He follows the path to Baú Rock without bothering to close the door, arms folded over his chest, listening carefully. He heads down to the beach promenade and is walking in front of the brightly lit, empty restaurants when he hears the barking again, frenetic and incessant. He crosses the street, ignoring an oncoming car, which flashes its headlights and honks twice. The barking is coming from a small bar with outside tables that is famous in summer for its caipirinhas made with bergamot leaves and a dash of curaçao and that opens only occasionally in the off-season, when it is frequented by locals. There are two barmen and another three men sitting at a small wooden table on the sidewalk. One of the barmen has served him on two or three occasions, a middle-aged man with an accent from the Brazil-Uruguay border, a mustache, graying side whiskers and goatee, skin wrinkled from the sun, and a body hypertrophied from decades of weightlifting. A blender is roaring away at top speed, Sublime is playing at a low volume somewhere behind the counter, and someone is smoking marijuana. No one greets him, but they all stop what they are doing for a moment, emphasizing the hostility that has just filled the air. One of the men leaning against the counter turns to face the street and starts drumming heavily on the slats of varnished wood on the facade of the bar.
Beta is barking loudly and incessantly, but it takes him a while to locate her in the driveway beside the bar behind a low wooden gate. She is tied by the neck with a red rag or item of clothing to the pipe of an outdoor faucet. Her protuberant ribs and cloudy eyes explain why she hasn’t been able to pull the pipe away. When she smells him nearby and finally sees him, her barks grow louder, more broken and sharper, like howls. The improvised cloth collar is strangling her.
He climbs over the gate, kneels next to her, and focuses all his attention on undoing the knot in the cloth, without wasting time trying to pat or calm her. She stops barking but keeps trying to raise her front paws and lick his face. The gate opens with a creak.
Leave the dog alone, kid.
The knot is as hard as cement.
I said leave her alone .
A kick in the ribs throws him against the wall between the driveway and a closed shopping arcade. Beta starts barking wildly again. He tries to get up but gets another kick in the stomach, just above his inflamed cut. This time he cries out in pain.
Who do you think you are, coming in like this and taking my dog, you piece of shit?
He starts to get up again, expecting the next blow, but this time his attacker decides to watch the spectacle of the man slowly picking himself up off the ground. He is a local, unshaven, with an animallike ignorance in his eyes. His blond surfer’s hair is poking out from under his red and white baseball cap and covers his neck and ears. He is tall and fills his baggy jacket and pants well. A hard man to take down.
Do we know each other?
Are you retarded?
I’m serious, I forget people.
The other men in the bar come over, forming an attentive audience on the sidewalk. One of them opens the gate and enters. The mustached barman hasn’t bothered to come out from behind the counter and can’t see anything. Beta snarls. The local kicks her and then immobilizes her with the makeshift collar.
’Course, we know each other, asshole. And if you don’t get out of here right now, you won’t forget me again, believe me.
The dog’s mine, and you know it.
I don’t know anything about that. I found her wandering along without a collar on the edge of the beach.
You’re the dickhead who was after Dália, aren’t you?
The local gives a little snort of amazement and takes a step forward, letting go of Beta.
What was that?
You’ve got a shark tattoo or something like that on your leg, haven’t you? I recognized you by your girly voice.
Jesus, this guy’s really asking for it.
He glances around and sees faces hungry for violence. Beta is sitting between him and the local, tired and confused, hungry and strangled, oblivious to the nature of the dispute. The animal his father loved more than anything. On his left, in the distance, a delicate veil of daylight glimmers on the horizon over the ocean. More or less here, on this same stretch of beach, his grandfather sank into the night sea and never returned, after rising up from a pool of blood as a whole town looked on, riddled with a hundred stab wounds, the living-dead going home. Right there where the waves are now breaking, grinning white smiles in the darkness. In the icy-cold water that helped Beta walk again. Beta, the old dog that everyone had given up on. Maybe that was what his father had feared. Not dying easily. Not dying ever.
The dog’s mine, and everyone here knows it. You’ve all seen me with her ever since I arrived. I’m taking her back, and I’ll be off now.
He bends over to start undoing the knot and receives a kick in the side of the face. There is a crack, and he feels tooth fragments on his tongue. Beta barks desperately. He and his attacker quickly end up on the sidewalk, and the group of locals starts in on him, from all sides. He manages to land a couple of punches, but he can no longer see a thing. Someone grabs him by the hair. His head is smashed a single time against the hood of a car, and blood stops up his nose and fills his mouth. A flying kick in the back brings him down in the middle of the road. He pulls his knees toward his chest as they continue to attack him, unable to react now. He hears Beta barking until it is over.
A car stops in the middle of the street, and its headlights reveal the silhouettes of those who have been watching from a safe distance. More and more people arrive. He manages to sit on the curb and realizes that he has been kicked right across the street to the beach promenade. He keeps his mouth closed and is afraid to open it, as if something vital might leak out.
Get him out of here, someone says.
Take him down to the sand.
Several hands pick him up by the arms and legs. He is carried for a time and then gently placed on the cold, hard sand, as if they now want to be careful not to hurt him. He lies there, his breathing heavy and bubbling with blood.
Sit him up.
Someone helps him sit, and he wavers like a gymnast making a concerted effort to keep his balance.
Can you make it home?
I need to get my dog.
Go home.
They leave, and his sight slowly returns. He is sitting facing the sea with the wall of the promenade at his back. Two men come down the nearest set of steps and approach him.
How are you?
Need some help?
He needs to go to a hospital.
Do you want to go to a hospital?
Where do you live?
He’s having trouble talking.
I’m going to call the police.
Stay here with him.
One of the men crouches down next to him and asks him the occasional question, but he isn’t listening. All he can hear is Beta’s tireless, surreal barking. She managed to make it back. Starving. Limping. She made it all the way back through the hills.
He starts to get up. It takes him a while, but he manages. He stands there for a few minutes, coughing and steadying his feet on the ground. The man looking after him holds his arm and tells him to stay still, but he pulls his arm away and looks at him with an expression that makes words unnecessary, because the man doesn’t touch him again. He takes a few tentative steps. He can walk.
He stumbles across the sand to the steps, climbs them, walks a little way along the promenade, and starts back across the street toward the bar and Beta’s barking. He wipes the blood from his eyes with his sleeves and has another little fit of coughing. Those who are still standing around talking about the fight stop talking and stare at him. Someone in the bar points across the street, and everyone else turns to look. He stops two paces away from the sidewalk.
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