MORNING IN NAGREBCAN
It was sunrise at Nagrebcan. The fine, bluish mist, low over the tobacco   fields, was lifting and thinning moment by moment. A ragged strip of   mist, pulled away by the morning breeze, had caught on the clumps of   bamboo along the banks of the stream that flowed to one side of the   barrio. Before long the sun would top the Katayaghan hills, but as yet   no people were around. In the grey shadow of the hills, the barrio was   gradually awaking. Roosters crowed and strutted on the ground while hens   hesitated on theri perches among the branches of the camanchile trees.   Stray goats nibbled the weeds on the sides of the road, and the bull   carabaos tugged restively against their stakes.
In the early mornig the puppies lay curled up together  between their  mother’s paws under the ladder of the house. Four puupies  were all  white like the mother. They had pink noses and pink eyelids and  pink  mouths. The skin between their toes and on the inside of their  large,  limp ears was pink. They had short sleek hair, for the mother  licked  them often. The fifth puppy lay across the mother’s neck. On the   puppy’s back was a big black spot like a saddle. The tips of its ears   were black and so was a pitch of hair on its chest.
The opening of the sawali door, its uneven bottom dragging  noisily  against the bamboo flooring, aroused the mother dog and she got  up and  stretched and shook herself, scattering dust and loose white  hair. A  rank doggy smell rose in the cool morning air. She took a quick  leap  forward, clearing the puppies which had begun to whine about her,   wanting to suckle. She trotted away and disappeared beyond the house of a   neighbor.
The puppies sat back on their rumps, whining. After a little  while they  lay down and went back to sleep, the black-spotted puppy on  top.
Baldo stood at the treshold and rubbed his sleep-heavy eyes  with his  fists. He must have been about ten yeras old, small for his  age, but  compactly built, and he stood straight on his bony legs. He  wore one of  his father’s discarded cotton undershirts.
The boy descended the ladder, leaning heavily on the single  bamboo  railing that served as a banister. He sat on the lowest step of  the  ladder, yawning and rubbing his eyes one after the other. Bending  down,  he reached between his legs for the blak-spotted puppy. He held it  to  him, stroking its soft, warm body. He blew on its nose. The puppy  stuck  out a small red tongue,lapping the air. It whined eagerly. Baldo   laughed—a low gurgle.
He rubbed his face against that of the dog. He said softly.  “My puppy.  My puppy.” He said it many times. The puppy licked his ears,  his  cheeks. When it licked his mouth. Baldo straightened up, raised the   puppy on a level with his eyes. “You are a foolish puppy” he said,   laughing. “Foolish, foolish, foolish,” he said, rolling the puppy on his   lap so that it howled.
The four other  puppies awoke and came scrambling about  Baldo’s legs.  He put down the black-spotted puppy and ran to the narrow  foot bridge  of women split-bamboo spanning the roadside ditch. When it  rained,  water from the roadway flowed under the makeshift bridge, but it  had  not rained for a long time and the ground was dry and sandy. Baldo  sat  on the bridge, digging his bare feet into the sand, feeling the cool   particles escaping between his toes. He whistled, a toneless whistle   with a curious trilling to it produced by placing the tongue against the   lower teeth and then curving it up and down. The whistle excited the   puppies, they ran to the boy as fast theri unsteady legs could carry   them, barking choppy little barks.
It was sunrise at Nagrebcan. The fine, bluish mist, low over the tobacco   fields, was lifting and thinning moment by moment. A ragged strip of   mist, pulled away by the morning breeze, had caught on the clumps of   bamboo along the banks of the stream that flowed to one side of the   barrio. Before long the sun would top the Katayaghan hills, but as yet   no people were around. In the grey shadow of the hills, the barrio was   gradually awaking. Roosters crowed and strutted on the ground while hens   hesitated on theri perches among the branches of the camanchile trees.   Stray goats nibbled the weeds on the sides of the road, and the bull   carabaos tugged restively against their stakes.
In the early mornig the puppies lay curled up together  between their  mother’s paws under the ladder of the house. Four puupies  were all  white like the mother. They had pink noses and pink eyelids and  pink  mouths. The skin between their toes and on the inside of their  large,  limp ears was pink. They had short sleek hair, for the mother  licked  them often. The fifth puppy lay across the mother’s neck. On the   puppy’s back was a big black spot like a saddle. The tips of its ears   were black and so was a pitch of hair on its chest.
The opening of the sawali door, its uneven bottom dragging  noisily  against the bamboo flooring, aroused the mother dog and she got  up and  stretched and shook herself, scattering dust and loose white  hair. A  rank doggy smell rose in the cool morning air. She took a quick  leap  forward, clearing the puppies which had begun to whine about her,   wanting to suckle. She trotted away and disappeared beyond the house of a   neighbor.
The puppies sat back on their rumps, whining. After a little  while they  lay down and went back to sleep, the black-spotted puppy on  top.
Baldo stood at the treshold and rubbed his sleep-heavy eyes  with his  fists. He must have been about ten yeras old, small for his  age, but  compactly built, and he stood straight on his bony legs. He  wore one of  his father’s discarded cotton undershirts.
The boy descended the ladder, leaning heavily on the single  bamboo  railing that served as a banister. He sat on the lowest step of  the  ladder, yawning and rubbing his eyes one after the other. Bending  down,  he reached between his legs for the blak-spotted puppy. He held it  to  him, stroking its soft, warm body. He blew on its nose. The puppy  stuck  out a small red tongue,lapping the air. It whined eagerly. Baldo   laughed—a low gurgle.
He rubbed his face against that of the dog. He said softly.  “My puppy.  My puppy.” He said it many times. The puppy licked his ears,  his  cheeks. When it licked his mouth. Baldo straightened up, raised the   puppy on a level with his eyes. “You are a foolish puppy” he said,   laughing. “Foolish, foolish, foolish,” he said, rolling the puppy on his   lap so that it howled.
The four other  puppies awoke and came scrambling about  Baldo’s legs.  He put down the black-spotted puppy and ran to the narrow  foot bridge  of women split-bamboo spanning the roadside ditch. When it  rained,  water from the roadway flowed under the makeshift bridge, but it  had  not rained for a long time and the ground was dry and sandy. Baldo  sat  on the bridge, digging his bare feet into the sand, feeling the cool   particles escaping between his toes. He whistled, a toneless whistle   with a curious trilling to it produced by placing the tongue against the   lower teeth and then curving it up and down. The whistle excited the   puppies, they ran to the boy as fast theri unsteady legs could carry   them, barking choppy little barks.
http://www.scribd.com/doc/34536551/Morning-in-Nagrebcan-Manuel-E-Arguilla
 
1. If you're too open-minded, your brains will fall out.
ReplyDelete2. Man is his own worst enemy.
ReplyDelete3. There are only two people who can tell you the truth about yourself : an enemy who has lost his temper and a friend who loves you dearly.
ReplyDelete4. Enemys were the friends you thought you had, untill they stabbed you in the back.
ReplyDelete5. The best revenge is to FORGIVE.
ReplyDelete