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"Yes, we all have nicknames here. They called my father that, and they call me that. Ps.h.!.+ It makes no difference. Because if a person is cross about it, it's all the worse. A few days ago a muleteer from a town in the district arrived here, and went to the inn, and as he had no nickname and they are very fond here in Cidones of giving one to every living creature, they said to him: 'No matter how short a while you stay here, you will be given a nickname'; and he answered contemptuously: 'Bah! Little fear.' Soon after, as he was crossing the square, a girl said to him: 'Good-bye, Little Fear!' and Little Fear it remained."
As Uncle Chinaman seemed very communicative, Caesar asked him some questions about life in the town.
Uncle Chinaman talked a great deal and with great clearness. According to him, the cause of all trouble in the town was cowardice. The two or three bosses of Castro and Father Martin ruled their party arbitrarily, and the rest of the people didn't dare breathe.
The poor didn't understand that by being united they could offset the influence of the rich, and even succeed in dominating them. Besides, fear didn't permit them to move.
"But fear of what?" said Caesar.
"Fear of everything; fear that they will levy a tax, that they won't provide work, that they will take your son for a soldier, that they will put you in jail for something or other, that the two or three bullies who are in the bosses' service might beat you."
"Does their tyranny go as far as that?"
"They do whatever they choose."
The Chinaman, who looked more like a Tartar, could make himself quite clear. If it had not been that he used the wrong words and had an itch for unusual ones, he would have given the impression of being a most intelligent man.
He said he was anti-clerical, declared himself a pantheist, and spoke of the "controversories" he maintained with different persons.
"A relative of mine who is a monk," he said, "is always reprehending me, and saying: 'Lucas, you are a Free-Thinker.'... 'And it's greatly to my credit,' I tell him."
Then, apropos of his monkish relative, he told a scandalous story. A niece of the Chinaman's, who had served for some while in the cafe, had gone to live with this monk.
Uncle Chinaman's account of it was rather grotesque.
"I had a niece," he said, "in the house, you know, very spruce, very good-looking, with b.r.e.a.s.t.s as hard as a rock. My wife loved her as 'muchly' as if she had been our daughter, and so did I. Suddenly we heard the poor child had made a false step... or two false steps... and a little while later the girl was in a bad condition. Well, then; she went to town, and came back here to the cafe, and again we heard that the poor child had made a false step... or two false steps; and as I have daughters, you know, this 'pro... missiousness' didn't please me, and I went and told her: 'Look here, Maria, this isn't right at all, and what you ought to do is get out.' She understood me, and went away, and went to her uncle the monk, and the two of them formed a 'cohabit.'...
Curse her! I went after them; and if I ever find them, I'll kill them.
All very well for the poor child to make a false step... or two false steps; but this thing of getting into a 'cohabit' with a monk, and he her uncle, that is a 'hulimination' for the family. You may believe that we had to empty the cup down to the 'drugs.'"
FATHER MARTIN
Caesar was listening to Uncle Chinaman with joy, when he saw two friars pa.s.sing along the road below the balcony.
"They are from the monastery of la Pena, I suppose," he said.
The Chinaman looked out and replied:
"One of them is the prior, Father Lafuerza. The other is an intriguing young chap who has been here only a short while."
"Man, I have to see them," said Caesar.
"They are coming up the street now."
Uncle Chinaman and Caesar went to the other end of the cafe, and waited for them to pa.s.s.
The younger of the two friars had an air of mock humility, and was weakly-looking, with a straggling yellowish beard and a crafty expression; Father Martin, on the contrary, looked like a pasha parading through his dominions. He was tall, stout, of an imposing aspect, with a grizzly blond beard, blue eyes, and a straight, well-shaped nose.
The two friars came up the narrow, steep street, stopping to talk to the women that were sewing and embroidering in the arcades.
Caesar and the Chinaman followed them with their eyes until the two friars turned a corner. Then Caesar left the cafe and walked back to Castro Duro.
VII. A TRYING SCENE
Don Platon Peribanez's reply was delayed longer than he had promised. No one knew whether the Duke of Castro Duro would get married or not get married, whether he would come out of prison or stay in.
Caesar had nothing for it but to wait, although he was already fed up with his stay. Alzugaray had a good time; he visited the surrounding towns in the company of Amparito and her father. Caesar, on the other hand, began to be bored. Accustomed to live with the independence of a savage, the social train of a town like Castro irritated him.
His good opinion of people was in direct ratio to the indifference they felt for him. Amparito's father was one of those who showed most antipathy. Sometimes he invited him to go motoring, but only for politeness. Caesar used to reply to these invitations with a courteous refusal.
Amparito, who was doubtless accustomed to seeing everybody in town fluttering about her, was wounded at this indifference and took every chance to see Caesar, and then shot her wit at him and was sharply impertinent.
The young creature was more intelligent than she had at first appeared and she spoke very plainly.
Caesar could not permit a young girl to make fun of him and combat his ideas for her own amus.e.m.e.nt.
"Let's see, Moneada," Amparito said to him one day in the gallery at Don Calixto's. "What are your political plans?"
"You wouldn't understand them," replied Caesar.
"Why not? Do you think I am so stupid?"
"No. It is merely that politics are not a matter for children." "Ah! But how old do you think I am?" she asked.
"You must be twelve or thirteen."
"You are a malicious joker, Senor Moncada, You know that I am almost seventeen."
"I don't. How should I know it?"
"Because I told your friend Alzugaray...."
"All right, but I don't ask my friend what you have told him."
"It doesn't interest you? Very good. You are very polite. But your politics do interest me. Come on, tell me. What reforms do you intend to make in the town? What improvements are you going to give the inhabitants? For I warn you, Senor Moncada, that they are all going to vote against you otherwise, I will tell my father."
"I don't believe his political interest is so keen."
"It is keen enough, and my father will do what I tell him. My father says that you are ambitious."
"If I were, I should make love to you, because you are rich."
"And do you suppose I would respond?"