In Pampinea’s fourth tale (IV, 2), Friar Alberto is the name assumed by Berto della Massa after his crooked reputation forces him to flee his hometown and assume a false identity in Venice. As Friar Alberto he develops a holy reputation that earns him the love and trust of many Venetians. Young, attractive, and virile, he also has a taste for the ladies, but he ends up as one of the day’s unlucky lovers when Lisetta’s in-laws discover the affair. He thus demonstrates the day’s theme while also contributing to The Decameron’s anticlerical satire by showing how manipulative religious figures can take advantage of gullible people.