Read Days of Your Fathers Online
Authors: Geoffrey Household
The TravesÃa was a long, narrow alley behind the Church, with half-abandoned warehouses on one side and a high wall, which had once enclosed a nunnery, on the other. The only two houses were Father Miguel's, next to the church, and a venerable, crumbling mansion nearly opposite, of which Herr Kuchler had taken the second floor. The alley was private enough for anything, even for Kuchler's assassination â though that could hardly have entered into the calculations of Jaime and the
cofradÃa
of the Friends of San Bartolomeo who probably represented as well as anyone the âdecent people' referred to by his uncle. Feeling more obscured by ecclesiastical shadows than an experienced Villanueva ought to feel, he dropped a note to Kuchler asking him to dinner the following day.
As yet he had only talked to the speculator at the hotel site or on the beach, reluctant to join him in the Café Moderno and be received by its customers with an elaborate politeness which really hurt. Kuchler, no doubt, would have ascribed it to respect for an ancient family. In his determination not to put a foot wrong in Spain he took social rank too seriously. That was the only reason why Gil had not already offered hospitality; Kuchler would be disappointed that it was so easily come by.
The German was extremely presentable, arriving with his white dinner jacket and formal air. A well-preserved man in his late forties with china-blue eyes in a smooth face of even tan, he was straight off the cover of a magazine for elder citizens â if there was such a thing. He turned out to be a likeable guest, and would have been even more so if he had not been so anxious to be liked.
Passion was the only word for Kuchler's admiration of Spain and its people. Gil was reminded of an unfortunate friend of his who had been determined to marry a gipsy singer and was always making excuses or denying that any need for excuses existed. He suspected that Kuchler knew the country chiefly from books, though speaking excellent Castilian. He was too slow to appreciate the dancing of light and shade.
âI hope, Count, that you are content with our deal?' Kuchler asked at last.
âVery, my dear fellow, very! When I think of the bare â¦'
âAnd I intend to pay particular attention to the restaurant.'
âThe little bikinis!' Gil exclaimed.
âHa! Ha!'
âAnd the intriguing possibilities of my house!'
âYou will invite me. I hope.'
âOf course! Of course!' Gil replied, and then remembered that he was under orders.
The revolutionary past of Lazalaya had not been notably atrocious, except in Jaime's eyes. Still, over the years there
had been quite enough incidents for brandy and imagination to work on.
âIf I can,' he added. âIt is such a pity that for us the sincerity of political opinions can only be proved by violence.'
âBut all is very calm,' Kuchler insisted. âIn the north and in the universities I know there are pockets of discontent. But here is old Spain! The true, old, catholic Spain!'
âYes, we haven't changed much.'
âSo wonderful in our era! So uniquely restful!'
âAnd always so predictable. Do you know that this house has been burnt down four times since 1800?'
âBut by whom?' Kuchler asked, much shocked.
âUsually Lazalaya. We deserved what was coming to us except the accompanying rape,' said Gil, warming to his task. âAnd my father used to tell me that from what he remembered of his great-aunts they deserved that, too.'
âBut rape!'
âWe can always have bikinis prohibited. That won't keep people away if the food is good enough.'
âSurely Lazalaya does not object to the hotel?' Kuchler asked. âThere was, I believe, some project for a mole.'
âOh, that! They've been talking about that since 1930. Your hotel will make more money for them than sardines. And prosperity for everyone is bound to reduce the crime statistics.'
âThere is no crime! My partner and I consulted our Embassy and the provincial chief of security.'
Gil had to admit that there were very few arrests. He tried to make his tone regretful. Herr Kuchler fidgeted with his bow tie and finished his brandy with a decisive gulp.
âI was talking to Don Jaime Caruncho a few days ago,' he said. âHe asked me if I had ever visited the cemetery.'
âAnd have you?'
âCasually. In passing. And then he put a most curious question: had I ever noticed that no police were buried there?'
âOh, I see.'
âHe seemed unwilling to tell me any more, and suggested that I should ask you.'
âAsk me what?' Gil replied, his mind racing for some answer which would satisfy Jaime and yet be noncommittal.
âWhy there are no police in the cemetery.'
âWell, they aren't buried there.'
âWhere are they buried?'
âWho knows, my dear Carl, who knows? I will ask you a question in my turn. Have you ever seen a dead donkey?'
âNo. No, I don't believe I have.'
âThink it over! You are an intelligent man.'
Kuchler's thanks were impenetrable. When he got into his car to drive back to Lazalaya, he certainly seemed graver than he should have been after a Villanueva dinner; but Gil doubted if this able and active German was likely to be still impressed at breakfast time in the TravesÃa de San Bartolomeo. Jaime Caruncho's dark hints were childish.
He strolled with a last cigar on the terrace of his house. Faint specks of lanterns showed at sea where the little boats had their lines out for bream. Lazalaya was a soft pattern of light, composed of faint pools rather than bright points. The only intrusion of modernity was the sudden plunge of a newly bought heifer as her nose touched the electric fence which limited the dairy herd's supper of lucerne.
Gil's peace of mind, already insecure between amusement and misgivings, had barely recovered from the start when there was a second plunge from the pomegranate grove below him.
âHow did it go?' asked the mayor.
âJaime, I wish you would arrive by the front door. And such impatience is undignified.'
âWe technicians have no time for dignity.'
âBut for a little refreshment, I hope.'
âHere outside the house, if you like.'
Gil, returning from the dining-room with glasses and a bottle, determined to reimpose his authority. It was futile for Lazalaya, a town of four thousand inhabitants without any noticeable capital among the lot, to oppose a sound
project conceived in Hamburg and approved by the Ministry of Tourism.
âLook, old friend! Forgive me if I say that you do not know the world outside Spain! When a speculator such as Kuchler has made so large an investment, he is not easily frightened out of it â if, as I suspect, that's your intention.'
âWe will see. Tell me â what are his politics?'
âHe seems to be much like an American. He gives political names to his decency and good will, and has no interest in definition.'
âBut it is said he was a Nazi,' Jaime replied.
âAlmost inevitable in a man of his age.'
âWell, it counts. He was brought up to violence.'
âSo were you,' Gil retorted, for the mayor had been a twice-decorated sergeant-major in the crusade against the infidel Republic.
âThat is why I understand him. He has a natural distrust of the Left.'
âJaime, you are not to involve them! They'd go to gaol.'
âWhat do you think of me?' the major exclaimed indignantly. âWhatever their misguided past, they are now my fellow citizens. I shall ensure that they all have alibis.'
âWhen? What for?'
âFather Miguel will explain to you. Go and see him tomorrow.'
Ridiculous, but at least harmless, Gil thought as he rode into Lazalaya the following day. His only touch of aristocratic pride was in his attitude to the Church. Since it was essential to the State, it must always be able to count on Villanueva support. As for parish priests, one entertained them; one had profound respect for their office; but one was not bound to have any for their opinion.
Father Miguel always reminded him of an obscure traffic signal. His cheek-bones were red, and so was the tip of his pointed nose. They formed a triangle under the black line of his eyebrows. He was cordial enough â and he damned well should be â but the parochial chair was uncomfortable and the interview unsatisfactory. Jaime seemed to have been misinformed, or else Father Miguel's system of approach
bidding was very cautious. He was pretending to see no harm in the hotel.
âI fear it is likely to bring in disturbing modern influence, padre,' Gil remarked gravely.
âThat is nothing new for the church, my son.'
âWell, no. Of course not. Still, I can imagine â¦'
âSometimes fact is more healthy than imagination.'
âI was only thinking that if we are to make out a case â¦'
âThe Ministry of Tourism has the full approval of the Church. It is not for me, a humble parish priest, to question national policy.'
âBut I understand you would rather have an honest little port and a fish-market! What about St Peter?'
âI cannot feel that he would have objected to a well-run inn.'
âRoman orgies, padre?'
âI am unable to decide how much you hope, my son, and how much you fear. So far as I know, the hotel will be primarily for respectable families from northern Europe.'
This was getting nowhere. It was hardly worthwhile bringing up the question of female exposure. The old fox was quite capable of pointing out that nothing was more likely to impress on Lazalaya the vanity of the flesh than respectable wives in bikinis.
âI can well see that you wish to undo the results of a moment of carelessness,' Father Miguel went on. âBut even if this worthy Kuchler could be persuaded to abandon the project, even if you were able to repay him his money, which â forgive me if I am misinformed â you cannot do, how is the Municipality to raise the capital for a mole and a fishmarket?'
âWell, we could always try the banks or float a company. We should have the foundations. That's an asset. And since the fishmarket would not be so big as the hotel, we can sell what's over.'
âTo whom?'
âA canning factory, for example.'
âThere is not enough space.'
âWell, a villa then.'
âWould you wish to live on top of a fishmarket?'
âYou're being very difficult, padre.'
âI am perhaps inexperienced, my son. And has it occurred to you that the walls of the service wing are three metres high already? Your company would have all the expense of pulling them down, and I doubt if the Ministry of Tourism would allow it. Our little town is powerless to oppose the Government.'
âI told Jaime that.'
âIf only the site were in the centre of a business district!' Father Miguel rambled on. âI hear that a constructor of office buildings has made an offer to the Little Brothers of St Macario for their convent in Tarragona. The price will enable them very materially to extend their good works.'
âThen they had better take it,' said Gil impatiently.
He was exasperated. It was typical of these parish priests to take refuge in milk-and-vinegar neutralism and start blathering about Little Brothers.
âThey would indeed if they could find a simple priory. The roof they would build with their own hands.'
âI'd suggest some fairly heavy gloves.'
âIt would be well within their capacities to complete the service wing. In California, I am told, missions are turned into hotels. I see no reason why here we should not turn a hotel into a mission.'
âAnd a lot of use that would be to Lazalaya! I mean, no doubt the town would profit spiritually, but â¦'
âIf the Little Brothers had the hotel garden and the wing,' replied Father Miguel gently, âI cannot believe they would object to the excellent investment of building and owning a fishmarket. That leaves us only with the problem of financing the mole. No doubt the Little Brothers would assist, especially if the Provincial Government, under its present enlightened administration, were to give a grant.'
âIt's possible. But something on paper â¦' Gil began.
âIndeed something on paper! With a little compass, perhaps, on the map? For example: that if for any unknown cause the building of the hotel is abandoned and the site with existing improvements offered back to you, the Little
Brothers would lend you the money, you on your part giving them a lien on the property at cost, and they on their part undertaking to build a fishmarket with all necessary approaches and customary amenities and to lease the same to the Municipality on condition that the Municipality, whom I believe we should call the Party of the Third Part, undertake to build a mole and a quay.'
For a moment Gil could find no reply, feeling that astonishment at the extreme competence of the Church would be rude and congratulations out of place. Eventually he mumbled that they would have to keep the deal pretty quiet.
âPublicity is always to be deprecated, my son. You may count, I assure you, on the discretion of the legal advisers to the Church. Now, since you appear to agree, let me hear your proposal, always remembering that I cannot run very fast.'
âPadre, I have no proposal whatever!'
âI understand from Don Jaime that you suggest I should allow a party of revolutionaries to chase me down the TravesÃa.'
âI know absolutely nothing about it,' Gil protested excitably.
âLet me put your conscience at rest! I see no sacrilege in so good a cause, especially since this regrettable scene will be organised by the CofradÃa of San Bartolomeo. All that will be asked of you personally is to keep your uncle informed â without in any way compromising him of course â so that in case of need he may, as the saying is, hold the ring.'
âHe'll shove me up before a military court if he thinks I'm responsible!'