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Poso Wells Page 2


  If only people knew what’s hidden behind the image of a saint.

  Gonzalo Varas had engaged in a bit of distortion, or to put it another way, he had allowed himself certain liberties in the articles he wrote for the nation’s serious papers. Serious in the sense that no one dared to impugn anyone’s honor, much less that of a dead man. A man who, furthermore, had won the first round of the elections and, even after death, enjoyed political power and connections. But, for the popular daily of the country’s principal port, he had described the events that led to the death of eleven people and the disappearance of the twelfth in absolute detail:

  MEN WITHOUT EYES

  On the night of October 16, to the astonishment of the thousands gathered for a political rally held to celebrate the winning candidate’s victory in the first round of the elections, a series of gruesome events resulted in the death of eleven individuals in an unprecedented case of spontaneous combustion. The confusion that followed was rendered even more strange by the appearance of a group of three to five eyeless men who carried off the lone survivor of the electrical short-circuit. When the candidate took to the stage—after nine p.m., with a splendid full moon illuminating the night of our Pearl of the Pacific, also dubbed by the incomparable Daniel Santos the balmy Carribean’s farthest port—all those present onstage, the author of this article included, opened a circle to make room for him to, presumably, place himself in the center. The truth is that we did so, without any spoken agreement, because the candidate was sweating like a condemned man and the stench from his armpits could be discerned from some distance away. One could confidently claim that he smelled of death and that his perspiration was mixed with the stink of fear. What could the candidate have been afraid of? This we will never know. What we do know, because I could smell it and see it, is that the candidate began to wet himself in full public view while the organizers introduced him to the public and the dancers performed pirouettes that exposed their nubile, luscious legs. He did not do so like any ordinary man of the people, opening his fly and holding his organ while emptying his bladder; no, what he did was use his leg as a urinal and the stage as a drain—leaving his respect for the noble electorate in some doubt. But, in any case, he walked about the stage while he peed. And let me testify that he peed a lot. And continued sweating. The ensuing vapors caused me to retreat to the farthest corner of the stage, for which I should thank him, because otherwise I might not be here to write these lines. At this point, I must also explain that the candidate did not bring a generator with him, but rather stole the current from some lampposts located about fifteen meters from the stage, by means of two thick cables connected directly to the spotlights and the sixteen loudspeakers which would, in normal circumstances, have left us hypnotized and deaf.

  At a certain moment, the rally’s announcer went silent, and so did the music—think (because advertisement of commercial recordings is not permitted in this space) of a prime example of reggaeton, of the song most heard today on the airwaves, the one that ironically refers to a highly explosive product that is not diesel fuel—and the announcer approached the candidate, requiring him to interrupt his pilgrimage around the stage. Just for an instant, shall we say, but that was long enough for a puddle of urine to form at his feet. In that instant, there was a sudden loss of current, a drop in voltage. A circuit within the microphone being passed from announcer to candidate let loose a spark. Remember that the candidate was sweating copiously and that salt water is a superb conductor of electricity. It should also be clarified that the spectacle was especially dazzling because current taken from a streetlight is 220 volts, not 110, and because the electricity not only flowed through the drops of sweat on his hand but also rose up like a charmed cobra along the thread of urine running down his leg. According to the coroner’s report, the candidate was not just electrocuted but incinerated. When he collapsed, smoke rose from his body. According to the same report, he had a hole in his stomach. I would speculate that an electrical charge came snaking up from his penis to his other vital organs, causing them to burn to a crisp. What a spectacular departure! The rest of the event was less electrifying. The other members of his party had only a few seconds, as could be seen from the look of terror in their eyes, to realize that death awaited them too. Some tried to let go of each others’ hands, to save themselves from an end that would show solidarity, yes, but would otherwise be foolish. But the current was already whisking them off, each one passing it along to the next.

  At this point you must be asking, but what about the man who managed to save himself? This man—a chubby man with scarcely any neck, with the face of a frog and the arms of a child— had never joined hands with the others. He was behind a loudspeaker, not very far from me, holding a gold credit card near one of his nostrils. He did not even know what had occurred. When he turned around and saw his comrades, still holding hands, collapsed on the floor among bolts of electricity that snaked around the stage, he managed only to open his mouth and then to cover it with his childlike hand before a group of men, either with no eyes at all or with deeply sunken eyelids, took hold of him and carried him off before he could protest. How did I see this? Thanks to the light of the magnificent full moon shining down on the stage at that moment, only to, lamentably, disappear behind a cloud within an instant.

  That was all that was known. And, despite entire battalions of the national army that descended on Poso Wells, nothing more had been found. Not a trace of the missing man. As if he had never existed. Meanwhile, Varas asked questions, walked the streets, and although he did not find anything to lead him to the politician, he continued to accumulate information for his other story, the one about the missing women. He kept finding someone who knew someone who had lost a daughter or a niece. The women vanished like smoke, and no one with the power to do anything seemed to care. Varas decided that his best bet was to find someplace in the barrio to stay, so as not to miss any detail. In his wanderings he met a man named Jaime Montenegro who proved welcoming. Montenegro was an elderly resident with a friendly face, a short, small man who lived alone and had an extra room that he offered to rent to Varas when the reporter told him what he was doing. So he moved in. In the evening, when Varas returned because it was no longer advisable to be walking the dirt streets of Wells, his host would set out two chairs at the entrance to the house and they would talk till nightfall. In these conversations, Jaime told Varas he could no longer even remember when he’d first come to this part of the city, but he did remember that he’d had no neighbors at the time. There’d been no one around but himself and his dog. As a curious note, he remembered a journalist who had showed up around that time to ask strange questions about blind men who came from a valley in the sierra. Jaime had been barely twenty, and so his memory of this was vague. That was the first time, though, that he heard the name of Wells, from the mouth of this same journalist, and he also remembered vaguely that something or other had happened which led to the barrio taking on that name, Poso Wells—or Wells’ Sediment in less poetic terms. The “Cooperative” came later, when a savings bank opened and the name appeared on a sign. Later, at the time of the squatters’ invasions amidst a clamor for land, a lawyer saw that sign, which was how the name became known outside the neighborhood. Jaime also told Varas that at this time—maybe a decade after his arrival—the first of the women disappeared without leaving a trace. He had lost all track of how many disappearances had occurred since. Everything Montenegro told Varas was invaluable, though it was also clear the old man’s memory was a minefield. Varas felt his way through that territory little by little, seeking a path along which Jaime could move forward without his memories exploding in mid-sentence.

  “What did that newspaperman want to know?”

  “The one from years ago, or the one who showed up here the day before yesterday?”

  “The one from when you had just recently come to Wells.”

  “I told you, he wanted to know if I’d seen a bunch of blind men around he
re anywhere.”

  “And had you?”

  “No. Really, I hadn’t.”

  “What was the newspaperman’s name?”

  “He didn’t tell me and I didn’t ask, but he said a lot of words in another language, and he had a strange accent too. And, like I told you, he was the first one to mention this Wells.”

  “Who was he?”

  “The newspaperman?”

  “No, the other guy, Wells.”

  “A historian, I think. He’d written I-don’t-know-what about Ecuador, something that the newspaperman was interested in.”

  Since Varas wasn’t making much progress in the rest of his investigations, he decided to follow the trail of Wells. In the Rolando library, in the center of Guayaquil, he found what he was looking for. It was a book of travel writings by an Englishman who had been in Ecuador toward the end of the nineteenth century. They were impressions, rich in detail, mostly about the central valley of the Andes. They mentioned Guayaquil only as the port where the author landed, but they did discuss a village of blind men and a mysterious encounter with them. Varas made a copy of this chronicle and continued to search for any trace of the other writer, presumably British as well, in papers from the 1950s, when Montenegro had arrived. After three fruitless days in the library, he found an article in the daily El Telégrafo signed by someone called Binns. It was neither a news article nor an opinion column, exactly, but more of a collection of fragmentary facts that gave the impression of having been written in the hope that some reader would come forward with more information, which the last paragraph of the article, in fact, openly requested. In the meantime, what Binns said began to give shape to the few things that Varas knew. As if Binns had written the article expressly for him to read fifty years later.

  THE END OF A CIVILIZATION?

  The first conjectures about the population of the Valley of the Fallen date from the sixteenth century and the alliances that certain Andean potentates sought with the Spaniards, especially the chief called Sancho Hacho, from Latacunga. In spite of his attempts to avail himself of an alliance with the invaders, they came to exercise military control over most of that territory between 1573 and 1597. However, some indigenous groups decided to withdraw to areas still unbeknownst to the new conquerors, areas that were extremely difficult to reach. In this regard, all credit is due to the honorable Mr. Wells, who describes so well the sufferings to be endured by anyone daring to venture into the fertile lands of the Valley of the Fallen. If the dangers of access were many, they were well repaid by the fecundity of its soil. Wells’s writing has a singular beauty and there would be little merit in trying to emulate it, so I will instead transcribe, for the benefit of the reader, the entire passage in question: “The valley, he said, had in it all that the heart of man could desire—sweet water, pasture, a good climate, slopes of rich brown soil with tangles of a shrub that bore an excellent fruit, and on one side great hanging forests of pine that held the avalanches high. Far overhead, on three sides, vast cliffs of grey-green rock were capped by cliffs of ice; but the glacier stream came not to them, but flowed away by the farther slopes, and only now and then huge ice masses fell on the valley side. In this valley it neither rained nor snowed, but the abundant springs gave a rich green pasture, that irrigation would spread over all the valley space.”

  The next traces we find, closer to us in time than the era of Sancho Hacho, date from the eighteenth century and are related to the indigenous uprisings of San Miguel de Molleambato in 1766, provoked by the ruinous taxes imposed by the Marqués of Miraflores; and of San Phelipe in 1777, provoked by the Corregidor of Latacunga’s insistence on undertaking a census of the natives. For centuries, it appears, the descendants of the men and women who had made their way along unknown paths to this valley in the shadow of the Cotopaxi volcano had lived a peaceful and isolated life, until one or the other of those eighteenth-century events led fifteen Spanish officers to flee from the fury of Indian rebels pursuing them with spears and shovels—and they fell into what may have been this same abyss. I found that information in a chronicle hidden within the pages of an agricultural manual that came by a circuitous path into the municipal archives of the city of Riobamba, though the report does not make clear whether this occurred before or after the volcano’s minor eruption of 1766 or its major one in 1768. What happened over the next hundred years is summarized in a few brief lines by Wells: “A strange disease had come upon them and had made all the children born to them there—and, indeed, several older children also—blind. And amidst the little population of that now isolated and forgotten valley the disease ran its course. The old became groping, the young saw but dimly, and the children that were born to them never saw at all.” It is well known, from contemporary chronicles, that eruptions of the eighteenth century brought temporary blindness to nearby inhabitants and made it impossible, as far away as Quito, to see one’s hand in front of one’s face. Could this be cause of the initial blindness later prolonged by the genetic deterioration of the Valley’s inbred population? Let us assume that Wells found the village in 1880. As I write these words in 1950, based on my recent research, I think that sometime after his visit the last descendants of that ancient pseudo-civilization based on what he called “the rudiments of a lost philosophy, the tradition of the greater world they came from, converted into something mythical and uncertain” must have finally left their valley for fear of another eruption that would sweep them from the earth, or perhaps because of other fears still unknown, and made their way to Guayaquil. I write these notes after having spent some weeks in that major port, pursuing certain clues to the south of the city on the banks of the salt-water estuary. Any information about this group of human beings that could be useful to men engaged in scientific endeavor would be welcome. My contact information will remain in the possession of the editors of this distinguished newspaper, the paragon of the national press. —Niall Binns

  That was all. Varas continued searching in the papers of the time, but there was no response to this article-letter, nor any sequel to it. Binns disappeared, but that did not close the door that his article on the blind men had opened. For Varas, it was impossible to think that the figures who carried off the man on the stage were unrelated to those mentioned in the writings of Binns and Wells. But that left a lot of holes to fill. What happened between 1880 and 1950? What happened between then and 2006?

  III

  The Hole

  Two weeks had passed.

  “Where are you taking me? Who are you? What are you doing? Stop that!” The chubby man tried to get loose, waving his arms and kicking at the air, but it was no use.

  He was surrounded by a group forming a tight circle around him. Two of them, inside the circle, had him by the armpits. They were all crowding him so closely that he barely had room to breathe. The little air there was reeked with a sickening odor of decomposition, rotting soil, worms. At some point he lost consciousness, and when he awoke he was sorry to have done so. He was being carried through a tunnel in the near-dark. The tunnel was so narrow that his captors had to go single file; they had him stretched out flat and were carrying him low down, near the floor, but when they noticed he had awoken they pushed at him until he understood he was supposed to stand and walk.

  “Where are you taking me? What is this? I’m claustrophobic. Let me out of here!” His voice had gone reedy and weak. Earlier, when he’d tried to cry out, before he fainted, the walls had closed in on him so that his shouts echoed into what felt like infinity. He felt a sense of panic and a strong desire for a snort of cocaine to help him handle what was happening to him without losing control. These sons of bitches were going to give him a heart attack. He felt the blood pounding in his ears.

  “Speak! Say something! What do you want from me? How much?” His voice quavered on the edge of hysteria.

  The only answer was the sound of feet shuffling through a tunnel of dirt and silence.

  The residents of Poso Wells Cooperative were
sick of soldiers. All those uniforms were making life impossible. Search after search, house after house, and every day they razed at least one. They closed four shops that served as unlicensed bars. They confiscated cans of black powder from a clandestine fireworks factory and arrested more than fifteen men for lack of papers and three women for leaving their small children locked in their shacks during the day while they went out to work. The people couldn’t bear any more. How could the soldiers demand papers in good order when there wasn’t even water to drink? Give them just that, just water, and they’d be first in line to play by the rules! A meeting was called in the plaza where the kidnapped man had disappeared.

  “We have to do something right now, or they’ll haul us all to jail,” said a solidly built man of medium height, hoarse and sweating heavily.

  “We need to take advantage of the fact that we’re all over the TV, demand deeds to our land, and get ourselves legalized once and for all,” a woman answered him.