The afternoon wears on, my feet and legs heavy like tree trunks from standing
through the tedious service. I watch the sun shift from one side of the church to the
other, amazed to discover paintings in the dome that I hadn’t seen before because of
direction of the light. I share my portion of bread with Ameer, my attention drifting
from my churning stomach to the patriarch standing behind the ornate altar. Once the
service concludes, I try to shuffle close enough to the emperor’s recession hoping to
shove Brigida’s letter at Nicolo, but can’t get close enough without being obvious.
Father Abbot eventually leads our brethren out into the square teeming with
masses of people who weren’t able to fit into the cathedral. Though the temperature has
cooled, the mob percolates feverishly, zealously shouting biblical references. As we
cleave the undulating crowd, my senses sharpen to perceive angry undertones piercing
the air around us. On high alert, I mutter to Ameer ahead of me to step lively and keep
up to the older monks ahead of us. No sooner do I issue the warning, then someone
brandishing a club breaks upon us screaming something about killing the bearer of
icons.
My violent past serves me well, and I jump in front of Ameer to intercept a blow
that would have crushed the boy. Covering him bodily, I absorb the bludgeoning about
my back, feeling no pain as the erstwhile red haze clouds reason with anger. In between
beatings, I strike out and catch the offender’s wrist, feeling bones crunch in my viselike
grip. I’m about to pummel his exposed ribs, when a hulking figure jerks the club from
the villain and pushes me back with a shake of his helmeted head.
Nicolo’s calculating assistance rescues me from the fog of rage ere I do something
I will live to regret. He easily restrains the zealot, and encourages me to hurry to catch
up so no one else gets hurt. I start to follow his advice, when he adds that this is why he
wouldn’t allow my sister to attend, and that she’s doing well. Remembering my letter to
her, I shove it inside his breastplate, pick up the fallen cross and bustle Ameer forward.
By the time we reach the monastery I’m in such agony that I can barely walk
upright to the hospital. My whole body is in spasm, the pain radiating from my bruised
back to wrench my gut. Constance takes one look at me and immediately pulls me back
into her room and lays me down on the pallet. She calls out to her aide for some linens
and buckets of cold sea water, then strips off my cowl, coaxes my cassock down my
shoulders and cuts away my bindings, exposing my throbbing back. Soaking the towels
in the icy water, she gently covers my back, bidding me to lie prone and let the chill take
away the sting.
“My stomach hurts so,” I gasp, gripped in a cramp that twists my loins. “I’m
trying to stay still but the pain…”
“Ah my poor dear,” she shakes her head in exaggerated pity. “I’m afraid you may
lose this one.”
“What do you mean?” I pant between waves of torment ripping through me, each
one harder than the last. “I’ve taken worse beatings than this and survived!”
“Your baby,” my befuddled brain snaps to attention, “I don’t think we can save
the babe growing inside of you. Not to worry, Adila, the pain will pass soon and there
will be others.”
“Baby?” The word tumbles around my head, refuting my attempts to coral its
meaning. I peer dumbly at my distended belly and groan in disbelief, “He told me he
couldn’t conceive!”
“Good God,” Constance reacts to my startled expression, “you didn’t know?
You’re still very slim, but you must be what, five months along?”
“How did you know?” I slur incoherently, laboring to follow the conversation.
“You forget that I’m a physician,” she pours a syrup into a spoon and holds it to
my lips, “just a drop t’will dull the pain. Besides, you haven’t come to pick up any
menstrual bindings in many moons. But there would have been other signs too, nausea,
tender breasts….”
She continues to list the symptoms of my pregnancy that I had attributed to
illness. The elixir slides warmly down my throat and eases into my stomach, allowing
for a temporary pause to digest the stunning reality of my predicament. My addled
thoughts won’t behave long enough to sort out the spinning tale of Majidi’s inability to
conceive. Did he trick me? Was it all a sham? Another spasm rips through my innards,
etching the agonizing doubt into the backs of my eyeballs until burning tears spring
forth and I groan in anguished rage.
Shrugging off Constance’s restraining hands, I lunge to my feet, growling in
perverse pleasure, welcoming the shards of lightning stabbing my loins. Anything to
dull the brand of betrayal searing my brain. My stomach lurches and hardens in effort
to evict the tiny life, while my soul screams to hold on to this kernel of love. Keening
sobs seep through the bars of my gritted teeth and my body releases its burden in a
slippery crimson gush. Unable to look at the bloody remains puddling at my feet, I
search for a diversion and find not one, but two dark pools glazed over with moisture,
reflecting my own trauma of treachery.
Brother Samuel’s tacit shock invades the cell like a wide-eyed gargoyle, yet his
form remains frozen in the doorway. His regard encompasses my tunic gaping from my
breasts, the gore between my legs, and Constance wrapping what is left of the fetus into
a bundle, reciting prayers to speed my child’s passage to heaven. Truth registers coldly
on his visage, and he turns his back and departs with a finality that shoves me back onto
the pallet. In the span of a few seconds, I’ve lost my love, my baby and my best friend.