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I was trapped by cave-ins every few days and only through the luck of the draw was able to dig my way out. Many were not so lucky. The mestizo who'd tried to educate me in the ways of the mines was buried alive the first week.
After blasting, we returned to the mine face with picks, shovels, and double-headed hammers to break up the rock and dirt.
The work was so excruciatingly arduous, we were fed not only beans and tortillas, but on alternate nights, meat. Consequently, after initial bouts of pain, dizziness, and the bite of the lash, my stamina improved. Any caballero who saw the muscles harden on my hands, arms, and back would instantly know I was no gentleman.
The mine owners used the de rato, or shortest route, method of mining. An ore vein was found and a tunnel began that followed the vein-twisting, turning, up the mountain, suddenly down it. Wherever the silver went, we went.
When I entered the mine, it was predawn and dark. And the sun was down when I came out. I no longer knew from personal experience whether the sun still warmed the earth or eternal night had fallen.
My world became one of darkness and drudgery. I was often too tired to even think and that helped heal the horror in my brain, forged by the fiery holocaust that had consumed Don Julio and his family.
Once I learned to deal with the arduous cycle of work, eating, sleep, and intermittent floggings, I began to think about breaking out. I knew escape could mean my death, but that was of no consequence. My greatest fear was dying anonymously in a cave-in, buried eternally under a mountain of rock-and never avenging Don Julio.
Escape would not be easy. The harsh physical conditions were more than matched by the brutal vigilance of the guards. Nonetheless, I gradually saw a way. Once, while waiting in an abandoned tunnel for the blasting to finish, I noticed a slender thread of light slanting through a crack about the thickness of a fingernail.
How did light penetrate a tunnel that was hundreds of feet beneath the earth's surface?
Gonzolo saw me staring at the light and laughed. "Do you think it's magic, marrano?"
"I don't know what it is," I confessed.
"It's coming through the mountainside. Crawl through that crack for ten or twelve feet, and you'll be standing above a river. Tell you what. Make it through that crack, and I'll let you leave this mine."
He laughed long and hard at his witless jest.
Someday I will not only walk out, I will strangle you with your whip, I promised myself.
But that certain slant of light stayed with me. Maybe it was Don Julio's training. He had taught me to question physical phenomena, and every question I asked myself about that stream of light produced the same answer: Beyond that wall of rock stood freedom.
All I had to do was work my way through the crack.
Obviously, hammering through a dozen feet of stone was not an option. But I did have something that would widen that crack in a heartbeat, and as a lifer I knew how to use it: black powder.
The crack already existed. I'd have to widen it by cramming enough powder in. After blowing that mountainside to kingdom come, I'd have to work my way out through all that rock... a.s.suming the mountain did not fall upon my head...
Stealing the black powder would be difficult. The powder was stored in a windowless adobe hut with a locked iron door. As for the powder we used, it was brought in in small quant.i.ties and heavily guarded.
But when I packed the charges into the mine face, I was alone with it. If before each blasting, I could steal a pinch of the powder, secret it on my body, and hide it later, the small thefts would add up.
If I was caught, there would be h.e.l.l to pay.
If I didn't try, I would die in the mine.
NINETY-NINE.
Over a period of months I collected and hid the powder a thimbleful at a time near the crack in the abandoned tunnel. With a little of my wet urine, I created cakes out of it. After the cakes dried I broke them up and crushed them into what Don Julio called "maize" powder because each chunk was about the size of a kernel of maize.
With each surrept.i.tious trip to the abandoned tunnel, I packed some black powder into the crack.
Stealing the powder, sneaking brief moments in the tunnel, packing the crack, the beatings, the cave-ins, sheer physical exhaustion were all taking a toll on me. By the time I was ready to make my move, I was more than just frantic, I was now deranged by the sheer horror and impossibility of what I was doing.
Furthermore, Gonzolo was after me. In order to pull all this off, I was increasingly late for work, and though once at the mine face I was among the hardest of workers, lateness was something Gonzolo would not tolerate.
That last afternoon when I arrived late at the mine face he struck me across the head with the b.u.t.tstock of his quirt so hard my ears rung, then said, "Tonight, when I finish with you at the flogging post, marrano, you'll never be late to the mine face again. And you'll remember the Inquisition as angels of mercy. a.s.suming, that is, you survive what I give you."
So that was that; it was today or never.
For the rest of the shift, he would not let me out of his sight. When I carried back my burden baskets of ore, when I went to get black powder, tools, anything, everything, he was on me like a shadow. And when it was time for the shifts to change, he walked me back personally, his right hand locked on my elbow.
We were just pa.s.sing the abandoned tunnel, when I turned to him and stopped. "I just want to ask you one favor," I said, in my most contrite voice, my eyes downcast.
I needed to make sure we were alone. Gonzolo was always the last man to leave the tunnels, and he automatically looked around for stragglers. The last men rounded the bend in the tunnel ahead, and we were alone.
"You have the right to ask nothing, marrano!" he hissed, and swung the whipstock at me again.
Mateo's fencing lessons at last bore fruit. I parried the blow with my double-headed mine hammer, then smashed him in the nose with its iron top. Grabbing him by the throat, I dragged him into the abandoned tunnel and slammed him into the wall.
"Die, you son of a wh.o.r.e, die!" I hissed in his face.
I backhanded the hammer into his left temple, killing him instantly-a death far more merciful than any he had dispensed.
Now I had two choices: blow this mountain to kingdom come or be tortured to death by an army of mine guards.
I hurriedly packed the rest of the hidden black powder into the crack and inserted the fuse. Down tunnel was the fire stove where we lit the brands we used to light the powder. I hurried down tunnel. I had to get to it before the next shift reached the shaft.
At the stove I took a brand-a small shank of wood soaked in pitch at the tip-from the brand box and lit it.
A guard shouted, "You, prisoner, what are you doing here? Where's Gonzolo?"
Another guard's voice said. "Why aren't you with the rest of your shift?"
I raced back to the abandoned shaft as fast as I knew how.
I beat them to the shaft and lit a fuse. I had no idea how effective it would be. It was little more than twine soaked in urine and black powder. I had no idea how fast it burned. It might burn in five seconds. It might not burn at all. I hadn't had time to test it.
Cupping the blazing brand, I lit the fuse as the two guards charged into the tunnel.
Both were armed with short swords, and again Mateo's instructions saved my life. When the first guard-a short, skinny africano with close-cropped hair and no front teeth-thrust at my throat, I slipped into my fencing-dancing posture and ducked. His momentum carried him into me, throwing him off balance and, at the same time, blocking any a.s.sault the other guard might be planning.
I drove my fist into his Adam's apple-while my heavy hammer pulverized his pelvis. He screamed and went limp in my arms.
Using his body as a shield I dodged his partner's sword blows while I groped for the short sword his partner had dropped on the tunnel floor. At last I had it in my hand. Letting the guard fall groaning, I faced the other guard, sword in one hand, hammer in the other.
Mateo had taught me that when fighting with rapier and dagger, the only practical use for the dagger was as a stabbing weapon. In other words, I was to occupy my opponent with my rapier, then kill him with my knife.
Well, this short sword wasn't a rapier and my hammer wasn't a dagger, but the strategy still seemed sound. Especially when combined with Mateo's other piece of irrefutable wisdom: Always stay on the attack.