THE INSURGENCE
of CHAN SANTA CRUZ

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CHAPTER THIRTY SIX |
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His horror
notwithstanding, General Rivera marshaled the substantial resources of Santa
Cruz into establishment of a great encampment in the Plaza by sundown, that
sixteenth of September. Asking his instructions, Colonel Rodriguez had been
told to prepare a banquet, and this so astonished him that he briefly
considered whether the General's mind had become unhinged at his entering the
church.
"Nothing like
that," Rivera said, anticipating his thoughts although Rodriguez had
expressed nothing openly. The Colonel's expression was plainly evident.
"Bravo held his victory banquet, and now it's my turn."
"Why?" the
Colonel found words.
"For Bravo's
prisoners, howsoever far from God," Rivera answered, "and for those
brave soldados who were allowed only the left-overs from the tables of their
grafting superiors. I come here to overturn the order of the Territory,"
the General added. "First to be served will be those prisoners whom we
have rescued this day, no matter their crimes. Next the women and children of
this city and, after these, the Indians. Then shall come the army's turn... by
rank as was the custom in the time of Bravo and Porfirio Diaz... but to mark
the end of that time the ranks shall be reversed... soldados will be the first
served, their Cabos and Sargentos following and we, the officers, dine
last."
"After that march
from Tabi," grumbled Rodriguez, "my men and I were hoping for a
little better."
"Don't concern
yourself," Rivera answered, "as there will be food for all. I am
ordering some of those white cattle butchered, the ones Bravo kept for his own
use. However belatedly, the revolution has come also to Quintana Roo.
"Two years ago,
Efraim, all Mexico crouched at the feet of Diaz, waiting for a scrap to fall
their way. I was on duty there, at the Centennial," the General admonished
Rodriguez, "...and I have had two years to reassess my sentiments. Was it
blindness we had, or lack of courage to stand when all of us could see what a
hollow thing this 'scientific governing' was. Well, fools we were who dined
with Diaz, and took our pleasures in the establishments of Corral. And for all
the pageantry, what was dedicated on our behalf? A prison and a lunatic asylum,
Colonel. This was the benefit to Mexicans while the Americans and
Germans and the other foreigners kissed the hand of Porfirio Diaz and licked
the honey from his fingers. Had not the British been mourning their dead king,
they would have been present too, only licking petroleum, not honey. And as for
the Mexicans, we barricaded the streets and drove them from their homes, that
their humble estate would not embarrass distinguished foreign guests. That was
the last time I held a command in the field... a noble posting, wasn't it? At
least, behind a desk, I could not be held responsible for more such detestable
folly."
"You should hold
less attachment to the past," Rodriguez said. "No man who has served
Mexico in the last forty years is without sins which may weigh upon the
conscience and no purpose is served by bending unnecessarily under that
weight."
"I welcome the
burden. Without the weight of conscience, one's inhuman instincts are not
fettered and they soar away, given the Devil's wings. Do you see how these men
regard me? Even the ones who can neither walk, nor speak, they gaze up at me
like dogs waiting for blows or food... it's all the same, all in a dog's
afternoon. God preserve us from such admiration!"
In fact, there were
those of the prisoners who... recovering their ability to stand and walk... had
followed the General all day like a band of stray dogs, and only gazed and
whimpered when Rivera ordered them driven off, staring with the dull eyes of
the dead.
"Where is that
doctor?" cried Rivera now, spurring his horse towards a dozen of these
lost men. "Those whose minds are broken cannot be helped, but what about
the sick?"
Rodriguez shrugged, but
a sergeant who was attempting to make himself useful to the new commander
pointed towards the hospital. "Dr. Rosario is there, at least what's left
of him. Don't bother going, for all you will find is another pair of dead eyes
in a living body." But Rivera, even having done most of his fighting
behind a desk, was still a General and Generals are not permitted to accept or
even to acknowledge despair. So he went to the hospital.
A few of the soldiers of
Santa Cruz, under the direction of a Sergeant from Tabi, were removing the dead
from the hospital tents... laying them alongside those from the church, in
rows, in the dust and weeds next to one of those dirt roads that migrated from
the plaza like the spokes of a poorly constructed wheel. There were thirteen of
these, and the rest of Rosario's patients, numbering about forty, had been
divided into those for whom hope of recovery was held out and those whose
wounds or illness was likely to be mortal. Eighty corpses had been carried from
the cathedral... the worst of the mutilated being removed to the other side of
the Plaza... but, no matter which way the insolent wind blew, a spiritual
corruption brushed General Rivera in its passage across Santa Cruz del Bravo.
He took a deep breath and wiped his nose upon his sleeve, realizing that the
barbaric attributes of Santa Cruz del Bravo had already become habitual.
"Where is
Dr. Rosario?" he demanded again. The Sergeant pointed towards the office.
Rosario was sitting on
his desk, rocking from side to side like some child's broken toy. His eyes were
unfocused, his finger drooped from a corner of his lip and he tugged at this,
as though the movement would improve his sight. Rivera sniffed and frowned...
there was a bottle on the table with perhaps an inch of liquid remaining, but
it bore a medicinal label.
Colonel Rosario picked
it up. "This man has been drinking formaldehyde, General. It's used to
preserve corpses, but can also be an intoxicant... stronger, even, than
alcohol."
"So you're the new
General," Rosario drooled. "General... they took away the bottle I
was saving for the celebration, and there isn't a drop of liquor in the
territory. It was very bad of don Ignacio to do this. I'm a doctor. Can you
find something to drink?"
"There are perhaps
seven hundred men in need of your help," Rivera answered sternly.
"You'll go without your drink, doctor, and that is my order."
"Seven hundred
men!" Rosario wondered and began to laugh. "Of course... the
prisoners! You've set them free and now they need... a doctor!" He tried
to slide off the desk but stumbled, face forward, against the wall. Rivera did
not offer a hand, and the doctor regained a standing position of his own
accord.
"Here is
their doctor," Rosario snickered, puffing and primping and taking a few
staggering steps towards the metal cabinet in which his supplies were kept.
"What else is needed... how about..." and he paused, yanking the door
open with such vehemence that he lost his balance and fell on his backside,
laughing. "How about medicine!" Dr. Rosario crawled to his knees,
leaning his elbows upon the lowest of the shelves to rise but not before Rivera
observed that this, like the rest of the cabinet, was empty. Still gripping the
side of the cabinet for support, the doctor pretended to remove things, holding
them up to the light for inspection.
"Here's our
quinine, we always need this, General. And bandages and here... an extract for
the liver. Disinfectants, serums..."
"What is the
meaning of this?" Rivera said. "Why are you playing games with this
empty cabinet... where are the medicines of Quintana Roo."
"Medicines?"
Dr. Rosario placed his forefinger to his nose, then to the top of his head.
With more a sneer than a smile, he returned to the dark, sitting on the edge,
his face leaning towards Rivera's.
"Could they be
in... Belize?" he replied, raising an eyebrow. "How about... Havana?
Merida? Perhaps... Italy? Only General Bravo would know. And if you ask him,
ask him what he does with the money he received. It's..."
Dr. Rosario lost his
train of thought. He raised a hand from the desk but lost his balance and fell
heavily on his side.
General Rivera took a
step backwards. "This hospital," he said, "is a disgrace. It is
a stain upon the reputation of the Republic." He waved at a spot before
his nose as if warding off flies; it was the doctor's breath that had offended
him, no less than the realization he had consumed the only substance which
could be used to retard the decay of Bravo's dead.
He bent his lips to the
doctor. "You are hereby relieved of your position, you pickle... effective
immediately!"
Rosario, not at all
disturbed, replied with a genuine smile. Still lying on his side, he said:
"General, if you think you can rule this territory by your word, or even
by the laws of the Republic, you are not the man whom I hoped you to be. I
accept your orders with deep gratitude, but it is in your own interest to
cultivate those whom you will have need of... first of all myself."
"You have no cause
to speak to me this way," Rivera answered. "There is no longer
anything you, nor anyone in this abominable place can do save to obey my orders.
Let me remind you doctor... if you are what you purport to be... that the
church is empty now, but can be quickly filled."
The doctor waved his
index finger side to side; since he was still at rest, it bumped repeatedly
against the top of his desk. "You wouldn't do that to me," he said
with a dreamy approximation of offense. "What if I were to say that, for
these past ten years, I have been keeping a diary of this territory?"
General Rivera did not reply, but Rosario had the satisfaction of noticing his
nostrils widen and his eyes grow clear with interest. "What if I had a
record of every action, every crime... the mortal ones of course, for to
describe the lesser sins of Santa Cruz del Bravo would require a library the
size of that of Mexico and Madrid, combined, with that of Paris thrown in. What
if all these were enumerated, with dates and the persons responsible...
wouldn't that be worth something to your President, a prize you could
take back to Mexico City? Or are you planning upon staying here?"
"You have been
spying on your commanding officers for the last ten years?" Rivera
scolded. "That's reprehensible!"
"Awww,"
Rosario groaned. "A man of principle. He doesn't even want to know what
represensabibble, what respi... what I've seen and written down." He
closed his eyes, almost certain that the General would stay. If he weren't
interested, thought the doctor, he would run... instead of hanging around, like
a dog waiting for dinner. This is the commander Madero sends us? God
have mercy!
He opened his eyes and,
with some difficulty, pushed off the desk to a sitting position. Dropping his
voice, he said "would you like me to help you?"
"What would I have
to do for you?" Rivera asked, proving his interest. "Buy you a
bottle?"
Dr. Rosario tried to laugh
at this but could only come up with a cough. "There is a matter in the
capital," he said when he could speak, "that I should like to see
resolved. It is a simple matter, one that can be rectified with a few words to
the President but, at present, the unfortunate outcome is that I must remain
here... a situation neither of us would hold appealing."
"I reiterate, you
are relieved of your duties. If I choose, I shall bring you to court martial
and you shall regret that you ever left the capital."
"Why?" Rosario
asked, snickering again. "I'm not one of your soldados, I am the Deputy
Superintendent of Health. If you want to get me out of here, you will have to
bring that up with the Superintendent."
"I'll do that! What
is his name?"
"Why... Ignacio
Bravo, of course." The doctor laughed aloud, slapping his knees and
falling backwards. "I've heard you had a lot of papers in your
saddlebag," he said, staring at the ceiling. "Did one of them appoint
you to this post? It pays quite well..."
Rivera clenched his
teeth. "You say the whole story of Bravo's crimes is in this diary of
yours?"
"The whole of
it!"
"I'll see what I
can do," Rivera replied, backing away towards the door. "Meanwhile,
I'll expect you to do what you can for the people here when you've sobered
up... if that is possible."
"The
prisoners?"
"They are no longer
prisoners," Rivera said, "but citizens of Mexico, whose liberty has
been restored to them by the Constitutional government and its elected
President."
"General..."
"Yes?" Rivera
said, turning back with reluctance, for he wished to be out of this place.
Rosario still lay on his
back, his knees dangling over one side of the desk, his head over the other,
but he gestured vaguely in the direction of the bottle of formaldehyde.
"You can take that
with you, General. I know it isn't much... but perhaps it can help a little.
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– “THE INSURGENCE of CHAN SANTA CRUZ”
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