The Hacienda(77)



Fast as a snake’s strike, Paloma twisted out of Do?a Catalina’s grasp. She snatched the paper and the cloth bag of herbs and flung herself across the kitchen.

“Don’t!” I cried.

Paloma threw the dried herbs and paper into the fire. The embers flared, leaping and devouring evidence of my work like kindling. Even if Do?a Catalina held true to her word and told Padre Vicente I had been on the property and what I had intended to do, neither he nor inquisitors would have any evidence with which to condemn me. In moments, only the acrid smell of burning herbs clinging to the air and soot would remain.

Do?a Catalina crossed the room and slapped Paloma across the face.

The breath left my lungs. Paloma had hinted that the patrón’s wife was cold and unpopular among the villagers. She had said outright that Ana Luisa loathed her and would do anything to be rid of her white-knuckled control of the house. Now I understood why. I understood why Paloma rarely spoke of her, why Mariana flinched at sudden movement.

I sprang between them, fury leaping bright and hungry as the kitchen fire in my chest. That box I kept locked in my breast strained until its bindings loosened; tendrils of what lay within seethed out and rippled off my skin like heat.

“Don’t touch her,” I shouted.

The fire matched me, licking high as it devoured the darkness that began to roll off me. It reflected in Do?a Catalina’s light irises, opening a window into Perdition. I loathed her then. I hated her with more wicked, burning power than I had ever felt toward any living being.

“You should leave,” Paloma murmured behind me. I glanced at her. She held a hand to her face, a weary resignation heavy in her posture. “Go.”

But I couldn’t leave her in the hands of a woman like this. There were tlachiqueros who whipped their donkeys with more shame than Do?a Catalina possessed. Paloma was in danger in this house.

“I’m taking you to your mother,” I told her. “Come with me.”

“Stay,” Do?a Catalina commanded.

I moved toward the door, but Paloma did not follow.

She hung her head, her hands loose at her sides as Do?a Catalina took her by the shoulder and yanked her away from me. Paloma did not protest, though her plaits swung from the force of the movement.

My anger died in an instant, as if drenched by a bucket of cold water.

I gave in to my temper and my hatred of Do?a Catalina. But it was Paloma who would now suffer because of it.

“Get out of my house,” Do?a Catalina said. “And pray that I don’t tell Padre Vicente of your visit.” At the look on my face, she added: “My word against yours, Padre—to whom do you think he will listen?”

There is no draft more bitter than that of helplessness. It bruised my throat as I looked at my cousin held fast, her proud head hung.

Do?a Catalina marked my pause. She smelled my fear, my hesitation, my grief at knowing Paloma’s pain was my fault. She found the most tender part of my body and struck her final blow:

“I banish you from San Isidro,” she said coldly. “If I ever find you have been here against my wishes or hear that you have sent messages or otherwise brought Indian superstition to this place, I will give Paloma to the Inquisition.”

The smugness in her voice struck me like a physical blow.

“Go, Andrés,” Paloma begged. “Just go.”

I retreated into the dark of the kitchen garden, stunned, then turned on my heel and strode away. I had caused Paloma pain, and now there was no way for me to protect her. No way for me to fix the damage I had wrought.

I had tried to do precisely what Titi would, but I failed. I had put Paloma in harm’s way. I had not helped Mariana. I had failed them all.

A light rain began to fall. It struck my burning cheeks like ice, mixing with the tears of rage it found there. A hooded figure passed into the kitchen courtyard just as I left it; Do?a Juana, the daughter of old Solórzano, pulled back her cloak’s hood to frown at me through the rain.

“Villalobos?” she said, genuine surprise coloring her voice. My surname smarted; it was what old Solórzano had called my father, when he was San Isidro’s foreman. What old Solórzano called me or any of my brothers. The Villalobos boy. As if we had no other identity but the legacy of the Spanish foreman forcing himself on an hacienda maid and being ordered to marry her. That name was a living, breathing scar of the criollo stranglehold on this land. At times like these, I wanted to strip it from my body like so much flesh and burn it. “What are you doing here at this hour?”

I could feel more than see how Juana’s look swept me appraisingly, from the thunderclouds on my brow to my balled fists.

My family had lived on this land longer than the Solórzanos had even been in Nueva Espa?a. To be banished from my home, forbidden from contacting my family . . .

I shouldered past Juana, leaving her unanswered in my wake. I had no patience for any Solórzano. Not tonight, not when loathing raked the inside of my ribs as I strode through the night. Loathing of the Solórzanos, of Do?a Catalina. Of myself, for putting Paloma in danger.

Paloma was not safe here. Not with these monsters.

I would find my way back to her, to this place, if it was the last thing I did. No Solórzano could keep me from my home. My grief crystallized the thought into a white-hot prayer, branding it on my bones like a promise.

God help me, I will be back.

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