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"Then, till tomorrow!"
"You are going now?"
"Yes."
"Goodnight, then."
Caesar left his room and marched off to sleep.
IV. THE BOOKSELLER AND THE ANARCHISTS
The following day, very early in the morning, Alzugaray went to a livery-stable which they had directed him to at the hotel, and asked to hire a horse. They brought him a large, old one; he mounted, and crossed the town more slowly than if he had been on foot, and set out for Cidones.
On reaching that town, he left the horse at a blacksmith's and went up through the narrow lanes of Cidones, which are horribly long, dark, and steep.
Then he ascended to la Pena, the rock on which the Franciscan monastery stands; but was unable to obtain any fresh information about Father Martin and his friars. The people with whom he talked were not disposed to unbosom themselves, and he preferred not to insist, so as not to be suspected.
Afterwards he went down to Cidones again and returned to Castro Duro.
Caesar was still in bed. Alzugaray went into his room.
"Don't you intend to get up?" he asked him.
"No."
"Don't you intend to eat, either?"
"Neither."
"Are you sick?"
"No."
"What is the matter with you? Laziness?"
"Something like that."
Alzugaray ate alone, and after he had had coffee, he directed his steps to the bookstore of the Republican councilman, of whom Caesar had spoken to him. He found it in a corner of the Square; and it was at the same time a stationer's shop and a newsdealer's. Behind the counter were an old man and a lad.
Alzugaray went in. He bought various Madrid periodicals from the lad, and then addressing the old man, asked him:
"Haven't you some sort of a map of the province, or of the neighbourhood of Castro Duro?"
"No, sir, there isn't one."
"Nor a guidebook, perhaps?"
"Nor that either. At the townhall we have a map of the town...."
"Only of the part built up?"
"Yes."
"Then it would do me no good."
"You want a map for making excursions, eh?"
"That's it. Yes."
"Well, there is none. We are very much behind the times."
"Yes, that's true. It wouldn't cost very much, and it would be useful for ever, both to the people here and to strangers."
"Just tell that to our town government!" exclaimed the old bookseller.
"Whatever is not for the advantage of the rich and the clerical element, there is no hope of."
"Those gentlemen have a great deal of influence here?" asked Alzugaray.
"Uf! Enormous. More every day."
"But there don't appear to be many convents."
"No, there are not many convents; but there is one that counts for a hundred, and that is the one at Cidones."
"Why is that?"
"Because it has a wild beast for a prior. Father Martin Lafuerza. He is famous all through this region. And he is a man of talent, there's no denying it, but despotic and exigent. He is into everything, catechizes the women, dominates the men. There is no way to fight against him. Here am I with this bookshop, and I have my pension as a lieutenant, which gives me enough to live very meanly, and with what little I get out of the periodicals I sc.r.a.pe along. Besides, I am a Republican and very liberal, and I like propaganda. If I didn't, I should have left all this long ago, because they have waged war to the death on me, an infamous sort of war which a person that lives in Madrid cannot understand; calumnies that come from no one knows where, atrocious accusations, everything...."
Alzugaray stared at the bookseller's grey eyes, which were extraordinarily bright. The old man was tall, stooped, grizzled, with a prominent nose and a beard trimmed to a point.
"But you have stuck firmly to your post," said Alzugaray.
"Having been a soldier must do something for a man," replied the bookseller. "He learns not to draw back in the face of danger. And this is my life. Now I am a councillor and I work at the town hall as much as I can, even though I know I shall accomplish nothing. Grafting goes on before my face, I know it exists, and yet it is impossible to find it.
Six months ago I informed the judge of irregularities committed in a Sisters' Asylum, things I had proof of.... The judge laid my information on the table, and things went on as if nothing had happened."
"Spain is in a bad way. It is a pity!" exclaimed Alzugaray.
"You people in Madrid, and I don't say this to irritate you, do not understand what goes on in the small towns."
"My dear man, I have never taken any part in political affairs."
"Well, I think that everybody ought to take part in politics, because it is for the general interest."
At this moment two persons entered the bookshop. Alzugaray was going to leave, but the bookseller said to him: