Read Hunger's Brides Online

Authors: W. Paul Anderson

Tags: #Fiction, #General

Hunger's Brides (109 page)

Gutiérrez, slightly flushed, edged for the door.

Come again, Gutiérrez, come again soon.

The dean chose that moment to give me the news that my commission for the Feast of Saint Peter had been cancelled. And this with barely an apology, though I knew the final decision on this was at least technically his. What Dean de la Sierra wished to impress upon me instead was that the Archbishop did not even bother to consult him before announcing it.

I answered that, as the Dean himself had admitted,
while approving my lyrics
, the common people needed a voice for their hardships and grievances, which were proving especially painful this year. Returning his book to the shelf, he was good enough to concede this again, before slipping out. Once he had, Ribera told me Agustín Dorantes had dropped by yesterday with an offer to help him rewrite my lyrics on Saint Peter. Dorantes was a passable rhymer and before my time had been the man most often favoured with such commissions.

Agustín Dorantes was also Master Examiner of the Inquisition. The man most likely to preside over a process against Palavicino's sermon.

Many came to the chapel that day, but Dorantes was not among them. Many explanations were possible but the most likely was this: he was already involved. It would not do for the Chief Magistrate to be present where and while evidence was being gathered. There could be little doubt the Holy Office's involvement was now official. But the case could not yet have been Palavicino's—

No. Though there might be a file opened against him soon, the Holy Office did not move so quickly. The case was not Palavicino's, the case was mine.

But Núñez, Father Núñez
had
come. Could that mean he was not involved? How very curious the sensation, seeing him in the chapel. He had not changed so much these past ten years, not so much as I might have thought. It was clear the young monk walking with him was less assistant than guide, but other than in the decline of his sight, he seemed no more ancient than he always had. Ten years earlier, almost to the day, we had spoken of Hermenegild in prison—Núñez had never been so threatening.

Choose, he said, a convent or a prison cell. I answered then with Herakles. How should I answer now?

Why neither, Father. There are as many thralls among the free as there are follies among the sane. Just so many mad slaves to honour, romance, lust, necessity. But not you nor any other shall ever make a prison of my mind. Irons are not all iron, yet they hobble. Bars are not
all wrought, yet ring and girdle. Stays are not all of whalebone, but detain us only if we let them.

How like empty bravado this sounded, ten years on.

“You think this one of your little comedies, Sor Juana, but this sacrament of water may well matryr you,” Father Núñez had said, exactly ten years ago. “Just how far are you willing to go, Juana? As far as Galileo?—or
plus ultra
, as far as Bruno.”

It was late in the locutory. All but two of my guests had left. The
escuchas
were washing up behind the arras, speaking in whispers. Ribera had been working at something quietly on the clavichord. He rose to leave, promising to return soon. He had an idea for a new musical project for us but had to go straightaway to consult someone. Only Carlos remained, leaning quietly against the wall, over by the window. He had secured a commission to write a chronicle of our Viceroy's great naval victory in Santo Domingo. We were sure the actual news of it must arrive any day. Carlos was trying to persuade me to write a dedicatory poem to open the chronicle. A show of loyalty to the Crown should be a welcome opportunity, for both of us. Things had never been easy between the new viceroyals and me, with her especially. They arrived with the presumption that I would serve them as enthusiastically as I had served past viceroys and vicereines, and rather more blindly.

“What can it hurt now?” Carlos asked, coming to sit across from me.

I had been thinking there was at least one other message in the
Scelta:
the perils of a person of the cloth meddling in worldly matters. But after today's events I had begun to wonder if doing nothing was a luxury I had.

“So tell me please about his great naval triumph. Is it fair to say the French in Santo Domingo—and
where
else?—would have been rather heavily outnumbered?

“Tortuga. And yes, heavily.“

“You have a title?”

“Trophy of Spanish Justice in the Punishment of French Perfidy.”

“Stirring. We might actually win.”

“Yes.”

“I can't bear her.”

“The Vice-Queen.”

“I assume her husband did little more than relay Madrid's orders to the fleet?”

“Correct.”

Another commission. The very thought…. Such a lassitude I felt. Even the carols to Saint Catherine, which I had wanted so badly, I was barely a week from finishing and yet could not. I could only dread what use Bishop Santa Cruz might yet put them to.

Antonia had made her way finally through the
portería
and along the corridor to join Carlos on the visitors' side. Quietly, listening to every word, she went about the room collecting dishes and depositing them where we on our side could reach them. I envied her the freedom in this humble task, a freedom she would say meant nothing to her, who wanted only to be on the other side, with me.

“Was I so very arrogant, Carlos, or too weak? Should I have forced the issue ten years ago, while don Payo was still Archbishop? Would I be better off now?”

“Or incomparably worse.”

“Truly, things did look so much darker then. Don Payo gone, then news of the
auto
in Madrid, then the comet….”

“A nice test of your scientific principles.”

My principles. In all this time I had never apologized to him about the comet … the poem in praise of his adversary. Each time I had wanted to, I felt as if it were really Núñez wringing it from me. It would feel no less so now.

“Listening to the Sicilian today, as we talked about
nuncios
and madhouses—and then that remark about Toledo, I was thinking that for some games one may know too much.”

“Too much …”

“Too much to solve it, to bear not finding the answer, or finding one. Too many answers to bear.”

“Such as?”

“Things, facts … That the onset of the Thirty Years War was remembered for the three comets of that year. That while all Europe watched them through his telescope Galileo was too ill to get up and look at them. That his troubles with the Jesuits began with the one event he did not see, with the facts he did not observe.”

“Yours sound like facts in search of a hypothesis.”

“That at the death of Caesar, who had declared himself emperor, a comet hung over Rome for six months—and who is to say the Archbishop does not owe some facet of his election to the effect of a comet?”

“I ask you again, are you so sure it would be better if Bishop Santa Cruz were Archbishop now?”

He was right, of course. Such a curious instrument was this chronoscope that is memory. One had only to look through it a second time to see the whole world inverted. And yet a third glance did not right things.

Núñez, who was surely my enemy now—could it be that day he had still been acting as a friend? Ten years ago it looked like madness to stay with him. Was I to think now it had been madness to dismiss him? Better or worse, then, to have refused every commission … and watched every special privilege I have won in here evaporate. Watched the thousand leaden chores and communal tasks here close over my head like the sea … accountant, peacemaker, Superintendant of Works and Masonry, paymaster, catechist. Explaining the sermons, chiding the novices, leading the choir.

And now I sat here envying Antonia's freedom to pick up dishes.

Curious inversions these.

Next to the window, Antonia's gatherings accumulated on the little table that spanned the grille. Glasses and decanters, flasks and cups, a city of glass in the setting sun—smudged glass towers and crystal minarets, inverted cones and earthen domes … a city of the sun on its own plateau, rising up against a plain of roses crossed in shadows.

Answer the question, decide
.

I got up to help Antonia with the dishes. Carlos bade us good-night.

As we finished, the last light fell across the rose bushes outside the window. The little courtyard lay in shadow. The Prioress came to stand at her balcony, looked down a moment at the locutory, then faded into her apartments to light the lamps. I set the Ambassador's gift on a chair by the doorway. I would send Antonia to him tomorrow, ask that he return at his earliest convenience. It had come to me, what I had been trying to remember since the Sicilian left.

After the rebellion in Calabria, Campanella feigned madness to save his life.

†
Byzantine emperor and lawgiver

†
the sane

J
UANA
I
NÉS DE LA
C
RUZ

B. Limosneros, trans
.

For an hour, sad thought,
let us pretend
I am happy
though I know I am not:
  since they say what afflicts us
has its conceiving in the mind,
to imagine ourselves blest
is to be a bit less wretched.
  Oh that my mind this once,
should serve to bring me peace,
that it not always run
counter to my ease.
  The whole world holds convictions
of such divergent kinds
that what one deems black,
another proves white.
  What entrances some
enrages others;
and what this one finds irksome
adds to that one's comfort.
  He who is sorrowing says
the happy man is heartless;
and he who is joyful smiles,
to see the sufferer in his toils.
  Those two thinkers of Greece
†
long pondered the matter:
for what brought the first to laugh,
to the second brought grief.
  Famous has their opposition
been these twenty centuries,
yet without a resolution
that can so much as be divined;
  to their two banners even now,
the world entire is drawn,
with the colours that we follow
determined by our disposition.
  Democritus claiming that our one
worthy answer to the world is laughter;
Heraclitus that the world's misfortunes
are cause for lamentation …

†
Democritus, Heraclitus

S
ERAPHINA

S
unday January 28th. The bells of three o'clock, two hours more to Lauds.

On the Friday night after Xavier Palavicino's sermon, I did finally sleep. Antonia woke me at daybreak or I would have slept through prayers. During
†
these, the coldest nights of winter, when we woke to frost on the flagstones and ice on the
tinacos
, she would often sleep on a cot by the fire in the library. At midnight I sent her in to sleep in my bed, preferring to read the Sicilian's gift with my back against the chimney. I doubted she would sleep much either, but she liked it there.

It had not been easy to be with her these past two months. She took the letter, the pamphlets, the sermon, hard—raged at him—quite refused to see that Santa Cruz had done anything at all for her sisters, and she was very close to rage with me for doing too little to defend myself. It was true, I'd done little but brood. Yes, brooding I was doing rather a lot of.

In the hours since the sermon I had been going over the entire day, the Sicilian's visit, the gift …

After writing his
City of the Sun
, after the uprising in Calabria, Campanella lived twenty-seven years in the Inquisition's prisons, feigning madness to stay the proceedings against him. But reading his
Scelta
I wondered what kind of madness this could have been, and what kind of prison, that he could write such poetry there. How did his madshows seem? Were they ever the same, or different each time: did he laugh, did he cry, did he tear his hair, bring himself to grief? I wondered if he ever, for an instant, lost his mind, I wondered if he ever, for a moment, forgot his lines. I wondered, if I were to feign madness, what kind I might try. There were so many kinds.

There was the lunacy of the court buffoon; there were the rages and fears of His Grace the Archbishop, his hatred of us, of all things that give pleasure; there was the sad and yet laughable madness in his choice of Heraclitus for the Gaudete Sunday sermon. Gaudete, ‘rejoicing.' Heraclitus, ‘the weeping philosopher.' Which is to say, if one may not laugh on this of all days, then one must weep ever. Or brood.

In June they had cancelled my lyrics for the sisters of Saint Bernard, in December my lyrics on the Nativity. Now those for Saint Peter,
fisherman. How was the poet to feel about this, what was she to say? It was not so very far from madness—but whose? That of Democritus who finds comedy where there is confusion, and puts out his eyes to preserve his vision? That of the geographer, the dizzy simpleton bestowing his simple blessings on the globe as it spins by too fast?—or perhaps it is his head that spins too fast.

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