Blood & Beauty (26 page)

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Authors: Sarah Dunant

Tags: #Historical, #Historical Fiction, #General Fiction

BOOK: Blood & Beauty
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Michelotto stares at him and a slow smile crosses his face. He lets the paper fall on to the table and yawns. ‘Well, if you don’t need me any more tonight, I have to sleep.’

Cesare waves him away. He leans back in his chair and stares at the ceiling.

At the door Michelotto turns. ‘The last name? Is that there because of a score to be settled or a gain to be had?’

But Cesare already has his eyes closed. Whether he does not hear, or just does not choose to answer, is not entirely clear.

CHAPTER 29

In a well-run convent even the most dramatic news takes a while to creep under the doors of the cells, and San Sisto, under the leadership of its abbess, Madonna Girolama Pichi, is very well run indeed. Unlike most city convents, where every other raised voice can jump over the walls, its ancient setting on the Via Appia near the southern gate means that these days it is surrounded by open countryside. It was built close to the spot where great men preached and gave their martyred bodies to God, and their devotion has soaked into its very stones, making silence easier to bear.

So far away is it that, unless there is an express reason for a nun to be informed of something, it is usually only when the riders gallop out towards Naples that the more sharp-eared have reason to hear the thunder of hooves and wonder what new Roman gossip they might be carrying in their saddlebags.

In this case, though, they do not have to wait long. Pedro Calderón, who in the past has kicked up enough dust as he rides past the convent’s bolted doors, is dispatched the moment the funeral cortège reaches the church. With the Pope incapable of making decisions, Cesare writes the letter. It is imperative that Lucrezia does not hear it first from any other source.

Calderón is shown into the abbess’s receiving-room. Though a little sweaty from the road, he is still a most lovely young man. Not that the abbess notices such things. Or if she does it will certainly not affect her behaviour towards him: this is a woman who has already seen off a cohort of the Papal Guard.

‘You have entered a place of sanctuary and worship where we have few visitors, and though I am sure your news is as urgent as you claim, I would ask you to respect that.’

In contrast, he is palpably nervous. But nuns often do that to men, and he has much to be nervous about. ‘It is urgent indeed. I also carry a letter for you, reverend mother. From the Most Reverend Lord Cardinal of Valencia.’

She takes it, breaks the seal and reads. A short gasp leaves her lips and the horror on her face moves quickly to pity. ‘Oh, how dreadful. This will affect the duchess deeply.’ She looks up. ‘Perhaps I should be the one—’

‘No. No,’ he says quickly. ‘Thank you… but my instructions are that the letter must be delivered by my own hand.’

He had said the very same thing five years ago when standing in a dusty courtyard in the middle of Siena, and from that moment of courage everything else had flowed. Then the words had been true. But Cesare had not issued any such explicit instructions to his messenger. It is the first lie that Pedro has told in this, the great affair of his heart.

‘Very well. I will send for her. It would be best for you to meet in the garden. The sisters are at individual evening prayer and you will have privacy there. I will show you there myself. When you are ready to leave, ring the bell at the door and the watch sister will collect you.’ She slips the letter into a drawer. Then says, almost abruptly, ‘Tell me, how is our Holy Father?’

‘I… he is in great distress.’

‘Yes, yes, of course.’ She nods quickly. Not even the abbess, it seems, is totally inured to the temptations of gossip. ‘The ways of the world can be cruel. I am sure you are well picked for your kindness.’

He bows his head. ‘I am the most humble servant of the duchess.’

She studies him for a second, and then moves on to lead the way.

 

The sun is setting and the garden is bathed in softest gold. It is well cared for: rows of clipped box hedge around a small pond where sun-lazy carp glide in and out under lily leaves. Trained fruit trees and banks of herbs give off a mix of medicinal and summer smells, a rich illustration of God’s handiwork, as useful as it is lovely. He stands awkwardly in the middle, waiting. Waiting. He, Pedro Calderón, who was taught duty by a Spanish father but learned romance from an Italian mother so that it took him till the age of seventeen to lose his virginity, to a professional, while he continued to wait for the woman of his dreams. His Laura, his Beatrice, his Ginevara. His princess. His downfall.

She comes clothed in white; a simple day dress, her hair caught in a loose gold net with a few strands flying free. She walks quickly, head held high, and he remembers the first time he saw her, resplendent in her wedding gown, gliding down the corridor as if her feet were not touching the ground.

She gives a laughing little smile, her face aglow in the light. Whoever summoned her has not warned her that it is bad news. ‘Pedro Calderón!’ And she is almost running now. ‘Oh, I am so pleased. They did not tell me it was you.’ She reaches him and takes his hand impetuously, slipping into the Catalán tongue of childhood intimacy.

It is the first time they have ever touched and they are both aware of it.

‘Madam, I… It is an honour to see you again. You are well?’

‘I am well enough. Learning to be quiet.’ She shrugs. ‘Though it is not an easy lesson. And you? You bring me news from home?’

‘Yes—’

‘What?’ Now she is looking, she sees it immediately. ‘Oh, what? What is it?’

‘I – I have a letter.’

He holds it out, but she is still staring at his face.

‘What is it? Is it my father? Oh dear God, it is my father, something has happened to my father.’

‘Madam, I— No, no, your father is well.’

‘Then it is Cesare…’

‘No. The letter is from him. See the seal. Here. Please. Please, you should read it.’

She gives a little laugh of relief. ‘Oh, then it must be my marriage. Very well.’

Yet as she puts her hand out to take it, she knows that it is not her marriage. Her fingers fumble with the seal, and in her haste she nearly drops it. Her eyes scan the first few lines, the loving thoughts, the gentle way in, and then…

When she has finished she stands, her eyes fixed at the pond. She sees fish flashes of silver and red, notes the way a breeze tickles the surface of the water. Nothing has changed. How could that be? Juan is dead yet wind still blows and fish swim. Juan is dead, but there is nothing in the world to mark his extinction. The thought makes her feel dizzy.

‘My lady!’

Immediately she sways he is there, his arm around her waist, a hand under her elbow, moving her towards the edge of the garden and a stone bench under the wall of high cell windows. She allows herself to be taken.

He sits stiffly next to her, his hand still supporting. At her feet, the flagstones are blurring through tears. But tears are too easy for such horror. She pulls them back as she sits frozen in the moment.

Finally she looks up, frowning, almost as if she had forgotten he was there. ‘You know what is written here? Oh, yes, of course, of course you do. My brother says it was murder. Murder! But how? Who did it? What happened?’

‘Should she receive you herself and should she ask you further, tell her no details. The duchess feels things deeply and women like her do not need to know more than is necessary.’ Cesare’s voice is clear in his head.

‘I don’t – I mean it is not for me to…’

She stares at him. ‘Oh… Cesare has told you not to tell me, yes?’ She shakes her head. ‘He’s wrong, He thinks because I am a woman— He doesn’t understand that it is much worse not to know. I will hear it from others soon enough and the gossip will be more foul. It would be better if it came from you, Pedro Calderón. Please.’

From the first lie to the first disobedience. What else can he possibly do? He makes it brief, dwelling as much on the care as the violence, painting a picture of the majesty of the cortège, the perfection of Juan’s body on the bier after the beauticians of death had worked their magic. ‘So peaceful – his face as perfect as if he was still alive. That is what everyone who saw him said.’

‘Yes.’ She listens, never taking her eyes from his face, nodding, deep concentration. ‘Yes, I can see it. I think I have even seen the river somewhere near that place.’ She shivers, then looks down at the letter again, as if she knows there might be more solace in the words now.

‘Will you answer me another question, Pedro Calderón?’ she says after a while.

‘Yes, my lady. If I can.’

‘Have you ever killed a man?’

‘Me?’

‘You are a bodyguard for my brother, yes? I think there must have been times, fights…’

He is back in the Piazza Navona with the Swiss Guard; all is panic and mayhem, with screams of fury and pain as blood sprays across the cobbles. He would prefer to keep his counsel on this as it is not something he is proud of, but a man of honour cannot break his promise to the woman he already loves. ‘Yes, there have been fights. And men have died. One fight in particular. I know I killed one, maybe more.’

‘And as he was dying… did he know?’

‘I don’t understand…’

‘Did he know he was dying? Was there time for him to pray?’

‘Pray?’ Prayer? Had there been prayer in the scream for mercy? Did that count? ‘I don’t know. They spoke another language.’

‘Ah! Well I pray that before Juan died he had time to ask forgiveness for his sins. I would have him at peace more than I might wish him back again here on earth.’ Her eyes fill with tears again. ‘My poor father… the Pope… This letter comes from Cesare because he is in too much grief to write himself. Is that right?’

‘I think it possible, yes, my lady.’

‘Oh, I wish I was there to comfort him.’ She shakes her head. ‘Well, I am not going to cry. Juan needs prayers more than tears,’ she says firmly, taking a deep breath and straightening up, her chin high, only the merest, sweetest touch of puppy fat around the jawline. They sit in silence for a few moments. He can feel his own pulse inside his head, tapping out the passing of time. Let me stay here for ever, he thinks.

‘It is close to this very convent that Saint Sixtus was martyred,’ she says. ‘Did you know that? He was beheaded on the orders of the Roman Emperor, and even as they wielded the sword his face was filled with joy. Because in death he knew he would find eternal life. The abbess speaks of him often and when she does all the nuns cry. Everyone knows that it makes this convent, built in his name, special for prayers of intercession.’ She is talking faster now, as if she is trying to convince herself. ‘So I am in the right place to pray for Juan, do you not think?’ She does not wait for his answer. ‘I mean he was… he was rash sometimes and I know he was not liked by everyone – but he was so filled with life, and much was put upon his shoulders. He was God’s child and underneath it all his heart was pure. I know that. So if I pray here then surely Our Lord will hear me.’

‘I am sure He will, my lady.’

‘Yes, yes. I think so too,’ she says with perfect earnestness.

They sit further, the light draining away under a gaudy pink- and apricot-streaked sky. They are both aware that their hands, though no longer touching, remain too close. She moves hers away, self-conscious now. ‘Thank you,’ she says. ‘I – I am glad it was you who was sent to tell me.’

He nods. ‘I… I will go now… if you wish.’

‘I… If you don’t mind, would you sit a little longer? The nuns are very kind but… my cell grows gloomy after sunset and it is so beautiful here.’ And she lifts up her face into the light, so that her skin glistens.

‘My lady, I will stay here till night ends and the day comes again if it would help.’

‘Ha! I am not sure the abbess would allow that. You sound like a knight in a romance tale, Pedro Calderón.’

‘I did not mean—’ He drops his eyes.

‘No, no. It is not a bad thing to be. I think the world would be a lesser place without the bravery of Buovo or the love of Lancilotto and Ginevara. When I was a child I loved such stories. I—’

She stops, realising suddenly what she is saying, how just for that instant she is no longer thinking of the horror of Juan.

Neither is he. No, right now he is imagining instead what a wonder it would be to be sitting at her side in the fading light sharing romance stories. How, if that might happen, he would surely die happy.

Career Spaniards, alas, are not so in thrall to the wonder of Dante that they read him as diligently as educated Romans. So this dreamy young man has not spent time in the fifth circle of hell, marvelling at the burning wind of agony which sweeps sinners in its path, or hearing the plaintive tale of Francesca and her brother-in-law Paolo, whose mutual appreciation of chivalric poetry pulled them into sin and an eternity of such cruel punishment that even Dante himself was brought to tears.

As for Lucrezia? Well, Lucrezia knows that story well enough. But as much as she dreams of heaven after death, she also dreams of just a taste of it on earth. She is seventeen years old with one brother cruelly murdered, another who loves her too much and a discarded husband who does not love her at all. She sits caught inside a vortex of grief, fear and yearning. Yet whatever the confusion, life is worth living. Ah, Juan…

Across the way, the door opens, silhouetting the figure of the watch sister. The convent is on its way to bed and visiting, even for its most powerful guests, is over. They are both on their feet immediately.

‘I am grateful to you, Pedro Calderón,’ she says quickly. ‘I would wish to send word back, but it is late now and I must compose my thoughts…’

‘I could return again in the morning, my lady. I am the appointed messenger between the Vatican and the convent.’

‘Oh, then… you will come back?’

‘Without fail.’

He drops on to his knee and takes her hand.

‘Tell my brother and my father that my heart is with them, and with God’s help I will find the words to comfort them.’

At a small window on the second floor the abbess stands, watching their leavetaking.

It is always a challenge when a convent opens its doors to noblewomen in distress: in the time it takes for their trunks and maidservants to enter, the ways of the world slide in with them, sending tremors through the hard-won calm of regulated worship. In her time, Abbess Pichi has overseen all kinds of dramas played out inside the walls and has grown adept at reading the signs. In the search for future nuns, it is her job to distinguish the spiritual from the sensual in young girls, not always an easy task when their bodies are as full of turmoil as their hearts. When the young Lucrezia had left to take up her place in the world she had prayed that God would preserve her from too much temptation. But His will often works in ways that even His most humble children cannot divine. That night she remembers her again in her prayers. And makes a note to talk to the watch sister about an occasional inspection of the garden during the evening hour of private prayer.

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