Authors: Mark Oldfield
âWhich are?'
âThe first is don't talk to me with a face like a choirboy going into confession with a bent priest.' Guzmán took his bill from the waiter and slapped it down onto the table in front of Viana. âThe second is you pick up the tab. Remember to keep in touch, won't you?'
Gutierrez was right about Guzmán, Viana thought, watching him go. No wonder the
general de brigada
had promised him special instructions on how to handle the
comandante
.
SAN SEBASTIÃN 1954, ESTACIÃN DEL NORTE, PASEO DE FRANCIA
Guzmán drove across town to the Santa Catalina Bridge. The town was livening up. Every street corner was lined with boys hawking newspapers, and here and there gypsies were shining shoes, using neat alcohol that removed all stains but would split the leather within a few hours. Further along, lines of women queued outside every food shop, all hoping the produce would not sell out before their turn came.
On the far side of the bridge, he turned into the Paseo de Francia and pulled over by a patch of waste land across the road from the smoke-stained North Station. Along the front of the station, a line of stony-faced passengers queued patiently at a ticket window. Guzmán observed them without interest as he finished his cigarette, watching the smoke from a departing train stretch and fade on the sea breeze.
A few passengers came out of the station entrance, among them a pasty-faced man struggling with several large camera cases. He peered uncertainly across the road through his thick glasses and finally recognised Guzmán. He staggered across the road with his luggage.
âGood trip?' Guzmán asked as he put Ochoa's bags in the boot.
âNot bad, sir,' said Ochoa. âAlthough it wasn't all that good either.'
âFuck me, Corporal,' Guzmán snapped, âit's been seventeen years and you've still got that same miserable disposition you had in the war.'
âThe station's packed with young women,' Ochoa said, in an attempt at conversation.
âYou always were hopeless with small talk,' Guzmán grunted. âJust get in.' He looked down and saw a small leather case. âIs this yours as well?'
Ochoa snatched up the case. âI carry this camera with me all the time. Just in case.' He paused. âWho's that watching us across the street?'
At the front of the station, Inspector Rivas was standing near the queue for the ticket office. Two of his men waited by the entrance, thinking Guzmán wouldn't notice them.
âLocal police. Someone was killed last night, I think he suspects me.'
Ochoa gave Guzmán a strange look. Guzmán ignored it.
âNice car, sir,' Ochoa said instead, admiring the Buick. âMust have cost a fortune.'
âNot really. I confiscated it from an enemy of the state.'
He pulled out of the car park, still glowering at Rivas in the rear-view mirror. âSo what's this job,
jefe
?' Ochoa asked.
âWe're tracking down a bandit.'
âJust us?'
âThe American ambassador is on holiday just across the border. Franco doesn't want his vacation disturbed by talk of bandits.' Guzmán turned to stare at Ochoa. âAnd by talk, Corporal, I mean killing the bastard.'
âI gathered that, sir.' Ochoa nodded. âSo what's our plan?'
âRemember the counter-insurgency work I did up here in the war?'
Ochoa nodded. âIt'd be hard to forget that, wouldn't it?'
Guzmán leaned forward. âI'm not talking about
that
. Christ, remember what was said when the war ended? There are things we don't talk about. Everyone in the
Brigada Especial
agreed to that, you included.' He changed gear noisily and headed out of town.
âYou were in the press corps when we were at Villarreal,' he continued, annoyed by the silence. âDid you do that for the rest of the war?'
Ochoa nodded. âAfter you were posted south, I took pictures of Red atrocities.'
âHow? You weren't behind their lines.'
âI used any bodies I could find. First, I'd mess their faces up with a bayonet or a brick and then take a picture. Our newspapers published them, saying they were the work of the Reds.'
âChrist, it's always the quiet ones,' Guzmán said. âYou must have seen a fair few corpses then, even if the only shooting you did was with a camera?'
âI certainly did,
jefe
. I was there when we captured Toledo.'
Guzmán exhaled a cloud of smoke. âI bet you didn't take pictures of that.'
âI went to watch them take over the hospital,' Ochoa said. âThere were two hundred patients, most too badly injured to get out of bed. After they killed the doctors, the
legionarios
raped the nurses and then killed them. Then they went through the hospital, slaughtering the patients as they went. It's not the sort of thing you forget.'
âOf course you can.' Guzmán took a drag on his cigarette. âJust get on with your life.'
âIs that what you did?' Ochoa said. âAfter Villarreal?'
âFor fuck's sake,' Guzmán snapped. âWhat did I just say about things we don't talk about? Villarreal's in the past and that's where it's staying.'
âSee, I haven't forgotten it,' Ochoa said. âI have these nightmares...'
âStop that now, Corporal, or you'll end up in the madhouse,' Guzmán said, angrily. âAnd when you come out in thirty years' time and you're begging outside Atocha station like a flea-ridden dog, don't shake your tin cup at me because you'll get fuck all.' He glared at him. âGot it? Change the fucking subject.'
âYes, sir.' Ochoa nodded. He looked out of the window at the sheer slopes towering over them on either side of the road. âWhere are we?'
The wind came from the mountains in cold violent flurries. Guzmán stood by the side of the Buick, surrounded by the shredded remains of his map. That map had failed him for the last time, he thought, watching the scattered pieces dancing away on the breeze.
Ochoa came back from examining an old wooden sign a few metres down the road. âIt isn't a road sign,' he shouted, trying to make himself heard above the wind.
âWhat does it say?'
Ochoa shrugged. âBeware of cattle.'
âThe sooner I get back to Madrid, the better.' Guzmán stared belligerently at a vast landscape devoid of cows. He cocked his head. âWhat's that noise?'
Someone was coming down the road. Guzmán reached into his jacket for the Browning, noticing Ochoa draw his pistol as he moved away, making them a harder target.
The noise grew louder as a figure appeared from behind a bank of gorse and rough shrubs. An ancient shepherd, wearing what appeared to be a filthy carpet. The strange noise Guzmán heard was his singing. The wind picked up again, changing direction. Suddenly, Guzmán became aware that the man was, in fact, wrapped in a sheepskin, a very old one, judging from the smell. He holstered his pistol and concentrated on getting upwind.
The old man's smile was a row of evil-looking stumps. âAre the gentleman lost?'
Guzmán thought that was perfectly clear, even to a reeking peasant like him. Since they needed his help, he refrained from saying so.
âI'm looking for Oroitz,
Abuelo
.' He spoke slowly, presuming the man was an idiot. Most country people were in his experience.
The old man pointed to a faint cluster of houses clinging haphazardly to the lower slopes of a mountain several kilometres across the valley. âOroitz.' He pointed again, in case Guzmán hadn't understood. â
Bai
.'
âWatch it,
Abuelo
, it's illegal to speak Basque,' Guzmán warned. âTell me, if we walk up that track over there, can we get to the village?'
The old man nodded. âThat track takes you there eventually, señor, though it's very wet, so you'll probably get those nice shoes muddy. And then you have to climb up through the rocks and that'll be quite a struggle because the ground gets really steep there.'
Guzmán's scowl was growing deeper by the minute. He began taking his bags out of the boot. âWill the car be safe if I leave it here?'
âLeave it?' the old man asked, surprised. âWhy would the gentleman do that?'
Country folk: every last one wooden-headed. No wonder Franco shot so many.
âBecause I'm not going to carry it, am I?'
âI thought perhaps the señor might take the road since he has an automobile.'
âRoad?' Guzmán's eyes narrowed. âWhat road?'
The old man pointed to a faint grey ribbon in the distance. âThat road. You follow it over the hill and it branches off up the side of the mountain to Oroitz. An easy drive, señor.'
Guzmán threw the bags back in the car. âYou thought I'd prefer going up a muddy track rather than drive?'
âThe gentleman is from Madrid. Things are done differently there.'
Guzmán stared at him, suspiciously. âHow do you know I'm from Madrid?'
The shepherd shrugged. âFrom the gentleman's licence plates, of course.'
Guzmán got behind the wheel. The old man watched him without blinking.
âDo you want a lift,
Abuelo
?'
The old man exposed the shattered remnants of his teeth as he smiled. â
Eskerrik asko.
'
Guzmán pulled the choke angrily. â
Por Dios
, speak like a Christian, will you? Spanish. Not Basque.
Entiendes
?'
âI understand, señor.'
Ochoa opened the rear door and the shepherd scrambled onto the back seat. Ochoa slammed the door and climbed into the passenger seat alongside Guzmán. They looked at one another for a moment.
âI'll open a window,' Ochoa said.
âOpen it wide.' Guzmán started the engine and the tyres grated on the track as he headed towards the distant road.
Ochoa turned to offer the old man a cigarette. âGot a name,
Abuelo
?'
âMikel Aingeru,
para servirle
,' the old man said politely, dipping into the pack of cigarettes. He took three, Ochoa noticed.
âDo you know where General Torres's hunting lodge is?' Guzmán asked.
âOf course.' The old man leaned forward between the two front seats, giving them a waft of his vile breath. âSee where the road turns left up the mountain? That's where we're going. If you carry straight on, you come to the general's lodge after a few kilometres.'
The shepherd was correct: the road did climb up the side of the mountain, so steeply that Guzmán was forced to slow to a crawl. The effect on the old man was immediate. No longer disturbed by the movement of the car, he began snoring loudly, his face resting against the window, steaming the glass with his fetid breath.
After a few hundred metres the road opened out onto a piece of flat ground near the village. Guzmán pulled over and killed the engine.
âThat's quite a view,' Ochoa said, accepting Guzmán's offer of a Bisonte. An ancient hand emerged from between the seats and plucked a cigarette from the pack.
âYou're awake, then?' Guzmán said, half turning. âWe've arrived.'
âSo I see.' Mikel leaned forward to let Ochoa give him a light.
âLet's take a look round,' Guzmán said to Ochoa.
âI'll stay and watch your bags.' The old man yawned, giving them an unwanted view of his gums. âThis car is so comfortable, I could sleep in it all night.'
âYou could if I let you,' Guzmán muttered. He climbed out of the car and looked round at the spectacular view. Above them, shards of cloud clung to the slopes of the mountain, hiding the peak. Behind him, he heard the sound of Ochoa's camera as he began taking photographs.
The village consisted of a short steep track with buildings on either side. The appearance of the houses told of centuries under rain-filled skies, scoured by the eternal mountain winds. The idea of living here horrified him. No bars or whores and no gambling. Just ancient houses being worn away by time and rain, much like their occupants, he supposed.
The clouds around the mountain were starting to break up, and he watched as the world below slowly emerged from the mist. Within twenty minutes he found himself looking out over a great landscape, rugged and beautiful in equal measure. Not that he cared. It wasn't Madrid and for that reason alone, he hated it.
Guzmán returned to the car and tapped on the window to wake the old man, recoiling from the smell as he opened the door. As he rummaged among the bags in the boot for his hat, he sensed the shepherd peering over his shoulder.
âHold this for a second.' Guzmán handed the old man a long leather case.
âThe señor has a rifle?' Mikel looked at Guzmán in surprise. â
CuÃdese,
señor. The
guardia
shoot people for carrying weapons.' He inclined his head towards the barracks a hundred metres down the hillside, joined to the village by a steep narrow path. A frayed plume of smoke rose from a chimney, and over the entrance to the
comisarÃa
the yellow and red flag stuttered in the breeze.
âNot that we need the
guardia
to kill us here,' Mikel said. âWe fight among ourselves.
Hombre
, two nights ago, they found eight bodies in the school at Ihintza. Students, all shot dead. Seems they'd got hold of some weapons and fallen out. What a thing to happen, eh?'
Guzmán looked at him without blinking. âIt's a tragedy.'
âWho knows what goes on in these young ones' minds? I blame the parents, señor.'
â
Absolutamente
,' Guzmán agreed, knowing that what had happened to the students in the schoolhouse had been planned weeks earlier by Gutierrez and his staff in Madrid.
âIt was nice to meet you,' he added, pointedly.