Authors: C.W. Gortner
Castile!”
Everyone went still. From his place on the dais with the king and queen, Philip‟s
eyes widened. Beside, Besançon went slack-jawed, food clinging to his many chins.
I moved down the chairs, clad in my traditional Spanish garb, my overskirt a rigid
cone over the whalebone farthingale favored by the royal women of Castile. My
mother‟s ruby encircled my throat; the hair tumbled loose to my waist under my
velvet hood, embroidered with Aragónese black lace. Coming before the dais, I raised
my chin to meet Louis‟ mordant gaze and Queen Anne‟s glower.
I gave them a cool smile. “Your Majesties of France,” I said, “I am a Spaniard
born and bred, and I will remain so until the day of my death.” I reached into my
gown pocket and removed the jewel with the arms of Castile that Philip had given me.
“I give your daughter this gift, so she can remember she will have me, Juana, future
queen of Spain, for a mother-in-law.”
Philip gripped his throne and half-rose. Louis said softly, “Madame Infanta is
bold.”
I glanced at him. His smile tugged at his lips, thin as a wire. “Will you not dine
with us?” he went on. “Such a shame it would be to waste such bravura on a mere
entrance.”
“Your Majesty,” I replied, “it would be more to my shame if I stayed.”
His gaze narrowed. I turned and walked out without pause, ignoring the stunned
courtiers at their tables and the staring nobles, going back to my apartments, a tickle
in my throat.
As soon as I closed my door, I slid to the floor before my astounded women, my
farthingale billowing about me like an inverted flower. Laughter escaped me in a
breathless gaze.
“We might as well start packing,” I said. “They‟ll not see me under their roof
another day.”
_________________
TO SPAIN, TO SPAIN.
I repeated the words in my mind as I walked into the courtyard, where servitors
hastened to finish the loading of the last of our belongings. As I expected, Besançon
had issued orders for our immediate departure, citing, to my amusement, a favorable
break in weather. Snow lashed out faces and the wind was cruel, but I did not care. I
had proven my mettle, though it did not alleviate the fact that my son had just been
promised to Spain‟s most pernicious foe.
Snowdrifts piled against the château walls. The entire court stood in unyielding
formation, muffled in oiled cloaks and sodden furs.
Louis smirked at my approach. “Madame Infanta, I fear it‟s been too brief a visit.”
“I regret you majesty lacks other means of entertainment,” I said, in the same
suave tone.
Without warning, his gloved hand gripped mine, pulling me close. “I do hope we
shall see each other again soon,” he whispered. I flinched, catching a lascivious glitter in his eyes.
At his side, Anne gave me a malignant glare. I had no doubt she would barricade
every border and every port, if necessary, to keep me from France again. Under the
circumstances, I forwent the traditional farewell kiss.
Philip steered me toward my mare, his hand like a vise on my sleeve. “You
deliberately ruined this occasion,” he said.
“Not as much as I would have liked,” I returned, and I pulled away to mount.
As we passed under the gatehouse, I threw back my head and laughed aloud.
__________________________________
orrential storms overcame us in Navarre― that tiny, strategically momentous
kingdom straddling France and Spain― obscuring the mountain pass ahead.
T We had to surrender our horses for return to Flanders with our less intrepid
servants and officials. The rest of us would cross the mountains on sure-footed mules
bred for the dangerous alpine roads, hired at an exorbitant rate from local guides.
I was used to riding a mule, it being the preferred mode of transport over the
rough roads of Castile, but even I began to think we‟d not survive hose treacherous
rivulets our guides dared call roads. Besieged by winds and snow that often blinded us
to the very path we sought to traverse, we lost several servants, and their laden mules,
when they tumbled over the edge to a shrieking death that echoed in the chilled air for
hours afterward. Besançon and his suite of secretaries were wretched, my ladies
hunched over their mounts in mute misery. Stunned out of his bad mood, Philip went
white and still, his discomfort exacerbated by a bad tooth he developed from all the
desserts and sweet wines he‟d imbued in France. I took to imploring every saint I
could think of, in appeal that we‟d not find ourselves entombed, lost to the world
until the spring when the goat herders uncovered our frozen bodies under the melting
snow.
Someone heard my prayers. Tripping over the rugged paths, our hands and feet
numb, our cloaks crystallized with ice after what seemed an eternity (but was actually
just four days) that glacial hell had disappeared behind us.
The sky parted. Anemic sunlight stabbed from the clouds.
Mid-afternoon on January 26, 1502, I had my first glimpse of the Ebro Valley‟s
verdant expanse stretched out below us like a vision of paradise, the tiered white-
edged cliffs of Aragón rising toward the immensity of a cloud-washed sky.
I drew my reins to a halt. Beside me, Philip also stopped, his throbbing jaw
enveloped in a kerchief. He stared dully at the unfamiliar landscape. One of the guides
cantered ahead, to bring news of our arrival.
“España,” I breathed. “I am home.”
_________________
HOW CAN I DESCRIBE WHAT IT FELT LIKE TO SET FOOT ON MY NATIVE SOIL AFTER
SEVEN YEARS OF ABSENCE? I thought I had remembered it, the look and smell, the
very feel of Spain. But in truth it seemed as strange and vivid a world to me as
Flanders once had― both lush and austere in its complexity, with its broad-leaved
forests and forbidding mountains., the serpentine wind of the Ebro River seeming to
go on forever as we tripped to into the valley to encounter a ferocious wind blowing
off the Bay of Biscay.
I heard Philip mutter the first words he‟d deigned to say to me since leaving
France. “Damn your mulish pride. Had it not been for you, we could be gathered
around a hearth right now instead of freezing our arses off like peasants.” His words
lacked much bite, however, muffled as they were by the bandage, his face drawn from
the pain in his tooth.
I flashed back, “Yes, but here you‟ll be a king.” My words touched a never, for he
visibly straightened his shoulders and barked at his page to fetch him a clean cap and
cape.
Beatriz and Soraya gathered beside me. Their relief at being home shone through
their fatigue as we spied a company of lords with their retinue galloping toward us on
stallions.
I spurred my lathered mule to them. I knew them at once, these
grandes
of Spain, high nobles familiar to me since childhood― the slim and powerful Marquis of
Villena, whose holdings in eastern Castile rivaled the Crown‟s; and his ally, thickset
fiery-haired Count of Benavente, who liked his meat rare. I gave him an earnest nod
as they dismounted and bowed before me, but reserved my smile for the tall, lean
figure of the admiral Don Fadriqué, my mother‟s premier noble and head of our
armada, who had escorted me to my betrothal in Valladolid.
His dark hair was salted with silver now, his angular temple bearing a small scar
from a wound he took during the siege on Granada. His black costume gave him a
stark quality, though one belied by his regard. He had dark blue eyes, almost black,
deep-set and hooded― the worldly eyes of a temperate soul who did not let the
exigencies of life harden him. He looked at me now with a quiet reverence that made
me start in my saddle, thrusting home as nothing else had that I was no longer the
doe-eyed infanta who‟d left Spain years ago.
“Señores.”
I said, with a catch in my throat. “I am glad of you. Please welcome my husband His Highness the archduke Philip.”
They bowed to Philip who‟d ridden up in his fresh apparel. To my discomfiture,
he received their obeisance in silence, briefly lifting his chin, sans its bandage, before turning to Besançon, who, despite our recent privations had already killed one mule
from his weight and looked about to kill the one he currently sat astride like a
mountain in his soiled robes.
“We‟ve prepared a house for you,” the admiral announced in his gravelly timbre.
“His Majesty‟s own Dr. de Soto is here,” said the admiral and upon our arrival in
the simple manor a half hour later, the diminutive
converso
physician who‟d served my mother since her coronation examined Philip. “The gum is infected,” he said, his
thick brows meeting over his nose, his eyes lucid with his intelligence. “I must lance it before the humors infect his blood.”
On the bed, Philip lifted a shout of protest. While the admiral held him down by
the shoulders and I took hold of his feet, Soto relieved my husband of his abscess
with an expert prick of a red-hot needle, followed by a poppy-seed drought. Once I
was certain Philip slept, I went down to the hall alone to join the lords.
Benavente and Villena sat before the hearth, drinking wine and speaking in
hushed voices, their man-servants standing attentively at the wall. They clearly did not
expect me to appear by myself, I thought, as they rose hastily to bow, their dialogue
ceasing abruptly.
The admiral steered me with his large calloused hand to a chair, bowing low as I
sat. I bade them to be at ease, finding it uncomfortable to be reverenced. My rank as
heiress would take getting used to.
“My lords, we‟ve had a most trying journey,” I started to explain. “My husband is
not himself and asks that you pardon him. He is in need of rest.” I paused, resisting
the impulse to further excuse Philip, whose rudeness, despite his tooth, they had no
doubt been discussing.
“There is no need to explain,” said the admiral. I noted he did not drink nor did
he sit, taking his position with abstemious care by the wall. “A winter crossing of the
Pyrenees would try even the most courageous of men.”
I glanced at Villena. He arched an elegant brow, a sardonic smile playing on his
thin lips. I noticed he had garnished each of his small ears with a tiny red gem, his face coldly aloof as a predatory bird‟s, with swarthy skin and arresting sulfuric-green eyes. I knew his reputation. He was known as a ruthless
grande
of impeccable lineage, who‟d caused my parents more than their share of trials when he refused to surrender his
castles for requisitioning during the crusade against the Moor. My mother often spoke
of him with asperity; my father detested him.
I wondered what he thought of the Habsburg prince who had come here with his
Spanish wife to claim the title of prince-consort.
As if sensing my thoughts, the admiral said, “You must do us the honor of
sharing a meal with us,” and with a hearty bray of agreement, stolid Benavente
clapped his beefy hands.
Servants hustled in. The fare was simple: bread and cold ham and cheese. It tasted
like heaven. I ate like a starving women, asking between mouthfuls that food be
brought up to Philip and to my rooms as well, where my ladies attended to the
preparation of my chamber.
Then I asked, “What of their Majesties, my parents? Do they knew we are here?”
“Word was sent, yes,” said Villena. “However their Majesties was called to Sevilla
to contend with a
morisco
insurrection Thos godforsaken heretics are never content.
Cisneros is on his way there now; deal with him as a prince of the church. He often
said he should have had them all burned years ago.”
The marquis waved his jeweled hand fastidiously, as if he spoke of the
extermination of rats. The silent man-servant behind him leaned over his chair to
wipe his lips clean of crumbs. I found myself staring as the man-servant then poured
him a refill of wine. When Villena lifted his eyes to me, his mouth curved in a feral
half-smile and I quickly looked away.
“Nevertheless,” I heard the admiral say. whose appetite was apparently as spare as
his person, “their Majesties sent word that they will meet you in Toledo. Welcoming
festivities have been prepared though Holy Week is only a few weeks away.”
“Festivities?” I repeated. If they‟d prepared festivities, they must have known long
before any official word had been sent that we‟d left France. Lopez had done his job
well.
Villena purred, “Why, yes. it is our understanding these Flemish expect
divertissements. After all, you‟ve just been in a realm known for its
joie de vivre, n’est-ce-pas?
”
My stomach lurched. My mother, it seemed, had indeed been fully apprised. How
had she taken the news of the betrothal? What would she say to us about it?
I hoped my anxiety didn‟t show on my face. “How fare their Majesties my
parents?”
“In excellent health and most eager to see Your Highness,” interjected Benavente,
before Villena could reply. The admiral, I noticed, averted his eyes.
“Indeed,” I said quietly. “Then we must make haste, for I too am eager to see
them.”
We finished the rest of the meal in awkward silence. Villena and Benavente said
their good-nights; the admiral remained, as though he sensed my need to talk. He