XXXVI. WHAT PEOPLE SAY AND THINK.

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CHAPTER XXXVI

WHAT PEOPLE SAY AND THINK.

Day dawned at last for the terrorized people. The streets in which

the cuartel and the tribunal were situated were still deserted and

solitary. The houses showed no signs of life. However, a shutter was

opened with a creaking noise and an infant head stuck out and looked

in all directions.... Slap!... A sound announces hard contact between

a strip of leather and a human body. The child made a grimace, closed

its eyes and disappeared. The shutter was closed again.

The example had been set. Without any doubt the opening and closing of

the shutter has been heard, for another window was opened very slowly

and cautiously and a wrinkled and toothless old woman thrust out her

head. She was called Sister Ruté. She looked about, knit her brows,

spit noisily and then crossed herself. In the house opposite, a little

window was timidly opened and her friend, Sister Rufa appeared. They

looked at each other for a moment, smiled, made some signals, and

again crossed themselves.

"Jesús! It was like a thanksgiving mass," said Sister Rufa.

"Since the time that Bálat sacked the town I have never seen a night

like it," replied Sister Puté.

"What a lot of shots! They say that it was old Pablo's gang."

"Tulisanes? It couldn't be. They say that it was the cuaderilleros

against the Civil Guards. For this reason, they have arrested Don

Filipo."

"Sanctus Deus! They say that there are no less than fourteen killed."

Other windows were opened and different faces appeared, exchanging

salutations and commenting on the affair.

In the light of the day--which promised to be a splendid one--could

be seen in the distance, like ash-colored shadows, soldiers hurrying

about in confusion.

"There goes another corpse!" said some one from one of the windows.

"One? I see two."

"And so do I. But do you know what it was?" asked a man with a

crafty face.

"Certainly. The cuaderilleros."

"No, Señor. An uprising at the cuartel."

"What uprising? The curate against the alferez?"

"No, nothing of the sort," said he who had asked the question. "The

Chinese have risen in revolt."

And he closed his window again.

"The Chinese!" repeated all, with the greatest astonishment.

In a quarter of an hour other versions of the affair were in

circulation. Ibarra, with his servants, it was said, had tried to

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