NORTHWOOD UNIVERSITY
Eng 385.1 Studies in the Hero
Winter 2005
Dr. Geoffrey A. Grimes
from "Three
Dirges"
in Requiem Guatemala
A Novel by
Marshall Bennett Connelly
- "And then he said, `Don Lázaro'--to my face!--the Colonel
himself, he said, `Don Lázaro, you've got five boys in Comitán teaching
the campesinos how to read. That's subversive. That's communist. So
tonight, you have to kill them.' . . . Now, what can I say?--you tell me!
What can a man say to something like that, and what's a man supposed to
do?"
- Before sunrise the next day, the little village of San Martín
Comitán lay draped, like a wrinkled quilt,
over the sharp ravines that scored the floor of the valley. Nestled in a
clearing in the pines that lined the slopes of the mountain range, the
highland aldea slumbered in the final moments of a long night as
the first faint glow of dawn began to trace the eastern rim of the Sierra
Madre. Gently sloping patches of tile roofs seemed anchored just above a
blanket of ground fog that stretched through the village and up the
valley. A rooster crowed in a corner of some milpa, a remote
cornfield behind the town.
- Then [pumpf!]--an Indian skyrocket streaked into the sky, its grey
trail racing above the center of the town, followed by a pale orange and
yellow burst. Its dull report echoed back and forth between the
mountains.
- In mid afternoon the day before, the military commander of the
garrison had been little disposed to wasting time in pleasantries.
- "Sit down, Don Lázaro," he frowned, eliciting something
between a greeting and an order. "You have had a very long walk from
Comitán."
- A weathered hat in hand, his tussled, raven hair glinting in the
sunlight flooding the room through the open doorway behind him, Don Lázaro
Emilio Cárdenas, a woodcarver and furniture maker by trade and the mayor
of San Martín Comitán, stood stoically before Colonel Julio Alfredo
Guzmán.
- "There, Don Lázaro, sit down," repeated the commander,
rolling a freshly sharpened yellow pencil between his fingers, never
moving his eyes from the face of the leathery Mayan stooping before his
desk.
- Saluting the exploding rocket, its echoes reverberating through the
valley, the rooster crowed again. It was answered by another more faintly
on the opposite side of the village.
- [BONK!] . . . [BONK!] . . . [BONK!] . . . The bell in the mission
of the town began to clap in a flat, thick bass. From the belfry, a flight
of pigeons fluttered aloft and dispersed to roosts somewhere under the fog
below. A brilliant, ruby lining now traced the rims of both the dark, grey
clouds and the flat, black mountains painted against the horizon. Another
flock of birds, a sprinkle of tiny, charcoal specks, swooped out of the
fields, spun once over the middle of the valley of San Martín,
and drifted to perches in the pines.
- Following the colonel's gesture, a wooden-faced soldier, in
camouflaged fatigues with a heavy, automatic assault rifle slung over his
shoulder, pulled a rickety chair from its position next to the doorway and
set it abruptly beside the dusty Indian.
- "Sit down!" repeated the commander as he rose from behind
his desk with measured formality.
- The Indian dropped his eyes to the chair beside him, looked back at
the colonel, and gingerly took a seat on the front edge of the chair.
Twisting the pencil methodically, Colonel Guzmán walked slowly around his
desk and stood directly over the diminutive Mayan peering deeply into the
crown of his hat. The wooden-faced soldier stood at attention just behind
the chair.
- "Listen to me, Don Lázaro. Do you understand me?"
- Then at once, from somewhere deep within the soul of the village, a
woman's anguish pierced the still, early morning, followed by yet a duet
of wails, and then a full chorus of cries. An orchestration of wrenching,
penetrating lamentations began to stream from the center of San Martín
Comitán and to work its way slowly, first down one rutted street and then
another, passing spectre-like toward the crossroad where the graves
climbed up the slope of the town's cemetery.
- A solemn procession of Comitanes, in full religious regalia,
followed the cofrades, the religious principales, in their
dark, woolen trajes, or outfits, crimson tzutes tied around
their heads with long silken tassels dangling behind--the twelve cofrades,
marching in six files, two abreast, carrying before them in outstretched
hands the sacred symbols of their rank, the silver monstrances, the
barras--tall, slender staffs crowned with the embossed image of San
Martín, the village's patron saint.
- Colonel Guzmán continued as Don Lázaro sat before him, the Indian's
head bowed to hide the increasing terror that gripped his heart. "You
have five boys--`catechists'--working for the American priest in Comitán.
They're teaching the campesinos how to read. Right?" pressed the
colonel. "Maybe even you, eh?"
- Don Lázaro's face froze, and his hands
began to tremble. He could not face the commander before him.
- "I think you understand me plainly enough," said the
colonel. "Well, you continue to listen to me! They're communist
subversives, these boys," said Colonel Guzmán. "So tonight, Don
Lázaro, tonight you have to kill them. Every one of them . . . all five!"
- Behind the cofrades paced the catechists, five somber young
men in sandals, musty jeans, and second-generation western jackets, in
some cases too snug and in others obviously too baggy to have been their
own. Following the five boys, wearing the long, white ceremonial tunics accented
with a single, central woven panel of red brocading, the principal
religious women--their hands over their mouths--wept uncontrollably under
lacy, white veils, tinted grey in the heavy mist of the morning.
- The procession of perhaps fifty or more moved with reluctance under
the wrought-iron arch that was the entrance to the town cemetery. The
solemn assembly flowed slowly around the faded blue and white tombs and
over the crest of the hill until the five young men, each escorted now by
an older man, followed the cofrades over the ridge of the hill and
dropped down on the other side just out of sight. The small congregation
then massed along the crest and peered over the hill, craning to watch the
proceedings below.
- "And what could I do? How could I do more?" asked Don
Lázaro, as he tried to explain to the parents the imperative for waking
them so late in the night. "I took the bus that stops at the military
post," he continued. "I took that same bus to Dos Padres. Then I
had to run and run. Twice I fell--you can see my hands and knees! All the
way I ran to reach you even now, now in the night. So I am telling you
what the colonel--what that `dog of Satan' himself--told me to my own
face. He said that `all five boys' . . ."
- Don Lázaro choked on words trying to frame such an unspeakable
crime, and, for the moment, he could not continue. The mothers and the
fathers exchanged looks of horror, unable to compass the full weight of
the words they anticipated from Don Lázaro, their mayor.
- "`All five, Don Lázaro, and by morning,'" repeated the
Mayor to the parents of the five boys gathered before him in the
candlelight of the altar.
- "`And you hear me clearly,'"
continued Don Lázaro, before the terrified families. "`If those
subversives aren't dead by sunrise tomorrow morning, my troops will come
to Comitán, and by noon
they will kill every living thing in the town and burn it to the ground,
and then--before nightfall--they will do the same thing to Santa María Pétzal, to Santa Luz, and to every other subversive
town in Sololá!'"
- The parents exchanged looks of terror and anger. The women began to
moan and wail. "That's what the colonel said to me, your
alcalde!" cried Don Lázaro, choking on his own tears. "And that
is the message I must bring to you!"
- "But what can we do?" they cried. "Where is our
priest to be away from us at such a time, but to `kill our own sons'! How can we do such a thing? Such a thing isn't
possible?"
- "But what else can you do?" asked the sons.
- "Have you forgotten what the militaries did in Cuarto
Pueblo?" asked Rolando Semitosa, signing the cross in benediction
over his head and chest.
- "Can you not remember the massacre of Puente Alto,"
interrupted Josúe Vállez, "how they locked
all the women and girls in the school house, threw in the grenades, and
burned them up? How they placed all the men in the protestant church and
clubbed them to death?"
- "And what they did to the small boys," added Marcos San
Miguel, "throwing them into the outhouse, leaving them there to
die?"
- "Surely, they will come and kill us all!" cried Jaime Chopúl. "Perhaps even now, the soldiers are here,
up there in the hills already, watching and waiting to see what we will
do!"
- "What bitches have brought these bastards into the world to do
such a thing to us!" cried Don Alvaro San Miguel, lifting his fists
and shaking them before Don Lázaro.
- "Que putas negras!
What mangy, black-souled whores!" cursed
Don Pablo Santa Cruz, rising from the bench beside the altar, stomping his
feet, and beating his head.
- "Why will they not leave us alone?" wept Dońa María
Mendoza de Vallez, lifting the edge of her shawl to her swollen
eyes.
- "And where is the Padre to speak for us?"
- "He is not here," wailed Dońa Lucía Sánchez
de Chopúl. "Why, merciful Madre, why is our
Padre not here at such an hour?"
- "Yes, the Padre is not here, so what choices do we have?"
asked Don Lázaro, his open hands outstretched before them.
- "What choices do you have?" asked the boys, waiting
breathlessly for an answer, scanning the anguished faces of their families
for some sign, searching about the room for even a margin of hope.
- . . . . . [BONK!] . . . . . . . . . . . . . . [BONK!] . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . [BONK!] . . . . . . . . The bell of San Martín
Comitán continued to clap its flat, dull refrain. From the cofrades
rose a litany of muted, almost imperceptible prayers lifted in the air on
drafts of black incense. And then silence. Even the birds ceased their
calling.
- The dense mist surged forward, enveloping the whole scene. Seconds
later, screeches of sharpened steel on steel sent trembles through the
muted congregation, and a chorus of screams went up as women sought
sanctuary against the breasts of their husbands and brothers.
- Then fell the swaths of five machetes, each finding its mark:
[thuck!] . . . . . . . . . . . . . . [thuck!] . .
[thuck!] . . . . . . . [thuck!]
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . [thuck!]
- The dense wall of the congregation collapsed in a mass of wailing
bodies. Their lamentations drifted back through the tombs, out the gate of
the cemetery, up the rutted road, and back into the town. They echoed
across the valley and then wafted toward the rays of morning sun just
beginning their stretch across the heavens.
- Somewhere away in the pine trees, the ignition of a heavy truck
churned and churned and finally fired its engine. The motor revved up once
and then again. After a hesitant pause, the drone of the truck slowly
dissipated into the rush of a cool wind that began to swirl through the
San Martín Valley of the Martyrs, flinging the drifts of clouds and the
souls of five young men high into the pines.
* * *
This page was last modified on February 10, 2006,
and is maintained by Dr. Geoffrey Grimes.
