fiscal, who was secretary to Don Juan de Silva, and
also served him in other offices of great danger.
It is well known that this man, for Don Juan’s
sake, has committed the most dangerous and insolent
acts that one can imagine, during that time and at
present. He is also secretary to this governor,
whose especial favor he enjoys. Whence I am persuaded
beyond all doubt that nothing good will be done, for
what the governor would not do through Josephe de
Naveda and the others is much more than what he would
do through the fiscal. It is not many months
since, because of a royal decree that your Majesty
sent to the Audiencia ordering the investigation of
the property of Don Juan de Silva and its sequestration,
I found, on attending to it, a process where it appeared
that this Naveda owed Don Juan de Silva eight thousand
pesos. On taking it to the Audiencia to have
justice done there and to have it paid, notwithstanding
your Majesty’s decree, the governor seized the
process and kept it, forbidding us, with frightful
demonstrations [of anger], to discuss it longer.
Consequently, I thought it best to postpone taking
the residencia until I could see whether matters would
mend, which God is wont to bring about by methods
unthought of—notwithstanding that the governor,
under pretext of service to your Majesty, told me
often to take the residencia, for, in the presence
of the greatest and most serious offenses, both he
and his associates would come out as if they were
angels. This was the motive of the pressure that
he brought to bear; and, even though he should have
more crimes than the sea has sands, yet because of
him nothing would be said against the others.
That would mean not to take the residencia, and for
me not to obey your Majesty’s will, with the
loss of great sums, and much detriment, to the royal
exchequer; for it is certain, Sire, that those who
would come out as if angels—and some of
them, especially Naveda, according to the report and
outcry of the country—would not pay what
they owe with many lives and with many hangings.
For such are the devices that the governors have used
here for the destruction both of the royal treasury
of your Majesty and of this country. However,
with the lapse of time and hoping for opportunity,
I made investigations as secretly as possible with
most of the notaries in this city, inasmuch as two
or three others that remain are of the governor’s
household—to the end, as I have told your
Majesty, that they may serve his purposes. They
(and if there were others, it would all be miraculous)
[38] and given with the greatest fear in the world;
with which your Majesty will see that not even in secret
and under oath do men dare to speak. Then continuing,
the time came in which the governor arrested me, without
considering what I had in charge at your Majesty’s
command. Consequently everything is at a standstill,
until God shall remedy it. Hence, Sire, as I
have said, the obligation of conscience makes me give
account to your Majesty; and I think, for a conclusion
of this matter, that I am not excused from some particulars.