Domingo Armada Omnibus

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Domingo Armada Omnibus Page 12

by Jefferson Bonar


  “I have to return to town,” Armada said. “Please, thank your wife for the wonderful food. And tell everyone I’ve enjoyed meeting them today. You have a fine family, Jose.”

  “I hope so,” Jose said. “Because I’m stuck with them.”

  “Buenas tardes,” Armada said, then turned and walked down the riverbed. It would eventually lead him down to the beach, where he could pick up the trail that would take him back into town. All the way there, only one thought rattled about in his brain.

  Why did it seem like Jose was lying?

  Chapter Eighteen

  Miguel awoke to the sound of the door clanging open. His heart skipped a beat. Had Madalena returned to take him on another excursion outside? Now that he’d tasted it, there was nothing else he wanted more. He had never slept so well as during that night. Even the cramping in his arms and legs hadn’t seemed so bad. Sleeping with a full stomach allowed him to wake up feeling refreshed, although he wasn’t sure what time it was as the torch had been allowed to go out, leaving him in almost total darkness.

  It hardly mattered as he’d simply used his imagination to pretend as though it were morning. He had spent hours focusing on what the sunlight felt like on his face, the smell of the fresh air, and how it had been to walk about with full strides, stretching his legs out, being able to go anywhere he pleased.

  A soldier came in through the darkness and lit the torch on the wall. There was someone else with him and for a moment Miguel could make out the long locks of a woman. It had to be Madalena!

  But as the torch splashed its usual orange, flickering light on the walls, it was clear that the long locks instead belonged to the constable named Armada, who now approached his cell.

  “How are you, Miguel?” Armada asked.

  “I’m, I’m fine.” Miguel said.

  “I just wanted to ask you a few more questions, if that’s all right.”

  “What time is it?” Miguel blurted out. He hadn’t meant to, but he needed to know if the sun was shining. In a strange way, he felt he’d be able to smell it on Armada. His clothes were slightly warm, somehow, with a sprinkling of dust on them.

  “Late in the afternoon, I think,” Armada said. The constable gave Miguel a friendly smile, instead of one tinged with the usual caustic sarcasm. Armada seemed to understand why he’d wanted to know, and sympathised. “A beautiful sunny day, as always.”

  Miguel smiled. He could picture it so easily now.

  “I wanted to ask you about your work for Jose,” Armada said.

  “Harvesting the cane?”

  “No. Digging the irrigation canals.”

  “Oh. That.”

  “You didn’t mention it to me before.”

  “I didn’t want to get in trouble,” Miguel said. “I knew we weren’t supposed to be doing it. Jose said it was all right, but I knew it wasn’t. He was trying to steal that water.”

  “But you did it anyway.”

  Miguel shrugged. He couldn’t think of an answer for the constable. Even Miguel wasn’t sure why he’d done it. Maybe he didn’t want to disappoint Jose. Or maybe he was hoping Jose would be his friend if he complied. Jose had been so friendly when he’d asked Miguel if he wanted to earn a bit of extra money during the harvest. How could he have said no?

  “You needed the money,” Armada said. “That’s fine. I’m not here to get you in trouble over it. I just wanted to know how Amparo felt about it.”

  “I tried not to talk to Amparo,” Miguel said. “I didn’t like working with him.”

  “He was a cruel man, I know, but…” Armada began.

  “No, it was because he and Jose were always arguing.”

  “About what?”

  Miguel tried to cast his mind back to those long nights he spent in the muddy field. He’d hated the work. It was cold, and he knew he would be tired the next day. And the shouting. He’d sensed Amparo and Jose were old friends who had known each other a long time, but those nights, when there was no one else around, they seemed so mean to each other. The sound of their shouting still sent shivers down his spine.

  “Money.”

  “How so?” Armada asked. He seemed particularly interested in Miguel’s answer. Miguel suddenly realised he was important to the case, and this made him slightly nervous.

  “Amparo wanted more. He was always arguing about it.”

  “But Jose didn’t want to pay him?”

  “I don’t think so. He mostly called Amparo a lot of bad names.”

  “Was Amparo threatening him as well?”

  “He said he was going to tell.”

  Armada’s body stiffened and he leaned in closer to the bars of the cell. “Tell what?”

  “Tell who we were stealing from.”

  “This is very important, Miguel, so I need you to think back very carefully. Are you saying that Amparo Rodriguez knew who owned the fallow field you were digging on?”

  Miguel’s nervousness increased and he began to mix up his memories. He was desperate to not to pass out again like he had with Madalena. He could feel how important this was to Armada and he didn’t want to disappoint him.

  But Armada was patient and willing to wait. Miguel could sense that and he was able to calm himself and hold the dizziness in his head at bay for a moment.

  “Yes,” Miguel whispered.

  “Did he say who it was?”

  “No. At least, not while I was around.”

  Armada turned around and leaned against the bars, taking in what he’d just been told.

  “What is it?” Miguel asked.

  “Just a crazy theory that is looking more and more to be true,” Armada said. Then he smiled. “I’ll be right back.”

  Armada left the room for a moment, then returned with one of the guards, who proceeded to unlock the door and swing it open for Miguel.

  Miguel stood inside the cell, not daring to move.

  “It’s all right, Miguel,” Armada said. “I’m releasing you.”

  “You are?”

  “Yes. This isn’t a trick, I promise,” Armada said, gesturing for Miguel to come out. “I don’t believe you had anything to do with Amparo Rodriguez’ murder. And I don’t see a reason to keep you in here any longer.”

  Miguel cautiously stepped forward, and wouldn’t have been surprised if the guard pounded on him and proceeded to beat him again. It was just the kind of trick they would have played when he’d first arrived.

  But instead, Armada escorted him out of the room, up the stairs, and all the way out of the castle. If it were a trick, he was going to a lot of effort to fool Miguel. And Miguel didn’t care anymore. He was outside, feeling the warmth of the sun on his face and head again. It was worth a beating, just for a few more minutes of sunshine.

  Armada escorted Miguel down to the tavern where he bought a menu del dia. Miguel scarfed up the food the moment it was served, as well as the warm, watery ale accompanying it. There was only a scattering of other men at the bar, and they now glared at him. Miguel realised he must have looked quite a sight. But he knew that wasn’t why these men were staring. It was because of the stories that had been circulating around town about why he had been imprisoned. Miguel shuddered to think about what they’d been saying, but going by the men’s faces, it wasn’t good.

  Armada didn’t seem to notice this. He appeared too wrapped up in apologising for Miguel’s incarceration and reminding him not to leave town as long as the case was still pending. He offered to put Miguel up for the night, then saw Miguel was tensing up and decided without asking to get another round of ales to put his mind at ease.

  Finding himself momentarily alone, and seeing Armada wrapped up in a conversation with the barman, Miguel rose from the table and quietly snuck out of the tavern. He would apologise later, but he just couldn’t stand those cold hard stares of the other men any longer.

  Without knowing where else to go, Miguel went back to the room he’d rented in a small house at the back of El Brocal when he’d first arrived. J
ose had told him about it. It was a place that always rented to labourers who drifted into town for the harvest season, and the woman he’d rented from seemed nice enough. She even gave him a good price.

  But that all changed when he returned. The landlady was not as nice as she’d been, and to his horror all of his things had been removed and sold to pay his bill. And he was certainly not allowed to rent a room again. The landlady knew he had no money and accused him of being a morisco and she said she didn’t rent to such people. Miguel had tried to tell him he wasn’t, but his protests fell on deaf ears.

  With nowhere else to go, Miguel wandered out of town and down to the delta where he found a stable with a door he could slip through. Inside, he found a flea-ridden blanket and a pile of straw, as well as a mule who seemed grateful for a bit of company.

  Chapter Nineteen

  Lucas arrived back at the inn shortly after Armada did, his eyes wide with excitement. It made Armada suspect at first, since not once in the history of Spain had a person fresh from a town archives, having spent the day culling through poorly-written records, ever returned in such a state. It seemed a waste of youthful energy, but Armada was hoping it would be useful. And going by how Lucas seemed to bounce off the walls, it was promising.

  “I went to the town hall like you said, sir, to try and look up who owns that fallow field,” Lucas began. “I dug through their archives and apparently it hasn’t changed hands for a long time. The only mention I found of it was a declaration of inheritance for tax purposes. It looks like the previous owner died and left it to his son.”

  Armada let his eyes glance over the notes Lucas pointed to. To him, it seemed a jumble of random words, phrases, and unidentifiable scrawl that made little sense.

  “There wasn’t much information in it, sir. Mostly just some vague descriptions of boundary markers, and some calculations of possible crop yields used to calculate the taxes, which I noted here in case we need it.”

  “Yes, yes, get on with it, Lucas. How does any of this help us?”

  “Well, it took me a while to find the name of that son who inherited it, sir. But I did. And you’ll never guess who it is.”

  Lucas ran his finger down to the bottom of his notes where a name had been written and circled several times.

  Pablo Ortega, alcalde of Salobreña and the most powerful man in town.

  Armada let his memory roll back to when Ortega had come to visit him at the inn. The man had seemed so eager for Miguel to be charged and for the case to be resolved. Not eager. Worried. The man had come looking for reassurance the case would play out as he’d planned. At the time, Armada hadn’t been able to figure out why. Was it out of concern for the town’s welfare? Or was it something more personal? He didn’t know Ortega well enough to tell.

  “Do you think Jose Padilla knows, sir?” Lucas said.

  “Perhaps. But that’s not the question on my mind. No, I’m more curious to know if Amparo Rodriguez knew.”

  “Why?”

  “We know that Amparo Rodriguez was an ambitious man. He constantly fought with Jose over money, which means we can assume that was a clear motivation in his life. But Amparo couldn’t get what he wanted from Jose simply by asking. So what if he tried to force Jose to give it to him?” Armada said.

  “Blackmail.”

  “It certainly fits. Jose has a lot to lose if Ortega found out he was stealing water from him. Ortega is a wealthy man and could easily have ruined Jose, either through criminal charges or a civil suit with the Royal Chancery. Either way, Jose couldn’t possibly afford to defend himself. If Amparo knew that, he would simply have had to threaten Jose with exposing his crimes to get whatever he wanted.”

  Lucas looked over his notes.

  “But sir, look how difficult it was for me to find out who owned that field. Nobody had looked at those records in years. So how would Amparo have known?”

  “A very astute question, Lucas. And there is only one way I can think of getting the answer. Which I will, first thing tomorrow morning. Meanwhile, I’d like you to return to the archives and continue your work.”

  “What am I looking for, sir?”

  “I’d like to know if Pablo Ortega owns any other fields around here. And more importantly, what he’s doing with them.”

  “That might be difficult, sir. The archivist there was already a bit wary of letting a young person like me see sensitive records like that. I’m not sure he will,” Lucas said.

  “Then there is a life lesson to be learned here, Lucas,” Armada said. He grabbed a small purse from his jacket pocket and plopped it on the table, causing the coins inside to jangle.

  “There will always be people in this world who require a bit more convincing,” Armada said.

  The next morning Armada walked along the ancient cobbled street just up the hill from the plaza that ran west, along a route that had once been the location of the medieval wall that had surrounded Salobreña so many years ago. The wall was considered obsolete after the last of the Moorish rebellions had been quashed. Any threat to Salobreña’s hilltop fortress now would come from the sea, not the land. The ancient wall had been allowed to fall into ruin, with large sections having been pillaged for building materials and the rest allowed to erode away with each successive rainstorm.

  The section of the wall that Armada now followed, however, had been preserved as it created a main thoroughfare into a large open square where buildings had been forbidden. It was here, in the part of town called the Medina, where the monthly market was now taking place. Armada was far from alone, as the road heaved with townspeople and overloaded carts pulled by exhausted mules who brayed in protest as they clopped their way past Armada. Merchants and traders from all over the region had come, some with fruit and vegetables of every variety, others with nuts or spices. Some specialized in clothing and came with carts stacked high with merino wool or dyed fabrics from Seville, while others brought leather goods and animal hides, freshly tanned, or wooden farming tools, as well as barrels of iron scrap.

  Salobreña had become a very noisy, crowded place as the streets filled with shoppers from town, as well as the myriad of little villages in its municipality including Ítrabo, Molvízar, and Lobres. Adding to this din were the local residents who stood about on their front stoops, chatting with neighbours and watching the parade of carts slowly shuffle past their doorsteps.

  Armada pushed his way through the throngs of people and came to the Medina, an open bit of land just beyond the wall that was now overcrowded with stalls, each with merchants haggling over prices with shoppers.

  Armada searched the narrow lanes between the stalls of the market, ignoring the wares on offer and eyeing the people. Many brought baskets made of reeds or wicker to carry their freshly-bought goods, while others filled canvas sacks thrown over their shoulders. A few women were content to hold up the front of their long dresses and fill them with carefully selected produce.

  She had to be here. And if he could catch her, the setting would be perfect. If she’d been here long enough, it would tell him everything he needed to know.

  After a bit of searching, Armada finally spotted her. She was in the far corner of the market, dressed in a modest grey dress, her hair tucked under a matching coif with a white neckerchief folded into the collar, her shoes simply a pair of mules. This was a woman dressing not to be noticed in a crowd of peasants and Armada had nearly missed her.

  Madalena was looking over a trader’s selection of bodices he had brought from Seville. Many were made from fine silk and kept in shape by the whalebone embedded in the fabric, designed to wrap tight around the woman’s middle, keeping her back straight and holding her bust up.

  Armada watched Madalena for a moment, finding that the crowd of shoppers allowed him to stand quite close to her without being seen. She was holding a modest basket, which held no food, but instead a few bits of silver jewellery, some red satin fabric, and now a new bodice, for which she had just paid the merchant and now plac
ed in her basket. Madalena drifted away and Armada took a closer look at the bodices for himself. Very fine silk indeed, he could tell, likely from Granada. And with the whalebone inserts quite expensive, and more than she should be able to afford.

  Seeing the confused stare the merchant was giving him, whose buyers were exclusively women, Armada moved on.

  He soon caught up with Madalena, who was now browsing a stall filled with a selection of pungent brown spices displayed in old wine barrels.

  “How long are you planning to follow me around today?” Madalena asked over her shoulder.

  “I apologise, Señora,” Armada said. “But I had a few more questions for you. Is there somewhere more private where we can speak?”

  “I don’t have time for this, Constable. I’ve just bought some very expensive flower bulbs, which I must plant in pots as soon as possible.”

  “Just one question then. It’s all I require. Do you have time for that?”

  “Of course,” Madalena said.

  “Why are you here?”

  This took Madalena by surprise. She turned and raised her eyebrows, looking straight at Armada. “That is your one question?”

  “You have no family in Salobreña. And given Amparo’s reputation in this pueblo, no friends either. Your neighbours must know about your money,” Armada said, gesturing to the new bodice in Madalena’s basket. “They can smell the meat you cook,” he continued. “They’ve seen your bed, they know about your new dresses and linens. In a place like La Loma, jealousy must run very high. Especially toward a stranger in town like you, whom you will always be in their eyes as you weren’t born here. Anyone else in your position would be sad, having just lost her husband, looking at a long life to be spent in spinsterhood, an outsider in her own pueblo. You have the means to return to Malaga, away from the petty jealousies of a town like this. And yet you remain. And plan on remaining here long enough at least to find it worth your while to plant a garden of expensive flowers.”

  Madalena seemed little affected by Armada’s words, and simply continued perusing the spice merchants’ supply as casually as if he had been discussing the weather. Armada had meant to wind her up, to upset her, which would reveal volumes.

 

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