The
priest crosses the river and returns to the banana plantation
where he met Captain Fellows and his daughter. He has had no
food for two days. But the bungalow is deserted, except for
a wounded dog. Most of the furniture has been removed. He goes
into the house and examines what has been left, wondering whether
the family moved because the wife was sick and they had to go
to the capital where there is a hospital. In the kitchen the
dog finds a bone with some meat on it. The hungry priest snatches
it from him. He finds a book of poetry in one of the rooms and
spends some time reading it. He then goes to explore the nearby
huts but they are deserted too. He wonders if there has been
an outbreak of disease that has forced the inhabitants to flee.
He notices an Indian woman approaching the hut, but when he
calls out to her, she runs away. From her actions he concludes
that there must be something valuable in the hut. He finds a
dying three-year-old boy who has been shot in three places.
The woman comes into the hut, but can only say “Americano”
in Spanish by way of explanation. He tells her to get water
and explains that he is a priest. But the boy dies before anything
can be done for him. The priest realizes that the Americano
the woman mentions may be the gringo who is wanted by the police.
He tells the woman they must bury the child, but she makes it
clear to him that she wants the boy buried near a church. They
are twenty miles from the border of another state, across the
mountains, where there may be a church.
They set off, with
only sugar to eat. The woman walks behind him with her dead
child strapped to her back. They travel for two days and reach
a plateau covered with short grass. There are many crosses in
the ground, and these are the first Christian symbols the priest
has seen publicly displayed for five years. The woman holds
the child’s body against one of the crosses. She then
sits down and will not move further. The priest continues on
his way, leaving her behind. Then he feels guilty and returns,
but there is no sign of the woman. She has gone home. The man
continues for several hours across difficult terrain. Eventually
he encounters a man with a gun. He tells the man he is a priest,
and much to his surprise, the man welcomes him. A big whitewashed
building looms up ahead, and the man says it is their church.
The priest knows he has crossed into another state. He is so
tired he falls asleep.
Analysis
Coral, the girl the priest seeks, is a contrast to Brigida,
his daughter. Whereas, Brigida rejected him, but Coral befriended
him and promised to help him.
The incident in which
the priest fights with a hungry dog for a bone is one of his
lowest moments. It shows life stripped to its essentials—the
struggle for food and survival, with man no better than a dog.
(In fact, the dog comes out of this encounter rather better
than the priest.)
The episode with
the woman and the dead child illustrates again the hold that
Catholicism has on the local people. The woman will not bury
the child without holding it against something she regards as
a holy object, even if it is only a simple cross in a field.
This suggests that the lieutenant and the civil authorities
that want to stamp out all traces of religion may have a much
harder task on their hands than they suppose. |