Father, I have seen (and cycled across) the Mississippi River. It is not a disappointment.
There is some talk that we will be returned to Ft. Missoula by rail — whether prompted by recent events in Cuba (or, perhaps, China) or merely that we have made our point to the Dept. of War, I do not know. The people we speak with throughout the country are “spoiling for a fight,” especially the youth, and it seems not to matter who the opponent shall be. Our near neighbors at the Fort, the Salish (popularly termed Flatheads, though their heads are not flat at all), have never developed a taste for the warpath, due either to a congenitally pacific nature or the ministration of the Jesuit worthies in their midst. Their chief, one Charlo, seems if not content at least resigned to their recent removal from the Valley to a reservation farther north, and our Missoula post remains an “open fort” without walls to block our sight of the magnificent vistas nor to shelter us from the punishing winter winds. (I do hope that October affords us the opportunity of battle in sunnier climes.) The tales Sgt. Sanders relates of our regiment’s role during the labor troubles haunting the Northern Pacific in Coeur d’Alene and other locales sound more like police work than “Injun fighting,” and at times I worry I have chosen the wrong unit in which to prove myself. But a soldier’s lot is to keep himself prepared for hazardous duty at all times, and to accept that he has no say in how his services will be employed.
A humbling lesson for Yrs. Truly.
(But if the next war is to be fought on bicycles, the 25th shall be in the van.)
Please share this offering with Mother and Jessie, and let them know they are ever in my thoughts. Do inform me of the latest concerning the “politicking” at home. The other fellows are much entertained by accounts of our little struggles there.
With respect from your wandering son,
Private Aaron Lunceford, Jr.
Junior kneels, as if praying, facing an orderly row of bicycles, and the unit’s rifles stacked in pyramids — polished, oiled, unloaded. The celebration continues, a band playing a patriotic air, but it is very far away.
EASTMAN BULLET
The screw is supposed to sever your spine at the base of the neck before you are choked by the collar.
Of course no one has ever survived to report whether this is true, and the official document lists judicial asphyxiation as the cause of death. Maybe the man who turns the crossbar, the executioner, knows, standing just behind the condemned — maybe he can hear a crack of bone, perhaps sense the moment when the desperate message from the brain is cut short, sense the sudden slackening of convulsing limbs.
Diosdado files onto the balcony that overlooks the courtyard of the Cuartel de España with the others — two militares, a choleric haciendero over from Mindoro, Benítez the defense lawyer from the Ministry of Justice, and Padre Peregrino. There is another fraile waiting in the courtyard below, a round, red-nosed Franciscan, knotted rope taut around his stomach, waiting to deliver the sacrament. Diosdado moves to the extreme left, with the box, hidden under his coat, pressed against the balcony rail. He is sweating as much from nerves as from the heat. When the Committee asked him to do this he agreed at once — he has been among the witnesses before, his political sympathies not yet known to the authorities, and he was able to ask to be invited without arousing suspicion. It was only some hours later, after they had given him the box and made sure he knew how to operate it, that the consequences fully dawned upon him. Once the photograph is copied and distributed there will be no doubt as to who has taken it, and his enviable life in Manila will be ended forever, or at least until a better day.
Men must have felt the same way in ’96, when Bonifacio told the crowd to rip their cédulas to pieces. With this act, thinks Diosdado, I not only tear free from Spain, but destroy my own identity. The Committee has given him a new, forged cédula personal that displays his face with a different name, and have promised to wait till he wires from Hongkong, safe with the other exiliados, before they spread copies of the photograph across the country.
“For murderers and thieves we admit the public,” says the Comandante to his visitors as they settle in, “but with the políticos, these days, a bit of discretion must be observed. No use stirring everybody up for nothing.”
“An occasional blood-letting does a body good.” The general is a tall, pox-scarred man with an impressive moustache. “Blood that is never spilled can only fester, eh Padre?”
Padre Peregrino frowns. “I have never cared for the public ones,” he says. “A dying man should be alone with his God.”
“If he has one,” grumbles the haciendero.
“If he accepts his Lord,” corrects the padre. “Believers or not, we are all his children.”
“I could do without all the moro-moro.” The haciendero is wearing a coat that looks fresh from the tailor, paid for that very morning. He points at the device below with a silver-tipped cane. “Making a solemn ceremony of it, proclamations, witnesses — it lends them a dignity they don’t deserve.”
“You’d shoot them in the streets like dogs,” smiles the Comandante.
“And perhaps leave them lying there a few days, as a lesson to the others.”
“We must have law.”
“Of course,” snorts the haciendero. “That’s the point of it. Make it against the law to move the body from where it lies for a week.”
“And what do you think, young man?” the Jesuit asks.
They are all looking at him. Diosdado has angled his body slightly, better to hide the box when it has to come out, and turns only his head to answer.
“I think we have to balance what is instructive,” he says, “with what is sanitary.”
The men laugh.
The condenado is led out from the holding cell then, and Diosdado is spared their attention. This one has shoes.
The one whose execution he witnessed two years ago had been barefoot, just another young Juan Tamad from Bayombong who had been swept up by the movement, joined the Katipuneros, been captured and then chosen to be executed as an example here in Manila. He was a long-legged boy who before they put the saco over his head had worn a tentative expression, looking around as if afraid to betray his ignorance of protocol in the presence of his betters. When the moment came his toes had splayed apart, had curled and clutched like fingers, had clawed a frenetic design into the dust at the foot of the stool.