Behind him, the storm passed. The amphitheater stood empty. And the magistrate ordered the scribe to write:
Not the smile of a saint in a mosaic. Not serene. It was the smile of a child who has just remembered a secret: They cannot reach the part of me that is already gone.
And Eulalia, who had no more teeth to spit, opened her mouth one last time.
She smiled.
The magistrate nodded to the executioner.
Decimus did not see this. He was already miles away, walking north along the river road, his armor abandoned in a ditch. He did not know where he was going. He only knew that he could no longer hold a spear.
The crowd in the amphitheater fell silent. Martyr Or The Death Of Saint Eulalia 2005l
Not a shout. Not a sermon. Just the same syllable she had given them yesterday, when they broke her fingers with the vice. The same word she had given the day before that, when they dragged her through the street of thorns. The same word she would give tomorrow, if she lived to see it.
The hooks were not large—small iron claws, each no longer than a finger. They were meant for flaying meat from bone. The executioner worked methodically: first the left shoulder blade, then the ribs, then the soft hollow beneath the collarbone. Eulalia’s body jerked once, twice. Her spine arched like a bow. A sound came out of her—not a scream, not a prayer, but something in between. A note. A single, clear note, as if her throat had become a flute.
Then the light swallowed her, and where her body had been, there was only a small heap of white ash—and, growing from the ash, a single white dove, which flew once around the arena and then vanished into the rain. Behind him, the storm passed
Emerita Augusta, Hispania, c. 304 AD
Decimus leaned closer. He heard her whisper: “No.”
He did not mean to. The haft clattered on the stone, and several guards turned to stare. But Decimus was already walking—not toward the girl, but away. He passed the magistrate, who shouted after him. He passed the priests of the imperial cult, who stood in their white robes like worried storks. He passed the open gate of the arena and kept walking into the empty street beyond. Not serene
The executioner lowered the hooks to her thighs. This time, Eulalia’s eyes opened. They were the color of river stones—gray-green, depthless. She was not looking at her torturers. She was looking at the sky, which had turned a strange, bruised purple above the arena wall. A storm was coming. The air smelled of ozone and blood.