31
SO BEGAN an endless succession of wretched, interminable days. There was little conversation in the house and the rain pounded constantly on the roof. Elena took over the cooking and the cleaning, chores she had never found distasteful and which she carried out efficiently. J., for his part, arranged things such that he was out of the house as much as possible. He did not reproach Elena about the shotgun incident, but neither did he make any attempt to bring her out of the depression into which she sank after the incident.
As a gesture of friendship to J., Gilberto continued to make sure there was a stack of logs on the veranda every morning. He knew J. would get blisters on his hands if he had to chop the firewood himself. The attitudes of the villagers towards J. did not change after the event. On the contrary, crockpots filled with crabs arrived even more frequently and, whenever he visited, the locals were as welcoming as ever.
Without an overseer, things on the finca began to go downhill. The horses were infested with ticks, and the heavy rains rotted the saplings in several of the seedbeds because J. had failed to deal with the drainage problems, while the loggers were increasingly unmanageable. For some time, Gilberto had been responsible for dealing with the labourers when J. was on one of his frequent trips to Turbo, on days when he was with Juan’s wife, and on those days he spent holed up in the house drinking. Though he was not a particularly brilliant foreman, Gilberto proved able to keep the men under control and ensure that the quality of the timber was adequate. After Gilberto’s departure, things deteriorated so much that a whole consignment was rejected because the quality of the lumber was so poor, and J. was forced to ship it back from Turbo. The situation was further aggravated by the fact that, when sober, J. would try to stop the rot by summarily firing people, docking their wages or ranting at the loggers. Such measures did not go down well with the men who, in a puerile attempt at revenge, began to deliberately sabotage their own work.
The truth was that, despite his best intentions and the pains he took to treat them as equals, J. had never liked the lumbermen. He was exasperated by their infantile insolence and their clumsy chicanery. He was infuriated by the fact that they stole anything they could and were constantly trying to swindle him — and each other. Worse still, they considered this systematic insubordination not as a matter of defiance but one of principle. Obviously, among the labourers there were what Don Eduardo called “just men”, but J. could only see them as a group, an enemy battalion and — his head addled from too much booze — he proved incapable of singling out individuals and making them, if not allies, then simply friends. A month after Gilberto’s departure, realizing that relations with the labourers were becoming untenable, J. managed to curtail his drinking and once again took control of the finca. At first, his newfound authority was precarious, not because of the men’s work — the timber was passably well cut and sold for a reasonable price — but because the men, believing they knew J. better than he knew them, played a waiting game assuming that he would weaken and they could strike home. But J. did not weaken. With almost superhuman effort, he managed to keep a cool head and to assert his authority. Eventually, the loggers — to use a cliché that has existed since mankind first accepted that certain individuals were born to lead — ended up, if not liking him, at least respecting him.
However, the work was arduous and J. was not prepared to spend his days cleaning shit from the rabbit hutches, chopping sugar cane into fodder for the horses and mending wire fences. He needed an estate manager. He spoke to a number of people in the village and the town, but it quickly became clear that everyone for miles around knew about Elena’s volatile temper and no one was prepared to take the job. This simply served to fuel J.’s sense that Elena was a liability — though he cared for her and occasionally they were still good in bed.
The stormy relationship before the incident with the ring had given way to a truce that was at once chilly and cordial. Since they were both busy, they ceased to mention the downpours that rolled in every day. It almost seemed as though J. enjoyed getting soaked to the skin on his treks into the forest to supervise the workmen. Only occasionally, on lazy Sunday afternoons as they stared out the driving rain, did they find themselves engaged in moribund conversations where Elena tried to raise the subject of the ring in the hope that J. might forgive her. She never succeeded. Though J. seemed affectionate and understanding, Elena keenly sensed he was actually distant and aloof. It was as though he were saying, “If you want to leave, leave; if you want to stay, that’s fine, stay. I don’t care one way or the other…” His attitude naturally infuriated her but, given the situation, she had no choice but to bite her tongue. At least for as long as she could.
It was then that Octavio arrived.
32
“THERE’S SOMEONE for you,” said Elena.
“Who?”
“Some old man. He’s out on the veranda.”
It was early and J. was still in bed. A light drizzle was falling.
“Ask him what he wants.”
“I asked, he said he wants to talk to you in person.”
Out on the veranda, J. encountered a man of about sixty with cropped grey hair and a grey beard. He wore a tight-fitting shirt that showed off a muscular body with not a gram of fat. Every time he scratched behind his ear — a nervous tic — his well-defined biceps were visible through the fabric. His face was broad and harsh, while his ears and his eyes were small.
He was looking for work, he said, and had heard J. was looking for an estate manager. His broad accent was that of an Antioquía farmhand. When J. asked where he had come from, he offered a rambling explanation, mentioning a coffee plantation “not far from here, up in the mountains”, and something about a lawsuit which, apparently, had cost him his land. When pressed, the old man simply repeated the same vague story and J. realized he did not want to talk about it. J. asked whether he knew anything about timber production and the old man said he had managed teams of loggers in Antioquía and Córdoba. He had no references and was probably in no position to get any. He was a man of few words; he would half-answer a question, stopping in mid-sentence when he felt he had been sufficiently understood, or when he feared he had said too much. He claimed to be married with five children and gave his name as Octavio Sossa.
“Let me think about it, Octavio,” said J. “Come by and see me tomorrow and I’ll give you an answer.”
“OK, Don J.”
That afternoon he did some investigation, but no one seemed to know anything about the old man. It was as though he had popped up out of the ground like a crab, with a wife and five children. J. asked Elena’s opinion and she said that she had not liked him at all. But since this was her opinion about everyone, J. paid it little heed. And so, the following morning, when Octavio called, he still had not made up his mind. In fact, J. had not taken to the man either; there was something underhand and insolent about the man’s eyes that gave him the creeps. But since he really did need an estate manager, he found himself telling Octavio that he could work a week’s trial to see how they got along.
And the man accepted.
He was an excellent worker. Surefooted and intelligent, he seemed to know everything there was to know about the finca. He immediately took charge of the loggers, knowledgeably appraising their work and offering valuable suggestions. The men, seeing that he knew how to deal with them and that he understood the business, respected him. Later, they would come to fear him.