When
I saw my sister, Delia, beating my dog with a stick, I felt hate heave like a
caged, angry beast in my chest. Out in the sun, the hair of my sister glinted
like metal and, in her brown dress, she looked like a sheathed dagger. Biryuk
hugged the earth and screamed but I could not bound forward nor cry out to my
sister. She had a weak heart and she must not be surprised. So I held myself,
my throat swelled, and I felt hate rear and plunge in its cage of ribs.
I
was thirteen when my father first took me hunting. All through the summer of
that year, I had tramped alone and unarmed the fields and forest around our
farm. Then one afternoon in late July my father told me I could use his
shotgun.
Beyond
the ipil grove, in a grass field we spotted a covey of brown pigeons. In the
open, they kept springing to the air and gliding away every time we were within
range. But finally they dropped to the ground inside a wedge of guava trees. My
father pressed my shoulder and I stopped. Then slowly, in a half-crouch, we
advanced. The breeze rose lightly; the grass scuffed against my bare legs. My
father stopped again. He knelt down and held my hand.
―Wait
for the birds to rise and then fire,‖ he whispered.
I
pushed the safety lever of the rifle off and sighted along the barrel. The
saddle of the stock felt greasy on my cheek. The gun was heavy and my arm
muscles twitched. My mouth was dry; I felt vaguely sick. I wanted to sit down.
―You
forgot to spit,‖ my father said.
Father
had told me that hunters always spat for luck before firing. I spat and I saw
the breeze bend the ragged, glassy threads of spittle toward the birds.
―That‘s
good,‖ Father said.
―Can‘t
we throw a stone,‖ I whispered fiercely. ―It‘s taking them a long time.‖
―No,
you‘ve to wait.‖
Suddenly,
a small dog yelping shrilly came tearing across the brooding plain of grass and
small trees. It raced across the plain in long slewy swoops, on outraged shanks
that disappeared and flashed alternately in the light of the cloud-banked sun.
One of the birds whistled and the covey dispersed like seeds thrown in the
wind. I fired and my body shook with the fierce momentary life of the rifle. I
saw three pigeons flutter in a last convulsive effort to stay afloat, then fall
to the ground. The shot did not scare the dog. He came to us, sniffing
cautiously. He circled around us until I snapped my fingers and then he came to
me.
―Not
bad,‖ my father said grinning. ―Three birds with one tube.‖ I went to the brush
to get the birds. The dog ambled after me. He found the birds for me. The
breast of one of the birds was torn. The bird had fallen on a spot where the
earth was worn bare, and its blood was spread like a tiny, red rag. The dog
scraped the blood with his tongue. I picked up the birds and its warm, mangled
flesh clung to the palm of my hand.
―You‘re
keen,‖ I said to the dog. ―Here. Come here.‖ I offered him my bloody palm. He
came to me and licked my palm clean.
I
gave the birds to my father. ―May I keep him, Father?‖ I said pointing to the
dog. He put the birds in a leather bag which he carried strapped around his
waist.
Father
looked at me a minute and then said: ―Well, I‘m not sure. That dog belongs to
somebody.‖
―May
I keep him until his owner comes for him?‖ I pursued.
―He‘d
make a good pointer,‖ Father remarked. ―But I would not like my son to be
accused of dog-stealing.‖
―Oh,
no!‖ I said quickly. ―I shall return him when the owner comes to claim him.‖
―All
right,‖ he said, ―I hope that dog makes a hunter out of you.‖
Biryuk
and I became fast friends. Every afternoon after school we went to the field to
chase quails or to the bank of the river which was fenced by tall, blade-sharp
reeds to flush snipes. Father was away most of the time but when he was home he
hunted with us.
Biryuk
scampered off and my sister flung the stick at him. Then she turned about and
she saw me.
―Eddie,
come here,‖ she commanded. I approached with apprehension. Slowly, almost
carefully, she reached over and twisted my ear.
―I
don‘t want to see that dog again in the house,‖ she said coldly. ―That dog
destroyed my slippers again. I‘ll tell Berto to kill that dog if I see it
around again.‖ She clutched one side of my face with her hot, moist hand and
shoved me, roughly. I tumbled to the ground. But I did not cry or protest. I
had passed that phase. Now, every word and gesture she hurled at me I caught
and fed to my growing and restless hate.
My
sister was the meanest creature I knew. She was eight when I was born, the day
my mother died. Although we continued to live in the same house, she had gone,
it seemed, to another country from where she looked at me with increasing
annoyance and contempt.
One
of my first solid memories was of standing before a grass hut. Its dirt floor
was covered with white banana stalks, and there was a small box filled with
crushed and dismembered flowers in one corner. A doll was cradled in the box.
It was my sister‘s playhouse and I remembered she told me to keep out of it.
She was not around so I went in. The fresh banana hides were cold under my
feet. The interior of the hut was rife with the sour smell of damp dead grass.
Against the flowers, the doll looked incredibly heavy. I picked it up. It was
slight but it had hard, unflexing limbs. I tried to bend one of the legs and it
snapped. I stared with horror at the hollow tube that was the leg of the doll.
Then I saw my sister coming. I hid the leg under one of the banana pelts. She
was running and I knew she was furious. The walls of the hut suddenly
constricted me. I felt sick with a nameless pain. My sister snatched the doll
from me and when she saw the torn leg she gasped. She pushed me hard and I
crashed against the wall of the hut. The flimsy wall collapsed over me. I heard
my sister screaming; she denounced me in a high, wild voice and my body ached
with fear. She seized one of the saplings that held up the hut and hit me again
and again until the flesh of my back and thighs sang with pain. Then suddenly
my sister moaned; she stiffened, the sapling fell from her hand and quietly, as
though a sling were lowering her, she sank to the ground. Her eyes were wild as
scud and on the edges of her lips, drawn tight over her teeth, quivered a wide
lace of froth. I ran to the house yelling for Father.
She
came back from the hospital in the city, pale and quiet and mean, drained, it
seemed, of all emotions, she moved and acted with the keen, perversity and
deceptive dullness of a sheathed knife, concealing in her body that awful power
for inspiring fear and pain and hate, not always with its drawn blade but only
with its fearful shape, defined by the sheath as her meanness was defined by
her body.
Nothing
I did ever pleased her. She destroyed willfully anything I liked. At first, I
took it as a process of adaptation, a step of adjustment; I snatched and
crushed every seed of anger she planted in me, but later on I realized that it
had become a habit with her. I did not say anything when she told Berto to kill
my monkey because it snickered at her one morning, while she was brushing her
teeth. I did not say anything when she told Father that she did not like my
pigeon house because it stank and I had to give away my pigeons and Berto had
to chop the house into kindling wood. I learned how to hold myself because I
knew we had to put up with her whims to keep her calm and quiet. But when she
dumped my butterflies into a waste can and burned them in the backyard, I
realized that she was spiting me.
My
butterflies never snickered at her and they did not smell. I kept them in an
unused cabinet in the living room and unless she opened the drawers, they were
out of her sight. And she knew too that my butterfly collection had grown with
me. But when I arrived home, one afternoon, from school, I found my butterflies
in a can, burned in their cotton beds like deckle. I wept and Father had to
call my sister for an explanation. She stood straight and calm before Father
but my tear-logged eyes saw only her harsh and arrogant silhouette. She looked
at me curiously but she did not say anything and Father began gently to
question her. She listened politely and when Father had stopped talking, she
said without rush, heat or concern: ―They were attracting ants.‖
I
ran after Biryuk. He had fled to the brambles. I ran after him, bugling his
name. I found him under a low, shriveled bush. I called him and he only
whimpered. Then I saw that one of his eyes was bleeding. I sat on the ground
and looked closer. The eye had been pierced. The stick of my sister hadstabbed
the eye of my dog. I was stunned. For a long time I sat motionless, staring at
Biryuk. Then I felt hate crouch; its paws dug hard into the floor of its cage;
it bunched muscles tensed; it held itself for a minute and then it sprang and
the door of the cage crashed open and hate clawed wildly my brain. I screamed.
Biryuk, frightened, yelped and fled, rattling the dead bush that sheltered him.
I did not run after him.
A
large hawk wheeled gracefully above a group of birds. It flew in a tightening
spiral above the birds.
On
my way back to the house, I passed the woodshed. I saw Berto in the shade of a
tree, splitting wood. He was splitting the wood he had stacked last year. A
mound of bone-white slats was piled near his chopping block. When he saw me, he
stopped and called me.
His
head was drenched with sweat. He brushed away the sweat and hair from his eyes
and said to me: ―I‘ve got something for you.‖
He
dropped his ax and walked into the woodshed. I followed him. Berto went to a
corner of the shed. I saw a jute sack spread on the ground. Berto stopped and
picked up the sack.
―Look,‖
he said.
I
approached. Pinned to the ground by a piece of wood, was a big centipede. Its
malignantly red body twitched back and forth.
―It‘s
large,‖ I said.
―I
found him under the stack I chopped.‖ Berto smiled happily; he looked at me
with his muddy eyes.
―You
know,‖ he said. ―That son of a devil nearly frightened me to death‖
I
stiffened. ―Did it, really?‖ I said trying to control my rising voice. Berto
was still grinning and I felt hot all over.
―I
didn‘t expect to find any centipede here,‖ he said. ―It nearly bit me. Who
wouldn‘t get shocked?‖ He bent and picked up a piece of wood.
―This
wood was here,‖ he said and put down the block. ―Then I picked it up, like
this. And this centipede was coiled here. Right here. I nearly touched it with
my hand. What do you think you would feel?‖
I
did not answer. I squatted to look at the reptile. Its antennae quivered
searching the tense afternoon air. I picked up a sliver of wood and prodded the
centipede. It uncoiled viciously. Its pinchers slashed at the tiny spear.
―I
could carry it dead,‖ I said half-aloud.
―Yes,‖
Berto said. ―I did not kill him because I knew you would like it.‖
―Yes,
you‘re right.‖
―That‘s
bigger than the one you found last year, isn‘t it?‖
―Yes,
it‘s very much bigger.‖
I
stuck the sliver into the carapace of the centipede. It went through the flesh
under the red armor; a whitish liquid oozed out. Then I made sure it was dead
by brushing its antennae. The centipede did not move. I wrapped it in a
handkerchief.
My
sister was enthroned in a large chair in the porch of the house. Her back was
turned away from the door; she sat facing the window. She was embroidering a
strip of white cloth. I went near, I stood behind her chair. She was not aware
of my presence. I unwrapped the centipede. I threw it on her lap.
My
sister shrieked and the strip of white sheet flew off like an unhanded hawk.
She shot up from her chair, turned around and she saw me but she collapsed
again to her chair clutching her breast, doubled up with pain The centipede had
fallen to the floor.
―You
did it,‖ she gasped. ―You tried to kill me. You‘ve health… life… you tried…‖
Her voice dragged off into a pain-stricken moan.
I
was engulfed by a sudden feeling of pity and guilt.
―But
it‘s dead!‖ I cried kneeling before her. ―It‘s dead! Look! Look!‖ I snatched up
the centipede and crushed its head between my fingers. ―It‘s dead!‖
My
sister did not move. I held the centipede before her like a hunter displaying
the tail of a deer, save that the centipede felt thorny in my hand.
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