A Bride and Her Lady

Xabregas Palace, Outer Lisboa

Early to Mid-August 1339

Inês heard the intake of breaths as they rounded the corner and stopped at the entry to the great hall. She longed to pull at the linen chemise clinging to her damp skin in the midday heat. Her kirtle pushed up her breasts, and padding accentuated her belly, forcing her to inhale shallowly. She and Constanza wore matching green silk kirtles. Inês had elected a deep blue surcoat while Constanza wore bright yellow. Inês’s blue and green brocade crespina capped thick golden hair flowing down her back. Constanza’s thin, dark hair was capped with a bejeweled yellow crespina, almost a crown, as though claiming her future role as queen. With heads demurely looking downward, shoulders back, and a right hand on the bellies they push up, she and Constanza offered the visualization of virginity and future motherhood to the Portuguese court unabashedly staring at them. They were the precise image of perfect unwed women.

“Lady Constanza Manuel of Peñafiel,” announced a man standing just behind them.

“Shall we?” Constanza whispered to Inês.

“My lady, we triumph before we enter,” she replied.

Each kicked a foot rightward and swept it forward in an arc to commence her slow glide forward. Inês counted each step as she held her posture. Rush matting gave way to rich Turkiye carpets. Fifty-eight steps to cross the length of the hall, and they arrived before the king and queen. Inês halted five paces behind Constanza as they bowed their heads in unison and bent in deep curtsies before the royal family.

“Rise,” Afonso commanded. And so they did.

As Constanza began the ritual formalities, Inês discreetly, without moving her head, inspected those she could see. Her eyes locked with those of a man standing to the right of the king. Ah, Pedro, Constanza’s future husband, she thought. A smile played on his lips, and she averted her gaze.

She glanced left to see an array of ladies standing beyond the queen. They stared frankly at both women, frozen in position before the court. She dared a glance back to the right, and he was still staring at her, though now he winked. She tried not to react, but her eyebrows rose. He knew she was aware of his stare. Her heart pounded, and warmth rushed from her chest to her forehead. Inês’s fair skin and pale hair precluded discreet blushes. She looked back at the ladies and saw they had observed her reaction to Pedro. Fortunately, no one behind her saw her reaction, and the royal family paid her no attention. Or so she hoped.

“We ask your retinue to come forward and join us,” Queen Beatriz said.

The Castilian legation, headed by Sancho Manuel of Villena, eldest, though illegitimate, son of Constanza’s father, streamed into the hall behind a banner of the house of Constanza’s family. Behind Sancho Manuel came two noblewomen, María Fernández de Velasco y Castañeda and María Sancha Gil. Castile’s king had selected these two to accompany the wedding party and to serve as his eyes and ears in the Portuguese court. Inês, when whispering with Constanza, disdainfully called these newcomers the two Marias. Following these ladies was Inês’s half-brother, Alvaro Pires de Castro. Another score of persons, richly dressed, trailed Alvaro.

As the last of the Castilian contingent entered the room, everyone broke apart, freed from the formal greeting into circles of small conversation. Inês stood dutifully behind Constanza as she engaged in her first exchange with Pedro. Inês’s half-brother, Alvaro, arrived at her elbow, and she turned to chat.

“You were both quite elegant on entrance,” he said. “Oh, the happy couple approaches.”

Constanza discreetly wiped dampness from her upper lip before she said, “My Lord Pedro, may I introduce one of my two guardians for the journey here, Alvaro Pires de Castro and his sister, Lady Inês Perez de Castro e Valardes. They serve so long as it may please you. Though I humbly pray they may stay many moons in support of my new life.”

Pedro bowed to them. “I have this day been o’er run and conquered. We welcome your companions to Portugal

Inês thought in horror, He is speaking to me. I am trapped, but I cannot look away. Nor could she think of anything to say. Her mind would not work.

Queens of Portugal Trilogy – Book One

An heir to the throne, a gorgeous blonde lady-in-waiting, the king’s trusted advisor. When a father and son don’t understand each other, the son pays an outrageous price.
Love, jealousy, loyalty, and revenge roil the court of 14th century Portugal.
In this engrossing launch to the Queens of Portugal trilogy, Catherine Mathis gives a fresh take on the tale of Pedro and Inês, Portugal’s real-life Romeo and Juliet. Pedro’s father would not have been king if not for his trusted advisor, Gonçalves. Once king, he wants no part in neighboring Castile’s royal convulsions though his son, Pedro, befriends powerful Castilians.
The all-consuming drive of the king is to ensure his line rules Portugal for centuries to come. He needs legitimate, strong heirs. The Infante Pedro loves a woman not deemed worthy to wear the crown as queen. Between father and son is Gonçalves, the king’s powerful, unquestioned counselor who is mentor to the son. Both Gonçalves and Pedro seek the attention of Inês.
There is a horrific cost to winning the love of Inês. She will not release her grip on Pedro until he keeps the two sworn oaths he made to her. Can Pedro do the impossible to satisfy Inês?
Inês is based on real people and events, exploring a cultural touchstone of Portuguese history.

Praise for Inês:

Mathis masterfully weaves emotional depth into the narrative, creating a deeply engaging experience that leaves a lasting impression and invites readers on an unforgettable journey through the grandeur and intrigue of Portugal’s past.
~ Mary Anne Yarde, The Coffee Pot Book Club 5* Review

This exciting start to the Queens of Portugal trilogy describes the legendary love story of Pedro and Inês, and I was amazed at the excellent storytelling and how the author brings the courts to life. There is a lot of drama and intrigue, and the characters’ emotions are beautifully captured in this engrossing tale.
~ Readers Favorite 5* Review

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About Catherine Mathis
 
Catherine Mathis was born in Berlin, the daughter of an American spy. As she grew up in Washington, D.C., her spy father turned into a drug enforcement agent. His career change wrecked any chance at high school popularity.
She graduated from Sewanee | The University of the South with a degree in history focused on the medieval period. After a career in finance, she returned to her first love of medieval history to ‘Share Iberian Tales.’
Outside of writing, spare time joys are family, friends, reading, collecting folk / outsider art, and travel.
Library Journal included Inês on its list of coming historical fiction for July 2025 – June 2026 in June 2025 during the annual meeting of the American Library Association. The book is in the Turbulent Relationship category, a great category name.

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