in presence of Don Eugenio and of one or two other
persons. He would then console him, in which task
he would be assisted by Don Eugenio. He would
afterwards leave him with the religious person who
would be appointed for that purpose. That night
and the whole of the following day, which would be
a festival, till after midnight, would be allotted
to Montigny, that he might have time to confess, to
receive the sacraments, to convert himself to God,
and to repent. Between one and two o’clock
in the morning the execution was to take place, in
presence of the ecclesiastic, of Don Eugenio de Peralta,
of the notary, and of one or two other persons, who
would be needed by the executioner. The ecclesiastic
was to be a wise and prudent person, and to be informed
how little confidence Montigny inspired in the article
of faith. If the prisoner should wish to make
a will, it could not be permitted. As all his
property had been confiscated, he could dispose of
nothing. Should he, however, desire to make a
memorial of the debts which he would wish paid; he
was to be allowed that liberty. It was, however,
to be stipulated that he was to make no allusion, in
any memorial or letter which he might write, to the
execution which was about to take place. He was
to use the language of a man seriously ill, and who
feels himself at the point of death. By this
infernal ingenuity it was proposed to make the victim
an accomplice in the plot, and to place a false exculpation
of his assassins in his dying lips. The execution
having been fulfilled, and the death having been announced
with the dissimulation prescribed, the burial was
to take place in the church of Saint Saviour, in Simancas.
A moderate degree of pomp, such as befitted a person
of Montigny’s quality, was to be allowed, and
a decent tomb erected. A grand mass was also
to be celebrated, with a respectable number, “say
seven hundred,” of lesser masses. As the
servants of the defunct were few in number, continued
the frugal King, they might be provided each with a
suit of mourning. Having thus personally arranged
all the details of this secret work, from the reading
of the sentence to the burial of the prisoner; having
settled not only the mode of his departure from life,
but of his passage through purgatory, the King despatched
the agent on his mission.
The royal program was faithfully enacted. Don Alonzo arrived at Valladolid; and made his arrangements with Don Eugenio. It was agreed that a paper, prepared by royal authority, and brought by Don Alonzo from Madrid, should be thrown into the corridor of Montigny’s prison. This paper, written in Latin, ran as follows: