I was wrong in my thinking why my father-in-law brought me on this business trip to Portugal. I'd thought he couldn't chance me staying in Texas with my wife, his daughter, Janis, with him gone--that I'd tell her what we'd been doing, my boss, Buck, and I. Not just what he had been doing with me, but what I, only nineteen to his fifty-four, had eventually willingly let him do. I hadn't done it too happily because there was nothing romantic in the land baron's doing it. When I surrendered, there was no affection involved. He was a conquering master. I laid back, fully open to him, and he took what he wanted by brute force. But it wasn't fully a case of forced taking. I was content enough in getting attention that I didn't get otherwise--certainly not from my wife of convenience. All of her attention went to our baby, which was not even mine.
But I wasn't ignored by Buck Thornton, my father-in-law. He'd always paid attention to me, even when he was buying me for a daughter who was pregnant and without a man. Sometimes I thought he only picked me for her to get to me. I hadn't made it all that hard to get me. I liked men. Besides, he'd blackmailed me. My unusual name, Jai, Jai Jensen, pointed to the issue. My father had been a missionary doctor in India; my mother was a native of what was then Bombay and is now called Mumbai. They came to the States and never bothered to become citizens. I was a student in animal husbandry at Texas A&M University north of Houston when, while going to college, Thornton hired me as a ranch hand on his gigantic cattle ranch near the Sam Houston National Forest and Huntsville.
Thornton found me attractive and exotic, as many others had found a mixed Indian and Danish eighteen-year-old, and when his problem with becoming the grandfather of a bastard met with his discovery that I was, essentially, undocumented, it all came together with him getting me into his bed. Subsequently, as his son-in-law, he was grooming me, or so he said, to take more responsibility in the family cattle-raising business.
Now, however, in Lisbon, sitting in the president's box of the Campo Pequeno bullfighting stadium, sitting between my father-in-law and the man he was here to close a business deal with, I understood why I was here. Senhor Enrique Mendes was an important man here in Lisbon, and especially in the bullfighting world. He was an impresario. He managed bullfighters and the bullfights themselves, here in the main stadium and elsewhere in Portugal, as well. And he acquired the bulls, the special bulls of specific bloodlines, to run in the arena. Portugal, in contrast to Spain, didn't kill the bulls in a bullfight, but most of them wound up too wounded from the succession of spearings that defined the progress of the spectacle or became too savvy in how to face the bullfighters to be used more than a couple times before they were butchered for their meat, which, I was told, only the Portuguese knew how to make tender enough to chew. Sometimes, for bulls becoming famous, they are restored to health and set to stud. This is rather rare, though. So, there was a continuing need to procure the special bulls.
Men like my father-in-law and Senhor Enrique Mendes could be said to be the human equivalent of such special bulls. And I wasn't entirely innocent in being covered by such men.
Raising a special bull to put in the ring was a highly ceremonial and expense operation in Spain and Portugal. Some impresarios, like Senhor Mendes, were looking for a cheaper source for the bulls. My father-in-law was interested in accommodating this need. He raised a special breed of fighting bulls, Vegahermosa bulls, on his ranch in Texas, and he wanted Mendes to buy them for use in the ring in Portugal. He had tried to sell them to Spain, but they weren't interested in any but Spanish bulls there. Mexico wasn't picky enough on the breed of the bull to put into the ring to make selling there profitable, although this prospect is what had led my father-in-law to invest in the bulls to begin with.
Senhor Mendes had visited us in Texas to inspect the bulls. He stayed with us, and it became quite clear he inspected me too. I now know that he had my father-in-law's acquiescence for doing so and that my tail was on the line and was tied up in a possible deal between the two men. He had been bold enough to say that he had no idea what parentage had made me small but well-formed, brown as a berry, but with blue eyes, Anglo-Saxon features, and blond highlights in my black, curly hair, but that he found the combination fascinating.
Somehow, I now was learning, I had become part of this bull-buying deal. Mendes wanted to be a bull with me and was making having me under him a contingency in the negotiations. My father-in-law wasn't objecting to that. I might have been interested--I was exploring my preferences and Thornton had helped develop those--but Mendes was old and ugly--and fat. And he was hairy and sweated easily and he couldn't keep his hands to himself.
That's how I knew why I was here, in Portugal, for a deal between the two human bulls. We sat, watching the many-faceted show in the ring, me being seated between my father-in-law and Senhor Mendes. The man kept touching me. I looked over to my father-in-law to see if he saw how familiar the man was getting, and I was shocked that he, indeed, saw it and signaled to me to cooperate with it.
Until I realized what my role was on this business trip, I had found the trip very interesting. Even though my citizenship in the United States was a bit uncertain, although improved, as I'd married an American, I'd never been anywhere else, anywhere outside the United States, to this point. I had been afraid that, if I left, I wouldn't be able to get back into the States again. My father-in-law had assured me that this was all taken care of for this trip.
Lisbon was an old city that was very different from anywhere I'd been in Texas. It seemed so much older and the buildings so much fancier. But, then, it did have so much more history that Texas did. We had arrived just the day before and we were staying at Senhor Mendes's mansion in the city, very close to the stadium. The land baron, Thornton, lived in a sprawling log house that was luxurious but had always come a distant second to the construction needs of the ranching buildings; Senhor Mendes lived in an ancient palace, one with many well-appointed bedrooms, and there he housed the
toreos
, those who worked for him in the bullring, not all of whom were matadors.
The palace was crawling with young men. Senhor Mendes introduced or pointed to them as we were shown through the place as men working for him in some capacity or other, either in maintaining his lifestyle in the large mansion itself or in the various roles as
toreos
in the bullfighting events. He was as familiar with all of them as he was trying to be with me, and they all took it with smiles. I was surrounded by young men who serviced Mendes. What defense did I have against his intentions in this venue?
His urban palace was fascinating, but it wasn't anything as strange and wonderful as the nearby bullfighting arena, the Campo Pequeno, that he brought us to on this day, was. The stadium, in the center city of the ancient Portuguese capital, was well over a hundred years old. It was built of orange bricks and had octagonal towers with domes on top of them--all very exotic, which Senhor Mendes explained was the Moorish influence on architecture on the Iberian Peninsula, which had once been under the control of the Arabs.
The spectacle of the bullfighting was even more ceremonial and involved in Portugal, where it was called
corridas de touros
, than it was in Spain, and the Portuguese version didn't often have even a single matador facing the bull, which wasn't killed.
There were two parts of the entertainment here--the spectacle of the
cavaleiro