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Secrets of Spain Trilogy

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by Caroline Angus Baker




  SECRETS OF

  SPAIN

  TRILOGY

  BLOOD IN THE VALENCIAN SOIL

  VENGEANCE IN THE VALENCIAN WATER

  DEATH IN THE VALENCIAN DUST

  CAROLINE ANGUS BAKER

  Bella Figura Publishing

  Also by Caroline Angus Baker

  The ‘Canna Medici’ Series:

  Night Wants to Forget

  Violent Daylight

  Luminous Colours of Dusk

  Cries of Midnight

  The ‘Secrets of Spain’ series, available individually:

  Blood in the Valencian Soil

  Vengeance in the Valencian Water

  Death in the Valencian Dust

  Bella Figura Publishing

  Auckland, New Zealand

  No part of this publication may be reproduced by any means, graphic, electronic, or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, taping or by any information storage retrieval system without the written permission of the author except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles and reviews.

  While locations and historical timelines are accurate, the characters and situations in this book are purely fictional and are not based on any person, living or dead.

  For more information on Spanish and Valencian culture and history, visit www.carolineangusbaker.com

  Copyright © 2015 Caroline Angus Baker

  All rights reserved.

  ISBN: 150881063X

  ISBN-13: 978-1508810636

  For Grayson, Torben, Espen and Lachlan

  Note:

  Because the Valencian language was banned under Franco, Spanish names and spellings have been used through most of the book, but Valencian spelling is used where indicated, in line with modern customs

  BLOOD

  IN THE VALENCIAN SOIL

  Love and hate hidden in the legacy of the

  Spanish Civil War

  Then I realised I had been murdered.

  They looked for me in cafes, cemeteries and churches …. but they did not find me. They never found me? No. They never found me.

  ~ Federico Garcia Lorca

  1

  Cuenca, España ~ Marzo de 1939

  “Come on, Luna! They will be here by now!”

  Luna Beltrán Caño looked away from the window of her bedroom. Her view looked across the gorge towards a monastery, which rose from the fog that sat between the mountains on the chilly spring day. Cuenca was once a medieval fortress precariously built on a hilltop, and now was an isolated little town. Fog shrouded the deep gorge of the Huécar river that surrounded the town. Any evil could lurk down there, the same kind that caused the original inhabitants to wall around the town for protection 1300 years ago.

  She picked up her unassuming brown coat from the only chair that adorned the sparse room. She was lucky that she owned something to keep her warm. Luna was a young woman with many luxuries in her life, like her single bed that had two blankets on it this year, and she was even able to wash them semi-regularly. On the wall over a small wooden table where she kept her diary, she had hung a mirror. Her father had bought it for his wife, but now Luna had inherited it. She looked at herself, with her curly black hair in a ponytail. Her cheeks had thinned over the winter; the shortage of food in the town wasn’t new. The farm labourers ventured further and further from the safe outskirts of the town into the mountains in search of places to grow crops or herd livestock. Many never returned. Every day there seemed to be fewer men in the town. Families had fled the town for Catalonia or the Basque country in the north, and they were never heard of again. Nowhere was safe during a civil war.

  The war had raged for almost three years now, and its intensity continued to grow. Cuenca was flanked by the Republican stronghold of Madrid to the west and the Republican port of Valencia to the east. The Republicano zone continue to lose ground to Franco’s rebel fascist troops, or Nacionales as they called themselves, and stories of immense atrocities spread far and wide.

  Now the threat of Franco’s army crossing the mountains and into Cuenca was about to become a reality. Men ran from the town in pursuit of adventure; to support the Republican fight against Franco and his brutal army, only to become barbarians themselves as their blood spilled into the soil that they fought to rule.

  Fighting and instability was all Luna knew. She was 20 years old, and her whole life, her world had been fighting. The war may have just been three years old, but she couldn’t remember a time where things were calm. She knew how lucky she was – they lived in town and they owned a home. Many did not. Most had been at the mercy of landowners, nothing more than peasants who worked for the wealthy. People were treated like slaves, traded like cattle, their desperation for work and food exploited. No wonder España’s population had divided themselves and decided to rise up to defend themselves. Luna was 12 when revolution came in España, not old enough to understand. She had never been to school, couldn’t read and write at that time. She was lucky that her father was educated enough to teach her as she grew older. The Second Republic, founded in 1931 promised an equal society, but that never came. She remembered her anarchist father getting her mother, Isabel, to vote in 1931, when women were first given the chance. Again, no change came, just in-fighting. People were poor, humiliated, unheard. No wonder civil war came in 1936. Franco’s rebel army had flooded into Spain from Morocco and the bloodletting had begun. The group, supported by fascists, monarchists and religious conservatives couldn’t just take España, because the Republicans were prepared to hold on to their country. Luna’s mother had been a Catholic, but her father’s new-found hate of the church and State meant that Luna couldn’t find solace in her religion anymore. The church was seen as oppressive, as was the army, who hated anyone who had an opinion on anything other than the unity and control of España. The fabric of society had well and truly broken down over the course of her short lifetime. The socialists, anarchists and communists who worked together under the Republican flag had held on to parts of España, with the help of a large group of international volunteers. But now, three years on, España was weary. Her people were weary. The Republican spirit had faded to the oppression of the Franco army.

  Luna stepped through the door that separated her own room from the rest of the house, passed through the room that her brother and his wife occupied, and through into the living space. The Beltrán Caño family was one of the blessed families who had managed to avoid starvation throughout this difficult time. The textile business that their father Juan Pablo help run, along with the town’s anarchist co-operative, had managed to stay afloat, thanks to the supplies he bought from Barcelona. At least the supplies were still in demand in the region of Castile-La Mancha. Her father was away in Madrid, which left her with just her older brother, Alejandro, and his wife, Sofía.

  “Sí, sí, I’m coming!” Luna replied. Her sister-in-law stood at the front door of the house across the small room. Sofía was a nurse, and her uniform was tight now that she was nine months pregnant. “You know Alejandro will come right to the house, don’t you?”

  “I want to be there when he gets out of the truck,” Sofía said impatiently, and watched Luna put on her basic black shoes. The puddles that formed between the cobbles outside were a real pain, because their shoes leaked. Sofía was on her damp feet all day at the hospital and so uncomfortable because of her pregnancy. At least Luna’s skirts were not as long as the full-length white ones Sofía had to wear at the hospital. Sofía’s dress soaked up the dirty water on the steps that made up the narrow streets between the house and the hospital, which only added to the misery of her life. But none of that mattered; today her husband of only six months was home from Valencia again
. As long as Sofía had Alejandro at home in Cuenca, nothing else mattered to her.

  Luna checked the fire in the stove, and the two young women stepped out onto the narrow road that was cold and damp in the shade. The women walked up the streets made of countless rows of stone steps. They were all alone on the street, all the other houses around them still shut up tight.

  “I’m so glad they’re back,” Luna said. “I’m not sure how much more of this I can take.”

  “Because you miss your brother or because you miss Cayetano?” Sofía teased.

  “I worry for Alejandro, of course! He’s my brother. He engages in these dangerous trips, and the worry keeps me awake at night.”

  “I know the feeling. With Alejandro back in Cuenca, I will be sure to keep him awake in bed,” Sofía giggled.

  “But you’re pregnant.”

  “I know that, Luna. How do you think I got into this dilemma with your brother? You’re the most innocent 20-year-old girl.”

  “I know how it works, Sofía. Remember that I have to sleep in the next room. I’m not a little girl.”

  “Do you need to confess some impure thoughts again?”

  Luna threw her a sly look. “I won’t share anything with you again. Besides, the day of being able to seek guidance from the church is long gone. Not since the mobs burned the church and killed most of the clergy here. We may be fighting for a liberal society, but yet I don’t find anyone fighting for my rights or beliefs.”

  “And that’s why your mind is occupied with dreams of the moment you make your way into Cayetano Ortega’s bed?”

  “Oh, would you stop! Papá has arranged for me to marry Ignacio in Madrid.”

  “The man is a bore, Luna. He looks so ill all the time. ”

  “Yes, but if marry him, then Papá’s business and Ignacio’s family’s business can merge and do well together. Times are hard enough. We need to own a business once the war is over, for our own safety and survival.”

  “They don’t need your marriage for that.”

  “No, but Papá thinks that Ignacio would make a suitable husband. Plus they need someone to carry on the family name.”

  “So you’re willing to pop out babies for the sake of textile businesses? That’s cold.”

  Luna sighed. “I like Ignacio. He is a gentleman. He is sophisticated, friendly, considerate, and wealthy. I could do worse. Much worse.”

  “You forgot love, Luna. Ignacio is a Falange member. Your father is just getting cosy with the enemy for his safety. He is a pig, you know that, don’t you? Juan Pablo is playing with fire.”

  “I will love Ignacio. But he lives in Madrid, I never get to see him.”

  “Then why don’t you just move to Madrid?”

  “And leave you and Alejandro? I wanted to be with Mamá until she died.”

  “I know,” Sofía said and placed her hand on her best friend’s shoulder. “I’m not trying to be nasty. I’m not.”

  “Alejandro told Cayetano unequivocally that he has to stay away from me. Ignacio should be the man for me.”

  “Alejandro says that because he knows what kind of man Cayetano is.”

  “Yeah, Ale and Caya are as bad as each other!”

  “We all have different expectations in life, Luna. In a few weeks from now, we could all be dead. It’s that simple. You saw what happened when the Republicans first claimed Cuenca for themselves…”

  “Yes, they dumped priests’ bodies in the street while the church burned.”

  “If I’m going to be raped and murdered when the Franco army sweep through here soon, I want to know that I married the man I loved while I had the chance. Alejandro is not perfect, but he’s a hero.”

  “He drives people from Madrid to Valencia! Hardly a noble task!”

  “That’s all Cayetano does! The trip from Madrid to Valencia is dangerous, Madrid is surrounded on three sides, and they bombed the roads to Valencia. It’s a risk. Cayetano is a drinker, and a womaniser, just like Alejandro was. They are more noble than any fascist bastardo. But we love who we love.”

  “Alejandro loves you, Sofía. There is no doubt about that. He is my brother, and I love him. I don’t care what he does for money, the same way you don’t care. Alejandro and Cayetano be may not be in the Republican army now, but they fought in Madrid, Jarama, Guadalajara, Teruel… they’re lucky to still be alive.”

  “I think Alejandro, Cayetano and Scarlett do a fantastic thing now! The more people they can help out of Madrid and to Valencia, and then off to a safer place, the better. Maybe we should be the ones fleeing to Valencia while we still can.”

  The pair turned a corner and stepped into the pale spring sunshine. There on the edge of the hillside was the small truck. Alejandro and Cayetano stood next to the open door at the front of the vehicle, and Scarlett sat in the driver’s seat. Alejandro glanced over to see his wife and sister coming in his direction. He dropped his cigarette on the path and dashed over to Sofía, and gathered her and their baby into his arms.

  Luna stood back with a smile. Alejandro and Sofía were so in love. She could see her brother’s face wet with tears as he held his wife. He had been gone three weeks, but the roads from Madrid to Valencia were the next target for the Franco army and the front lines of the war were just miles from Cuenca now. There were soldiers ready to shoot anything that moved in every valley. It would have been the most dangerous trip yet. Alejandro Beltrán Caño knew the obligation he had to his family, but he wanted adventure. Alejandro had wanted to fight the army and the onslaught that they brought to his nation. He wanted to look a Falange member in the eye as he speared the life from him, and had done so many times during the war. The Republicans desperately wanted to save their country. With the aid of his friend, Cayetano Ortega, he had almost built up enough cash to ferry the whole family out of España while the war raged. People in Madrid would pay what little money they had to have their families and their belongings driven from the uncertainty and starvation of Madrid to Valencia in the back of a small truck, so they could set sail for Francia.

  “Buenos días, Señorita Luna.”

  Luna turned at the sound of Cayetano’s voice. She savoured every word she heard from the man’s mouth. His voice was deep, and it sent a sensation through her body that she wasn’t sure she could trust. She was reluctant to look him in the eye for fear of what it did to her. “Buenos días, Cayetano,” she said, and dared to look at the tall man. He held his dirty brown cap in his unwashed fist as he tried to tidy his uncombed curly black hair with his other hand. “Welcome home again.”

  “How have things been here? How are you?”

  “I’m fine,” she shrugged. “Sofía has been unwell.”

  Cayetano nodded. “I saw your father in Madrid. He is worried for you and Sofía. But he is too busy to come home. We suggested that he stays in Madrid for a little longer.”

  “Papá is safe? I have been so worried.”

  “Your father is fine. Alejandro will try to get back to Madrid next week with the truck and visit him. Your Papá will be okay. The Beltrán family will be back together soon.”

  “Luna,” Scarlett said, her voice stern. Luna looked over at the woman and squinted in the sunlight. She wasn’t sure what to make of Scarlett. “I’m sorry to hear that your mother passed away last month.”

  “Gracias,” she mumbled in return. Luna found her intimidating. Scarlett Montgomery had been a nurse with the International Brigade based out in Huete. But after the camp had been bombed, she travelled the 60 kilometres to Cuenca to work at the hospital, where Sofía befriended her. Scarlett was from a far off country, Nueva Zelanda, and had sailed to España in the hope of aiding the less fortunate caught up in the war. But now Scarlett had become disillusioned and had left nursing to help her friends Cayetano and Alejandro get people out of the country. Luna had no idea what Scarlett did with her share of the money. Now that her husband, Ulrich, a German soldier with the International Brigade, was dead, who knew what her plans were.
>
  “Now that Isabel has passed away,” Scarlett continued, “what are you doing?”

  “I help Sofía.”

  “She needs help, Scarlett,” Cayetano said. He knew that Scarlett didn’t like Luna.

  “I’m aware of that,” Scarlett said as she got out of the truck. “But a woman like Luna could do more to help save her country from invasion than just sit at home.” She folded her arms, which pulled at her oversized dark green shirt. It revealed the curves hidden under the androgynous clothing she wore.

  “Me? How?”

  “Women are no longer confined to the kitchen, Luna. Women take up arms to fight alongside their brothers. They run political activism groups and set up charities for orphans. You are a caring person, perhaps with some training you could even be a nurse.”

  Luna looked Scarlett up and down. Her luscious deep red curls were pulled back from her face into a long ponytail. Her face carried a deadly serious expression. Alejandro had told her that Scarlett had come to España with three fellow countrymen who were eager to fight. They were all killed soon after they left Barcelona, which left Scarlett alone with no language skills. The woman had come a long way in two years, but it was easy to see that her heart had been darkened by the experience.

  “Luna will marry Ignacio Reyes Paz, remember?” Cayetano said. “Luna will be going to Madrid with him. To associate herself with the enemy.”

  “Is that wise?” Scarlett asked.

  “I thought that,” Alejandro interjected. “Perhaps you would be safer in Valencia. Papá’s plan to marry you off as a safeguard for our survival is ridiculous.” He gave his sister a massive hug, happy to see her again after his hair-raising expedition.

  “I don’t know,” Luna said once her brother had let her go. “I haven’t spoken to Papá or Ignacio…”

  “Or you could be more than a wife and fight for the Republican cause,” Scarlett interrupted her.

 

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