DEAD STARS
by Paz
Marquez Benitez
Dead Star by Paz Marquez Benitez is the very first published Philippine Short Story in English. It was written in 1925 and was published in the Philippine Herald on the same year. How can we simply describe the story: It is verbose, very flowery--a great example of what a literary piece written on the period of imitation in Philippine Literature looks like. The theme is very simple. It is about love. The title Dead Star speaks of the whole story itself. A star, like love, when it is new and young is very warm, very bright but as time goes by, love, like a star, can grow dim, distant, and cold.
THROUGH the open window the air-steeped outdoors passed into his room, quietly enveloping him, stealing into his very thought. Esperanza, Julia, the sorry mess he had made of life, the years to come even now beginning to weigh down, to crush--they lost concreteness, diffused into formless melancholy. The tranquil murmur of conversation issued from the brick-tiled azotea where Don Julian and Carmen were busy puttering away among the rose pots.
"Papa, and when will the 'long table' be
set?"
"I don't know yet. Alfredo is not very
specific, but I understand Esperanza wants it to be next month."
Carmen sighed impatiently. "Why is he not a
bit more decided, I wonder. He is over thirty, is he not? And still a bachelor!
Esperanza must be tired waiting."
"She does not seem to be in much of a hurry
either," Don Julian nasally commented, while his rose scissors busily
snipped away.
"How can a woman be in a hurry when the man
does not hurry her?" Carmen returned, pinching off a worm with a careful,
somewhat absent air. "Papa, do you remember how much in love he was?"
"In love? With whom?"
"With Esperanza, of course. He has not had
another love affair that I know of," she said with good-natured contempt.
"What I mean is that at the beginning he was enthusiastic--flowers,
serenades, notes, and things like that--"
Alfredo remembered that period with a wonder not
unmixed with shame. That was less than four years ago. He could not understand
those months of a great hunger that was not of the body nor yet of the mind, a
craving that had seized on him one quiet night when the moon was abroad and
under the dappled shadow of the trees in the plaza, man wooed maid. Was he being
cheated by life? Love--he seemed to have missed it. Or was the love that others
told about a mere fabrication of perfervid imagination, an exaggeration of the
commonplace, a glorification of insipid monotonies such as made up his love
life? Was love a combination of circumstances, or sheer native capacity of
soul? In those days love was, for him, still the eternal puzzle; for love, as
he knew it, was a stranger to love as he divined it might be.
Sitting quietly in his room now, he could almost
revive the restlessness of those days, the feeling of tumultuous haste, such as
he knew so well in his boyhood when something beautiful was going on somewhere
and he was trying to get there in time to see. "Hurry, hurry, or you will
miss it," someone had seemed to urge in his ears. So he had avidly seized
on the shadow of Love and deluded himself for a long while in the way of
humanity from time immemorial. In the meantime, he became very much engaged to
Esperanza.
Why would men so mismanage their lives? Greed, he
thought, was what ruined so many. Greed--the desire to crowd into a moment all
the enjoyment it will hold, to squeeze from the hour all the emotion it will
yield. Men commit themselves when but half-meaning to do so, sacrificing
possible future fullness of ecstasy to the craving for immediate excitement.
Greed--mortgaging the future--forcing the hand of Time, or of Fate.
"What do you think happened?" asked
Carmen, pursuing her thought.
"I supposed long-engaged people are like that;
warm now, cool tomorrow. I think they are oftener cool than warm. The very fact
that an engagement has been allowed to prolong itself argues a certain
placidity of temperament--or of affection--on the part of either, or
both." Don Julian loved to philosophize. He was talking now with an
evident relish in words, his resonant, very nasal voice toned down to monologue
pitch. "That phase you were speaking of is natural enough for a beginning.
Besides, that, as I see it, was Alfredo's last race with escaping youth--"
Carmen laughed aloud at the thought of her
brother's perfect physical repose--almost indolence--disturbed in the role
suggested by her father's figurative language.
"A last spurt of hot blood," finished the
old man.
Few certainly would credit Alfredo Salazar with hot
blood. Even his friends had amusedly diagnosed his blood as cool and thin,
citing incontrovertible evidence. Tall and slender, he moved with an indolent
ease that verged on grace. Under straight recalcitrant hair, a thin face with a
satisfying breadth of forehead, slow, dreamer's eyes, and astonishing freshness
of lips--indeed Alfredo Salazar's appearance betokened little of exuberant
masculinity; rather a poet with wayward humor, a fastidious artist with keen,
clear brain.
He rose and quietly went out of the house. He
lingered a moment on the stone steps; then went down the path shaded by
immature acacias, through the little tarred gate which he left swinging back
and forth, now opening, now closing, on the gravel road bordered along the
farther side by madre cacao hedge in tardy lavender bloom.
The gravel road narrowed as it slanted up to the
house on the hill, whose wide, open porches he could glimpse through the
heat-shrivelled tamarinds in the Martinez yard.
Six weeks ago that house meant nothing to him save
that it was the Martinez house, rented and occupied by Judge del Valle and his
family. Six weeks ago Julia Salas meant nothing to him; he did not even know
her name; but now--
One evening he had gone "neighboring"
with Don Julian; a rare enough occurrence, since he made it a point to avoid
all appearance of currying favor with the Judge. This particular evening
however, he had allowed himself to be persuaded. "A little mental
relaxation now and then is beneficial," the old man had said.
"Besides, a judge's good will, you know;" the rest of the
thought--"is worth a rising young lawyer's trouble"--Don Julian
conveyed through a shrug and a smile that derided his own worldly wisdom.
A young woman had met them at the door. It was
evident from the excitement of the Judge's children that she was a recent and
very welcome arrival. In the characteristic Filipino way formal introductions
had been omitted--the judge limiting himself to a casual "Ah, ya
se conocen?"--with the consequence that Alfredo called her Miss del
Valle throughout the evening.
He was puzzled that she should smile with evident
delight every time he addressed her thus. Later Don Julian informed him that
she was not the Judge's sister, as he had supposed, but his sister-in-law, and
that her name was Julia Salas. A very dignified rather austere name, he
thought. Still, the young lady should have corrected him. As it was, he was
greatly embarrassed, and felt that he should explain.
To his apology, she replied, "That is nothing,
Each time I was about to correct you, but I remembered a similar experience I
had once before."
"Oh," he drawled out, vastly relieved.
"A man named Manalang--I kept calling him
Manalo. After the tenth time or so, the young man rose from his seat and said
suddenly, 'Pardon me, but my name is Manalang, Manalang.' You know, I never
forgave him!"
He laughed with her.
"The best thing to do under the circumstances,
I have found out," she pursued, "is to pretend not to hear, and to
let the other person find out his mistake without help."
"As you did this time. Still, you looked
amused every time I--"
"I was thinking of Mr. Manalang."
Don Julian and his uncommunicative friend, the
Judge, were absorbed in a game of chess. The young man had tired of playing
appreciative spectator and desultory conversationalist, so he and Julia Salas
had gone off to chat in the vine-covered porch. The lone piano in the
neighborhood alternately tinkled and banged away as the player's moods altered.
He listened, and wondered irrelevantly if Miss Salas could sing; she had such a
charming speaking voice.
He was mildly surprised to note from her appearance
that she was unmistakably a sister of the Judge's wife, although Doña Adela was
of a different type altogether. She was small and plump, with wide brown eyes,
clearly defined eyebrows, and delicately modeled hips--a pretty woman with the
complexion of a baby and the expression of a likable cow. Julia was taller, not
so obviously pretty. She had the same eyebrows and lips, but she was much
darker, of a smooth rich brown with underlying tones of crimson which
heightened the impression she gave of abounding vitality.
On Sunday mornings after mass, father and son would
go crunching up the gravel road to the house on the hill. The Judge's wife
invariably offered them beer, which Don Julian enjoyed and Alfredo did not.
After a half hour or so, the chessboard would be brought out; then Alfredo and
Julia Salas would go out to the porch to chat. She sat in the low hammock and he
in a rocking chair and the hours--warm, quiet March hours--sped by. He enjoyed
talking with her and it was evident that she liked his company; yet what
feeling there was between them was so undisturbed that it seemed a matter of
course. Only when Esperanza chanced to ask him indirectly about those visits
did some uneasiness creep into his thoughts of the girl next door.
Esperanza had wanted to know if he went straight
home after mass. Alfredo suddenly realized that for several Sundays now he had
not waited for Esperanza to come out of the church as he had been wont to do.
He had been eager to go "neighboring."
He answered that he went home to work. And, because
he was not habitually untruthful, added, "Sometimes I go with Papa to
Judge del Valle's."
She dropped the topic. Esperanza was not prone to
indulge in unprovoked jealousies. She was a believer in the regenerative virtue
of institutions, in their power to regulate feeling as well as conduct. If a
man were married, why, of course, he loved his wife; if he were engaged, he
could not possibly love another woman.
That half-lie told him what he had not admitted
openly to himself, that he was giving Julia Salas something which he was not
free to give. He realized that; yet something that would not be denied beckoned
imperiously, and he followed on.
It was so easy to forget up there, away from the
prying eyes of the world, so easy and so poignantly sweet. The beloved woman,
he standing close to her, the shadows around, enfolding.
"Up here I find--something--"
He and Julia Salas stood looking out into the she
quiet night. Sensing unwanted intensity, laughed, woman-like, asking,
"Amusement?"
"No; youth--its spirit--"
"Are you so old?"
"And heart's desire."
Was he becoming a poet, or is there a poet lurking
in the heart of every man?
"Down there," he had continued, his voice
somewhat indistinct, "the road is too broad, too trodden by feet, too
barren of mystery."
"Down there" beyond the ancient tamarinds
lay the road, upturned to the stars. In the darkness the fireflies glimmered,
while an errant breeze strayed in from somewhere, bringing elusive, faraway
sounds as of voices in a dream.
"Mystery--" she answered lightly,
"that is so brief--"
"Not in some," quickly. "Not in
you."
"You have known me a few weeks; so the
mystery."
"I could study you all my life and still not
find it."
"So long?"
"I should like to."
Those six weeks were now so swift--seeming in the
memory, yet had they been so deep in the living, so charged with compelling
power and sweetness. Because neither the past nor the future had relevance or
meaning, he lived only the present, day by day, lived it intensely, with such a
willful shutting out of fact as astounded him in his calmer moments.
Just before Holy Week, Don Julian invited the judge
and his family to spend Sunday afternoon at Tanda where he had a coconut
plantation and a house on the beach. Carmen also came with her four energetic
children. She and Doña Adela spent most of the time indoors directing the
preparation of the merienda and discussing the likeable
absurdities of their husbands--how Carmen's Vicente was so absorbed in his
farms that he would not even take time off to accompany her on this visit to
her father; how Doña Adela's Dionisio was the most absentminded of men, sometimes
going out without his collar, or with unmatched socks.
After the merienda, Don Julian
sauntered off with the judge to show him what a thriving young coconut looked
like--"plenty of leaves, close set, rich green"--while the children,
convoyed by Julia Salas, found unending entertainment in the rippling sand left
by the ebbing tide. They were far down, walking at the edge of the water,
indistinctly outlined against the gray of the out-curving beach.
Alfredo left his perch on the bamboo ladder of the
house and followed. Here were her footsteps, narrow, arched. He laughed at
himself for his black canvas footwear which he removed forthwith and tossed
high up on dry sand.
When he came up, she flushed, then smiled with
frank pleasure.
"I hope you are enjoying this," he said
with a questioning inflection.
"Very much. It looks like home to me, except
that we do not have such a lovely beach."
There was a breeze from the water. It blew the hair
away from her forehead, and whipped the tucked-up skirt around her straight,
slender figure. In the picture was something of eager freedom as of wings
poised in flight. The girl had grace, distinction. Her face was not notably
pretty; yet she had a tantalizing charm, all the more compelling because it was
an inner quality, an achievement of the spirit. The lure was there, of
naturalness, of an alert vitality of mind and body, of a thoughtful, sunny
temper, and of a piquant perverseness which is sauce to charm.
"The afternoon has seemed very short, hasn't
it?" Then, "This, I think, is the last time--we can visit."
"The last? Why?"
"Oh, you will be too busy perhaps."
He noted an evasive quality in the answer.
"Do I seem especially industrious to
you?"
"If you are, you never look it."
"Not perspiring or breathless, as a busy man
ought to be."
"But--"
"Always unhurried, too unhurried, and
calm." She smiled to herself.
"I wish that were true," he said after a
meditative pause.
She waited.
"A man is happier if he is, as you say, calm
and placid."
"Like a carabao in a mud pool," she
retorted perversely
"Who? I?"
"Oh, no!"
"You said I am calm and placid."
"That is what I think."
"I used to think so too. Shows how little we
know ourselves."
It was strange to him that he could be wooing thus:
with tone and look and covert phrase.
"I should like to see your home town."
"There is nothing to see--little crooked
streets, bunut roofs with ferns growing on them, and sometimes
squashes."
That was the background. It made her seem less
detached, less unrelated, yet withal more distant, as if that background
claimed her and excluded him.
"Nothing? There is you."
"Oh, me? But I am here."
"I will not go, of course, until you are
there."
"Will you come? You will find it dull. There
isn't even one American there!"
"Well--Americans are rather essential to my
entertainment."
She laughed.
"We live on Calle Luz, a little street with
trees."
"Could I find that?"
"If you don't ask for Miss del Valle,"
she smiled teasingly.
"I'll inquire about--"
"What?"
"The house of the prettiest girl in the
town."
"There is where you will lose your way."
Then she turned serious. "Now, that is not quite sincere."
"It is," he averred slowly, but
emphatically.
"I thought you, at least, would not say such
things."
"Pretty--pretty--a foolish word! But there is
none other more handy I did not mean that quite--"
"Are you withdrawing the compliment?"
"Re-enforcing it, maybe. Something is pretty
when it pleases the eye--it is more than that when--"
"If it saddens?" she interrupted hastily.
"Exactly."
"It must be ugly."
"Always?"
Toward the west, the sunlight lay on the dimming
waters in a broad, glinting streamer of crimsoned gold.
"No, of course you are right."
"Why did you say this is the last time?"
he asked quietly as they turned back.
"I am going home."
The end of an impossible dream!
"When?" after a long silence.
"Tomorrow. I received a letter from Father and
Mother yesterday. They want me to spend Holy Week at home."
She seemed to be waiting for him to speak.
"That is why I said this is the last time."
"Can't I come to say good-bye?"
"Oh, you don't need to!"
"No, but I want to."
"There is no time."
The golden streamer was withdrawing, shortening,
until it looked no more than a pool far away at the rim of the world.
Stillness, a vibrant quiet that affects the senses as does solemn harmony; a
peace that is not contentment but a cessation of tumult when all violence of
feeling tones down to the wistful serenity of regret. She turned and looked
into his face, in her dark eyes a ghost of sunset sadness.
"Home seems so far from here. This is almost
like another life."
"I know. This is Elsewhere, and yet strange
enough, I cannot get rid of the old things."
"Old things?"
"Oh, old things, mistakes, encumbrances, old
baggage." He said it lightly, unwilling to mar the hour. He walked close,
his hand sometimes touching hers for one whirling second.
Don Julian's nasal summons came to them on the
wind.
Alfredo gripped the soft hand so near his own. At
his touch, the girl turned her face away, but he heard her voice say very low,
"Good-bye."
II
ALFREDO Salazar turned to the right where, farther
on, the road broadened and entered the heart of the town--heart of Chinese
stores sheltered under low-hung roofs, of indolent drug stores and tailor
shops, of dingy shoe-repairing establishments, and a cluttered goldsmith's
cubbyhole where a consumptive bent over a magnifying lens; heart of old
brick-roofed houses with quaint hand-and-ball knockers on the door; heart of
grass-grown plaza reposeful with trees, of ancient church and convento,now
circled by swallows gliding in flight as smooth and soft as the afternoon
itself. Into the quickly deepening twilight, the voice of the biggest of the
church bells kept ringing its insistent summons. Flocking came the devout with
their long wax candles, young women in vivid apparel (for this was Holy
Thursday and the Lord was still alive), older women in sober black skirts. Came
too the young men in droves, elbowing each other under the talisay tree near
the church door. The gaily decked rice-paper lanterns were again on display
while from the windows of the older houses hung colored glass globes, heirlooms
from a day when grasspith wicks floating in coconut oil were the chief lighting
device.
Soon a double row of lights emerged from the church
and uncoiled down the length of the street like a huge jewelled band studded
with glittering clusters where the saints' platforms were. Above the measured
music rose the untutored voices of the choir, steeped in incense and the acrid
fumes of burning wax.
The sight of Esperanza and her mother sedately
pacing behind Our Lady of Sorrows suddenly destroyed the illusion of continuity
and broke up those lines of light into component individuals. Esperanza
stiffened self-consciously, tried to look unaware, and could not.
The line moved on.
Suddenly, Alfredo's slow blood began to beat
violently, irregularly. A girl was coming down the line--a girl that was
striking, and vividly alive, the woman that could cause violent commotion in
his heart, yet had no place in the completed ordering of his life.
Her glance of abstracted devotion fell on him and
came to a brief stop.
The line kept moving on, wending its circuitous
route away from the church and then back again, where, according to the old
proverb, all processions end.
At last Our Lady of Sorrows entered the church, and
with her the priest and the choir, whose voices now echoed from the arched
ceiling. The bells rang the close of the procession.
A round orange moon, "huge as a winnowing
basket," rose lazily into a clear sky, whitening the iron roofs and
dimming the lanterns at the windows. Along the still densely shadowed streets
the young women with their rear guard of males loitered and, maybe, took the
longest way home.
Toward the end of the row of Chinese stores, he
caught up with Julia Salas. The crowd had dispersed into the side streets,
leaving Calle Real to those who lived farther out. It was past eight, and
Esperanza would be expecting him in a little while: yet the thought did not
hurry him as he said "Good evening" and fell into step with the girl.
"I had been thinking all this time that you
had gone," he said in a voice that was both excited and troubled.
"No, my sister asked me to stay until they are
ready to go."
"Oh, is the Judge going?"
"Yes."
The provincial docket had been cleared, and Judge
del Valle had been assigned elsewhere. As lawyer--and as lover--Alfredo had
found that out long before.
"Mr. Salazar," she broke into his
silence, "I wish to congratulate you."
Her tone told him that she had learned, at last.
That was inevitable.
"For what?"
"For your approaching wedding."
Some explanation was due her, surely. Yet what
could he say that would not offend?
"I should have offered congratulations long
before, but you know mere visitors are slow about getting the news," she
continued.
He listened not so much to what she said as to the
nuances in her voice. He heard nothing to enlighten him, except that she had
reverted to the formal tones of early acquaintance. No revelation there; simply
the old voice--cool, almost detached from personality, flexible and vibrant,
suggesting potentialities of song.
"Are weddings interesting to you?" he
finally brought out quietly
"When they are of friends, yes."
"Would you come if I asked you?"
"When is it going to be?"
"May," he replied briefly, after a long
pause.
"May is the month of happiness they say,"
she said, with what seemed to him a shade of irony.
"They say," slowly, indifferently.
"Would you come?"
"Why not?"
"No reason. I am just asking. Then you
will?"
"If you will ask me," she said with
disdain.
"Then I ask you."
"Then I will be there."
The gravel road lay before them; at the road's end
the lighted windows of the house on the hill. There swept over the spirit of
Alfredo Salazar a longing so keen that it was pain, a wish that, that house
were his, that all the bewilderments of the present were not, and that this
woman by his side were his long wedded wife, returning with him to the peace of
home.
"Julita," he said in his slow, thoughtful
manner, "did you ever have to choose between something you wanted to do
and something you had to do?"
"No!"
"I thought maybe you had had that experience;
then you could understand a man who was in such a situation."
"You are fortunate," he pursued when she
did not answer.
"Is--is this man sure of what he should
do?"
"I don't know, Julita. Perhaps not. But there
is a point where a thing escapes us and rushes downward of its own weight,
dragging us along. Then it is foolish to ask whether one will or will not,
because it no longer depends on him."
"But then why--why--" her muffled voice
came. "Oh, what do I know? That is his problem after all."
"Doesn't it--interest you?"
"Why must it? I--I have to say good-bye, Mr.
Salazar; we are at the house."
Without lifting her eyes she quickly turned and
walked away.
Had the final word been said? He wondered. It had.
Yet a feeble flutter of hope trembled in his mind though set against that hope
were three years of engagement, a very near wedding, perfect understanding
between the parents, his own conscience, and Esperanza herself--Esperanza
waiting, Esperanza no longer young, Esperanza the efficient, the
literal-minded, the intensely acquisitive.
He looked attentively at her where she sat on the
sofa, appraisingly, and with a kind of aversion which he tried to control.
She was one of those fortunate women who have the
gift of uniformly acceptable appearance. She never surprised one with
unexpected homeliness nor with startling reserves of beauty. At home, in
church, on the street, she was always herself, a woman past first bloom, light
and clear of complexion, spare of arms and of breast, with a slight convexity
to thin throat; a woman dressed with self-conscious care, even elegance; a
woman distinctly not average.
She was pursuing an indignant relation about
something or other, something about Calixta, their note-carrier, Alfredo
perceived, so he merely half-listened, understanding imperfectly. At a pause he
drawled out to fill in the gap: "Well, what of it?" The remark
sounded ruder than he had intended.
"She is not married to him," Esperanza
insisted in her thin, nervously pitched voice. "Besides, she should have
thought of us. Nanay practically brought her up. We never thought she would
turn out bad."
What had Calixta done? Homely, middle-aged Calixta?
"You are very positive about her
badness," he commented dryly. Esperanza was always positive.
"But do you approve?"
"Of what?"
"What she did."
"No," indifferently.
"Well?"
He was suddenly impelled by a desire to disturb the
unvexed orthodoxy of her mind. "All I say is that it is not necessarily
wicked."
"Why shouldn't it be? You talked like an--immoral
man. I did not know that your ideas were like that."
"My ideas?" he retorted, goaded by a
deep, accumulated exasperation. "The only test I wish to apply to conduct
is the test of fairness. Am I injuring anybody? No? Then I am justified in my conscience.
I am right. Living with a man to whom she is not married--is that it? It may be
wrong, and again it may not."
"She has injured us. She was ungrateful."
Her voice was tight with resentment.
"The trouble with you, Esperanza, is that you
are--" he stopped, appalled by the passion in his voice.
"Why do you get angry? I do not understand you
at all! I think I know why you have been indifferent to me lately. I am not
blind, or deaf; I see and hear what perhaps some are trying to keep from
me." The blood surged into his very eyes and his hearing sharpened to
points of acute pain. What would she say next?
"Why don't you speak out frankly before it is
too late? You need not think of me and of what people will say." Her voice
trembled.
Alfredo was suffering as he could not remember ever
having suffered before. What people will say--what will they not say? What
don't they say when long engagements are broken almost on the eve of the
wedding?
"Yes," he said hesitatingly, diffidently,
as if merely thinking aloud, "one tries to be fair--according to his
lights--but it is hard. One would like to be fair to one's self first. But that
is too easy, one does not dare--"
"What do you mean?" she asked with
repressed violence. "Whatever my shortcomings, and no doubt they are many
in your eyes, I have never gone out of my way, of my place, to find a
man."
Did she mean by this irrelevant remark that he it
was who had sought her; or was that a covert attack on Julia Salas?
"Esperanza--" a desperate plea lay in his
stumbling words. "If you--suppose I--" Yet how could a mere man word
such a plea?
"If you mean you want to take back your word,
if you are tired of--why don't you tell me you are tired of me?" she burst
out in a storm of weeping that left him completely shamed and unnerved.
The last word had been said.
III
AS Alfredo Salazar leaned against the boat rail to
watch the evening settling over the lake, he wondered if Esperanza would
attribute any significance to this trip of his. He was supposed to be in Sta.
Cruz whither the case of the People of the Philippine Islands vs. Belina et al
had kept him, and there he would have been if Brigida Samuy had not been so
important to the defense. He had to find that elusive old woman. That the
search was leading him to that particular lake town which was Julia Salas' home
should not disturb him unduly Yet he was disturbed to a degree utterly out of
proportion to the prosaicalness of his errand. That inner tumult was no
surprise to him; in the last eight years he had become used to such occasional
storms. He had long realized that he could not forget Julia Salas. Still, he
had tried to be content and not to remember too much. The climber of mountains
who has known the back-break, the lonesomeness, and the chill, finds a certain
restfulness in level paths made easy to his feet. He looks up sometimes from
the valley where settles the dusk of evening, but he knows he must not heed the
radiant beckoning. Maybe, in time, he would cease even to look up.
He was not unhappy in his marriage. He felt no
rebellion: only the calm of capitulation to what he recognized as irresistible
forces of circumstance and of character. His life had simply ordered itself; no
more struggles, no more stirring up of emotions that got a man nowhere. From
his capacity of complete detachment he derived a strange solace. The essential
himself, the himself that had its being in the core of his thought, would, he
reflected, always be free and alone. When claims encroached too insistently, as
sometimes they did, he retreated into the inner fastness, and from that vantage
he saw things and people around him as remote and alien, as incidents that did
not matter. At such times did Esperanza feel baffled and helpless; he was
gentle, even tender, but immeasurably far away, beyond her reach.
Lights were springing into life on the shore. That
was the town, a little up-tilted town nestling in the dark greenness of the
groves. A snubcrested belfry stood beside the ancient church. On the outskirts
the evening smudges glowed red through the sinuous mists of smoke that rose and
lost themselves in the purple shadows of the hills. There was a young moon
which grew slowly luminous as the coral tints in the sky yielded to the darker
blues of evening.
The vessel approached the landing quietly, trailing
a wake of long golden ripples on the dark water. Peculiar hill inflections came
to his ears from the crowd assembled to meet the boat--slow, singing cadences,
characteristic of the Laguna lake-shore speech. From where he stood he could
not distinguish faces, so he had no way of knowing whether the presidentewas
there to meet him or not. Just then a voice shouted.
"Is the abogado there? Abogado!"
"What abogado?" someone
irately asked.
That must be the presidente, he
thought, and went down to the landing.
It was a policeman, a tall pock-marked individual.
The presidente had left with Brigida Samuy--Tandang
"Binday"--that noon for Santa Cruz. Señor Salazar's second letter had
arrived late, but the wife had read it and said, "Go and meet the abogado and
invite him to our house."
Alfredo Salazar courteously declined the
invitation. He would sleep on board since the boat would leave at four the next
morning anyway. So thepresidente had received his first letter?
Alfredo did not know because that official had not sent an answer. "Yes,"
the policeman replied, "but he could not write because we heard that
Tandang Binday was in San Antonio so we went there to find her."
San Antonio was up in the hills! Good man, the
presidente! He, Alfredo, must do something for him. It was not every day that
one met with such willingness to help.
Eight o'clock, lugubriously tolled from the bell
tower, found the boat settled into a somnolent quiet. A cot had been brought
out and spread for him, but it was too bare to be inviting at that hour. It was
too early to sleep: he would walk around the town. His heart beat faster as he
picked his way to shore over the rafts made fast to sundry piles driven into
the water.
How peaceful the town was! Here and there a
little tienda was still open, its dim light issuing forlornly
through the single window which served as counter. An occasional couple
sauntered by, the women's chinelasmaking scraping sounds. From a
distance came the shrill voices of children playing games on the street--tubigan perhaps,
or "hawk-and-chicken." The thought of Julia Salas in that quiet place
filled him with a pitying sadness.
How would life seem now if he had married Julia
Salas? Had he meant anything to her? That unforgettable red-and-gold afternoon
in early April haunted him with a sense of incompleteness as restless as other
unlaid ghosts. She had not married--why? Faithfulness, he reflected, was not a
conscious effort at regretful memory. It was something unvolitional, maybe a
recurrent awareness of irreplaceability. Irrelevant trifles--a cool wind on his
forehead, far-away sounds as of voices in a dream--at times moved him to an
oddly irresistible impulse to listen as to an insistent, unfinished prayer.
A few inquiries led him to a certain little
tree-ceilinged street where the young moon wove indistinct filigrees of fight
and shadow. In the gardens the cotton tree threw its angular shadow athwart the
low stone wall; and in the cool, stilly midnight the cock's first call rose in
tall, soaring jets of sound. Calle Luz.
Somehow or other, he had known that he would find
her house because she would surely be sitting at the window. Where else, before
bedtime on a moonlit night? The house was low and the light in the sala behind
her threw her head into unmistakable relief. He sensed rather than saw her
start of vivid surprise.
"Good evening," he said, raising his hat.
"Good evening. Oh! Are you in town?"
"On some little business," he answered
with a feeling of painful constraint.
"Won't you come up?"
He considered. His vague plans had not included
this. But Julia Salas had left the window, calling to her mother as she did so.
After a while, someone came downstairs with a lighted candle to open the door.
At last--he was shaking her hand.
She had not changed much--a little less slender,
not so eagerly alive, yet something had gone. He missed it, sitting opposite
her, looking thoughtfully into her fine dark eyes. She asked him about the home
town, about this and that, in a sober, somewhat meditative tone. He conversed
with increasing ease, though with a growing wonder that he should be there at
all. He could not take his eyes from her face. What had she lost? Or was the
loss his? He felt an impersonal curiosity creeping into his gaze. The girl must
have noticed, for her cheek darkened in a blush.
Gently--was it experimentally?--he pressed her hand
at parting; but his own felt undisturbed and emotionless. Did she still care?
The answer to the question hardly interested him.
The young moon had set, and from the uninviting cot
he could see one half of a star-studded sky.
So that was all over.
Why had he obstinately clung to that dream?
So all these years--since when?--he had been seeing
the light of dead stars, long extinguished, yet seemingly still in their
appointed places in the heavens.
An immense sadness as of loss invaded his spirit, a
vast homesickness for some immutable refuge of the heart far away where faded
gardens bloom again, and where live on in unchanging freshness, the dear, dead
loves of vanished youth.
This is the 1925 short story that gave birth
to modern Philippine writing in English.
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