by Jean Plaidy
‘A saint would not have rejoiced, so I pray you, Beatriz, do not endow me with saintliness, or you will be sadly disappointed. I would pray now for peace in our country, not because I am good, but because I know that the country’s peace will make us all so much happier – myself, Henry and Alfonso.’
There were special prayers in the Convent of Santa Clara, and these were for peace. Isabella had asked that these should be offered. She found life in the convent inspiring. She was ready to embrace its austerity; she was pleased to be able to give herself up to prayer and contemplation.
Isabella was to remember those days she spent in the convent as the end of a certain period of her life, but she could not know, as she walked the stone corridors, as she listened to the bells which called her to the chapel, and the chanting voices there, that events were taking shape which would force her to play a prominent part in the conflict which raged about her.
It was Beatrix who brought her the news.
They had asked Beatriz to do this because no other dared to do so.
And Beatriz came to her, her face blotched with the tears she had shed, for once unable to find words for what she had to say.
‘What has happened, Beatriz?’ asked Isabella, and her heart grew heavy with alarm.
When Beatriz shook her head and began to weep, Isabella went on: ‘Is it Alfonso?’
Beatriz nodded.
‘He is ill?’
Beatriz looked at her with a tragic stare, and Isabella whispered: ‘Dead?’
Beatriz suddenly found words. ‘He retired to his room after supper. When his servants went to wake him they could not arouse him; he had died in his sleep.’
‘Poison . . .’ murmured Isabella. She turned away and whispered: ‘So . . . it has happened to Alfonso.’
She stared from the window. She did not see the black figures of the nuns hurrying to the chapel. She did not hear the tolling bell. In her mind’s eye she saw Alfonso waking suddenly in the night, with the knowledge upon him. Perhaps he had called for his sister; for he would naturally call for her if he were in trouble.
And so . . . it had happened to Alfonso.
She did not weep. She felt too numb, too drained of feeling. She turned to Beatriz and said: ‘Where did it happen?’
‘At Cardeñosa.’
‘And the news was brought . . . ?’
‘A few minutes ago. Someone came to the convent from the town. They say that the whole of Avila knows of it, and that the town is plunged into mourning.’
‘We will go to Cardeñosa, Beatriz,’ said Isabella. ‘We will go at once and say our last farewells to Alfonso!’
Beatriz came to her mistress and put her arm about her. She shook her head sadly and her voice was poignant with emotion.
‘No, Princesa, you can do no good. You can only add to your suffering.’
‘I wish to see Alfonso for the last time,’ stated Isabella blankly.
‘You scourge yourself.’
‘He would wish me to be there. Come, Beatriz, we are leaving at once for Cardeñosa.’
Isabella rode out from Avila, and as she did so the people in the streets turned their faces away from her. She was grateful to them for such understanding of her sorrow.
She had not yet begun to consider what the death of Alfonso would mean to her position; she had forgotten that those ambitious men, who had so ruthlessly terminated Alfonso’s childhood to make him into a King, would now turn their attention to her. There was no room in her heart for more than this one overwhelming fact: Alfonso, little brother and companion of her early years, was dead.
She was surprised, when she rode into the little village of Cardeñosa, that there was no sign of mourning. She saw a group of soldiers cheerfully calling to each other; their laughter rang in her ears and it sounded inhuman.
When they noticed her they stopped their chatter, and saluted her, but she received their homage as though she were unaware of them. Was this all they cared for Alfonso?
Beatriz, in sudden anger, called out: ‘Is this the way you show respect for your King?’
The soldiers looked bewildered. One opened his mouth as though to speak, but Isabella with her little entourage had ridden on.
The grooms who took their horses wore the same cheerful looks as the soldiers they had seen in the streets.
Beatriz said impulsively: ‘You do not mourn in Cardeñosa as they do in Avila. Why not?’
‘Mourn, my lady? Why should we mourn?’
Beatriz had to use great restraint to prevent herself giving the groom a slap across his face. ‘So you had no love for your King then?’
There was the same bewildered look on the groom’s face as there had been on those of the soldiers in the village.
Then a voice from inside the inn which Alfonso had made his headquarters called: ‘What is this? Has the Princess Isabella tired of convent life then, and come to join her brother?’
Beatriz saw Isabella turn pale; and she put out her arm to catch her, for she thought her mistress was about to faint. Could that have been the voice of a ghost? Could there be another who spoke with the voice of Alfonso?
But there was Alfonso, full of health and vigour, running across the courtyard, calling: ‘Isabella! So this is no lie. You are here then, sister.’
Isabella slid from her horse and ran to her brother; she seized him in her arms and kissed him; then taking his face in her hands she stared into it.
‘So it is you, Alfonso. It is really you. You are not a ghost. This is my brother . . . my little brother . . .’
‘Well I know of no one else it could be,’ said Alfonso, laughing.
‘But I heard . . . . How . . . how could such wicked stories be spread abroad! Oh Alfonso . . . I am so happy.’
And there, before the wondering eyes of grooms and soldiers, Isabella began to weep, not violently, but quietly; and they were tears of happiness.
Alfonso himself dried her eyes and, putting his arm about her, led her into the inn.
Beatriz walked beside them.
‘It was an evil rumour,’ she said. ‘Avila is mourning your death. We heard that you had died in the night.’
‘These rumours!’ said Alfonso. ‘How do they start? But let us not worry about that now. It is good to have you with me, Isabella. Now you will stay awhile? Tonight we shall have a special feast . . . as near a banquet as we can muster in this place.’ He called to his men: ‘My sister, the Princess Isabella, is here. Have them prepare a banquet worthy of her.’
Alfonso was deeply moved by his sister’s emotion. The fact that Isabella was usually so restrained made him aware of the depth of her feeling for him, and he was afraid he too would break down. He had to remind himself constantly that he was a King, and not a young boy any more.
He called to the innkeeper.
‘A special banquet,’ he cried, ‘in honour of my sister’s arrival! What can you put before us?’
‘Highness, I have some chickens . . . very good, very tender; and there are some trout . . .’
‘Do your best, and let there be a banquet such as you have never served before, because my sister is come, and that is a very important matter to me.’
Then he turned to Isabella and once more they embraced.
‘Isabella,’ whispered Alfonso, ‘how glad I am that we are once more together. Let it be so as often as we can arrange it. Sister, I need you with me. Without you . . . I am still a little unsure.’
‘Yes, yes, Alfonso,’ she answered in the same quiet and tense tone, ‘we must be together. We need each other. In future . . . we must not be apart.’
It was a merry supper that was served that night in the Cardeñosa inn.
The trout was delicious. Alfonso commented on its excellence and took a second helping.
Everyone was merry. It was pleasant, they said, to have been joined by the ladies, and they had heard that the Princess Isabella intended in future to accompany her brother on his journeys through his domain.
When they retired, Isabella and Beatriz talked about the day’s doings and marvelled that they could have left Avila in such distress and have found such joy, the very same day, in Cardeñosa.
Beatriz, combing her mistress’s hair, said: ‘Yet it surprises me how such rumours could be started.’
‘It is not difficult to understand, Beatriz. So many people in high places die suddenly that the story of another death is readily believed.’
‘That is so,’ agreed Beatriz and did not pursue the subject, for, she reasoned with herself, why spoil the day’s pleasure?
Yet she was a little uneasy. Avila was only two leagues from Cardeñosa, and the rumour had a good hold on the former. How could it have happened . . . so close?
But she was not going to brood on that terrible moment, when the news had been brought to her and she realised it was her duty to break it to Isabella.
Isabella awoke early and for a few moments could not remember where she was. Then the events of the day before came back to her mind. That strange day which had begun in such sorrow and had ended in joy.
She was of course in the Cardeñosa inn.
She lay thinking of that moment when Alfonso had come out of the inn and for a few seconds she had thought she had seen his ghost. Now, she thought, I shall always be with him. I shall make it my duty to care for him, for after all he is but a boy and my own brother.
Perhaps she would be able to influence him, to persuade him that he could be no true King while Henry lived. If he were declared heir to the throne, she would be perfectly content; for she believed without doubt that the little Joanna had no right to that title. From now on, she told herself, Alfonso and I will be together.
There was a knocking at her door and she called to whoever was there to enter.
Beatriz came in. She was pale and she looked distraught.
‘Highness,’ she said, ‘will you come to Alfonso’s bedchamber?’
Isabella started up in dismay. ‘What has happened?’
‘I have been asked to take you to him.’
‘He is ill!’
All the fears of yesterday were back with her.
‘They cannot awaken him,’ said Beatriz. ‘They do not understand what can have happened.’
Beatriz flung a robe about Isabella’s shoulders and they went to Alfonso’s chamber.
He lay in his bed, strangely unlike himself.
Isabella bent over him. ‘Alfonso . . . Alfonso, brother. It is Isabella. Wake up. What ails you?’
There was no response. The room was dark, for it had but one small window.
‘I cannot see him clearly,’ said Isabella touching his forehead. Its coldness startled her. She took his hand; and it dropped lifelessly back to lie on the counterpane.
Isabella turned in horror to Beatriz who stood behind her.
Beatriz moved closer to the figure on the bed. She put her hand to the boy’s heart and kept it there for some seconds while she wondered how she was going to say what she knew she must.
She turned to Isabella.
‘No,’ cried Isabella. ‘No!’
Beatriz did not answer. But Isabella knew that there was no way of turning from the truth.
‘But how . . . how?’ she cried. ‘But why . . . ?’ Beatriz put an arm about her. ‘We will send for the doctors,’ she said. She turned angrily on his page. ‘Why did you not send for the doctors before this?’
‘My lady, I came to wake him and he did not answer, and I was afraid; so I came for you. It is but a matter of ten minutes since I came into his room and found him lying thus. I came to you at once, knowing you would say how I should act.’
‘Fetch the doctors,’ Beatriz commanded. The page went, and Isabella looked at her friend with heavy eyes.
‘You know there is nothing the doctors can do, Beatriz?’
‘Dearest, I fear it is so.’
‘So . . .’ said Isabella, ‘I have lost him then. I have lost him after all.’
Beatriz embraced her and for a little while Isabella remained passive.
The doctors came into the room. Isabella watched them listlessly as they stood about the bed, and they exchanged significant glances with each other.
Beatriz felt her control was snapping. ‘Well, say something!’ she cried. ‘He is dead . . . dead . . . is he not?’
‘We fear so, my lady.’
‘And . . . nothing can be done?’
‘It is too late, my lady.’
‘Too late,’ whispered Isabella to herself. ‘How foolish I was to think I could help him, to think I could save him. How could I save him except by keeping him by my side day and night, by tasting every morsel of food before it touched his lips?’
Beatriz was crying: ‘But . . . how . . . how . . . ?’
That was a question they could not answer.
Isabella understood why she had heard the rumours in Avila. The planners had not been working in unison; something may have gone wrong at the inn while the carriers of the news went on and announced it in accordance with some preconceived plot.
Thus the news of Alfonso’s death had been circulated before it happened.
How could Alfonso have died so suddenly unless someone had deliberately cut short his life? A few hours ago he had been full of life and health; and now he was dead.
Dear Alfonso, dear innocent Alfonso, this was what he had feared in those early days when he had talked so much of the fate of others. And it had come to him . . . even as he had feared it would.
She trusted that he had not suffered much. It was incredible that she should have been close by, and that he should have awakened in his need while she was sleeping peacefully unaware.
She saw Beatrix’s smouldering eyes upon her. Beatriz would want to find those who had done this. She would want revenge.
But what would be the use? That would not bring Alfonso back to her.
THE HEIRESS TO THE THRONE
In the Convent of Santa Clara Isabella gave herself up to mourning.
She would sit thinking of the past when she and her mother had retired to Arevalo with little Alfonso. Now her mother lived, but could one call that existence living? And she, Isabella, was left to face a turbulent world.
There were times when she envied the young nuns who were about to take the veil and shut themselves off for ever from the world.
‘I wish,’ she told Beatrix, ‘that I could so resign myself.’
But Beatrix, who was always outspoken, shook her head. ‘No, my Infanta, you do not wish this. You know that a great future awaits you, and you would never turn your back on your destiny. Not for you the life of the cloistered nun. One day you will be a Queen. Your name will be honoured and remembered in the generations to come.’
‘Who can say?’ murmured Isabella. ‘Might you not have made the same prophecy for my poor Alfonso?’
She had not been long at the convent when she had a visitor. The Archbishop of Toledo himself, representing the confederacy which was in revolt against the King, had travelled to the convent to see her. She received him with reserve and he was unusually humble.
‘Condolences, Highness,’ said the Archbishop. ‘I know how you suffer through our great loss. I and my friends mourn with you.’
‘Yet,’ said Isabella, ‘had Alfonso never been acclaimed King of Castile he might be alive at this hour.’
‘It is true that he would not have been in Cardeñosa, and perhaps would not have contracted the plague.’
‘Or eaten trout!’ said Isabella.
‘Ah, these are dangerous times,’ murmured the Archbishop. ‘That is why we need a firm government, a royal leader of integrity.’
‘The times must be dangerous in a country where two rulers are set up. I think that my brother might not have died if he had had God’s blessing on his enterprise.’
‘But if, as you hint, Highness, his death was due to trout, that is the result of the criminality of man surely, not the justice of God.’
‘It may
be,’ said Isabella, ‘that if God had looked with favour on Alfonso’s accession, he would have prevented his death.’
‘Who shall say,’ said the Archbishop. ‘I come to remind Your Highness of the evil state of Castile and of the need for reform.’
‘There is no need to remind me of that,’ said Isabella, ‘for I have heard reports of the state of our country which fill me with such dismay that I could not forget them if I tried.’
The Archbishop bowed his head. ‘Highness,’ he said, ‘we desire to proclaim you Queen of Castile and Leon.’
‘I thank you,’ said Isabella, ‘but while my brother Henry lives no one else has a right to wear the crown. Too long has there been conflict in Castile, which was largely due to the fact that it has two sovereigns.’
‘Highness, you cannot mean that you refuse to be proclaimed Queen!’
‘That is exactly what I mean.’
‘But . . . this is incredible.’
‘I know it to be right.’
‘Why, Highness, were you Queen you could immediately begin to set right all that is wrong in Castile. My nephew and myself would be beside you. It could be the beginning of a new era for Castile.’
Isabella was silent. She visualised all that she longed to do for her country. She had often planned how she would strengthen the Hermandad; how she would attempt to bring her people back to a more religious life, how she would establish a Court which would be in direct opposition to that of her brother.
‘Our present Queen,’ murmured the Archbishop, ‘is becoming notorious on account of the lecherous life she leads. There was a time when she was content with one lover; now there must be many. Do you not see, Highness, what a bad example this sets our people?’
‘Indeed I see,’ said Isabella.
‘Then why do you hesitate?’
‘Because, however good one’s intentions, they will fail unless built on a foundation which is just. Were I to take what you offer me, I know I should be doing what is wrong. Therefore, I reject your offer.’
The Archbishop was stunned; he had not believed in the true piety of Isabella, and he did not think she would be proof against this offer of the crown.