The Spanish Teacher
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About this ebook
Winner of the Gival Press Novel Award
“…De la Cuesta’s novel maintains an accumulating power which holds onto a reader’s attention not only through the forceful figure of Ordóñez, but by demonstrating acutely how ordinary lives are impacted by the underlying social and political landscape
Barbara de la Cuesta
Barbara de la Cuesta taught and worked as a journalist in South America, and is now a teacher of English as a Second Language and Spanish. Out of this experience came her two prize-winning novels, The Spanish Teacher, winner of the Gival Press Award in 2007, and Rosa, winner of the Driftless Novella Prize from Brain Mill Press in 2017. Fellowships in fiction from the Mass`achusetts Artists' Foundation, and the New Jersey Council on the Arts, as well as residencies at the Ragdale Foundation, The Virginia Center, and the Millay Colony, have allowed her to complete these novels. She has also published two collections of poetry with Finishing Line Press, and her collection of short stories, The Place Where Judas Lost his Boots, has recently won The Brighthorse Prize for short fictionals she and the local people of the remote village attend him.
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The Spanish Teacher - Barbara de la Cuesta
Copyright © 2018 by Barbara de la Cuesta.
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, distributed, or transmitted in any form or by any means, including photocopying, recording, or other electronic or mechanical methods, without the prior written permission of the publisher, except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical reviews and certain other noncommercial uses permitted by copyright law.
This book is sold subject to the condition that it shall not, by way of trade or otherwise, be lent, re-sold, hired out or otherwise circulated without the author’s prior consent in any form of binding or cover other than that in which it is published and without a similar condition including this condition being imposed on the subsequent purchaser.
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Wrapped in his mule blanket, Ordóñez stood in a corner of the terrace observing the Vice-Consul, Mr. Plimford, dancing with his wife. They were dressed as Apaches. Mrs. Plimford, whose name it was said was Dee Dee, had good legs and showed them off with sly sensuality.
They had hired musicians, the best in the city, and the guitarist, Eusebio Várgas of the inward face, was just at that moment passing the beat of a bolero to the maraca player.
What a man, this Eusebio!
someone cried; and Ordóñez, looking upward at the stars burning above the burning mountains, allowed himself to be stirred.
A pair, dressed to represent a Mexican wedding, danced the bolero in a studied way, but well. They wore masks, their hair tucked up; but it was certain both were women. Ordóñez watched them, noting how the one smiled in ironic awareness of her pleasure, while the other moved in a trance of grave concentration that tugged at him until he moved across the terrace and interrupted them.
He spoke in English: I would like to know who you are.
But I can’t tell you,
said the one he had chosen, It is Carnival.
This amused him. I am here as myself, as Ordóñez,
he said. Ordóñez cannot afford a costume.
She knew him, from the Colegio.
I think I have seen you before,
he said.
You have.
Every morning, at ten, he stepped through the open air side of her classroom, come to teach her children to sing La Cucaracha.
He didn’t begin dancing with her, merely stood with her hand in his. But where, where did you come from?
He meant how had it been she, who had tugged at him thus…
Warsaw,
she said.
He was bewildered.
Warsaw, New York. They named it after some Pole,
she said. It’s a little place.
We have little towns,
he said, Ah, they are named to great purpose, great purpose. Reform, they are called, or Purity! Ha! ha! Like the cook’s daughter who is called Purificación, the slut.
She laughed, looking into his face. He moved her to one side of the terrace. The Plimford’s house, which had once been the Italian consulate, overlooked Miraflores. You could see the length of Roosevelt Avenue as far as the British school. I have been to Philadelphia,
he said. Do you know Philadelphia?
I’ve been there.
I accompanied a priest to a congress at Villanova College. One should avoid traveling with priests. ‘We are going to a country without a soul,’ he told me. ‘You must take care.’
She moved back to find a seat on the low terrace wall. The musicians had finished a set and were smoking in a corner, their instruments resting on the wall. He followed her, noting the small, sleek head and slender shoulders. He had seen her before.
We went on a ‘C’ liner called ‘The City of Tunja.’ There was a terrible storm. He came to my bunk. I thought he wanted to throw me overboard, like Jonah. Ha! But he only wanted to give me confession. I got away from him in Philadelphia.
I’m glad of that.
Another mountain was burning, over above the Malaria Station. Why do they burn?
she asked.
The farmers burn off the trees, so cattle can graze on the new grass when the rains come. They should not do it. It is on the radio every hour.
"Hola!" Ricaurte’s voice issued from inside a papier mache mask. Eusebio Várgas is unhapy with the punch.
Is there rum?
Perhaps in the kitchen. The costumes are going to be judged and I don’t want to miss it. Then I am to sing a ballad of Evaristo Gil’s.
She knew Ricaurte. He was the other one, the other Spanish teacher to her little charges, sons and daughters of Firestone executives.
I’ll look for the rum,
Ordóñez said. He turned to her: You will come?
She nodded, followed him down the flight of stairs to the kitchen, where a hired waiter found a bottle of Ron Viejo. That will do,
said Ordóñez. Eusebio Várgas must have something decent to drink.
Yes, yes,
the waiter nodded. There is no one like Eusebio Várgas.
They returned upstairs with the rum and found the musicians seated around a laundry tub out on the roof.
Now this you could call something to drink,
said the maraca player, passing the glasses around, Ricaurte’s performance could be heard through the open window. "‘It is a copla of Guillermo Lara’s," said the guitarist.
No, by Evaristo Gil,
said Ordóñez. Ah, yes.
River that reached out and took the girl Daughter of the tavern keeper…
I had a friend, a taxi driver, who sang that,
said the maraca player. He could wring tears from the Horned One, I swear.
That is true,
said Eusebio Várgas.
White-skinned, she was, and well-formed…"
That is poetry. That is poetry!
said the maraca player.
For poetry you need rum,
said Eusebio Várgas. Our friend Ricaurte, I’ll bet, drinks vermouth like the ladies, or gin.
The maraca player had brought out a box of firecrackers, which he began lighting from a cigarette, tossing them out over the terrace wall. He offered one to Ordóñez’s companion. Will the Señorita try…?
They are dangerous,
Ordóñez told her. If one is put together upside down, it explodes in one’s face.
I’ll throw it fast,
she said. She held the little rocket over the wall, flipping it outward toward the center of the little park below. It shot sideways, and returned to sputter out at their feet.
See, they do not hurt you,
said the maraca player.
A miracle,
said Ordóñez. A miracle we are not all killed every December. Four or five years ago, the row of shacks on Roosevelt Avenue where they sell the fireworks went up, one after another. Boom boom boom, a chain reaction like your atomic bomb,
he said to her.
It is not my atomic bomb,
she said.
Yes, it is. What’s here is mine; what’s there is yours.
The maraca player offered Ordóñez the last rocket. He took it and handed it to her: "Would you like to take another chance, Señorita, that the charge is correctly inserted in this little invention?"
With pleasure,
she said, lighting it and holding onto its stem until the last minute, before tossing it down into the street.
At one o’clock, they left the Plimford’s and followed the musicians to the Obelisk Grill.
Eusebio Várgas must be forgiven a fondness for the verses of Guillermo Lara,
said Ordóñez, as they walked toward the river. I don’t understand,
she said.
"They are ballads of taxi drivers, who listen all day on their car radios to Romances de Hoy. How nauseating! Evaristo Gil and his ‘Infant white as the Child Jesus!’ Holy Mother! Has no one ever looked at an infant in this country?" said Ordóñez. He stopped to drink from the bottle of Ron Viejo he had carried away from the Plimfords’ kitchen. Do you want?
No, thank you.
"It is we are a people who can intoxicate ourselves with words.
Our national vice."
Del Rio Avenue followed the dry bed of the Humboldt River as far as the deep canyon where the Barrio Santa Ana spilled down the sides of the hills that held aloft the shacks of Terrón Colorado. Our nourishment flows out of us,
he said. I feel sometimes that I am dying of discussions; do you understand? When El Cacique, our illustrious dictator, was in the twenty-second year of his reign, we plotted to kill him. We met in Roberto Pino’s house and talked about it till morning. It lasted seventeen years, our discussion; and, in the meantime, El Cacique took to his bed to die, of natural causes. I became ill. I would have died too, if I had not discovered a cure…
What was it?
she asked.
I took a walk. Five hundred miles, from Malaganueva to Los Chorros. In the company of a mule. It was a mule capable of long silences. We exchanged, along the whole way, only two or three comments: how the sand on the banks of the Málaga River is gray, while the bed of the Culebra is white.
And you recovered?
she asked, wondering how one could be attracted to a man with this suddenness, simply because he tells these absurd…
Yes. That was many years ago. I was a journalist. It was in 1959,
he said. What were you doing in 1959?
She thought he might be trying to calculate her age. I suppose I was sitting on the floor piling blocks,
she said.
In Warsaw, New York?
Yes.
What kind of a place is that?
I grew up on a farm, on a dairy.
Ah, so.
Like one of those heroines of an animal story,
she laughed. What is that?
A kind of a story we have for children who have no pets.
Ah, for everyone you have something. Why did you come here?
"An ad in the New York Times: Teachers Abroad.
And you wanted to come here, precisely here?
No…I think it was Spain."
Ah, you ask for Spain and you get here. A pity.
It hasn’t mattered,
she said.
He stopped her under a street lamp, took off her hat and mask. It was a neat, focused face, evenly freckled, with dark hair drawn back.
It’s what I’ve wanted,
she said. What is that?
To walk out on the street in my costume.
Ha! Like the maid servants; they quit their jobs just before Carnival and dance four nights till dawn in the Barrio Colorado. Then after, you will see them dragging their tin trunks up and down the streets of Alta Mira and Santa Rita looking for another job. So, you are a teacher.
Yes. My name is Dorie West.
I am a teacher too.
I know.
The guitarist, Eusebio Várgas, had moved to fill in with a group in the Barrio Candelaria; only the maraca player was at the grill when they arrived. Ordóñez invited him to share a plate of meat pies.
Mr. Plimford does not keep a group long enough to count for a night’s work,
the maraca player said. And then he lets you go too late to find another employment. It would be more profitable to play till three in the Casa del Pueblo, though they only give you ten pesos an hour. You wanted to hear Eusebjo Várgas in another set?
Ordóñez nodded.
"Wait a bit. Macario will be back, and we’ll play you a Merengue."
They didn’t wait, but walked up to Santa Ana Avenue and crossed the Calle Quinta Bridge into the Plaza La Callada. There was a large marble base without a statue. What was it?
she asked.
El Cacique,
he said. Our Great Man. We are ashamed of him now; we tumble his statues into the grass.
You wanted to kill him once,
she said. Nevertheless, he was our Great Man.
A tyrant,
she said. She had read a book. He put innocent people in chains.
My house is three blocks from here,
he said. Shall we go there?
Yes,
she said. Her feet were aching. He led her past the darkened flank of the Chapel of San Judas, through another little plaza with its tired gestures of ragged palm and rudimentary fountain, and down the narrow Cuarta Bis Street to his door, which he opened with three separate keys. Inside, he told her to wait while he went to the kitchen to find a candle stuck in a saucer, which he lighted to avoid turning on the naked overhead bulb in the parlor.
Sit here.
He indicated one of two leatherette chairs. Wait, I will wipe it.
He took a rag from under a cushion.
The street is unpaved; there is always dust…
He was quickly sober, appalled by the house as she must see it: cramped parlor with pictures his sister cut out of Hogar and taped crookedly to the walls, the hens roosting on the sills, the cock in a cage on top of the refrigerator. He excused himself to go back to the kitchen and find a bottle of rum from which he swigged twice before he returned to her, thinking, how could I have lived so long this way and never noticed…?
She waited, becoming sober. He seemed gone a long time. There were students’ exercise books lying all over the floor. She picked one up, read:
Simón Bolívar, until he was six years old, ran naked as a savage. His tutor instituted a system of instruction based on Rousseau’s Emile. To this we owe our liberation from Spain…
Ordóñez returned, handed her a glass. My wife is dead,
he said to her.
I am sorry…
She was my first cousin. I always preferred the women of my family to others. She left me three children. My sister Alicia cares for them.
What are their names?
she asked.
Lily and Rita, the girls; and Luís. He is ten. In an hour my sister will get up to go to Mass.
Shall we go in there,
she said, pointing to the door of a room off the patio.
Do you want to?
he asked.
Yes. I don’t want…them, anyone, to see us.
I have a wish to embrace you…
I too.
Have you had lovers?
One,
she said.
Come,
he said, and led her into