The English Tutor - Raul Korso Leo Domenico -... -
Korso (the elder) swallowed. “If you had not come, we would have remained ignorant.”
At that, the tutor turned. And for the first time, the silver in his eyes seemed to burn.
He bowed, and as he did, the wind slammed the door shut behind him. For the first week, the grandsons—brutish, beautiful boys of seventeen and nineteen—resisted. They threw ink at him. They hid his Horace. They spoke only in rapid, vulgar dialect they were certain no foreigner could follow. The English Tutor - Raul Korso Leo Domenico -...
Raul, Korso, Leo, Domenico…
—Raul Korso Leo Domenico.
“Your gutter tongue is merely Latin’s grave-soil,” he said. “Let us dig for the bones.”
The first knock came not at dawn, but at the third hour of night, during a thunderstorm that turned the gravel of the villa’s driveway into a river of shattered moonlight. Korso (the elder) swallowed
He slung the satchel over his shoulder. “They are all dead. But their lessons are not. I carry their names so I do not forget what a teacher truly is: a smuggler of fire.”