by David Walton
QUINTESSENCE SKY
by David Walton
Copyright 2013 David Walton
Smashwords Edition
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PROLOGUE
FATHER Ramos was sitting at his fireplace, reading Copernicus, when the inquisitors knocked on his door.
It was generally his favorite time of the day. His niece, Antonia, worked her embroidery in the rocking chair across from him. The fire cast a warm glow through the room. The crackle of burning wood combined with the soft scrape of porcelain as Carmela, his old servant, straightened the kitchen.
Copernicus claimed that the world was not round, as the Greeks had maintained, but flat, with oceans that ran over the edge into oblivion, or else were held in by a lip, like a giant bowl. He used the movements of the stars to defend his position, and so far, Ramos had not been able to find a fault with his logic. It was a revolutionary work, and he was enjoying it.
At the same time, though, he found it unsettling. Cosmology was not just an intellectual pursuit; it had spiritual implications. For more than a thousand years, the Church had understood the Earth to be round, surrounded by a series of crystalline spheres to which the heavenly bodies were attached, first the moon, then the sun, then the movable stars, then the fixed stars, then the angelic sphere, and finally, the empyrean, the dwelling place of God. The spheres were perfect circles, as God was perfect. If Copernicus was right, what did that say about God?
At the sound of fists pounding on the door, everyone in the room froze. Antonia's chair stopped rocking, and her embroidery needle poised motionless over the cloth. Carmela held her breath, one arm still reaching for a bowl, and darted a frightened glance toward the window.
Unhurriedly, Ramos leaned forward and dropped the Copernican treatise into the fire. He would find another copy. It wasn't worth the risk that one of these brutes would see it and recognize it for what it was.
"Antonia, please retire to your chamber," he said, keeping his voice even.
Antonia was a sweet child, fourteen years old, though she had seen more than her share of tragedy in that short time. She was exceedingly pretty, with thick black curls that flooded over her shoulders and down her back. There was little in this world as guileless or innocent as she, but she knew enough to fear the men who came knocking late at night. The muscles of her neck and arms were rigid with fright.
Carmela, who had served as Antonia's nursemaid since her birth, crossed the room and tried to take her hand, but Antonia pulled away. She stood, heedless of the embroidery that fell to the stone hearth.
"What do they want?" she said.
The pounding on the door grew more insistent, and Ramos sighed. "Doubtless they wish me to perform some service. Don't let it trouble your rest."
"What if you don't come back?"
"I am no heretic, child. I will return by morning."
"You can't be certain of that." She knew it, and so did he.
"Say your prayers for me, then," he said.
Antonia allowed Carmela to lead her away, but at the last moment, she pulled away and ran back to him. She threw her arms around his neck and kissed his cheek. "Be safe, Tío Ramos," she said.
"I will. Go now."
"Whatever they want, just do what they say. Don't fight them."
"I won't."
She ran back to Carmela.
"Lie still on your bed and pretend to be asleep," Ramos said. "If anyone comes in, don't open your eyes."
True to his vows, Ramos had never married, but God had seen fit to give him this child anyway, the daughter of his brother Diego. Her mother was dead, and Diego had never been the sort of man to care for a child. He had left Spain two years ago on King Philip's orders, to engineer a marriage between the king and Queen Mary of England. He had left Antonia behind, and Ramos had taken her in gladly. Ramos thought it was just as well for Antonia that Diego had not taken her with him. His brother had never been a kind man.
"Open in the name of King Philip!" bellowed a voice from outside.
Ramos stoked the fire to be sure the pages were completely burned, and then walked to the door. He opened it to reveal three men in crimson cloaks. The tallest of them, whose hand was raised to strike the door again, scowled at Ramos.
"You should not use the king's name so lightly," Ramos said. "King Philip is in England marrying a queen, not here sending lackeys to knock down his humble servants' doors."
The tallest one reddened. "We are the king's voice and the king's fist," he said. "Treat us with deference, or we'll have you put to the question, priest or no."
"By all means, your Excellency. Shall I kiss your ring?"
"Or perhaps we'll question that girl who lives in your house. I'm sure she could tell us some tales, if we worked on her long enough."
Ramos bowed his head. These were petty, vindictive men, and no good would come from antagonizing them. "I am your servant," he said. "There is no need for threats." He stepped outside and pushed the door shut behind him.
The inquisitor nodded pompously. "That's better. Come along, then."
"Where are we going?" Ramos said.
"Valencia wants you."
FATHER Alonso de Valencia was waiting for Ramos in the Catedral de Nuestra Señora de la Asunción. The cathedral was a latticework of wooden scaffolding and stone arches built on the foundations of an older church. It would not truly be a cathedral until it was finished, many years hence, and became the bishop's seat, but that did not stop its cellars from being useful in the work of the Church. Valencia was about sixty, his skin dry and taut around his spare frame. His smile was grim.
"It's good to see you, Ramos," Valencia said. "The Lord has need of your service."
"You know what I think about what you do here," Ramos said. "I'm an astronomer, not an inquisitor."
Valencia made a face like he was tasting something bad. "I don't relish the work either. It's often unpleasant, and it wears on the nerves. But it is important work, necessary to cleanse the realm of Protestants and other heretics."
"I won't help you torture someone," Ramos said.
"This time, I think you will."
Valencia descended into the crypt, leaving Ramos little choice but to follow. He would much rather have climbed to the flat, stone roof of the transept, where he could study the stars and breathe the fresh air, but he went down instead, his footsteps echoing in the stone tunnel. The air was cool but thick, and there was a stink of fear and blood.
The prisoner was no more than ten years old. He was strapped into a heavy, wooden chair in the center of the room. His eyes rolled back and forth, and he thrashed against the straps. His chin was wet with spittle, and vomit stained his shirt. Torches were arranged in such a way as to dazzle his eyes and allow an inquisitor to approach unseen from behind. The chair itself had holes in the back where sharpened screws could be slowly turned, iron nails that could be heated from below by hot coals, and attachments for a variety of other instruments of slow agony. A rack stood against the wall as well, along with shelves of hammers, pincers, vices, and blades.
"No," Ramos said. "Let him go. I will have no part of this."
"The boy is demon-possessed," Valencia said. "He went into convulsions when we brought him down the stairs."
"His mind is sick, and he is terrified."
"You should have s
een him, thrashing on the ground and frothing at the mouth. The demons have driven him quite mad."
"A clear indication that his parents are Protestants," Ramos said.
"Or worse," Valencia replied, missing the sarcasm, or else choosing to ignore it.
"What do you hope to gain from this? If the boy is possessed, he's not under his own control. If you torture him, he'll admit to anything. How will you know if he's guilty of heresy?"
Valencia laughed. "The boy's guilt is self-evident. Demons can not enter a Christian soul. No, as you say, we need his witness against his parents. We need to know how deep the heresy goes. It does no good to cut off the plant while the roots remain in place to sprout again."
Ramos watched the boy pulling against his restraints, and remembered the tall inquisitor's casual suggestion that they might question Antonia. He felt sick.
"Just because he tells you something under torture, doesn't mean it's true," Ramos said.
"That's why we need you."
"I don't understand."
"It takes a special kind of man to extract confessions," Valencia said. "Someone with patience and fortitude. I am quite gifted at it, but I can recognize when others have talents that I do not possess. They say you are very good at casting the horoscope."
Ramos was not about to be flattered. "I am the king's astronomer, professor of mathematics at the University, and founder of the Holy Astrological Society. Clearly I am competent."
"I wish you to cast for the prisoner."
"I don't see how that will aid you."
"You're too modest. Think of it as helping me know which questions to ask."
Ramos shook his head. He understood what Valencia was asking now, but he still didn't want to be involved. "I don't think . . ."
"It's an experiment," Valencia said. "If it doesn't work, I'll just go back to doing it my way." He looked pointedly at the instruments of pain arrayed around them.
Ramos bowed his head in assent. If he could spare this boy from torture, or even just delay it a while, it was worth the attempt. "I'll need paper," he said. "And plenty of ink."
RAMOS spread a full sheet of printer's paper on a table and weighted its corners with chips of quarried stone from the chapel above. An arc of votive candles illuminated the blank surface. He began to draw.
The boy's name was Luis. He had been born on May the first, under the star Ceginus.
Ramos dipped his quill and inked a large circle, the celestial sphere, which he followed by lines dividing the ecliptic into the twelve houses. With practiced ease, he consulted his astrolabe, converting coordinates in his head, and paged through his almanac for the tables of oblique ascensions.
"Do they keep an unauthorized Bible translation hidden in the house?" Valencia said in a calm monotone. "Or perhaps a Talmud? A secret book of any kind?"
"No book, no book," Luis said.
"If they did have a book, where would they hide it?"
"Luis don't know," the boy said, rocking. "Luis don't read."
"But you've seen it, surely. Is there a secret box? A secret place where they store it?"
"Luis want to go home."
"Where is the book, Luis?"
"Papa read to me sometimes. Not Mama. She don't read neither."
"Where does your papa put the book after he reads to you?"
"No, no, no. Luis is a good boy. Not allowed to touch it."
"Did you ever touch it, Luis?"
"No, no, no."
While Ramos listened, he calculated, and could almost forget the horrific circumstances of this casting. He had figured countless horoscopes in his professional career, and the steps came easily. At the University of Valladolid, he trained medical students in horoscope-casting to diagnose diseases or determine auspicious times to mix their medicines.
His figures gave him trouble today, however, which was unusual. Detailed horoscopes could take hours to calculate, but Ramos was experienced and quick. Something bothered him about this one, though he couldn't quite put his finger on it. The equations just didn't seem to line up the way they usually did.
He persisted, however, and soon certain associations began to emerge. "Ask him about any letters his parents may have received or written," Ramos said.
"With whom do your parents correspond? Are there friends abroad to whom they write?" Valencia said.
"Luis don't touch the letters. Luis don't read."
"Do they read them to you?"
"No, no, no."
"Where are they from?"
Luis looked suddenly frightened. "Luis not tell. Luis keeps a secret."
Some inquisitors were shouters, bellowing threats at the accused to intimidate them into speaking. Valencia's subdued questioning seemed more effective. Ramos suspected that even if the questioning moved on to torture, he would maintain his serene demeanor, posing questions in calm, conversational tones while those he interrogated screamed and wept.
"We already know the answers to these questions," Valencia said soothingly. "It is for your sake that we ask them. If you are honest with us, it will spare you pain."
"From far away," Luis said. "Many days travel." He had a transparently mischievous expression, as if he thought he had answered the question cleverly without giving his secret away.
"From where, exactly?" Valencia said, and Luis's mischievous expression vanished.
Another association materialized under Ramos's pen: "philosopher" and "demon". Philosopher demon? No. The Demon Philosopher. "Ask him about Martin Luther," Ramos said.
At the name, Luis's eyes bugged out and he tried to stand, though he was still strapped down. "Luis not tell," he wailed. "Luis is a good boy."
Valencia nodded appreciatively to Ramos. If Luis's parents were corresponding with Luther's followers, that implied they were much more than simple Protestant sympathizers. It meant a network of Protestants, sedition, underground worship services—exactly how the unrest had started in the Netherlands. They may have just uncovered a serious cancer in the pure flesh of Spain, one that would have to be ruthlessly excised. Ramos was a Jesuit, devoted to the Church and to the Pope. He knew it was important to root out heresy, and yet he didn't feel proud of his contribution here.
Luis became more and more agitated, until his eyes rolled back, and his body went into convulsions, rattling the chair and knocking his head against the iron bands.
"Unstrap him," Valencia said to the guards, who quickly obeyed, allowing the convulsing boy to slip to the floor. They wouldn't get any more information out of him if he battered himself unconscious in the chair.
While they waited for the convulsions to subside, Ramos perused the horoscope again, partly just to take his eyes away from the child's distress. Something still bothered him about the shape of the calculations. He looked back and forth between his paper and his astrolabe, turning the sphere slightly, and then he saw it. He stared, disbelieving. Surely not.
Ramos knew the heavens as well as he knew the doctrines of Holy Scripture, as well as he knew his own name. For thousands of years, the fixed stars had turned in their courses, while the five wandering stars—Mercury, Venus, Mars, Jupiter, and Saturn—cut across them in their own complex patterns, more dynamic, but utterly predictable. If there was anything he knew about the heavenly spheres, it was this: they didn't change. What he was seeing was impossible.
Yet it was true. A star was missing. It wasn't pictured on his astrolabe, though he knew it always had been, knew it had been there only minutes before. He snatched his almanac and flipped through, but the star was missing from the tables as well. Was he losing his mind?
He glanced back up and saw that, although Luis's fit was over, Valencia himself was staring slack-jawed, not speaking. Something was happening. The air felt thick, the pervasive smell of blood sickeningly strong. Luis laughed from the floor, a maniacal sound. Valencia turned to Ramos, his face a mask of terror. He raised an arm, reaching out, and tried to stand, but his legs buckled and he collapsed. On the floor, he beg
an to convulse, his eyes wide and startled, his mouth gulping like a fish out of water.
Ramos leapt to his feet, overturning the table and sending the ink splashing onto the stones. Witchcraft. Somehow, the boy had sent his demons into Valencia. The guards were staring at the convulsing inquisitor, stunned. Luis, looking like a frightened rabbit, bolted for the stairs. No one moved to stop him. Ramos began to tremble. This was wrong, all wrong. He took one more look at Valencia's body spasming on the floor and ran.
He raced up the stairs, tripping twice, and stumbled out into the air behind the boy, who disappeared into the night without looking back. Ramos tilted his head and spun, scanning the sky. He saw it at once, in the constellation Gemini. There was a hole in the sky where a star had been before. It was, if anything, blacker than the night sky around it, a chasm where no stars could be seen. Streaks of light from the surrounding stars trailed into the hole in a spiral shape, like water swirling down a drain, as if the hole were sucking the very starlight out of the sky. Ramos had never seen anything so terrifying in all his life.
In the city around him, lights appeared in windows, accompanied by shouts and cries and curses. Antonia. Ramos started running again. He had to get home to Antonia.
Valladolid was the capital city of Spain, but at night, its streets were as black and muddy as a country lane. Lanterns illuminated snatches of a city gone mad. Shouts and weeping echoed on all sides. A man lurched out into the street chased by a woman. He stumbled toward Ramos, eyes wide, then fell down and convulsed on the road. The woman pulled at his arm, trying to drag him back into the house. Ramos hurried on, keeping to the middle of the street.
He ran northeast along the Calle de la Madre de Dios, toward his home. Another shout came from a house across the road, and a first-floor window shattered. A woman climbed through the broken glass, and then she, too, collapsed in the dirt in violent convulsions. Ramos recognized his neighbor, Señora Cabezas, a graceful mother of three who insisted on the old Castilian manners. Please God, let Antonia be safe.