed in assent.
“Summon the Council of Eight, call an assembly at the Palazzo dela Signoria” Machiavelli by this time, had taken a key from around his neck and opened a strong box.
“That is necessary, yes.”
…
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Lorenzo stood at a dias in the courtyard of the Palazzo dela Signoria not three hours later, surrounded by six Lictors, their Fasces bearing axes. The Diumvir of Rome stood next to hm, and behind him stood the Council of Eight as well as persons who distinguished themselves in the fight for the Liberty of Florence: Machiavelli, Venucinni, Ezio Auditore, and the Gonfaloniere of Justice, Cesare Petrucci. These men were to be granted an Ovation.
Lorenzo himself wore maroon sandals and a white toga bearing two purple stripes down the sleeve and center, a bronze medallion and iron ring. In his hand, he carried he ivory curule rod with its two outstretched fingers held in the crook of his elbow. Before him stood a throng of twenty thousand people packed into the square like sardines. Some sat on rooftops, leaned precariously out windows sat precariously on ledges.
He cleared his throat, and spoke, projecting his voice loudly so that all might hear.
“Citizens of Florence and Rome, delegates from Venice, ambassadors of all assembled nations! On this day at high mass a vile crime was committed against me, my family, and all of you. The Pazzi, assisted by Archbishop Salviati of Pisa, Bernardo di Bandino Baroncelli, the Condotieri Montesecco, Stefano de Bagone, Antonio Maffei, and other vile traitors enumerated on this list” he said, presenting a piece of parchment bearing the names of fifty others who assisted in the planning and execution of the conspiracy “ attemped the most heinous of offenses. They killed my brother and son, and they attempted to supplant your elected officials and cast you all into the clutches of tyranny and oppression! We have interrogated a prisoner, and he has told us a great deal.” He made a come-hither motion with his hand, and several guard brought a bloody and broken Salviati out onto the stage.
“Who were you working for, serpent?” Lorenzo asked him. Loud enough for everyone to hear
“P-p-p Pope Sixtus!” he cried out “The Spanish Anti-Pope?” Lorenzo replied with a leading question
“Y-y-yes” the archbishop stammered out.
The crowd jeered, and threw rotten vegetables at him.
“What should I do with them! What should I do with HIM?”
“KILL THEM!” someone shouted from the back of the seething and angry throng
“What should I do with them!?” Lorenzo asked them again
“KILL THEM!” the entire mass of humanity shouted back.
With that, Lorenzo took one of the axes from a lictor's fasce and in one fluid motion, severed Salviati's head from his neck
A servant brought a bowl of water garnished with rose petals, which Lorenzo used to wash his hands and then dried them on a cloth. A second servant brought him a piece of parchment, a quill dipped in ink, and a board, which he held out and permitted Lorenzo to sign the document. Then he held up the death warrant
“This, my people, is the death warrant for the conspirators. May their deaths be painful, and our justice complete.” The crowd cheered.
…
The city sprang into action, every Pazzi not married into another family over the age of thirteen was rounded up and brought to the Palazzo dela Signoria, the other conspirators were hunted down. Several were Roman Senators, and these individuals were carted off the Rome for trial, those without such status were subjected to the tender mercies of Florence's city guard. However, it was for the instigator, Fransesco de Pazzi for whom the most severe punishment was reserved. While every other member of his family, as well as his fwllo conspirators hung from the walls of the Palazzo—Baroncelli with his bowels hanging out.
Lorenzo himself stood over Fransesco in his best finery, a cloak festooned with his coat of arms over his shoulders. He lay sprawled out on one of the crenellations of the tower, much of his skin flayed from his flesh, his nose cut off, and a rope tied around his hands, which were behind his back. Lorenzo smiled, and looked down upon him.
“You have been brave, steadfast, and dignified in your agony. I can end your suffering, all you must do is kiss the emblem on my cloak, and your suffering will end. You will feel no more”
Fransesco remained silent, to which Lorenzo replied by kicking him over the edge. When the poor man reached the bottom, the rope went taught, forcing his arms to wrench up and dislocating his shoulders. His screams could be heard well over the din of the sadistically raucous crowd below. Then he was hauled up, and his agonizing wails could once again be made out. By the time he reached the top his will was finally broken, and he kissed the Medici seal.
Lorenzo nodded, and a noose was placed around Fransesco's neck. He was hauled to his feet, and permitted to stare over the edge before a black hood was placed over his head.
“You must end it Fransesco.” Lorenzo cooed. “If you do not, I will have to torture you again, and neither of us want that.” Even though he was hooded, the piteous expression on his face was plainly evident through posture. Still the prospect of more agony was too much. Fransesco stepped off the battlements, and his neck snapped neatly when he reached the end of his rope.