A great many thanks to chasten, NOG77 and pickfiction. ⁷Without your help, I would never have finished this tale.
Thank you to the Avengers Assembly who are my idols.
This is a sequel to "Maria del Sueño." It also occurs in the town of San Isidro, Luzon, during the latter part of the 19th century. Capitan Andres Gonzales must again solve a mystery while falling in love, and to top it all, he must also contend with the seeds of revolution which have been sown in the town and are steadily growing.
All the characters in this story are 18 years of age and above.
For Jason and William and Heiser.
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PROLOGUE
The two men waited outside San Isidro. They had been camped on the hilltop near the huge rice field since noon, but now it was long past sunset; the instructions they received were very clear: if they wanted to be paid, they had to wait; unfortunately, there was never any mention of how long they were to wait.
Maximo, the younger of the two, stood up and, for the fourth time that night, looked down on the paddies.
"Do you know what time it is?" he asked as he paced up and down the edge of the well-worn track.
His companion shook his head.
"And, no, I don't know when he will come, all Kidlat said was to wait," Jaime added before Maximo could ask anything else. "Now, can you please sit down? - your pacing up and down is making me dizzy. Soon, all this will be over - and you'll be going home to your wife with some cash, for a change."
Maximo sat down.
"I'm hungry," he said sullenly.
Jaime took one last puff from his
cigarillo
. He squeezed the lit end between two fingers, putting out the tiny flame.
"I told you to eat before we came up here," he said.
"I did, but I had no idea it would take this long," Maximo complained.
A sound stopped Jaime from answering. The two men looked at the path they had used earlier. A figure on a small pony rode up and stopped a few feet from where they were.
"Is it done?" the rider asked.
"Of course," Jaime said.
"Are you sure no one followed you up here?"
The two men nodded.
The man on the pony threw down a small bag.
"Your payment," he said and turned the small horse away and down the path.
As soon as he disappeared, Maximo grabbed the bag and opened it. He gasped; inside were wads of money - more money than he had ever seen in his life!
"What did I tell you,
compadre
? It pays to be patient," Jaime said.
I
Porcia Fuentes heard the lock on the front door turn. She quickly got out of bed, wrapped an old
mantilla
around her shoulders, and hurried down the small staircase.
She was halfway down when her father, Alberto Fuentes, entered the small
sala
. He looked tired, a frown knit his brows together, but he quickly smiled when he looked up and saw his daughter.
"You should not have waited for me,
hija
," he said as father and daughter made their way to the small kitchen which also doubled as the Fuentes' dining room. A cold supper was laid out on the table:
kesong puti
- white goat's cheese - and the local bread,
pan de sal,
- and coarse granules of the native coffee -
kape de baraco.
Porcia fired up the small wood stove to boil water for the brew; as the liquid simmered, she once again noticed how troubled her father looked, she hoped nothing was wrong at the shop he owned and managed. The Fuentes' were not moneyed, but the young girl had grown in a loving home and had not wanted for anything.
Things changed, though, when her mother was stricken with a strange ailment a year ago. Almost overnight, Elisa turned from warm, caring, and loving to distant, suspicious, and increasingly violent. She refused to be seen by a physician, heaping such verbal abuse on her husband and daughter when it was suggested that Alberto was forced to call upon the services of the town's
hilot,
Mang
Sisto, instead.
The shaman came and spent one afternoon exorcising the demons he believed had taken hold of both Elisa and the Fuentes' home. He burned incense and several leaves which he refused to identify - trade secrets, he explained - he hung strange charms above the windows and doors and finally offered sweet rice cake to the unseen entities by leaving a plate of it out in the garden overnight.
But when none of them worked,
Mang Sisto
was forced to declare that Elisa was not possessed, but ill.
"Do not take this the wrong way,
compadre,
" he said to Alberto, "But your wife's illness is here," he added, pointing to Alberto's head.
Her mother now spent most of the time in bed, barely talking to anyone and getting up only to eat when she felt like it.
The water boiled over. Porcia carefully picked up the small kettle and gingerly poured the water into the cup over which the coffee grains were placed, wrapped in a thin muslin cloth. Soon a rich aroma filled the kitchen as dark drops of the strong brew seeped through the cloth and began to fill the cup.
She added a heaping teaspoon of
moscovado
into the brew; her father liked his coffee black, but sweet, and he liked the taste of brown sugar more than white, which was a good thing since white sugar was very expensive. She brought the cup to Alberto; her father smiled his thanks.
"Sit down and keep your father company, Porcia," Alberto said
The young girl kissed him on the forehead and took the seat beside him.
"Guess who came by the shop this afternoon,
hija.
"
Porcia smiled and thought for a while.
"Let's see, the
alkalde-mayor,
perhaps, finally realizing how much better your work is?"
Her father laughed a little.
"No, dearest, it was Francisco, your godfather."
The smile on his daughter's face quickly faded.
"And what did
he
want?" Porcia's voice was cold.
Alberto placed one hand over hers and gently squeezed her fingers.
"Let us stop bearing ill will towards him, Porcia. The matter is over, as far as I'm concerned and we've weathered far worse storms in the past. Besides, with the coming Christmas season, I'm sure business will pick up a little. Have you forgotten how close you and your
ninong
were before?"
Porcia sighed. That was true,
Ninong
Francisco had more than diligently fulfilled the role of godfather to her; being a childless
soltero
, Francisco had grown to love Alberto's daughter as his own. Porcia sighed.
"If you can forgive him, Papá, I can, too."
Alberto patted his daughter's hand then reached into his breast pocket and pulled out a beautifully glazed wooden case. He set it down in front of Porcia.
"He sent this for you,
hija.
"
Porcia opened the case. Inside was an exquisite black ceramic fountain pen. She carefully uncapped it and was surprised to find her initials carved on the side.
"He knows how much you hate your old quill pen. He said it holds a secret, and you would know enough to discover it. He hopes you can tell him all about it when you see each other again."
Porcia smiled.
"Never settle for the obvious,
hija.
"
That was
Ninong
Francisco's favorite expression whenever he gifted her with one of his strange gadgets. They were common everyday objects, but when turned or pressed or pulled apart, would turn into something quite extraordinary; a razor into a fan, a butter knife into a jeweled comb, a pen into - Porcia's smile grew wider - her fingers had easily found the tiny latch on the pen's cap, she pushed it...and a slender silver letter opener slid out smoothly from the other end. Both father and daughter gasped in surprise.
"I shall go and thank him tomorrow, Papá."
"Well, Francisco said he's quite busy at the warehouse, what with the re-location to Manila; perhaps we can visit him next weekend, yes?"
Porcia nodded and placed the pen back in the case.