The Marriage Banns of Oliva Sabuco and Acacio de Buedo were posted on December, 1580. There was an apparent falling-out between Oliva and her widowed father at about the time of his remarriage to Ana Navarro García -which some claim illiterate- a woman of Oliva's age. Her father sired another son, Miguel, from this second marriage. Miguel Sabuco states in his "last" Will and Testament of 1588 that the couple, Oliva and Acacio, eventually sued to collect the overdue dowry and arrived at a settlement of 52,500 maravedis.(The reader should not be caught unawares of the qualifier "last" in this will for we have no idea whether this was really the Last Will on account of recent findings that seem to prove that the Bachiller was still alive fourteen years after that testament). Oliva's dowry is comparable to that in fashion for women of the nobility. It is possible that with the dowry finally paid, plus the 1585 settlement of her mother's estate, Oliva had the capital needed to fund the cost of bringing her Nueva Filosofia to press although there are records of a settlement of a debt of Buedo with his in-law Miguel Sabuco. Pedro Simón-Abril may have alerted his publisher in Madrid, Pedro Madrigal to the book, arouse his interest in it, and, perhaps, propped his engagement. In 1587, the first edition of Nueva Filosofía was put to printing there. Oliva and her husband apparently lived the remainder of their lives in Alcaraz. During the years following the publication of his wife's book, Acacio de Buedo was elected several times to the post of Caballero de la Sierra. This was a publicly-funded constabulary position of certain prestige. By 1595 Acacio had risen to the position of Alcalde Mayor (second to the Corregidor). Oliva and Acacio were asked to be godparents at the September 1, 1596 baptism of Miguel de Valleserios. They also acted in the same capacity on May 24, 1600 for Pedro, son of Pedro Alvarez and María Vázquez, his wife. On December 9, 1612 and again on June 2, 1613, Acacio de Buedo vouched for the residency of a native from León who was getting married to a woman from Alcaraz. Oliva's half-brother, Miguel Sabuco, and his wife Isabel de las Vacas were witnesses to that marriage. All this points to a good standing of the Buedos in the community of Alcaraz. At the time of third edition of Nueva Filosofía in Braga, Portugal (then Spain's) her new publisher, Lorenço de Basto, mentions that the Inquisition had taken an interest in the second (1588) edition necessitating revision (i.e.: expurgations) towards the third one, and -shockingly!- that Oliva had passed away .