The weather had finally begun to cool, and the walk through the city was a pleasant one. Santรกngel had known plenty of misery, but summer in
the stench of Madrid was its own unique punishment. He turned his feet south to the rougher part of town. He could go far enough to manage his errand, but if he pushed much beyond the city walls, he knew he would feel the tether that bound him to De Paredes pulling him back. Santรกngel could ignore it, but not for long, not if he didnโt wish to endure the consequences.
He didnโt. Because he was a coward. He had always feared death more than he resented this unrelenting life.
His first lesson with the scullion had shown him two things: she had an agile mind and she was doing her best to hide it. Never a bad strategy for a servant, though heโd long since stopped bothering with such deception.
Neither Vรญctor nor Antonio Pรฉrez would be eager for a champion with thoughts of her own. She was stubborn, combative, secretive. But she wanted to learn and she was capable of it. Heโd gleaned little else.
She might be a conversa or a morisca. Most of the magic that survived in Spain came from Morvedre or Zaragoza or Yepes. But who knew how long any of it would last, lost to exile and the Inquisition, magic bleeding away with the bodies of Jews and Muslims, their poetry silenced, their knowledge buried in the stones of synagogues made into churches, the arches of Mudรฉjar palaces. The tolerance for mysterious texts like theย Picatrixย would be stamped out by the Pope, and King Philip would follow.
He could already feel the effects of his brief time with her. His stride was surer, his lungs breathed more deeply. There was pleasure in shared magic, and danger too. It pricked the mind and the spirit. It filled the room with possibility.
Santรกngel cut down one of the crooked alleys, keeping Avapiรฉs to his left, and hurried on to Garavitoโs workshop and kennels. This was the part of the
city known as El Rastro, crowded with tanneries and coal burners and coopers, its slumping buildings snug against each other, its streets choked with mud and shit and blood from the slaughterhouse. No one saw him as he moved through the traffic of carts and wagons, men loaded down with cargo and goods. His gift for stealth served Vรญctor well, and so it had come easily to Santรกngel, but he wondered sometimes if, as heโd lost interest in
the world, the world had taken less notice of him.
Garavito lived on the lower floor of a building with sweating plaster
walls built around a courtyard where his landlord let him keep his cages. He came from a family of trappers, and though heโd tried his hand at becoming a furrier, he didnโt have a talent for it. He sold lesser pelts to peasants and
merchants for their bedding, but the martens and genet cats screeching and crying from the cramped wooden boxes in the courtyard would be sold to men with a greater gift for turning living things into fashionable fur-lined coats, felted hats, and scented gloves.
Santรกngel could have entered the house easily enough, but he knocked instead. A young man answered the door, hiding his face from the passersby on the street.
โHello, Manuel,โ he said. โIs your father home?โ
The boy nodded and stepped aside, turning away from Santรกngel. When Manuel had been only eight years old heโd accidentally released a fox in his fatherโs care. Garavito had seized the hammer he used to nail and stretch skins, and smashed in the left side of Manuelโs head. The boy should have died, but heโd kept on living, his eye forever half-shut, the skin of his forehead healing over the crater in his skull. His mother was long gone, but whether sheโd run away in the night or been murdered by Garavito depended on where you got your gossip.
Santรกngel set a stack of silver reales on the battered table. โGo from here.
Find your uncles. Or set out on your own.โ
The boy kept his gaze on Santรกngel as if fearing a trick. โAre you going to kill him?โ
Santรกngel didnโt answer, only waited. There was a time when some sense of justice or righteousness would have made him want to kill a brute like Garavito, but now it was just a task to be done with.
Manuel snatched the coins from the table, holding them close to his chest.
โGo,โ Santรกngel repeated.
As he made his way through the courtyard, he caught the glint of panicked eyes and scrabbling claws through the holes in the cages. He hated this place and he was only glad that after today he wouldnโt have to visit it again.
Garavito was seated on a bench, hunched over the body of a bloodied squirrel, his knife making messy work of separating the animalโs limp body from its skin.
โGaravito,โ Santรกngel said softly.
The big man startled and lurched to his feet, knocking the bench backward. He had a thick head of black hair and a nose that had been broken so many times it lay nearly flat against his face.
โShit,โ he blurted, registering Santรกngel. He stood with the mangled squirrel in one hand, his knife in the other, and bowed awkwardly. โSeรฑor,โ he said. โI wasnโt expecting you.โ
Again, Santรกngel held his tongue, letting silence fill the courtyard, the only sounds the mewls and hissing from the cages.
โI โฆ I have no new information,โ Garavito said. โYou can be sure I will send word when I do.โ
Garavitoโs brothers hunted and trapped far afield and spoke to other
hunters and trappers. In the past, those contacts had provided Vรญctor with vital information and word of unusual happenings in the countryside.
Garavito shifted uneasily as the quiet stretched, then he tossed the squirrelโs body onto the overturned bench. He wiped the blade of his knife on his breeches. His hands were still stained red.
โWell?โ he demanded. โWhat do you want? I have work to do.โ โSince you like to talk, I thought Iโd let you talk.โ
Now Garavitoโs eyes skittered away. โDon Vรญctor knows I can be trusted.โ
โYou were late bringing us word of the olive farmer.โ
โI explained all that. There were rumors, nothing more.โ
โRumors of a milagrero. A milagrero who now belongs to Beatriz Hortolano.โ
Garavito spat. โIf Don Vรญctor has a problem withโโ
โIt would be wise to stop saying his name. Youโve spoken it too freely already. He forgave the loss of Donadei, but he cannot tolerate being the subject of gossip. Youโve been talking about my inquiries into the olive farmer and our acquaintance in Toledo. You brought our employerโs name
into the conversation. So, no, he doesnโt trust you, and thatโs a very bad thing.โ
Garavito lunged. Santรกngel knew he would. Heโd seen the way the big manโs stance shifted, the grip he adjusted on his knife. He stepped aside and let Garavito stumble past.
Garavito whirled and struck out again. Santรกngel could have dodged the blow, but his morning lesson with the scullion must have ruffled his mood. He let the strike land.
The knife lodged in Santรกngelโs gut, its dirty handle jutting from his torso like a mysterious growth.
A surprised laugh burbled from Garavitoโs throat, as if he couldnโt quite
believe what heโd accomplished. โDon Vรญctorโs scorpion doesnโt have much of a sting!โ
He sounded so proud, so triumphant. Santรกngel almost felt guilty. Even so, he took some satisfaction in watching that triumph turn to bafflement when he yanked the knife from beneath his sternum.
He offered the hilt back to Garavito courteously. โWould you like to try again?โ
Garavito stared at the knife in Santรกngelโs hand with the same suspicion his son had shown the stack of coins. Then he grabbed the hilt and stabbed again and again and again, driving Santรกngel back against the wall.
Santรกngel let himself be shoved about. He knew he was being silly, theatrical. He should have crept into Garavitoโs house and slit his throat.
Now he was bleeding and heโd probably have to suffer through some kind of fever tonight. Maybe he thought Garavito, who called his sonย half-moonย and liked to skin the creatures in his keeping while they were still alive to feel it, didnโt deserve a quick death. Maybe he was bored. His mind had moved ahead to the walk home and what he would choose for tomorrowโs lesson.
Again he pulled the knife from his gut.
โDevil,โ Garavito said, backing away. He crossed himself, eyes locked on the blood seeping through Santรกngelโs doublet. โGod help me. Jesus save
me.โ
โIt does hurt,โ Santรกngel said. โIf that makes you feel any better.โ
It was time to bring this scene to an end. He turned the knife on Garavito: quick jabs to the stomachโan echo of the attack heโd just endured, another
bit of theaterโone strike after another until his opponent crumpled, then a slash behind each knee to make sure he couldnโt get up.
Santรกngel opened the cages, releasing coney, genet cats, weasels, ermines that had not yet sloughed off their brown coats for winter white, a single fox. Some fled. Others rose on back legs, scenting the blood on the air, their hunger making them bold.
He watched them creep tentatively toward where Garavito lay moaning, trying to cover the enticement of his wound. Maybe his neighbors would hear the screaming and come help him. Maybe theyโd remember the shove heโd given them in the street or the clout across the face and theyโd close their windows against the sound.
As Santรกngel passed through the cramped apartment, he saw Manuel hadnโt left. He was lurking by the window, watching his father die.
โI needed to know,โ Manuel said. โPlease donโt kill me.โ
โMake sure youโre gone before the authorities arrive,โ Santรกngel replied, and slipped back onto the street. Vรญctor would tell him to murder the boy too, but Vรญctor wasnโt here.
It took him less than half an hour to traverse the city, his cloak drawn tight over his ruined clothing, the distraction of the crowded streets
welcome as he made his way past the houses built over the old garrison walls. He hadnโt lied to Garavito. His injuries were painful, but pain held no real interest for him. He knew it would stop. He knew death wasnโt coming.
Pain without fear was easy to bear. He would wash his hands and change his clothes, and forget Garavitoโs name the way heโd forgotten so many others.
Too soon he saw the Casa de los Estudios, the women calling to one another from the grocersโ stalls in the Plaza del Arrabal, the acrobats performing in the square that fronted the Alcรกzar, and there, Vรญctorโs new palaceโa great slab of achievement. This was the third De Paredes palace Santรกngel had lived in. There had been rented rooms, then humble houses, then grand ones as the familyโs wealth grew. This palace had been built in
the Italianate style, all stone instead of brick, a testimony to the De Paredes fortune. It was the newest of his many properties, built when rumors began that Philip would move his court to Madrid.
Vรญctorโs massive bodyguard was outside his library. El Peรฑaco, he was called, a wrestler and fighter from somewhere near Sigรผenza. Vรญctor always kept him near when Santรกngel wasnโt in his presence.
โGaravito?โ Vรญctor asked when he glimpsed Santรกngel in the doorway. โWill gossip no longer.โ
โAnd the scullion? Is she hopeless?โ โVery much so.โ
โWhat a tragedy for you.โ Vรญctor did not look up from his writing. Santรกngel had forgotten emotion long ago. He had no humors to balance,
no bile, no spleen, no desire. And yet as he watched Vรญctor scratch away at his correspondence, he felt the old rage stir. Once he had craved revenge almost as much as freedom. It had driven him through the sameness of his days and given him purpose. But in time, even his fury had waned,
extinguished by the truth of his curse, by the relentless march of years. How strange to discover it within him still, an underground spring that might feed a great river.