DURING the night the expectant populace had taken
possession of all the belfries in the town in order to welcome
Pedrito Montero, who was making his entry after
having slept the night in Rincon. And first came straggling
in through the land gate the armed mob of all
colours, complexions, types, and states of raggedness,
calling themselves the Sulaco National Guard, and
commanded by Señor Gamacho. Through the middle
of the street streamed, like a torrent of rubbish, a mass
of straw hats, ponchos, gun-barrels, with an enormous
green and yellow flag flapping in their midst, in a
cloud of dust, to the furious beating of drums. The
spectators recoiled against the walls of the houses
shouting their Vivas! Behind the rabble could be seen the lances of the cavalry, the "army" of Pedro Montero. He advanced between Señores Fuentes and Gamacho at the head of his llaneros, who had accomplished the feat of crossing the Paramos of the Higuerota in a snow-storm. They rode four abreast, mounted on confiscated Campo horses, clad in the heterogeneous stock of roadside stores they had looted hurriedly in their rapid ride through the northern part of the province; for Pedro Montero had been in a great hurry to occupy Sulaco. The handkerchiefs knotted loosely around their bare throats were glaringly new, and all the right sleeves of their cotton shirts had been cut off close to the shoulder for greater freedom in throwing the lazo. Emaciated greybeards rode by the side of lean dark youths, marked by all the hardships of campaigning,
They were a good sample of the cavalry of the plains
with which Pedro Montero had helped so much the victorious
career of his brother the general. The influence
which that man, brought up in coast towns, acquired in
a short time over the plainsmen of the Republic can be
ascribed only to a genius for treachery of so effective
a kind that it must have appeared to those violent men
but little removed from a state of utter savagery, as the
perfection of sagacity and virtue. The popular lore
of all nations testifies that duplicity and cunning, together
with bodily strength, were looked upon, even
more than courage, as heroic virtues by primitive mankind.
To overcome your adversary was the great
affair of life. Courage was taken for granted. But
the use of intelligence awakened wonder and respect.
Stratagems, providing they did not fail, were honourable;
We have changed since. The use of intelligence
awakens little wonder and less respect. But the ignorant
and barbarous plainsmen engaging in civil strife followed
willingly a leader who often managed to deliver their
enemies bound, as it were, into their hands. Pedro Montero
had a talent for lulling his adversaries into a sense
of security. And as men learn wisdom with extreme
slowness, and are always ready to believe promises that
flatter their secret hopes, Pedro Montero was successful
time after time. Whether only a servant or some inferior
official in the Costaguana Legation in Paris, he had
rushed back to his country directly he heard that his
brother had emerged from the obscurity of his frontier
commandancia. He had managed to deceive by his
gift of plausibility the chiefs of the Ribierist movement
in the capital, and even the acute agent of the San
Tomé mine had failed to understand him thoroughly.
At once he had obtained an enormous influence over
his brother. They were very much alike in appearance,
both bald, with bunches of crisp hair above their ears,
arguing the presence of some negro blood. Only Pedro
was smaller than the general, more delicate altogether,
with an ape-like faculty for imitating all the outward
signs of refinement and distinction, and with a parrot-
like talent for languages. Both brothers had received
some elementary instruction by the munificence of a
great European traveller, to whom their father had been
a body-servant during his journeys in the interior of
the country. In General Montero's case it enabled
Thus at first sight the agent of the Gould Concession
in Sta. Marta had credited him with the possession of
sane views, and even with a restraining power over the
general's everlastingly discontented vanity. It could
never have entered his head that Pedrito Montero,
lackey or inferior scribe, lodged in the garrets of the
various Parisian hotels where the Costaguana Legation
used to shelter its diplomatic dignity, had been devouring
the lighter sort of historical works in the French
language, such, for instance as the books of Imbert
de Saint Amand upon the Second Empire. But Pedrito
had been struck by the splendour of a brilliant court,
and had conceived the idea of an existence for himself
where, like the Duc de Morny, he would associate the
command of every pleasure with the conduct of political
affairs and enjoy power supremely in every way. Nobody
could have guessed that. And yet this was one
of the immediate causes of the Monterist Revolution.
This will appear less incredible by the reflection that
the fundamental causes were the same as ever, rooted
in the political immaturity of the people, in the indolence
of the upper classes and the mental darkness of
the lower.
Pedrito Montero saw in the elevation of his brother
the road wide open to his wildest imaginings. This was
what made the Monterist pronunciamiento so unpreventable.
Pedro Montero, the brother of the general, dismounted
into a shouting and perspiring throng of enthusiasts
whom the ragged Nationals were pushing
back fiercely. Ascending a few steps he surveyed the
large crowd gaping at him. and the bullet-speckled
walls of the houses opposite lightly veiled by a sunny
haze of dust. The word "PORVENIR" in immense
black capitals, alternating with broken windows, stared
at him across the vast space; and he thought with delight
of the hour of vengeance, because he was very sure
of laying his hands upon Decoud. On his left hand,
Gamacho, big and hot, wiping his hairy wet face,
uncovered a set of yellow fangs in a grin of stupid hilarity.
On his right, Señor Fuentes, small and lean,
looked on with compressed lips. The crowd stared
literally open-mouthed, lost in eager stillness, as
though they had expected the great guerrillero, the
famous Pedrito, to begin scattering at once some sort
of visible largesse. What he began was a speech. He
began it with the shouted word "Citizens!" which
reached even those in the middle of the Plaza. Afterwards
the greater part of the citizens remained fascinated
by the orator's action alone, his tip-toeing, the
arms flung above his head with the fists clenched, a
hand laid flat upon the heart, the silver gleam of rolling
Upstairs Pedrito Montero walked about rapidly from
one wrecked room of the Intendencia to another, snarling
incessantly --
"What stupidity! What destruction!"
Señor Fuentes, following, would relax his taciturn
disposition to murmur --
"It is all the work of Gamacho and his Nationals;"
and then, inclining his head on his left shoulder,
would press together his lips so firmly that a little
hollow would appear at each corner. He had his
nomination for Political Chief of the town in his
In the long audience room, with its tall mirrors all
starred by stones, the hangings torn down and the
canopy over the platform at the upper end pulled to
pieces, the vast, deep muttering of the crowd and the
howling voice of Gamacho speaking just below reached
them through the shutters as they stood idly in dimness
and desolation.
"The brute!" observed his Excellency Don Pedro
Montero through clenched teeth. "We must contrive
as quickly as possible to send him and his Nationals out
there to fight Hernandez."
The new Géfé Político only jerked his head sideways,
and took a puff at his cigarette in sign of his agreement
with this method for ridding the town of Gamacho and
his inconvenient rabble.
Pedrito Montero looked with disgust at the absolutely
bare floor, and at the belt of heavy gilt picture-frames
running round the room, out of which the remnants of
torn and slashed canvases fluttered like dingy rags.
"We are not barbarians," he said.
This was what said his Excellency, the popular
Pedrito, the guerrillero skilled in the art of laying ambushes,
charged by his brother at his own demand
with the organization of Sulaco on democratic principles.
The night before, during the consultation
with his partisans, who had come out to meet him in
Rincon, he had opened his intentions to Señor Fuentes --
"We shall organize a popular vote, by yes or no, confiding
the destinies of our beloved country to the wisdom
and valiance of my heroic brother, the invincible general.
A plebiscite. Do you understand?"
And Señor Fuentes, puffing out his leathery cheeks,
had inclined his head slightly to the left, letting a thin,
His Excellency was exasperated at the devastation.
Not a single chair, table, sofa, étagère or console had been left in the state rooms of the Intendencia. His Excellency, though twitching all over with rage, was restrained from bursting into violence by a sense of his remoteness and isolation. His heroic brother was very far away. Meantime, how was he going to take his siesta? He had expected to find comfort and luxury in the Intendencia after a year of hard camp life, ending with the hardships and privations of the daring dash upon Sulaco -- upon the province which was worth more in wealth and influence than all the rest of the Republic's territory. He would get even with Gamacho by-and-by. And Señor Gamacho's oration, delectable to popular ears, went on in the heat and glare of the Plaza like the uncouth howlings of an inferior sort of devil cast into a white-hot furnace. Every moment he had to wipe his streaming face with his bare fore-arm; he had flung off his coat, and had turned up the sleeves of his shirt high above the elbows; but he kept on his head the large cocked hat with white plumes. His ingenuousness cherished this sign of his rank as Commandante of the National Guards. Approving and grave murmurs greeted his periods. His opinion was that war should be declared at once against France, England, Germany, and the United States, who, by introducing railways, mining enterprises, colonization, and under such other shallow pretences, aimed at robbing poor people of their lands, and with the help of these Goths and paralytics, the aristocrats would convert them into toiling and miserable slaves. And the leperos, flinging about the corners of their dirty white mantas, yelled their approbation. General
The morning was wearing on; there were already signs
of disruption, currents and eddies in the crowd. Some
were seeking the shade of the walls and under the trees
of the Alameda. Horsemen spurred through, shouting;
groups of sombreros set level on heads against the vertical
sun were drifting away into the streets, where the
open doors of pulperias revealed an enticing gloom resounding
with the gentle tinkling of guitars. The National
Guards were thinking of siesta, and the eloquence
of Gamacho, their chief, was exhausted. Later on,
when, in the cooler hours of the afternoon, they tried
to assemble again for further consideration of public
affairs, detachments of Montero's cavalry camped on
the Alameda charged them without parley, at speed,
with long lances levelled at their flying backs as far as
the ends of the streets. The National Guards of
Sulaco were surprised by this proceeding. But they
were not indignant. No Costaguanero had ever
learned to question the eccentricities of a military force.
They were part of the natural order of things. This must
be, they concluded, some kind of administrative measure,
no doubt. But the motive of it escaped their
unaided intelligence, and their chief and orator, Gamacho,
Commandante of the National Guard, was lying
drunk and asleep in the bosom of his family. His bare
feet were upturned in the shadows repulsively, in the
manner of a corpse. His eloquent mouth had dropped
open. His youngest daughter, scratching her head with
one hand, with the other waved a green bough over his
scorched and peeling face.