登陆注册
5223700000014

第14章 CHAPTER II MADARIAGA, THE CENTAUR(3)

The fame of his vast territories and his wealth in stock reached even to Buenos Aires. Every one knew of Madariaga by name, although very few had seen him. When he went to the Capital, he passed unnoticed because of his country aspect--the same leggings that he was used to wearing in the fields, his poncho wrapped around him like a muffler above which rose the aggressive points of a necktie, a tormenting ornament imposed by his daughters, who in vain arranged it with loving hands that he might look a little more respectable.

One day he entered the office of the richest merchant of the capital.

"Sir, I know that you need some young bulls for the European market, and I have come to sell you a few."

The man of affairs looked haughtily at the poor cowboy. He might explain his errand to one of the employees, he could not waste his time on such small matters. But the malicious grin on the rustic's face awoke his curiosity.

"And how many are you able to sell, my good man?"

"About thirty thousand, sir."

It was not necessary to hear more. The supercilious merchant sprang from his desk, and obsequiously offered him a seat.

"You can be no other than Don Madariaga."

"At the service of God and yourself, sir," he responded in the manner of a Spanish countryman.

That was the most glorious moment of his existence.

In the outer office of the Directors of the Bank, the clerks offered him a seat until the personage the other side of the door should deign to receive him. But scarcely was his name announced than that same director ran to admit him, and the employee was stupefied to hear the ranchman say, by way of greeting, "I have come to draw out three hundred thousand dollars. I have abundant pasturage, and I wish to buy a ranch or two in order to stock them."

His arbitrary and contradictory character weighed upon the inhabitants of his lands with both cruel and good-natured tyranny.

No vagabond ever passed by the ranch without being rudely assailed by its owner from the outset.

"Don't tell me any of your hard-luck stories, friend," he would yell as if he were going to beat him. "Under the shed is a skinned beast; cut and eat as much as you wish and so help yourself to continue your journey. . . . But no more of your yarns!"

And he would turn his back upon the tramp, after giving him a few dollars.

One day he became infuriated because a peon was nailing the wire fencing too deliberately on the posts. Everybody was robbing him!

The following day he spoke of a large sum of money that he would have to pay for having endorsed the note of an acquaintance, completely bankrupt. "Poor fellow! His luck is worse than mine!"

Upon finding in the road the skeleton of a recently killed sheep, he was beside himself with indignation. It was not because of the loss of the meat. "Hunger knows no law, and God has made meat for mankind to eat. But they might at least have left the skin!" . . .

And he would rage against such wickedness, always repeating, "Lack of religion and good habits!" The next time, the bandits stripped the flesh off of three cows, leaving the skins in full view, and the ranchman said, smiling, "That is the way I like people, honorable and doing no wrong."

His vigor as a tireless centaur had helped him powerfully in his task of populating his lands. He was capricious, despotic and with the same paternal instincts as his compatriots who, centuries before when conquering the new world, had clarified its native blood. Like the Castilian conquistadors, he had a fancy for copper-colored beauty with oblique eyes and straight hair. When Desnoyers saw him going off on some sudden pretext, putting his horse at full gallop toward a neighboring ranch, he would say to himself, smilingly, "He is going in search of a new peon who will help work his land fifteen years from now."

The personnel of the ranch often used to comment on the resemblance of certain youths laboring here the same as the others, galloping from the first streak of dawn over the fields, attending to the various duties of pasturing. The overseer, Celedonio, a half-breed thirty years old, generally detested for his hard and avaricious character, also bore a distant resemblance to the patron.

Almost every year, some woman from a great distance, dirty and bad-faced, presented herself at the ranch, leading by the hand a little mongrel with eyes like live coals. She would ask to speak with the proprietor alone, and upon being confronted with her, he usually recalled a trip made ten or twelve years before in order to buy a herd of cattle.

"You remember, Patron, that you passed the night on my ranch because the river had risen?"

The Patron did not remember anything about it. But a vague instinct warned him that the woman was probably telling the truth. "Well, what of it?"

"Patron, here he is. . . . It is better for him to grow to manhood by your side than in any other place."

And she presented him with the little hybrid. One more, and offered with such simplicity! . . . "Lack of religion and good habits!"

Then with sudden modesty, he doubted the woman's veracity. Why must it necessarily be his? . . . But his wavering was generally short-lived.

"If it's mine, put it with the others."

The mother went away tranquilly, seeing the youngster's future assured, because this man so lavish in violence was equally so in generosity. In time there would be a bit of land and a good flock of sheep for the urchin.

These adoptions at first aroused in Misia Petrona a little rebellion--the only ones of her life; but the centaur soon reduced her to terrified silence.

"And you dare to complain of me, you weak cow! . . . A woman who has only given me daughters. You ought to be ashamed of yourself."

The same hand that negligently extracted from his pocket a wad of bills rolled into a ball, giving them away capriciously without knowing just how much, also wore a lash hanging from the wrist. It was supposed to be for his horse, but it was used with equal facility when any of his peons incurred his wrath.

"I strike because I can," he would say to pacify himself.

同类推荐
  • 猫苑

    猫苑

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 三十代天师虚靖真君语录

    三十代天师虚靖真君语录

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 颜氏学记

    颜氏学记

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 经方实验录

    经方实验录

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 战守

    战守

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 随机系统嗨异界

    随机系统嗨异界

    这是一个拼人品的系统它能让你抽到游戏动漫的技能,也能让你抽到一个马桶但是相信我,它绝对能让主人公装一次又一次清丽脱俗的逼英雄联盟,守望先锋,龙之谷,火影忍者等等元素现已加入豪华套餐→_→游戏迷请入~
  • 旧年雪倾城

    旧年雪倾城

    袁曼和安然的再一次相遇是在五年后。再次遇到安然她更多的是惶恐,她不想让他看到自己的狼狈,于是便选择逃避,可是逃避带来的更多的是纠缠。再一次和小梨见面时她已经是安然的未婚妻了。爱人和好友同时背叛让她再一次感受到那种撕心裂肺,可是此时的身旁却没有了能安慰她的人。
  • 名门枭宠:江少的娇妻

    名门枭宠:江少的娇妻

    他,22岁在美国的华尔街名声大噪,28岁掌管了家族企业,32岁的他一手毁掉了他父亲创造的商业帝国,33岁的他亲手创立了属于自己的帝国,他逼得父亲“退位”,逼得继母“乞讨”,只因他从小看见父亲和他的的合伙人赵清源一起吞并母亲的家族企业,父亲和后母又逼死了自己的母亲,所以,他发誓,今生今世要让他们付出惨痛的代价,他就是江家集团的太子爷——江云天。她,赵清源的独生女,被视为江云天仇人的女儿,她便是一直寄人篱下的赵晚晴。他却始终不承认自己早已爱上了这个女孩,当他承认了自己已经爱上她时,晚晴毅然决然的离开了江家,江云天能否重新把晚晴追回来吗?他又要如何敞开心扉面对过去,面对她呢?"
  • 管理学常识一本通

    管理学常识一本通

    《管理学常识一本通》整合各正宗管理学读本为一体,《管理学常识一本通》通晓整个管理学。同时给理论知识配上案例故事,方便读者掌握理论知识的同时,在案例故事中得加深理解和记忆。易懂的语言,巧妙的故事构成了《管理学常识一本通》知识性、趣味性和哲理性于一身的管理学常识大集合,给您生活和工作添色彩!
  • 经七里滩

    经七里滩

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 红色禁卫军(二)

    红色禁卫军(二)

    “文化大革命”开始以后,一些原来不归中央办公厅管理的场所,由于中共中央的领导人经常莅临和使用,例如人民大会堂,从便于管理和警卫考虑,还是由中央办公厅接管比较合适。于是,接管这些场所的事宜,提上了日程。在人民大会堂交由中央办公厅管理后,1966年11月14日,中共中央办公厅主任汪东兴,召集中办的有关部门负责人开会,又具体部署了钓鱼台国宾馆的管理和警卫工作的交接。
  • 当骆驼祥子遇见那啥总裁

    当骆驼祥子遇见那啥总裁

    某现代宅男,因为怀着“大志”,穿越到民国初年,却无意中卷入一系列历史事件。在家国处于危难之际,他终于挺身而出……到底最后他会如何?我们拭目以待吧!故事,就从1922开始……【兴之所至,工余写作,更新蜗速,敬请原谅】
  • 80后,你为30岁准备好了吗

    80后,你为30岁准备好了吗

    据统计,80后在中国有超过2亿的人口。中国社会的转型,造就了80后的很多独特性。 80后,这曾经是一个多么新鲜、多么富有朝气的词语。随着时间碾压而来的尘烟,一切都呼啸而至,别再躲避了,这已经是无法避免的事实了——80后,欢迎你们进入三十的殿堂。
  • 同学修仙吗

    同学修仙吗

    9012年了,该修仙了。同学,修仙吗?包吃包住包分配哦。
  • 魔妃来袭:三流大小姐

    魔妃来袭:三流大小姐

    她是集万千宠爱于一身将军府上天才大小姐,一夕之间,身份被夺,修为被毁,沦落三流低等武者!八年后,她携带傲娇仙宠,逆天来袭,拳打渣爹恶姨,脚踩白莲花!强势夺回原来的一切!顺便拐带霸气傻王一枚!可是……一朝傻王变魔王!成了香饽饽?!管她狂蜂浪蝶,敢抢本小姐的男人,本小姐揍的你亲妈都不认识!