I tell this for a fact.
It happened in the bull-ring at Quito. I sat
in the box with John Harned, and with Maria Valenzuela,
and with Luis Cervallos. I saw it happen.
I saw it all from first to last. I was on the
steamer Ecuadore from Panama to Guayaquil. Maria
Valenzuela is my cousin. I have known her always.
She is very beautiful. I am a Spaniard an
Ecuadoriano, true, but I am descended from Pedro Patino,
who was one of Pizarro’s captains. They
were brave men. They were heroes. Did not
Pizarro lead three hundred and fifty Spanish cavaliers
and four thousand Indians into the far Cordilleras
in search of treasure? And did not all the four
thousand Indians and three hundred of the brave cavaliers
die on that vain quest? But Pedro Patino did
not die. He it was that lived to found the family
of the Patino. I am Ecuadoriano, true, but I
am Spanish. I am Manuel de Jesus Patino.
I own many haciendas, and ten thousand Indians are
my slaves, though the law says they are free men who
work by freedom of contract. The law is a funny
thing. We Ecuadorianos laugh at it. It is
our law. We make it for ourselves. I am
Manuel de Jesus Patino. Remember that name.
It will be written some day in history. There
are revolutions in Ecuador. We call them elections.
It is a good joke is it not? what you call
a pun?
John Harned was an American.
I met him first at the Tivoli hotel in Panama.
He had much money this I have heard.
He was going to Lima, but he met Maria Valenzuela
in the Tivoli hotel. Maria Valenzuela is my cousin,
and she is beautiful. It is true, she is the most
beautiful woman in Ecuador. But also is she most
beautiful in every country in Paris, in
Madrid, in New York, in Vienna. Always do all
men look at her, and John Harned looked long at her
at Panama. He loved her, that I know for a fact.
She was Ecuadoriano, true but she was of
all countries; she was of all the world. She
spoke many languages. She sang ah!
like an artiste. Her smile wonderful,
divine. Her eyes ah! have I not seen
men look in her eyes? They were what you English
call amazing. They were promises of paradise.
Men drowned themselves in her eyes.
Maria Valenzuela was rich richer
than I, who am accounted very rich in Ecuador.
But John Harned did not care for her money. He
had a heart a funny heart. He was
a fool. He did not go to Lima. He left the
steamer at Guayaquil and followed her to Quito.
She was coming home from Europe and other places.
I do not see what she found in him, but she liked him.
This I know for a fact, else he would not have followed
her to Quito. She asked him to come. Well
do I remember the occasion. She said:
“Come to Quito and I will show
you the bullfight brave, clever, magnificent!”
But he said: “I go to Lima,
not Quito. Such is my passage engaged on the
steamer.”
“You travel for pleasure no?”
said Maria Valenzuela; and she looked at him as only
Maria Valenzuela could look, her eyes warm with the
promise.
And he came. No; he did not come
for the bull-fight. He came because of what he
had seen in her eyes. Women like Maria Valenzuela
are born once in a hundred years. They are of
no country and no time. They are what you call
goddesses. Men fall down at their feet. They
play with men and run them through their pretty fingers
like sand. Cleopatra was such a woman they say;
and so was Circe. She turned men into swine.
Ha! ha! It is true no?
It all came about because Maria Valenzuela said:
“You English people are what
shall I say? savage no?
You prize-fight. Two men each hit the other with
their fists till their eyes are blinded and their
noses are broken. Hideous! And the other
men who look on cry out loudly and are made glad.
It is barbarous no?”
“But they are men,” said
John Harned; “and they prize-fight out of desire.
No one makes them prize-fight. They do it because
they desire it more than anything else in the world.”
Maria Valenzuela there
was scorn in her smile as she said: “They
kill each other often is it not so?
I have read it in the papers.”
“But the bull,” said John Harned.
“The bull is killed many times
in the bull-fight, and the bull does not come into
the the ring out of desire. It is not fair to
the bull. He is compelled to fight. But
the man in the prize-fight no; he is not
compelled.”
“He is the more brute therefore,” said
Maria Valenzuela.
“He is savage. He is primitive.
He is animal. He strikes with his paws like a
bear from a cave, and he is ferocious. But the
bull-fight ah! You have not seen the
bullfight no? The toreador is clever.
He must have skill. He is modern. He is
romantic. He is only a man, soft and tender,
and he faces the wild bull in conflict. And he
kills with a sword, a slender sword, with one thrust,
so, to the heart of the great beast. It is delicious.
It makes the heart beat to behold the small
man, the great beast, the wide level sand, the thousands
that look on without breath; the great beast rushes
to the attack, the small man stands like a statue;
he does not move, he is unafraid, and in his hand
is the slender sword flashing like silver in the sun;
nearer and nearer rushes the great beast with its
sharp horns, the man does not move, and then so the
sword flashes, the thrust is made, to the heart, to
the hilt, the bull falls to the sand and is dead,
and the man is unhurt. It is brave. It is
magnificent! Ah! I could love the toreador.
But the man of the prize-fight he is the
brute, the human beast, the savage primitive, the
maniac that receives many blows in his stupid face
and rejoices. Come to Quito and I will show you
the brave sport of men, the toreador and the bull.”
But John Harned did not go to Quito
for the bull-fight. He went because of Maria
Valenzuela. He was a large man, more broad of
shoulder than we Ecuadorianos, more tall, more heavy
of limb and bone. True, he was larger of his
own race. His eyes were blue, though I have seen
them gray, and, sometimes, like cold steel. His
features were large, too not delicate like
ours, and his jaw was very strong to look at.
Also, his face was smooth-shaven like a priest’s.
Why should a man feel shame for the hair on his face?
Did not God put it there? Yes, I believe in God I
am not a pagan like many of you English. God is
good. He made me an Ecuadoriano with ten thousand
slaves. And when I die I shall go to God.
Yes, the priests are right.
But John Harned. He was a quiet
man. He talked always in a low voice, and he
never moved his hands when he talked. One would
have thought his heart was a piece of ice; yet did
he have a streak of warm in his blood, for he followed
Maria Valenzuela to Quito. Also, and for all that
he talked low without moving his hands, he was an
animal, as you shall see the beast primitive,
the stupid, ferocious savage of the long ago that
dressed in wild skins and lived in the caves along
with the bears and wolves.
Luis Cervallos is my friend, the best
of Ecuadorianos. He owns three cacao plantations
at Naranjito and Chobo. At Milagro is his big
sugar plantation. He has large haciendas at Ambato
and Latacunga, and down the coast is he interested
in oil-wells. Also has he spent much money in
planting rubber along the Guayas. He is modern,
like the Yankee; and, like the Yankee, full of business.
He has much money, but it is in many ventures, and
ever he needs more money for new ventures and for the
old ones. He has been everywhere and seen everything.
When he was a very young man he was in the Yankee
military academy what you call West Point. There
was trouble. He was made to resign. He does
not like Americans. But he did like Maria Valenzuela,
who was of his own country. Also, he needed her
money for his ventures and for his gold mine in Eastern
Ecuador where the painted Indians live. I was
his friend. It was my desire that he should marry
Maria Valenzuela. Further, much of my money had
I invested in his ventures, more so in his gold mine
which was very rich but which first required the expense
of much money before it would yield forth its riches.
If Luis Cervallos married Maria Valenzuela I should
have more money very immediately.
But John Harned followed Maria Valenzuela
to Quito, and it was quickly clear to us to
Luis Cervallos and me that she looked upon John Harned
with great kindness. It is said that a woman will
have her will, but this is a case not in point, for
Maria Valenzuela did not have her will at
least not with John Harned. Perhaps it would all
have happened as it did, even if Luis Cervallos and
I had not sat in the box that day at the bull-ring
in Quito. But this I know: we did sit
in the box that day. And I shall tell you what
happened.
The four of us were in the one box,
guests of Luis Cervallos. I was next to the Presidente’s
box. On the other side was the box of General
Jose Eliceo Salazar. With him were Joaquin Endara
and Urcisino Castillo, both generals, and Colonel
Jacinto Fierro and Captain Baltazar de Echeverria.
Only Luis Cervallos had the position and the influence
to get that box next to the Présidente. I
know for a fact that the Présidente himself expressed
the desire to the management that Luis Cervallos should
have that box.
The band finished playing the national
hymn of Ecuador. The procession of the toréadors
was over. The Présidente nodded to begin.
The bugles blew, and the bull dashed in you
know the way, excited, bewildered, the darts in its
shoulder burning like fire, itself seeking madly whatever
enemy to destroy. The toréadors hid behind
their shelters and waited. Suddenly they appeared
forth, the capadores, five of them, from every side,
their colored capes flinging wide. The bull paused
at sight of such a generosity of enemies, unable in
his own mind to know which to attack. Then advanced
one of the capadors alone to meet the bull. The
bull was very angry. With its fore-legs it pawed
the sand of the arena till the dust rose all about
it. Then it charged, with lowered head, straight
for the lone capador.
It is always of interest, the first
charge of the first bull. After a time it is
natural that one should grow tired, trifle, that the
keenness should lose its edge. But that first
charge of the first bull! John Harned was seeing
it for the first time, and he could not escape the
excitement the sight of the man, armed only
with a piece of cloth, and of the bull rushing upon
him across the sand with sharp horns, widespreading.
“See!” cried Maria Valenzuela. “Is
it not superb?”
John Harned nodded, but did not look
at her. His eyes were sparkling, and they were
only for the bull-ring. The capador stepped
to the side, with a twirl of the cape eluding the
bull and spreading the cape on his own shoulders.
“What do you think?” asked
Maria Venzuela. “Is it not a what-you-call sporting
proposition no?”
“It is certainly,” said John Harned.
“It is very clever.”
She clapped her hands with delight.
They were little hands. The audience applauded.
The bull turned and came back. Again the capadore
eluded him, throwing the cape on his shoulders, and
again the audience applauded. Three times did
this happen. The capadore was very excellent.
Then he retired, and the other capadore played with
the bull. After that they placed the banderillos
in the bull, in the shoulders, on each side of the
back-bone, two at a time. Then stepped forward
Ordonez, the chief matador, with the long sword and
the scarlet cape. The bugles blew for the death.
He is not so good as Matestini. Still he is good,
and with one thrust he drove the sword to the heart,
and the bull doubled his legs under him and lay down
and died. It was a pretty thrust, clean and sure;
and there was much applause, and many of the common
people threw their hats into the ring. Maria
Valenzuela clapped her hands with the rest, and John
Harned, whose cold heart was not touched by the event,
looked at her with curiosity.
“You like it?” he asked.
“Always,” she said, still clapping her
hands.
“From a little girl,”
said Luis Cervallos. “I remember her first
fight. She was four years old. She sat with
her mother, and just like now she clapped her hands.
She is a proper Spanish woman.
“You have seen it,” said
Maria Valenzuela to John Harned, as they fastened
the mules to the dead bull and dragged it out.
“You have seen the bull-fight and you like it no?
What do you think?
“I think the bull had no chance,”
he said. “The bull was doomed from the
first. The issue was not in doubt. Every
one knew, before the bull entered the ring, that it
was to die. To be a sporting proposition, the
issue must be in doubt. It was one stupid bull
who had never fought a man against five wise men who
had fought many bulls. It would be possibly a
little bit fair if it were one man against one bull.”
“Or one man against five bulls,”
said Maria Valenzuela; and we all laughed, and Luis
Ceryallos laughed loudest.
“Yes,” said John Harned,
“against five bulls, and the man, like the bulls,
never in the bull ring before a man like
yourself, Senor Crevallos.”
“Yet we Spanish like the bull-fight,”
said Luis Cervallos; and I swear the devil was whispering
then in his ear, telling him to do that which I shall
relate.
“Then must it be a cultivated
taste,” John Harned made answer. “We
kill bulls by the thousand every day in Chicago, yet
no one cares to pay admittance to see.”
“That is butchery,” said
I; “but this ah, this is an art.
It is delicate. It is fine. It is rare.”
“Not always,” said Luis
Cervallos. “I have seen clumsy matadors,
and I tell you it is not nice.”
He shuddered, and his face betrayed
such what-you-call disgust, that I knew, then, that
the devil was whispering and that he was beginning
to play a part.
“Senor Harned may be right,”
said Luis Cervallos. “It may not be fair
to the bull. For is it not known to all of us
that for twenty-four hours the bull is given no water,
and that immediately before the fight he is permitted
to drink his fill?”
“And he comes into the ring
heavy with water?” said John Harned quickly;
and I saw that his eyes were very gray and very sharp
and very cold.
“It is necessary for the sport,”
said Luis Cervallos. “Would you have the
bull so strong that he would kill the toréadors?”
“I would that he had a fighting
chance,” said John Harned, facing the ring to
see the second bull come in.
It was not a good bull. It was
frightened. It ran around the ring in search
of a way to get out. The capadors stepped forth
and flared their capes, but he refused to charge upon
them.
“It is a stupid bull,” said Maria Valenzuela.
“I beg pardon,” said John
Harned; “but it would seem to me a wise bull.
He knows he must not fight man. See! He smells
death there in the ring.”
True. The bull, pausing where
the last one had died, was smelling the wet sand and
snorting. Again he ran around the ring, with raised
head, looking at the faces of the thousands that hissed
him, that threw orange-peel at him and called him
names. But the smell of blood decided him, and
he charged a capador, so without warning that
the man just escaped. He dropped his cape and
dodged into the shelter. The bull struck the
wall of the ring with a crash. And John Harned
said, in a quiet voice, as though he talked to himself:
“I will give one thousand sucres
to the lazar-house of Quito if a bull kills a
man this day.”
“You like bulls?” said Maria Valenzuela
with a smile.
“I like such men less,”
said John Harned. “A toreador is not a brave
man. He surely cannot be a brave man. See,
the bull’s tongue is already out. He is
tired and he has not yet begun.”
“It is the water,” said Luis Cervallos.
“Yes, it is the water,”
said John Harned. “Would it not be safer
to hamstring the bull before he comes on?”
Maria Valenzuela was made angry by
this sneer in John Harned’s words. But
Luis Cervallos smiled so that only I could see him,
and then it broke upon my mind surely the game he
was playing. He and I were to be banderilleros.
The big American bull was there in the box with us.
We were to stick the darts in him till he became angry,
and then there might be no marriage with Maria Valenzuela.
It was a good sport. And the spirit of bull-fighters
was in our blood.
The bull was now angry and excited.
The capadors had great game with him. He was
very quick, and sometimes he turned with such sharpness
that his hind legs lost their footing and he plowed
the sand with his quarter. But he charged always
the flung capes and committed no harm.
“He has no chance,” said
John Harned. “He is fighting wind.”
“He thinks the cape is his enemy,”
explained Maria Valenzuela. “See how cleverly
the capador deceives him.”
“It is his nature to be deceived,”
said John Harned. “Wherefore he is doomed
to fight wind. The toréadors know it, you
know it, I know it we all know from the
first that he will fight wind. He only does not
know it. It is his stupid beast-nature.
He has no chance.”
“It is very simple,” said
Luis Cervallos. “The bull shuts his eyes
when he charges. Therefore ”
“The man steps, out of the way
and the bull rushes by,” Harned interrupted.
“Yes,” said Luis Cervallos;
“that is it. The bull shuts his eyes, and
the man knows it.”
“But cows do not shut their
eyes,” said John Harned. “I know a
cow at home that is a Jersey and gives milk, that
would whip the whole gang of them.”
“But the toréadors do not fight cows,”
said I.
“They are afraid to fight cows,” said
John Harned.
“Yes,” said Luis Cervallos,
“they are afraid to fight cows. There would
be no sport in killing toréadors.”
“There would be some sport,”
said John Harned, “if a toreador were killed
once in a while. When I become an old man, and
mayhap a cripple, and should I need to make a living
and be unable to do hard work, then would I become
a bull-fighter. It is a light vocation for elderly
gentlemen and pensioners.”
“But see!” said Maria
Valenzuela, as the bull charged bravely and the capador
eluded it with a fling of his cape. “It
requires skill so to avoid the beast.”
“True,” said John Harned.
“But believe me, it requires a thousand times
more skill to avoid the many and quick punches of a
prize-fighter who keeps his eyes open and strikes
with intelligence. Furthermore, this bull does
not want to fight. Behold, he runs away.”
It was not a good bull, for again
it ran around the ring, seeking to find a way out.
“Yet these bulls are sometimes
the most dangerous,” said Luis Cervallos.
“It can never be known what they will do next.
They are wise. They are half cow. The bull-fighters
never like them. See! He has turned!”
Once again, baffled and made angry
by the walls of the ring that would not let him out,
the bull was attacking his enemies valiantly.
“His tongue is hanging out,”
said John Harned. “First, they fill him
with water. Then they tire him out, one man and
then another, persuading him to exhaust himself by
fighting wind. While some tire him, others rest.
But the bull they never let rest. Afterward, when
he is quite tired and no longer quick, the matador
sticks the sword into him.”
The time had now come for the banderillos.
Three times one of the fighters endeavored to place
the darts, and three times did he fail. He but
stung the bull and maddened it. The banderillos
must go in, you know, two at a time, into the shoulders,
on each side the backbone and close to it. If
but one be placed, it is a failure. The crowd
hissed and called for Ordonez. And then Ordonez
did a great thing. Four times he stood forth,
and four times, at the first attempt, he stuck in the
banderillos, so that eight of them, well placed, stood
out of the back of the bull at one time. The
crowd went mad, and a rain of hats and money fell
on the sand of the ring.
And just then the bull charged unexpectedly
one of the capadors. The man slipped and lost
his head. The bull caught him fortunately,
between his wide horns. And while the audience
watched, breathless and silent, John Harned stood
up and yelled with gladness. Alone, in that hush
of all of us, John Harned yelled. And he yelled
for the bull. As you see yourself, John Harned
wanted the man killed. His was a brutal heart.
This bad conduct made those angry that sat in the
box of General Salazar, and they cried out against
John Harned. And Urcisino Castillo told him to
his face that he was a dog of a Gringo and other things.
Only it was in Spanish, and John Harned did not understand.
He stood and yelled, perhaps for the time of ten seconds,
when the bull was enticed into charging the other
capadors and the man arose unhurt.
“The bull has no chance,”
John Harned said with sadness as he sat down.
“The man was uninjured. They fooled the
bull away from him.” Then he turned to
Maria Valenzuela and said: “I beg your pardon.
I was excited.”
She smiled and in reproof tapped his arm with her
fan.
“It is your first bull-fight,”
she said. “After you have seen more you
will not cry for the death of the man. You Americans,
you see, are more brutal than we. It is because
of your prize-fighting. We come only to see the
bull killed.”
“But I would the bull had some
chance,” he answered. “Doubtless,
in time, I shall cease to be annoyed by the men who
take advantage of the bull.”
The bugles blew for the death of the
bull. Ordonez stood forth with the sword and
the scarlet cloth. But the bull had changed again,
and did not want to fight. Ordonez stamped his
foot in the sand, and cried out, and waved the scarlet
cloth. Then the bull charged, but without heart.
There was no weight to the charge. It was a poor
thrust. The sword struck a bone and bent.
Ordonez took a fresh sword. The bull, again stung
to fight, charged once more. Five times Ordonez
essayed the thrust, and each time the sword went but
part way in or struck bone. The sixth time, the
sword went in to the hilt. But it was a bad thrust.
The sword missed the heart and stuck out half a yard
through the ribs on the opposite side. The audience
hissed the matador. I glanced at John Harned.
He sat silent, without movement; but I could see his
teeth were set, and his hands were clenched tight
on the railing of the box.
All fight was now out of the bull,
and, though it was no vital thrust, he trotted lamely
what of the sword that stuck through him, in one side
and out the other. He ran away from the matador
and the capadors, and circled the edge of the ring,
looking up at the many faces.
“He is saying: ’For
God’s sake let me out of this; I don’t
want to fight,’” said John Harned.
That was all. He said no more,
but sat and watched, though sometimes he looked sideways
at Maria Valenzuela to see how she took it. She
was angry with the matador. He was awkward, and
she had desired a clever exhibition.
The bull was now very tired, and weak
from loss of blood, though far from dying. He
walked slowly around the wall of the ring, seeking
a way out. He would not charge. He had had
enough. But he must be killed. There is
a place, in the neck of a bull behind the horns, where
the cord of the spine is unprotected and where a short
stab will immediately kill. Ordonez stepped in
front of the bull and lowered his scarlet cloth to
the ground. The bull would not charge. He
stood still and smelled the cloth, lowering his head
to do so. Ordonez stabbed between the horns at
the spot in the neck. The bull jerked his head
up. The stab had missed. Then the bull watched
the sword. When Ordonez moved the cloth on the
ground, the bull forgot the sword and lowered his head
to smell the cloth. Again Ordonez stabbed, and
again he failed. He tried many times. It
was stupid. And John Harned said nothing.
At last a stab went home, and the bull fell to the
sand, dead immediately, and the mules were made fast
and he was dragged out.
“The Gringos say it is a cruel
sport no?” said Luis Cervallos.
“That it is not humane. That it is bad
for the bull. No?”
“No,” said John Harned.
“The bull does not count for much. It is
bad for those that look on. It is degrading to
those that look on. It teaches them to delight
in animal suffering. It is cowardly for five men
to fight one stupid bull. Therefore those that
look on learn to be cowards. The bull dies, but
those that look on live and the lesson is learned.
The bravery of men is not nourished by scenes of cowardice.”
Maria Valenzuela said nothing.
Neither did she look at him. But she heard every
word and her cheeks were white with anger. She
looked out across the ring and fanned herself, but
I saw that her hand trembled. Nor did John Harned
look at her. He went on as though she were not
there. He, too, was angry, coldly angry.
“It is the cowardly sport of a cowardly people,”
he said.
“Ah,” said Luis Cervallos softly, “you
think you understand us.”
“I understand now the Spanish
Inquisition,” said John Harned. “It
must have been more delightful than bull-fighting.”
Luis Cervallos smiled but said nothing.
He glanced at Maria Valenzuela, and knew that the
bull-fight in the box was won. Never would she
have further to do with the Gringo who spoke such
words. But neither Luis Cervallos nor I was prepared
for the outcome of the day. I fear we do not
understand the Gringos. How were we to know that
John Harned, who was so coldly angry, should go suddenly
mad! But mad he did go, as you shall see.
The bull did not count for much he said
so himself. Then why should the horse count for
so much? That I cannot understand. The mind
of John Harned lacked logic. That is the only
explanation.
“It is not usual to have horses
in the bull-ring at Quito,” said Luis Cervallos,
looking up from the program. “In Spain they
always have them. But to-day, by special permission
we shall have them. When the next bull comes
on there will be horses and picadors-you know,
the men who carry lances and ride the horses.”
“The bull is doomed from the
first,” said John Harned. “Are the
horses then likewise doomed!”
“They are blindfolded so that
they may not see the bull,” said Luis Cervallos.
“I have seen many horses killed. It is a
brave sight.”
“I have seen the bull slaughtered,”
said John Harned “I will now see the horse slaughtered,
so that I may understand more fully the fine points
of this noble sport.”
“They are old horses,”
said Luis Cervallos, “that are not good for
anything else.”
“I see,” said John Harned.
The third bull came on, and soon against
it were both capadors and picadors. One
picador took his stand directly below us. I agree,
it was a thin and aged horse he rode, a bag of bones
covered with mangy hide.
“It is a marvel that the poor
brute can hold up the weight of the rider,”
said John Harned. “And now that the horse
fights the bull, what weapons has it?”
“The horse does not fight the bull,” said
Luis Cervallos.
“Oh,” said John Harned,
“then is the horse there to be gored? That
must be why it is blindfolded, so that it shall not
see the bull coming to gore it.”
“Not quite so,” said I.
“The lance of the picador is to keep the bull
from goring the horse.”
“Then are horses rarely gored?” asked
John Harned.
“No,” said Luis Cervallos.
“I have seen, at Seville, eighteen horses killed
in one day, and the people clamored for more horses.”
“Were they blindfolded like
this horse?” asked John Harned.
“Yes,” said Luis Cervallos.
After that we talked no more, but
watched the fight. And John Harned was going
mad all the time, and we did not know. The bull
refused to charge the horse. And the horse stood
still, and because it could not see it did not know
that the capadors were trying to make the bull charge
upon it. The capadors teased the bull their capes,
and when it charged them they ran toward the horse
and into their shelters. At last the bull was
angry, and it saw the horse before it.
“The horse does not know, the
horse does not know,” John Harned whispered
to himself, unaware that he voiced his thought aloud.
The bull charged, and of course the
horse knew nothing till the picador failed and the
horse found himself impaled on the bull’s horns
from beneath. The bull was magnificently strong.
The sight of its strength was splendid to see.
It lifted the horse clear into the air; and as the
horse fell to its side on on the ground the picador
landed on his feet and escaped, while the capadors
lured the bull away. The horse was emptied of
its essential organs. Yet did it rise to its feet
screaming. It was the scream of the horse that
did it, that made John Harned completely mad; for
he, too, started to rise to his feet, I heard him
curse low and deep. He never took his eyes from
the horse, which, screaming, strove to run, but fell
down instead and rolled on its back so that all its
four legs were kicking in the air. Then the bull
charged it and gored it again and again until it was
dead.
John Harned was now on his feet.
His eyes were no longer cold like steel. They
were blue flames. He looked at Maria Valenzuela,
and she looked at him, and in his face was a great
loathing. The moment of his madness was upon
him. Everybody was looking, now that the horse
was dead; and John Harned was a large man and easy
to be seen.
“Sit down,” said Luis
Cervallos, “or you will make a fool of yourself.”
John Harned replied nothing.
He struck out his fist. He smote Luis Cervallos
in the face so that he fell like a dead man across
the chairs and did not rise again. He saw nothing
of what followed. But I saw much. Urcisino
Castillo, leaning forward from the next box, with his
cane struck John Harned full across the face.
And John Harned smote him with his fist so that in
falling he overthrew General Salazar. John Harned
was now in what-you-call Berserker rage no?
The beast primitive in him was loose and roaring the
beast primitive of the holes and caves of the long
ago.
“You came for a bull-fight,”
I heard him say, “And by God I’ll show
you a man-fight!”
It was a fight. The soldiers
guarding the Presidente’s box leaped across,
but from one of them he took a rifle and beat them
on their heads with it. From the other box Colonel
Jacinto Fierro was shooting at him with a revolver.
The first shot killed a soldier. This I know for
a fact. I saw it. But the second shot struck
John Harned in the side. Whereupon he swore,
and with a lunge drove the bayonet of his rifle into
Colonel Jacinto Fierro’s body. It was horrible
to behold. The Americans and the English are
a brutal race. They sneer at our bull-fighting,
yet do they delight in the shedding of blood.
More men were killed that day because of John Harned
than were ever killed in all the history of the bull-ring
of Quito, yes, and of Guayaquil and all Ecuador.
It was the scream of the horse that
did it, yet why did not John Harned go mad when the
bull was killed? A beast is a beast, be it bull
or horse. John Harned was mad. There is
no other explanation. He was blood-mad, a beast
himself. I leave it to your judgment. Which
is worse the goring of the horse by the
bull, or the goring of Colonel Jacinto Fierro by the
bayonet in the hands of John Harned! And John
Harned gored others with that bayonet. He was
full of devils. He fought with many bullets in
him, and he was hard to kill. And Maria Valenzuela
was a brave woman. Unlike the other women, she
did not cry out nor faint. She sat still in her
box, gazing out across the bull-ring. Her face
was white and she fanned herself, but she never looked
around.
From all sides came the soldiers and
officers and the common people bravely to subdue the
mad Gringo. It is true the cry went
up from the crowd to kill all the Gringos. It
is an old cry in Latin-American countries, what of
the dislike for the Gringos and their uncouth ways.
It is true, the cry went up. But the brave Ecuadorianos
killed only John Harned, and first he killed seven
of them. Besides, there were many hurt.
I have seen many bull-fights, but never have I seen
anything so abominable as the scene in the boxes when
the fight was over. It was like a field of battle.
The dead lay around everywhere, while the wounded
sobbed and groaned and some of them died. One
man, whom John Harned had thrust through the belly
with the bayonet, clutched at himself with both his
hands and screamed. I tell you for a fact it was
more terrible than the screaming of a thousand horses.
No, Maria Valenzuela did not marry
Luis Cervallos. I am sorry for that. He
was my friend, and much of my money was invested in
his ventures. It was five weeks before the surgeons
took the bandages from his face. And there is
a scar there to this day, on the cheek, under the eye.
Yet John Harned struck him but once and struck him
only with his naked fist. Maria Valenzuela is
in Austria now. It is said she is to marry an
Arch-Duke or some high nobleman. I do not know.
I think she liked John Harned before he followed her
to Quito to see the bull-fight. But why the horse?
That is what I desire to know. Why should he watch
the bull and say that it did not count, and then go
immediately and most horribly mad because a horse
screamed? There is no understanding the Gringos.
They are barbarians.