Guernica Magazine

Cain’s Feast

A Mexican story that reads like a biblical tale of love and infidelity and a chronicle of a murder at once.
Photo by Ian Livesey via Flickr

“Cain’s Feast” reads simultaneously like a biblical tale of love and infidelity and a chronicle of a murder. A devastated lover’s past and present collide as he invokes both heaven and hell upon his beloved in the same breath. A tone of ominous prophecy roves through the text; the writing follows pace, and heedlessly disrupts temporal and spatial narrative conventions. Published first in Giramondo Publishing’s HEAT magazine and written by the Mexican writer Aniela Rodríguez, “Cain’s Feast” is an anachronistic story of doomed lovers, in a translation dense with the rhythm of another language and place.

Raaza Jamshed for Guernica Global Spotlights

In memoriam
To my beloved Nacho, since this feast
is more yours than mine

he shot Jocinto delivered him that day was enough for the priest to realize that heaven is a shitty invention: the futile drivel of the missals and leaflets matrons dispense when proclaiming the blessedness of Our Lord. First light was enough for us to find ourselves leaving church singing hallelujahs and giving thanks to God, for the sky to blacken and the organ to be struck dumb due to some fault in its moving parts or an anomaly in the hearts of men. Jacinto went rigid at the door. He wasn’t going to try anything, by God he didn’t want to shoot him. He had backed out of it to start with. To forget, he stepped inside the cantina, where he tossed back the bottle of whisky that was set down in front of him; it didn’t obliterate his shame,

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Guernica Magazine

Guernica Magazine7 min read
“The Last Time I Came to Burn Paper”
There are much easier ways to write a debut novel, but Aube Rey Lescure has decided to have none of ease. River East, River West is an intergenerational epic, the story of a single family whose lives span a period of sweeping cultural change in China
Guernica Magazine10 min read
Black Wing Dragging Across the Sand
The next to be born was quite small, about the size of a sweet potato. The midwife said nothing to the mother at first but, upon leaving the room, warned her that the girl might not survive. No one seemed particularly concerned; after all, if she liv
Guernica Magazine13 min read
The Jaws of Life
To begin again the story: Tawny had been unzipping Carson LaFell’s fly and preparing to fit her head between his stomach and the steering wheel when the big red fire engine came rising over the fogged curve of the earth. I saw it but couldn’t say any

Related Books & Audiobooks