"Faith is an island in the setting sun. Proof is the bottom line for everyone." Paul Simon,
Proof
.
**********
"They're about to surrender."
"I was just about to say that. About to, but not yet. It'll be another ten days or so. That's my estimate. I don't think we should try harvesting both at the same time. If we do, the Pedro Ximénez might fall off the vine."
"You're right. It'll certainly be different this year. Benito always thought it would. I wasn't sure I agreed with him before, but now I do. Ezequiel now thinks the same, too. It'll be the Pedro Ximénez first, and then the Palomino. The esparto is ready and waiting. While the Palomino surrenders, the other dries."
"You know, I've learned over the years to never disagree with Benito when it comes to the vines."
"I should have learned that lesson too. That man's accuracy is like sorcery. Our dear Benito. But you know how stubborn I am. I can't agree with anybody's opinion until I've consulted my own senses. I need proof."
As they had this conversation, the two women walked arm-in-arm between the vines. They were strikingly alike. Of similar height, with similar build and with the same dark coloring. The differences were that one's face had the fine wrinkles of experience. The black braid falling down her back was woven through with silver strands.
The other woman's braid had no silver. Her face was unlined, its elfin quality giving her the impression of being even younger than her 28 years. Like the older woman, she wore a sombrero. The sun was bright but the early-September midday heat of Jerez de la Frontera hadn't yet set in. It was early morning.
The women walked on. Over them, the winds blew; the westerly poniente wind that was a marker of a fine winegrowing district. Around them, the leaves of the vines were vibrant green. The vines were heavy with Palomino grapes. The crop was about to surrender—the leaves would darken further, the grapes would become deliciously sweet, and it would be the perfect moment for harvest.
At this vineyard, all the cutting was done by hand. The old-fashioned way. The way the old masters had done it before the twentieth century had come with its mechanization. Technology was good when it came to things like computers and birth control, but not altogether good when it came to winemaking. Here, they all knew that. Here, the vineyard would teem with hand harvesters, carriers, foremen, bodega staff and local drivers, working together to make the harvest as efficient as possible.
The grapes would be taken to the pressing machines in record time, and then the solera would begin. A fifteen-year process. The dry base would be made from the Palomino grapes, fermented by yeast that would die seven years later. A little Pedro Ximénez would be added and for another eight years, the wine would grow dark and complex as it oxidized.
Only then would the amber-colored medium-dry amontillado with its notes of almond, caramel, brine and oak, be bottled and the gold label of 'Casa Torrejón' placed on it. Then it would go out to the international market.
One vineyard, one winery. Casa Torrejón. A proud heritage dating from 1896.
And may it continue forever
, the younger woman thought. Her eyes were on the vines. A smile was on her lips.
May it continue even after I've gone
.
As though the older woman had read the younger's thoughts, she said, "It's a shame you're going. Will you come to see the next harvest, do you think? Or will you be too busy with your new husband and family to even remember the vines?"
The younger woman gave a long-suffering sigh. "Mama..." she began.
The older woman smiled and held up her free hand. "Yes, yes. I understand. There's no need to defend yourself like you've done a thousand times. I only wanted to needle you. I know you love our heritage as much as I do. As much as your brother does. As much as Benito and Ezequiel. The vines are in your blood, too."
"You still wish I wouldn't go."
"That's not true. What I wish is that you live your own life. If leaving here is a part of that, then so be it. Go and be happy."
"But?" the younger woman prompted, knowing there was more.
"But be sure of what you're doing. You've only known this man for one year. Is a year enough? Me, I can't say. I didn't rush into any of my marriages. I knew Florentin San Roman for three years before we got married. It was the same when I married your father. As for Ezequiel, he courted me for five years before I agreed to marry him. If I were sure that you'll be happy there in the United States, I'll smile as I wave you off. But I can't smile when I keep having these doubts that it's for the best. You know very well that my heart is tough. It takes much to break it. But your unhappiness would surely break it."
"He's a good man, Mama."
"I never said he wasn't. But two good people in love can still be unhappy together. Saint Valentine, he can be a fickle one. He goes away as easily as he comes. A marriage needs more than love to be happy. And when a marriage is unhappy, what happens then? Quarrels. Loneliness. Could the loneliness push you into another man's arms? It might. Then what? Then things grow even worse."
"That won't happen. He's a good man. I wish you'd stop thinking the worst and having these doubts. I know I don't."
The older woman said no more. She only nodded slowly.
For the next few moments, they walked in silence through the ripening vines. The estate lands stretched out as far as the eye could see; made up of the 527-hectare vineyard, the bodegas, workers' quarters, the chapel which had been unused since 1921, the equipment sheds, stables, and other outbuildings.
Of course, there was the
cortijo