Pimento and Batiste pa.s.sed the railing, and the people pressed up even closer against the bar.
Here were many of those who lived near the ancient land of Barret.
This trial was interesting. The hated new-comer had been denounced by Pimento, who was the "_atandador_"[G] of that district.
The bully, by mixing up in elections, and strutting about like a fighting c.o.c.k all over the neighbourhood, had won this office which gave him a certain air of authority and strengthened his prestige among the neighbours, who made much of him and treated him on irrigation days.
Batiste was amazed at this unjust denunciation. His pallor was that of indignation. He gazed with eyes full of fury at all the familiar mocking faces, which were pressing against the rail, and at his enemy Pimento, who was strutting about proudly, like a man accustomed to appearing before the tribunal, and to whom a small part of its unquestionable authority belonged.
"Speak," said the eldest of the judges, putting one foot forward, for according to a century-old custom, the tribunal, instead of using the hands, signalled with the white sandal to him who should speak.
Pimento poured forth his accusation. This man who was beside him, perhaps because he was new in the _huerta_, seemed to think that the apportionment of the water was a trifling matter, and that he could suit his own blessed will.
He, Pimento, the _atandador_, who represented the authority of the ca.n.a.ls in his district, had set for Batiste the hour for watering his wheat. It was two o"clock in the morning. But doubtless the senor, not wishing to arise at that hour, had let his turn go, and at five, when the water was intended for others, he had raised the flood-gate without permission from anybody (the _first_ offence), and attempted to water his fields, resolving to oppose, by main force, the orders of the _atandador_, which const.i.tuted the _third_ and last offence.
The thrice-guilty delinquent, turning all the colours of the rainbow, and indignant at the words of Pimento, was not able to restrain himself.
"You lie, and lie doubly!"
The tribunal became indignant at the heat and the lack of respect with which this man was protesting.
If he did not keep silent he would be fined.
But what was a fine for the concentrated wrath of a peaceful man! He kept on protesting against the injustice of men, against the tribunal which had, as its servants, such rogues and liars as Pimento.
The tribunal was stirred up; the seven judges became excited.
Four _sous_ for a fine!
Batiste, realizing his situation, suddenly grew silent, terrified at having incurred a fine, while laughter came from the crowd and howls of joy from his enemies.
He remained motionless, with bowed head, and his eyes dimmed with tears of rage, while his brutal enemy finished formulating his denunciation.
"Speak," the tribunal said to him. But little sympathy was noted in the looks of the judges for this disturber, who had come to trouble the solemnity of their deliberations with his protests.
Batiste, trembling with rage, stammered, not knowing how to begin his defence because of the very fact that it seemed to him perfectly just.
The court had been misled; Pimento was a liar and furthermore his declared enemy. He had told him that his time for irrigation came at five, he remembered it very well, and was now affirming that it was two; just to make him incur a fine, to destroy the wheat upon which the life of his family depended.... Did the tribunal value the word of an honest man? Then this was the truth, although he was not able to present witnesses. It seemed impossible that the honourable syndics, all good people, should trust a rascal like Pimento!
The white sandal of the president struck the square tile of the sidewalk, as if to avert the storm of protests and the lack of respect which he saw from afar.
"Be silent."
And Batiste was silent, while the seven-headed monster, folding itself up again on the sofa of damask, was whispering, preparing the sentence.
"The tribunal decrees ..." said the eldest judge, and there was absolute silence.
All the people around the roped s.p.a.ce showed a certain anxiety in their eyes, as if they were the sentenced. They were hanging on the lips of the eldest judge.
"Batiste Borrull shall pay two pounds for a penalty, and four _sous_ for a fine."
A murmur of satisfaction arose and spread, and one old woman even began to clap her hands, shouting "Hurrah! hurrah!" amid the loud laughter of the people.
Batiste went out blindly from the tribunal, with his head lowered as though he were about to fight, and Pimento prudently stayed behind.
If the people had not parted, opening the way, for him, it is certain that he would have struck out with his powerful fists, and given the hostile rabble a beating on the spot.
He departed. He went to the house of his masters to tell them of what had happened, of the ill will of this people, pledged to embitter his existence for him; and an hour later, already more composed by the kind words of the _senores_, he set forth on the road toward his home.
Insufferable torment! Marching close to their carts loaded with manure or mounted on their donkeys above the empty hampers, he kept meeting on the low road of Alboraya many of those who had been present at the trial.
They were hostile people, neighbours whom he never greeted.
When he pa.s.sed beside them, they remained silent, and made an effort to keep their gravity, although a malicious joy glowed in their eyes; but as soon as he had gone by, they burst into insolent laughter behind his back, and he even heard the voice of a lad who shouted, mimicking the grave tone of the president:
"Four _sous_ for a fine!"
In the distance he saw, in the doorway of the tavern of Copa, his enemy Pimento, with an earthen jug in hand, in the midst of a circle of friends, gesticulating and laughing as if he were imitating the protests and complaints of the one denounced. His sentence was the theme of rejoicing for the _huerta_: all were laughing.
G.o.d! Now he, a man of peace and a kind father, understood why it is that men kill.
His powerful arms trembled, and he felt a cruel itching in the hands. He slackened his pace on approaching the house of Copa; he wanted to see whether they would mock him to his face.
He even thought, a strange novelty, of entering for the first time to drink a gla.s.s of wine face to face with his enemies; but the two pound fine lay heavy on his heart and he repented of his generosity. This was a conspiracy against the footwear of his sons; it would take all the little pile of farthings h.o.a.rded together by Teresa to buy new sandals for the little ones.
As he pa.s.sed the front of the tavern, Pimento hid with the excuse of filling the jug, and his friends pretended not to see Batiste.
His aspect of a man ready for anything inspired respect in his neighbours.
But this triumph filled him with sadness. How hateful the people were to him! The entire _vega_ arose before him, scowling and threatening at all hours. This was not living. Even in the daytime, he avoided coming out of his fields, shunning all contact with his neighbours.
He did not fear them, but like a prudent man, avoided disputes.
At night, he slept restlessly, and many times, at the slightest barking of the dogs, he leaped out of bed, rushed from the house, shotgun in hand, and even believed on more than one occasion that he saw black forms which fled among the adjoining paths.
He feared for his harvest, for the wheat which was the hope of the family and whose growth was followed in silence but with envious glances from the other farm-houses.
He knew of the threats of Pimento, who supported by all the _huerta_, swore that this wheat should not be cut by him who had sowed it, and Batiste almost forgot his sons in thinking about his fields, of the series of green waves which grew and grew under the rays of the sun and which must turn into golden piles of ripe wheat.
The silent and concentrated hatred followed him out upon the road. The women drew away, with curling lips, and did not deign to salute him, as is the custom in the _huerta_; the men who were working in the fields adjoining the road, called to each other with insolent expressions which were directed indirectly at Batiste; and the little children shouted from a distance, "Thug! Jew!" without adding more to such insults, as if they alone were applicable to the enemy of the _huerta_.
Ah! If he had not had the fists of a giant, those enormous shoulders and that expression of a man who has few friends, how soon the entire _vega_ would have settled with him! Each one hoping that the other would be the first to dare, they contented themselves with insulting him from a distance.
Batiste, in the midst of the sadness which this solitude inspired in him, experienced one slight satisfaction. Already close to the farm-house, when he heard the barkings of the dog who had scented his approach, he saw a boy, an overgrown youth, seated on a sloping bank with the sickle between his legs, and holding some piles of cut brushwood at his side, who stood up to greet him.
"Good day, Senor Batiste!"
And the salutation, the trembling voice of a timid boy with which he spoke to him, impressed him pleasantly.