Cathedral of the Sea (91 page)

Read Cathedral of the Sea Online

Authors: Ildefonso Falcones

BOOK: Cathedral of the Sea
2.6Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
“They only adopt ideas, beliefs, just like ...” At this, Nicolau and Berenguer gave a start. Why not? Was it not true? Didn’t that poor man who had died under a hail of insults and given his life for his community deserve the truth? “Just like us,” Arnau said in a loud, firm voice.
“You dare equate the Catholic faith with heresy?” roared the bishop.
“It is not for me to compare anything: I leave that to you, the men of God. All I said was—”
“We are well aware of what you said!” Nicolau Eimerich shouted. “You compared the one, true Christian faith with the heretical doctrines of the Jews.”
Arnau faced the tribunal. The clerk was still writing on his papers. Even the soldiers, standing stiffly to attention by the doors behind him, appeared to be listening to the scrape of his quill on the parchment. Nicolau smiled. The scratching pierced Arnau to the backbone, and a shudder ran through his entire body. The inquisitor saw it, and smiled even more broadly. “Yes,” he seemed to be saying, “that is what you said.”
“They are just like us,” Arnau repeated.
Nicolau silenced him with a wave of his hand.
The clerk continued writing for a few more moments. “Everything you said is recorded there,” the inquisitor’s look told Arnau. When the clerk raised his quill, Nicolau gave a satisfied smile.
“The session is suspended until tomorrow,” he cried, getting up from his seat.
MAR WAS TIRED of listening to Joan.
“Where are you going?” Aledis asked her. Mar merely looked at her. “There again? You’ve been every day, and you haven’t succeeded ...”
“I’ve succeeded in letting her know I’m here, and that I won’t forget what she did to me.” Joan hid his face. “I succeeded in catching sight of her through the window, and in letting her know that Arnau is mine. I saw it in her eyes, and I intend to remind her of it every day of her life. I intend to succeed by making her think every moment of the day that I was the one who won.”
Aledis watched her leave the inn. Mar took the same route as she had done every day since her arrival in Barcelona, and ended up outside the gates of the palace in Calle de Montcada. She pounded on the door knocker as hard as she could. Eleonor might refuse to see her, but she wanted her to know she was there.
As on every other day, the ancient servant peered at her through the peephole.
“My lady,” he said, “you know that Doña Eleonor ...”
“Open the door. I just want to see her, even if it is only through the window she hides behind.”
“But she does not want that.”
“Does she know who I am?”
Mar saw Pere turn toward the palace windows.
“Yes.”
Mar banged again on the knocker.
“My lady, do not insist, or Doña Eleonor will call the soldiers,” the old man advised her.
“Open up, Pere.”
“She won’t see you, my lady.”
Mar felt a hand on her shoulder, pulling her away from the door.
“Perhaps she will see me,” she heard, before she saw someone stepping in front of her.
“Guillem!” cried Mar, flinging herself on him.
“Do you remember me, Pere?” asked the Moor, with Mar clinging to him.
“How could I not remember?”
“Well, then, tell your mistress I want to see her.”
When the old man shut the peephole, Guillem took Mar by the waist and lifted her into the air. Laughing, Mar let him whirl her round. Then Guillem put her down, took a step back, and lifted her arms so that he could get a good look at her.
“My little girl,” he said, his voice choking with emotion. “How often I’ve dreamed of holding you in my arms again! But now you weigh a lot more. You’ve become a real ...”
Mar broke free, and ran to embrace him. “Why did you abandon me?” she asked, tears in her eyes.
“I was no more than a slave, child. What could a mere slave do?”
“You were like a father to me.”
“Am I not that anymore?”
“You always will be.”
Mar hugged Guillem tight. “You always will be,” thought the Moor. How many years had he wasted so far from here? He turned back to the door.
“Doña Eleonor will not see you either,” he heard from inside.
“Tell her she will be hearing from me.”
THE SOLDIERS TOOK him back down to the dungeons. As the jailer chained him up again, Arnau could not take his eyes off the dark bundle at the far end of the gloomy cell. He was still standing observing it when the jailer left.
“What do you have to do with Aledis?” he shouted at the old woman as soon as the jailer’s footsteps had faded in the distance.
Arnau thought he could make out a slight movement in the shadowy figure, but after that, nothing.
“What do you have to do with Aledis?” he repeated. “What was she doing here? Why does she visit you?”
The silence that was his only reply led him to think again of that pair of huge brown eyes.
“What do Aledis and Mar have to do with each other?” he begged the shadow.
No reply. Arnau tried at least to hear the old woman’s breathing, but the countless groans and snores from the other prisoners prevented him from making out any sound Francesca might be making. Arnau looked desperately along the walls of the dungeon: nobody paid him any heed.
As SOON AS he saw Mar come in accompanied by a splendidly dressed Moor, the innkeeper stopped stirring the big cooking pot hanging over the fire. He became even more troubled when he saw two slaves follow them in carrying Guillem’s possessions. “Why didn’t he go to the corn exchange, where all the merchants stay?” he thought as he went to receive them.
“This is truly an honor,” the innkeeper said, bowing to the ground before them.
Guillem waited for him to finish his exaggerated display. “Do you have rooms?”
“Yes. The slaves can sleep in the—”
“Rooms for three,” Guillem cut in. “One room for me, and another for the two of them.”
The innkeeper glanced at the two youngsters with big dark eyes and curly locks waiting silently behind their master.
“Yes,” he said. “If that is what you require. Follow me.”
“They will see to everything. Bring us some water.”
Guillem went with Mar to one of the tables. Only the two of them were left in the dining room.
“Did you say the trial began today?”
“Yes, although I couldn’t say for sure. I’m not sure about anything. I haven’t even been able to see him.”
Guillem heard the emotion choking Mar. He stretched out his hand to comfort her, but in the end withdrew it without touching her. She was no longer a little girl, and he ... well, he was only a Moor. Nobody ought to think ... It was enough to have whirled her round in the air outside Eleonor’s palace. Mar’s hand reached out and took his.
“I’m still the same. I always will be, for you.”
Guillem smiled. “What about your husband?”
“He died.”
Mar’s face did not show the least sign of distress. Guillem changed topics : “Have you done anything for Arnau?”
Mar half closed her eyes and twisted her lips. “What do you mean? There’s nothing we—”
“What about Joan? Joan is an inquisitor. Have you heard anything from him? Hasn’t he interceded on Arnau’s behalf?”
“That friar?” Mar laughed scornfully and said nothing; what was the point of telling him? Arnau’s situation was bad enough, and that was what had brought Guillem to Barcelona. “No. He hasn’t done anything. Besides, he cannot go against the grand inquisitor. He is at the inn with us ...”
“With us?”
“Yes. I’ve met a widow called Aledis. She’s staying here with her two daughters. She was a friend of Arnau’s when they were young. Apparently she happened to be in Barcelona when he was arrested. I sleep in their room. She’s a good woman. You’ll meet them all when we eat.”
Guillem squeezed her hand.
“Tell me about you,” said Mar.
As THE SUN climbed in the sky, Mar and Guillem told each other all that had happened to them in the six years since they had last met. Mar was careful not to mention Joan. The first to appear back at the inn were Teresa and Eulàlia. They were hot, but looked happy, although the smiles disappeared from their pretty faces as soon as they saw Mar and remembered that Francesca was still in jail.
They had walked all over the city, delighted at the new identity that being dressed as orphans ... and virgins ... had lent them. They had never before enjoyed such freedom, because according to the law, they always had to wear bright silks and colors to show everyone that they were prostitutes. “Shall we go in?” suggested Teresa, surreptitiously pointing to the doorway of San Jaume. She said it in a whisper, as though afraid lest the very idea arouse the ire of the whole of Barcelona. But nothing happened. The faithful inside the church paid them no attention, nor did the priest, whom they avoided looking at, pressing closer to each other as he went by.
Chattering and laughing, they went down Calle Boqueria toward the sea. If they had gone in the opposite direction, up Calle del Bisbe to Plaza Nova, they would have run into Aledis. She was standing outside the bishop’s palace, trying to recognize Arnau or Francesca in the shadows behind the stained-glass windows. She did not even know which one concealed the chamber where Arnau was being tried! Had Francesca been called to testify yet? Joan did not know anything about her. Aledis peered at window after window. She must have been, but what use was it knowing that, if Aledis could not do anything for her? Arnau was strong, and Francesca ... They did not know what she was like.
“What are you doing standing there?” Aledis turned and saw one of the soldiers of the Inquisition next to her. She had not seen him arrive. “What are you looking at so closely?”
Aledis ducked down and fled without a word. “You don’t know Francesca,” she thought as she ran away. “None of your tortures will be able to make her give away the secret she has kept hidden all her life.”

Other books

The Marquess of Cake by Heather Hiestand
Undying by Azizi, Bernadette
Ojos de hielo by Carolina Solé
Simple Arrangement by McKenna Jeffries
Jack in the Green by Diane Capri
The FitzOsbornes in Exile by Michelle Cooper
Punished! by David Lubar
Simply Irresistible by Rachel Gibson
El pozo de la muerte by Lincoln Child Douglas Preston