THE INSURGENCE
of CHAN SANTA CRUZ

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CHAPTER THIRTY FIVE |
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When the first column of
light appeared on the church wall, to mark a new day in Santa Cruz del Bravo,
Octaviano Solis, who had trusted its appearance to deliver him from the
terrible thirst of his tomb, fell into despair. The prisoners, both men and
women... from the humblest prostitute or pickpocket to the bandit chief
Matochino... had, similarly, lost all hope, placing their heads in their hands
to await the coming of don del Muerte.
This golden cord of
sunlight which, in its departure on the previous evening, had resembled the
vanishing ladder of hope being drawn out of reach, now took on the semblance of
a hangman's noose descending towards one and all. The songs with which they had
battled the night had faded with the dawn, and many of the prisoners had lain
down to die even as General Rivera entered the capital... not even the cries
and shots outside could revive that music.
There were always cries
and shots in Santa Cruz del Bravo.
"My time has
come," the dying bandit Sandoval Padilla groaned when the light appeared.
"I shall mount that ladder of light, whether it leads to Heaven or another
place, and you shall do what I have commanded." He crossed himself weakly,
then expired, one of the many crossties of the railroad set down in Quintana
Roo and, by circumstance, one of the last.
Solis and Matochino sat
facing each other while the color faded from the dead man's cheeks. The heavy
breathing and coughing of the sick and the dying reverberated off the walls of
the church like hundreds of balls set in play within an Indian court of stone.
The teeth of one of Lo Matochino's women rattled and he spat in her mouth, she
licked this hungrily, rocking from side to side and drawing her knees up into a
ball, sobbing without words, then smearing the tears with thirsty fingers which
she sucked upon, greedily..
"Here is my
knife," Matochino said. "Use it for me, I cannot. When I was a boy,
the fathers said that, before Cortes brought Jesucristo to this Mexico, our
people drank the blood and ate the flesh of human beings. Not as symbols, as
the priests tried pointing out, not in the form of bread and wine but as the
flesh itself... at first only that of enemy kings but, after a time, anyone,
living or dead. Now symbols distinguish ourselves, the civilized, from that
which we condemn as savagery and though I have given everything... my soul, my
sweat, my freedom... to the sinful life I have led, I cannot make a complaint.
It should be a matter of no consequence for me to slit the throat of a dead man
the way I have slit the throats of so many of the living, but I cannot. I
cannot go back to the drinking of blood... it is where I've made my stand. Take
this knife, Colonel, you must do this thing for me that will keep us both
alive."
"No," Solis
answered, "I cannot either. I will wait and hope, but does there come a
time when hoping is no more? Those who have nothing must make their own time,
so I shall make this arrangement with you and with the lords of death."
He nodded towards the
wall. "What that light has reached the floor," said Solis, measuring
a distance of some eight meters, "I shall surrender myself to don del
Muerte but, if he does not choose me, I shall do as Sandoval has asked. It may
be that he has already too many treasures to harvest one more, and it also may
be that this place has been so cursed that even don del Muerte fears to
tarry... for it was only by great will, by a heroic effort that Sandoval
achieved death. Yes, when the light reaches the floor I shall cut and drink
blood and you shall do the same."
The golden noose crept
downwards slowly towards the floor, gaining brilliance as it did and holding
the fascination of the hundreds still alive. In the great temple of the Cruzob,
the only sound was the buzzing of flies and, occasionally, a shouting from
outside the walls, indicative of some commotion.
"Give me the
knife," said Solis when perhaps two hours had gone by, and the beam was
less than a meter from the ground. Its light drew the eyes of the prisoners
towards it, bulging like those of toads, some closed as if to ward off the
impending degradation. The words between the Colonel and Matochino had been overheard
and carried to the furthest corner, men who still could raise a hand were
opening knives, sharpening sticks or, for a few, the edges of their military
decorations, fumbling for the sharp little flints which served to make fire.
"Padilla was a liar
who never killed a man," said Lo Matochino, "for he would know that
when a living throat is cut, blood comes out in great streams and is lost if
one is not waiting. But the blood of dead men lies in their veins like a
stagnant stream - it rots, as does the flesh. So do not tarry long at the doing
of this thing, it must be time."
Solis held the dead
man's head in his lap and stared at the wall, waiting in mute acceptance for
either a miracle or the inevitable. Finally the light reached the end of the
wall, trembling as it crossed over onto the gray expanse of mud. Bending
towards Padilla, he cut savagely into the bandit's neck but there was no
answering spurt of blood, not even a line of crimson. As Matochino predicted,
the heart no longer pumped and Padilla's blood had flowed downwards, collecting
in the veins of his feet which dangled over the edge of the altar.
"Help me with
this," Solis said and, with an oath, Matochino hoisted the corpse up by
its ankles which new position caused them to lighten in color. The flesh about
the wound grew darker but still the blood merely dripped and, abandoning his
knife and his principles, Solis plunged his teeth and tongue into the crevice.
The tepid blood had already begun to clot, but Solis drew it out in strings and,
when he withdrew his teeth to wring every essence of fluid from the clotted
blood, Matochino took his turn... then, as those dying on Matochino's
altar stirred at the sensation of serum, the Colonel drank again. Down and down
he pressed his face, striking the hidden moisture which trickled through his
parched lips like some dark electricity of such potency he never even heard the
similar sighs and cries of the feeding prisoners, nor the banging upon the
door.
A brilliant white
enveloped him and, at first, Octaviano Solis deduced that this was death, that
his body had deserted his spirit at the shock of receiving the criminal's
blood. Pulling his face up from Padilla's neck, the light surrounding him was
so bright he could not see and he put a hand before his eyes, raising his
bloody snout towards the source of its brilliance, anticipating its judgment.
"Madre de
Dios!" cried General Rivera, standing in the doorway of the cathedral. The
liberating party had been first stricken by a great wind of odors... of corpses
and their excretions, blood and despairing sweat, causing them to tuck their
chins into their chests and close their eyes. And when this first gust had
passed they had looked into this heart of the apocalypse... these figures
keening and cowering and ravaging the torn bodies of the dead... and the
General, being a devout Christian, had centered his gaze on the altar where a
man clothed in the remnants of the uniform of a Federal officer was raising his
chin, dripping with gore, from the dead man on whom he was feeding... opening
his lips in the vampire's salutation.
The General covered his
ears so that no trace of these rejoicings would scar his soul. "What is
this thing," he murmured to Colonel Rodriguez, "that we have set
loose upon the world?"
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