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HACENDADO VIUDO ACOGIÓ A UNA FAMILIA QUE CONSTRUÍA CASA DE BARRO … SIN IMAGINAR LO QUE PASARÍA

A widowed landowner took in a family building a mud house, without imagining what would happen.  Hernán Salvatierra did not leave that morning with the intention of changing his life.  He went out because the horse needed exercise, because he himself had not crossed the main gate of the hacienda for three days, and because Rufino, his administrator, had told him the night before that there was something strange on the southern boundary, something he could not explain well, he only said, “Don Hernán, I think you have to

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see it yourself.”  Hernán didn’t ask him any more questions.  Rufino had a habit of dramatizing, of exaggerating catastrophes.  So he mounted the gray horse, took the dirt road that bordered the cornfields, and didn’t hurry.  The sun was still low when it reached the southern boundary, and there it was.

A woman kneeling on the ground mixing mud with her hands, not with a shovel, with her hands.  His arms were covered in mud up to his elbows, his hair was tied back with a rag, and he was working with such absolute concentration that he didn’t even hear the horse approaching.  Beside her, a girl of about 7 years old carried small stones in a red plastic bucket, carefully placing them in a row that already formed the base of what was clearly intended to be a wall.

And further back, sitting on a sack, a small child, no more than 4 years old, was crushing clods of mud with his open palms, serious, convinced that his contribution was fundamental. Hernán stopped the gray horse.  He didn’t speak immediately, he observed, because what he had before him was not an invasion of the kind he was familiar with.

It wasn’t a group of men who arrived at night, who hammered stakes, who brought forged papers and shady lawyers.  What I saw before me was a woman and two children, building a mud house on their land, in broad daylight, without hiding from anyone.  It was the girl who saw it.  First, he looked up, stared at her without any particular fear, and then he tugged on his mother’s sleeve.

Mom, there’s a man.  The woman raised her head.  His eyes were dark and direct.  There was no fear in them either.  Or if it was there, it was also buried beneath something else, perhaps determination or pure exhaustion that went unnoticed.  She stood up slowly, wiped her hands on her apron, although that didn’t help much, and looked him straight in the eye.

Good morning, she said.  Hernán took a moment to respond.  I had been talking to very few people for two years.  Silence had become a habit for him.  What are you doing here?  He finally asked.  His voice came out rougher than he intended.  Not from anger, from lack of use.  “Building,” the woman replied, as if it were the most obvious answer in the world.

In my homeland.  Yes, she said, “I know.” There was a silence. The boy continued squeezing mud, unconcerned with the conversation. The girl, on the other hand, looked at Hernán with that meticulous attention that children who have learned to read adults possess, to know if there is danger.

“What are their names?” Hernán asked. “Mariela. Mariela Cifuentes.” “And where did Mariela Cifuentes live before she moved onto foreign land?” Something crossed the woman’s face. Not shame. Something more like a very old pain that no longer throbbed sharply, but was still there. “In the depths of the village,” she said, “But we have nothing there anymore, and the father of these children.

” “There is no father,” she replied with a neutrality that locked that door. Hernández mounted. He didn’t know why he did it. It was easier to maintain distance from the horse, easier to command from afar. But something in him, something that had been dormant for months, stirred without asking permission, and his feet touched the ground before his mind had even finished making the decision.

He walked to the half-built wall.  He examined it. The stones were well placed for the work of a 7-year-old. The mud was of good consistency, mixed with dry straw. Whoever had prepared it knew what they were doing. “Do you know how to build?” he asked. “I’m learning,” Mariela said, “but I’m doing well. This won’t withstand the October rains.

I’ll be finished by October.” Hernán looked at her. She held his gaze without blinking. ” What right do you have to be here?” he asked. And this time there was no harshness in his voice. It was a genuine question. “No right,” she replied, “only necessity.” The girl approached. Then she stood beside her mother with the red bucket still in her hand and looked at Hernán with appraising eyes.

“You own this land,” Lía asked, her mother said in a warning tone. “Yes,” Hernán replied. “I am the owner.”  The girl took that seriously.  “And he’s going to kick us out?” Hernán opened his mouth, closed it, turned around, and looked toward the ranch, which could be seen in the distance among the trees, with its old roof and walls that he hadn’t repainted since Consuelo died, since everything in that house had stopped in time as if time itself had been ashamed to continue.

When he turned back, the little boy had stopped squishing mud and was looking at him too; his cheeks were full of dirt, and he had an expression of utterly carefree curiosity. Hernán felt something in his chest. He couldn’t name it. It had been a long time since he’d named anything he felt. “I still don’t know,” he said, and got back on the gray horse.

He left without another word. Rufino was waiting for him at the entrance to the ranch, leaning against the gate post, his arms crossed, with that expression of someone who has a lot to say and is waiting for the right moment. Benicio Rufino Palomares had been managing Hacienda Piedra Clara for 16 years. He had arrived with Don  Evaristo, Hernán’s father, worked as an accounts assistant.

And when Hernán inherited the property, Rufino already knew more about those lands than the heir himself. He was efficient, punctual, and loyal to the hacienda in a way that sometimes made it hard to distinguish whether it was loyalty to him or loyalty to the place. “Did you see her?” Rufino asked. “I saw her.

” And Hernández mounted, handed the reins to the groom, and walked toward the house without answering immediately. Rufino followed him. “Don Hernán, that woman has no right to be there. I can speak with the sub-prefect this afternoon. In two days, we’ll have her removed with a court order.” ” No,” Rufino stopped.

“What do you mean, no?” “No, Rufino.” Hernán climbed the steps of the porch and sat in the wooden chair where his father had sat before him, and his grandfather before him. ” Leave her alone, Don Hernán, with all due respect, that land isn’t just any land. You know the southern boundary has history. If you allow  Let someone move in there, Batman will open a door that will be hard to close. Hernán looked at him.

What a story. Rufino opened his mouth, closed it, and lowered his gaze slightly. Nothing worth stirring up now. Then don’t talk to me about doors I don’t know. Hernán got up, the woman is staying for now, went into the house, and closed the door. That night Hernán didn’t sleep well. It wasn’t the first time.

Since Consuelo died, two years and four months ago, sleep had become an uncomfortable territory for him. The bed was too big, the house too quiet, and his own head too noisy in the dark. But that night it wasn’t Consuelo that kept him awake. It was the image of that girl looking at him with the red bucket.

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