The Discreet Hero

The Discreet Hero by Mario Vargas Llosa Page B

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Authors: Mario Vargas Llosa
They’d keep after him, and then it would suddenly end in tragedy. Still, these gloomy thoughts didn’t make him yield an inch in his resolve not to give in to their threats or attacks.
    What depressed him most was the conversation with Colorado Vignolo, his compadre, colleague, and competitor, who came looking for him one morning at Narihualá Transport, where Felícito had set up an improvised office—a board on two oil barrels—in a corner of the garage. From there he could see the shambles of scorched corrugated iron, walls, and furniture the fire had turned his old office into. The flames had even destroyed part of the roof. Through the open space a piece of high, blue sky was visible. Just as well it rarely rained in Piura, except in El Niño years. Colorado Vignolo was very troubled.
    “You shouldn’t have done this, compadre,” he said as he embraced him and showed him a clipping from El Tiempo . “How could you risk your life like this? You’re always so calm about everything, Felícito. What got into you this time? What are friends for, hey waddya think? If you’d consulted me, I wouldn’t have let you do anything so dumb.”
    “That’s why I didn’t consult you, compadre. I figured you’d tell me not to place the notice.” Felícito pointed at the ruins of his old office. “I had to respond somehow to the people who did this to me.”
    They went to have coffee in a dive that had recently opened at the corner of Plaza Merino and Calle Tacna, next to a Chinese restaurant. It was dark, and numerous flies circled in the gloom. From there you could see the dusty almond trees in the little square and the weathered façade of the Church of the Virgen del Carmen. There were no other customers, and they could talk openly.
    “It’s never happened to you, compadre?” Felícito asked. “You never had one of those letters, demanding money?”
    He was surprised to see that Colorado Vignolo had a strange expression on his face; he seemed to be in a daze and for a moment didn’t know how to answer. There was a guilty gleam in his hooded eyes; he blinked incessantly and avoided looking at his friend.
    “Compadre, don’t tell me you…” Felícito stammered, squeezing his friend’s arm.
    “I’m no hero and don’t want to be one,” Colorado Vignolo replied in a quiet voice. “So yes, I am telling you. I pay them a small amount every month. And though I can’t prove it, I can tell you that all or almost all the transport companies in Piura make those payments too. It’s what you should have done instead of being reckless and confronting them. We all thought you were paying too, Felícito. What a foolish thing you’ve done. I can’t understand it and none of our colleagues can either. Have you lost your mind? My friend, you don’t get into fights you can’t win.”
    “It’s hard to believe you’d bend over for those sons of bitches,” Felícito said sadly. “I swear I can’t wrap my mind around it. You always seemed like such a tough guy.”
    “It’s not much, a small sum that’s included in general expenses.” Colorado shrugged, embarrassed, not knowing what to do with his hands, moving them as if they were in the way. “It’s not worth risking your life over something so minor, Felícito. That five hundred they asked for would’ve been cut in half if you’d just been willing to negotiate with them, I can tell you that. Don’t you see what they’ve done to your business? And on top of that, you put that notice in El Tiempo . You’re risking your life and your family’s life. And even poor Mabel’s, don’t you realize that? You won’t ever be able to stand up to them, as sure as my name’s Vignolo. The earth is round, not square. Accept it and don’t try to straighten out the crooked world we live in. The gang’s very powerful, it’s infiltrated everywhere, beginning with the government and the judges. You’re really naïve to trust the police. It wouldn’t surprise me if

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