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Chapter no 44

The Familiar

Luzia woke in the larder. It was cold and dark and the air smelled wrong, like iron and urine and damp. I was dreaming, she thought. I dressed in

velvet and met an angel. I made miracles on my tongue.

The world returned in an ugly wave of memory. Donadeiโ€™s warship, the slabs of jade embedded in his cross becoming scarabs, Santรกngelโ€™s arms tight around her as they raced through the woods, his blood on her hands. She tried to sit up.

โ€œEasy,โ€ said a familiar voice. โ€œYou took a bad blow to the head.โ€

Luzia touched her fingers to her temple. Someone had struck her. She remembered now, soldiers riding her down in the woods, pain splintering through her skull.

The cell was narrow, the ceiling low. The only light came from a candle set on the stone floor. Two low wooden platforms, cots of a sort, had been placed side by side in the room, with a bare scrap of space to maneuver between them. A girl was sitting on one of them, a child, her back settled against the wall, her short legs stretched out before her.

โ€œTeoda?โ€

โ€œIโ€™m afraid so.โ€

The bundle of rags beside the Holy Child shifted and Luzia realized there was a third person in the cell, an old woman with gray hair pulled tightly back from her lean face.

โ€œThis is Neva. Sheโ€™s been here nearly two years.โ€ โ€œTwo years? On what charge?โ€

โ€œSimple fornication,โ€ Neva said with a grin that revealed a sparse collection of teeth.

โ€œWe are in Toledo,โ€ Luzia said. A statement, not a question. Just as Fortรบn Donadei had warned. A prisoner of the Inquisition like Isabel de la Cruz had once been, and Piedrola, and Lucrecia de Leรณn. Fragments of the

journey returned to herโ€”the rumble of the wagon, the roar of a river. They would have passed the burning grounds as they entered the city walls through the Puerta de Bisagra.

โ€œWe are,โ€ said Teoda on a sigh. โ€œI โ€ฆ I need to relieve myself.โ€

โ€œThe pot is in the corner,โ€ said Teoda. โ€œItโ€™s all quite shocking, but maybe you will find it less so.โ€

โ€œBecause servants prefer to lift our skirts with an audience?โ€

โ€œIโ€™m sorry,โ€ Teoda said with a laugh. โ€œNeva and I will turn our backs and I will remember that modesty is not just for ladies with rich families.โ€

In truth, modesty was a luxury and Luzia had urinated in alleys and behind market stalls. But she was tired and frightened and her head was aching.

โ€œOur wait for charges will not be so long,โ€ Teoda said as Luzia saw to her needs. โ€œThere is an auto de fe planned for Todos los Santos. Theyโ€™ll want to sentence us then. If you hadnโ€™t been in a prison wagon you would have seen the stages and scaffolding going up in Plaza de Zocodover.โ€

The Feast of All Saints. That couldnโ€™t be right. Trials were meant to last months if not years. โ€œThatโ€™s mere weeks away.โ€

Teoda shrugged. โ€œI have already confessed my heresies. They have no reason to prolong my stay here. Besides, the king will want to make a show of my death.โ€

โ€œThen โ€ฆ you are to be burned?โ€

โ€œOf course. If I repent the executioner will do me the courtesy of strangling me first, but I will not repent.โ€

โ€œSheโ€™s not as brave as she sounds,โ€ said Neva. โ€œNeither am I. Youโ€™ll hear us crying at night.โ€

Teoda gave a huff that might have been another laugh. โ€œWe do each other the courtesy of ignoring it. We have no secrets here. And you should know the inquisitors sleep mere feet away and can hear us unless we whisper. Of course even if we whisper, Neva may denounce us for the sake of earning herself a speedier hearing.โ€

Luzia stretched, paced to the door where there was a small barred opening through which she could see nothing but a dimly lit hallway. A

single window showed only the night beyond, and rags had been jammed into its seams to keep out the cold. The air felt too heavy, the damp dragging against her skin. She wished sheโ€™d been awake when theyโ€™d

brought her here. She had no sense of where she was. They could be a mile belowground and she wouldnโ€™t know.

โ€œTry to breathe,โ€ Teoda said, and Luzia realized she was panting, her hand pressed to her chest. โ€œOr at least sit down so that you wonโ€™t be injured if you faint.โ€

โ€œI donโ€™t understand why Iโ€™m here.โ€ โ€œNone of us do,โ€ said Neva.

โ€œI do,โ€ said Teoda.

Luzia sat down on the wooden cot across from Teoda. โ€œTreason is a matter for the civil courts, isnโ€™t it? Why am I a prisoner of the tribunal?โ€

โ€œCount yourself lucky,โ€ said Neva. โ€œThe city prisons are so crowded they force men and women into the same cells. They die in there and go undiscovered for days.โ€

Teoda gave Neva a meaningful glance. โ€œA song for us?โ€

Neva beat her fist against her thigh and began to sing about three

fountains in her village that ran cold in the summer and hot in the winter.

โ€œA bit of privacy,โ€ Teoda explained. โ€œYou must be here because of Pรฉrez. Heโ€™s fled to Aragรณn, where the king is no match for his popularity. So Philip has sent the Inquisition after his old friend. Only the tribunalโ€™s power

reaches across every part of Spain.โ€ โ€œHow do you know all this?โ€

โ€œWe arenโ€™t supposed to be permitted letters, but my brother has found

ways to get news from the outside. And gossip is never in short supply here. The guards like to talk as much as we do.โ€

โ€œHave you โ€ฆ Has there been word of Vรญctor de Paredes or his household?โ€

โ€œI only know none of them are here.โ€

Santรกngel had promised her he couldnโ€™t die. But what if he was wrong?

He had lied to her, maybe intended to betray her, but when trouble had come, heโ€™d placed himself between Luzia and the kingโ€™s soldiers. What if his gifts were mere delusion and she had left him to bleed to death in that clearing without help or defense?

No, Don Vรญctor wouldnโ€™t give up his prize so easily. He may have intended to replace Santรกngel with her, but now she was tainted by the charge of heresy or witchcraft or some other crime.

โ€œWhat of Donadei?โ€ she asked.

Teodaโ€™s laugh was brittle, the sound strange from her childโ€™s mouth. โ€œI hear nothing of him. I only know he isnโ€™t sitting in a cell. Wherever he is, he is free.โ€

โ€œI donโ€™t see how the Inquisition can pursue Pรฉrez. Has he committed some crime against the Church?โ€

โ€œTheyโ€™re claiming he has encouraged heresy. The charge is flimsy, but our punishment by the Inquisition will give weight to the claims and remind everyone of the kingโ€™s strength.โ€ She raised her voice. โ€œHe canโ€™t very well put dear Lucrecia to death, can he?โ€

โ€œBe silent, demon,โ€ said a voice from another cell. โ€œIโ€™m trying to rest.

Neva, will you please cease that wailing?โ€

Teoda rolled her eyes. โ€œDonโ€™t rest too well, you may have another dream!โ€

Then it was true. Lucrecia de Leรณn was here, the dreaming prophet, the girl who had predicted the defeat of the armada. โ€œShe wonโ€™t be sentenced alongside us?โ€

โ€œShe isย with child,โ€ Teoda said gleefully. โ€œShe fell in love with one of her scribes. Itโ€™s all very thrilling.โ€

โ€œOne of her scribes?โ€ Santรกngel had claimed he couldnโ€™t father children, but that could have been another lie.

โ€œDiego de Vitores. A very nice young man, Iโ€™m told. They exchange letters, though thatโ€™s not supposed to be permitted either.โ€

At least that was one less thing for Luzia to feel miserable about.

โ€œThe king wonโ€™t put her to death,โ€ said Teoda. โ€œAt least not for a while.

Sheโ€™s a good Catholic and everyone knows it.โ€

โ€œAnd her predictions were accurate,โ€ Luzia noted. โ€œThat must be inconvenient.โ€

Now Teodaโ€™s merriment fell away. โ€œThey got her to confess to making up her dreams, but she recanted the next day.โ€

โ€œThen why confess at all?โ€ But Teodaโ€™s grim look made the answer obvious. โ€œTorture.โ€

Teoda nodded.

โ€œTheyโ€™ve questioned you too?โ€ Luzia asked.

โ€œNo.โ€ Teoda fiddled with her cuff. The dress was different from the one sheโ€™d worn the night of the second trial, and Luzia wondered how sheโ€™d gotten fresh clothes. โ€œThey brought me to the room where they do their work. They will make you guess at the charge you face.โ€

Heresy, witchcraft, fornication too, she supposed. Maybe Don Vรญctor would claim heโ€™d been tricked with a false lineage provided by the linajista and sheโ€™d be charged with Judaizing too.

โ€œYouโ€™ve been here since the second trial? Since the puppet show?โ€ โ€œYes. My brother is moneyed and connected, so he is already filing

appeals. He knows the courts well. But it wonโ€™t matter. My nurse was taken for questioning too. Sheโ€™s trying to deny she knew we are heretics. She

thinks it will save her life. And it may. If sheโ€™s lucky sheโ€™ll be publicly flogged and banished.โ€

โ€œHow do you sound so unafraid?โ€

โ€œI have God. I know who I am. I fear torture, but I donโ€™t fear death. So I will confess to every heresy because it isnโ€™t heresy at all, only truth. You

see? They neednโ€™t torture me at all.โ€

Luzia knew that wasnโ€™t true. If they wanted to know the names of other Calvinists and heretics, Teoda would have to name them. But if the thought that she could escape torture made this horror easier, Luzia wasnโ€™t going to snatch it away.

โ€œYouโ€™ll have that same choice,โ€ said the Holy Child. โ€œTheyโ€™ll ask if youโ€™re in league with the devil.โ€

โ€œI should have such powerful friends.โ€

Teodaโ€™s laugh was high and light. โ€œI knew I liked you.โ€ Neva sang on.

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