The Spanish Daughter

“You’re welcome to it.”

I refrained from turning toward my father’s desk as I crept to the door. Angélica waited for me by the threshold, her hand on the knob. As soon as I walked out, she shut the door.





CHAPTER 17

Today I was going to prove my manhood to Don Martin.

I’d run into him in the morning after breakfast while taking a walk by the plantation. He’d disposed of his usual jacket and tie and had his shirt rolled up all the way to his elbows and long rubber boots over his pants.

“Want to come fishing?” he said.

“Right now?” I asked.

“It’s what Sundays are for.”

“Not church?” I said.

“This is my church,” he said, pointing at the vegetation around us.

I couldn’t say I disagreed. I accepted his invitation, mostly out of a desire to find out from him who was the mysterious woman dating Franco. I had a feeling that Martin knew a lot more than he let on about the foreman’s son.

I wished I’d declined the offer to go fishing, though.

When Martin handed me a tin box and told me to collect worms for bait with my bare hands, I thought I would retch.

I’d always been squeamish but it was apparent that “other men” didn’t feel this way. Martin had no qualms about digging into the soil by our feet and pulling out those wiggling creatures.

I stood in the middle of the field, paralyzed. Perhaps this was what Cristóbal had meant when he said we were city people. He was right about that. First, it had been the stubborn mare, then the snake, today worms. What tomorrow?

“Well, what are you waiting for?” he said.

I wanted to tell him that I couldn’t touch a worm even if he paid me, but two things stopped me: my pride and the fear of being discovered.

I reached inside the mud and shut my eyes as I felt a squirmy worm between my thumb and index finger. I pulled it out, shivering and doing my best to ignore the nausea building up inside my throat. I dropped the thing immediately inside the tin box.

“You look like you’ve never touched a worm before,” Martin said.

Swallowing, I forced my hand to dig inside the mud again.

“So Don Martin,” I said, “this morning I walked past that house again, the one that got burned in the fire.”

He was barely listening. He’d just picked up a colossal worm and flashed it dangerously close to my face so I would appreciate its size.

“I tell you what,” he said, “I dare you to find a bigger worm than this.”

What were we, ten years old?

I sighed.

No, we were men. Competitive. Daring. Not easily revolted men.

Despite my disgust, I wasn’t about to let him win the challenge.

I dug with my full hand, letting the dirt build up under my nails and between my fingers. Among handfuls of soil, gray worms squirmed to the surface. As I collected a few of them and compared them in length to Martin’s impressive catch, my revulsion diminished. Soon, I was finding worms at a faster speed than Martin and couldn’t help but enjoy the race we’d immersed ourselves into. Much to my dismay, I giggled—it had been an unconscious reaction and now I was going to pay for it. Martin stopped his search and stared at me. For a moment, there was silence. I bet my cheeks were as red as a handful of cherries.

I returned to the task of finding the longest worm and felt a thick one between my fingers. It was as long as a cigarette holder.

I presented my catch. We stood too close for comfort—I could smell Martin’s citric cologne masked under the unmistakable scent of moist soil. I took a step back.

“Fine, I concede. You win,” he said. “Now let’s go get some fish.”

*

After casting our rods (mine took some effort to get in right) I sat on a rock next to Martin, our boots resting by the edge of the water. We sat there quietly for a moment, staring at the water’s surface and its calming effect.

“You grew up here?” I asked after a few minutes.

“Yes, but I went to school in Colombia. I owe my education to Don Armand.”

As his line stiffened, he reeled it in.

No catch.

He patiently cast his rod again.

“Don Armand paid for my boarding school and college after my father passed away,” he said.

“You went to college?”

He didn’t seem like the type. My husband fit my idea of what a university graduate ought to look like, not Martin. Then again, this trip seemed to be challenging all my preconceived notions about others.

“What did you study?” I said.

“Agronomy.”

“That makes sense.”

For a moment, the only sound was the gurgling of the brook.

“So, what happened to your father?” I finally said.

“He drowned.”

His bluntness disconcerted me. Involuntarily, I faced the water. I regretted asking, but he didn’t seem to mind the subject.

“He’d gotten drunk the night before and in the morning, he went for a swim. Some think that he got a cramp, but I think he was still drunk.”

“Did he”—I lowered my tone—“did he get drunk often?”

“No. That’s why he got so drunk this time. He couldn’t handle his alcohol.” He faced the pond, pensively. “I think it finally caught up with him.”

“What?”

“His mistakes.”

I wanted to know more, but I didn’t think Cristóbal would’ve asked. Besides, after the giggling fiasco, I didn’t want to call more attention to myself. Honestly, I was surprised Martin hadn’t realized I was a woman yet. He seemed like an observant man.

“Well, that’s all in the past. It doesn’t change anything,” he said with a hint of bitterness.

His fishing rod stiffened, then gave a small jerk. Martin stood up and pulled on the pole.

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