Aztec - Aztec Blood - BestLightNovel.com
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Another knife went into my gut. "Tell me that you have not done something as foolish as setting up an a.s.signation with her."
He said nothing. I waited until he'd drained another goblet full of wine.
"What did you do?"
"Luis is a swine."
"What did you do?"
"The girl wishes to talk to you, to beg for forgiveness in ever doubting you. If you handle the matter right, you will partake of her favors before Luis gets the chance."
"Are you loco? Do you think I would use Elena to avenge myself on my enemies?"
"You ask if I am loco? You have come back to New Spain to kill her husband-to-be and perhaps destroy her uncle, who raised her as a daughter. And you think you can do these deeds without damage to her?"
He got up from sitting on the edge of the fountain. "b.a.s.t.a.r.do, I will have to work very hard, very hard indeed, to write a happy ending to the tragic-comedia that you have begun."
ONE HUNDRED AND NINETEEN.
The meeting Mateo had set up between Elena and myself was arranged at the house of Don Silvestre's widowed daughter. Mateo said the widow, who was only a few years older than me, rarely used the house; she spent most of her time at the household of her father. The widow had many charms, Mateo told me, alluding to the fact that he would ensure she did not wither from lack of love.
I was nervous as I waited in the courtyard. An elderly india and her husband appeared to be the only servants at the house. On a small table, they had set out sweetmeats and wine. Darkness had fallen and they illuminated the area around me with candles. Protected by high walls, the location was private. A perfect place for a rendezvous with another man's woman.
I felt as if I had stepped onto a stage featuring the doomed lovers, Calisto and Melibea, if not an even more tragic comedia called Romeo and Juliet, a play Mateo said was written by an Englishman named Shakespeare. The quandary Mateo spoke of, that I could not destroy the others without harming Elena, weighed heavy on my heart. The Fates were casting lots for my soul.
I heard the carriage outside and tensed with antic.i.p.ation.
When she came through the gate, I got up slowly from where I had been sitting at the edge of the fountain. She had changed into a black dress and Wore a long, silk shawl over her head and draped down her shoulders. I had half expected her to wear a mask as was so common among the ladies of the city when traveling to an a.s.signation, but no one would have recognized her with the shawl anyway.
"Dona Elena." I bowed.
"Don Carlos."
To give my hands something to do, I gestured at the table of sweetmeats. "Our hostess is not at home, but she kindly provided a table of delicacies."
"I have met Dona Teodora. She is a good woman who cares well for her elderly father."
"I understand you were with the father today."
She came to me, holding out her hand. "Oh, Carlos, I am so happy you are not the scoundrel others claim you to be. Your sacrifice to protect your family name was that of a martyred saint."
I took her hand and kissed it.
"Elena, I have to tell you the truth"-at least part of it-"I am not the person you think I am."
"I know that."
"You do?"
"Of course. The man I met at Don Silvestre explained about your brother."
"No, no, it's not just that, it's..."
"Yes?"
It was impossible. If I told her the truth, she would run screaming from the house. But I hated living a lie. My entire life had been a lie, and with her I wished to lay my soul naked.
"There are things about me that I cannot reveal, things that you would never understand, some that would make you hate me. But there is one truth that you may depend upon. From the moment I first saw you, I loved you."
"And I, you."
She said it so simply, I was caught by surprise.
"Did you want me to hide my feelings?" she asked.
"It's impossible for us, you're betrothed to another."
I was holding onto her hand. I drew her closer and she pulled away. She walked around the courtyard for a moment.
"Don't you find it strange," she said, "how we of the higher cla.s.s of society have less freedom? Our possessions, even our names, entrap us. A man and a woman of common blood can love and marry whom they like." She turned and faced me. "My uncle can make me marry Luis, but he can never make me love him. I do not hate Luis, and I believe he truly loves me. He has refused offers of marriage from families whose daughters have larger dowries and certainly fairer looks. But for me, marriage to him would be a prison. That's why I was willing to go to another type of prison, a convent, where at least I would have had the freedom to read books and write what I have the vanity to call poetry."
"Your poems are the songs of angels."
"Fine words, Don Carlos, but I hardly think you have heard of my poems all the way in Spain. My poems have been rarely published even in the colony."
"You do yourself an injustice. I was given this book to read when I was sailing from Seville."
I showed her a book of poems I had printed for her.
She shook her head, her eyes glowing. "I wrote that years ago. There must be a book or two still in existence. And it made it all the way to Seville?"
"To the whole world. I'm certain there is a copy right now in the queen's boudoir in Madrid."
"More likely on the Inquisition's evidence table. Who gave you the book?"
"I don't know the man's name. He was reading a book in a cantina and offered it to me when he learned I was to take a sea voyage." Eh, amigos, do lies flow like honey off my tongue?
I heard a noise at the wall bordering the street. A head popped into view for just the briefest moment before the man dropped back down. I ran out the gate, but the man was on a horse galloping away before I was able to seize him.
Elena came out behind me. "I recognize him. One of Luis's servants set to spy on me."
She left without further word. Concerned for her reputation, I did not try to stop her. Under ordinary circ.u.mstances, I would soon be receiving Luis's seconds to deliver the challenge for a duel, and I would welcome the opportunity to kill him. I suspected, though, that the challenge would not come. Not because Luis feared me, but because of the scandal it would create so soon after I had saved Elena.
I stood for a moment in the courtyard and closed my eyes, listening again to her saying that she loved me. But who did she love? The martyr-hero Don Carlos? Or the poor lepero boy grown into a notorious bandit?
ONE HUNDRED AND TWENTY.