After
about five hours, the priest, the mestizo and the guide approach
some huts near the border. The priest sends the mules, with
their guide, away. He goes on with the mestizo on foot, certain
that the police will be waiting for him. The priest stops for
some brandy, and then continues to the hut where the mestizo
says the dying gringo is. The priest enters and finds the man.
The man whispers to him to go away. The priest asks him if he
wants to confess. The man says no. He tells the priest to take
his gun, but the holster is empty, a sign to the priest that
they are not alone. The priest tries again to get the man to
confess his sins, but the American takes no notice. As he dies,
the priest whispers a conditional absolution, in case the man’s
spirit had repented in the moment before it left him.
Analysis
There is a cruel irony in the fact that the priest travels for
five hours, into a dangerous situation, to hear the gringo’s
confession, only to be told to go away. The irony becomes even
greater when the events of the next chapter are related. Underlying
it all, once more, is the priest’s guilt about his own
life. He does not see himself as any better than the American
criminal who killed and robbed. |