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"It'll fool no one."
"Cri-uh, Luis, think about this. He had no close friends except Ramon, and that mal hombre is in h.e.l.l. He has no more family except relatives in Spain, none of whom have seen him for years. My uncle was the only one who even knew him reasonably well. Luis was a man who did not seek the company of others, not even women. His grandmother, and myself to a lesser extent, were the only ones with whom he was close."
"You said it yourself, your uncle would recognize him. He's seen both of us together."
"And what is my uncle to report to the king? That he mistook a marques for a beggar-bandit and imprudently hanged him? My uncle will not blink an eye when my husband, Luis, returns to the city after his wounds heal. I will let him know subtly before you walk into his presence, so he will not faint dead when he sees you."
I shook my head. "This is insanity. I cannot just take the place of another man. The last time I tried this it got me into more trouble than it was worth."
"That is what is wonderful about this plan of Mateo's. Who is the Marques de la Cerda?"
"The marques? Why I... I..."
"Say it."
"I am the rightful Marques de la Cerda-by birth."
"Can't you see? My love, you will be impersonating yourself! "
I thought for a moment.
"I am also your lawful wedded husband. It is time I claimed my conjugal rights." I pulled her to me and began removing her clothes.
"Wait," she said. She pushed me away. "As your wife, will I be allowed to read what I like and write what I wish?"
"As long as I get what I want, you may read and write."
"To make sure I get what I want," she said, "I shall keep a dagger hidden in my petticoats."
Ay de mi! I had married a jungle cat.
ONE HUNDRED AND THIRTY-TWO.
Five months later, recovered from my wounds-and the hot oil to my face-we left the City of Mexico to board the treasure fleet at Veracruz.
Don Diego had welcomed me into the family without meeting my eye. Mateo had contrived a heroic feat for me in the riots, one only slightly less awesome than his own singlehanded defense of the palace. With my ancient bloodline, which was in a small way tied to the throne of Spain, and my recent act of heroism-along with a substantial contribution to the king's war purse-I was ordered to the Royal Court in Madrid to a.s.sume a position on the Council of the Indies for three years. With the travel time between Europe and the colony, and visits to my peninsular relatives, it would be a good five years before we returned. By that time, all but the legend of Cristo the b.a.s.t.a.r.do will have faded.
Mateo sailed on the same ship. Extricating our secret h.o.a.rd from the cave, he boasted that he would build a great arena and fill it with water in Madrid. Then he would perform before the king the great sea battle for Tenocht.i.tlan. Would I worry what mischief this would result in? Si.
You say this is all a fairy tale? That the poor street child cannot become a n.o.bleman with a beautiful wife? Eh, amigos, was not Amadis of Gaul cast out as a child? And did he not win a princess and a kingdom?
Do you expect any less from Cristo the b.a.s.t.a.r.do?
Have you forgotten that a great autor of plays was manipulating all the events to ensure that there was a happy ending? I told you it was a wondrous tale, as colorful and exciting as any of the chivalric romances that drove poor Don Quixote loco.
And in truth, I have not told it all. I could not, of course. You see, like Jaime the lepero, I am such a product of my youth on the streets that I could not help lying. Amigos, forgive me, but I confess that sometimes in my secret narrative, I have even lied to you.
I leave now-
Eh, wait, you say. I have left out part of the story. You want to know why the guards did not believe Luis when he told them that he was not Cristo the b.a.s.t.a.r.do.
Well, you see, he never told them he was really Luis. He tried, but the words would never come out. Mateo told me the reason before Elena and I boarded the galleon for Seville. When he bent over Luis on the floor of the viceroy's palace, he cut out Luis's tongue.
It is now time to put down my pen. As a high n.o.bleman of Spain and New Spain, I am now a man of the sword and not the quill.
Vaya con Dios, amigos!
AFTERWORD.
The major historic events related in the novel occurred during the seventeenth century in Mexico, then known as New Spain. Incidents such as the manipulation of the price of maize resulting in the food riot in which the viceroy's palace was attacked, the pirate raid on Veracruz, the Jaguar Knight murder cult, and the adventures of the nun-bandit Catalina de Erauso were of this period.
Elena, of course, was inspired by Sor Juana Ines de la Cruz. Beautiful, brilliant, a b.a.s.t.a.r.da ("daughter of the Church" was how her birth certificate put it), the great poetess threatened to disguise herself as a man and sneak into a university because women were not permitted an education.
The author has been liberal in presenting the chronology of the events.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR.
Gary Jennings was known for his intensive research, which often included rigorous and sometimes hazardous travels-exploring every corner of Mexico for his Aztec novels, retracing the wanderings of Marco Polo for The Journeyer, joining nine different circuses for Spangle, and roaming the Balkans writing Raptor.
Copyright 2001 by Eugene Winick, Executor, Estate of Gary Jennings
ISBN: 0-812-59098-8.