Mosaic | Page 12

LA CRUZ By: Elliot Drake-Maurer - Barbara Bretting Fiction Winner T he Moorish city of Granada had been besieged for half of the year 1491, and the tension in the streets was palpable. People went about their daily lives, but the fact that they were trapped in their own city hung like a parasite on everyone’s minds, reminding them that outside their walls lay an army that wanted their city to fall. The granary floors were beginning to show under the receding carpets of wheat, and the only meats in the market stalls were dried fish and smoked beef, hard food for hard times. In a city where Catholic, Jew and Muslim had long coexisted in peace, the bonds between the communities were being stretched thin by war. Emir Muhammed XII, known by the Spanish as Boabdil, had severed ties with the Catholic monarchs in the North, the young King Ferdinand II de Aragon and his queen Isabella I de Castile. As a result of Boabdil’s betrayal, the Catholic armies, bolstered by mercenaries from all parts of Europe had closed in around the Muslim forces. They took control of city after city until Granada became the last holding still under Boabdil’s rule. “El Chico” they cal