The sun was salmon and hazy in the west. Dodong
thought to himself he would tell his father about Teang when he got home, after
he had unhitched the carabao from the plow, and let it to its shed and fed it.
He was hesitant about saying it, but he wanted his father to know. What he had
to say was of serious import as it would mark a climacteric in his life. Dodong
finally decided to tell it, at a thought came to him his father might refuse to
consider it. His father was silent hard-working farmer who chewed areca nut,
which he had learned to do from his mother, Dodong's grandmother.
I will tell it to him. I will tell it to him.
The ground was broken up into many fresh wounds and
fragrant with a sweetish earthy smell. Many slender soft worms emerged from the
furrows and then burrowed again deeper into the soil. A short colorless worm
marched blindly to Dodong's foot and crawled calmly over it. Dodong go tickled
and jerked his foot, flinging the worm into the air. Dodong did not bother to
look where it fell, but thought of his age, seventeen, and he said to himself
he was not young any more.
Dodong unhitched the carabao leisurely and gave it
a healthy tap on the hip. The beast turned its head to look at him with dumb
faithful eyes. Dodong gave it a slight push and the animal walked alongside him
to its shed. He placed bundles of grass before it land the carabao began to
eat. Dodong looked at it without interests.
Dodong started homeward, thinking how he would
break his news to his father. He wanted to marry, Dodong did. He was seventeen,
he had pimples on his face, the down on his upper lip already was dark--these
meant he was no longer a boy. He was growing into a man--he was a man. Dodong
felt insolent and big at the thought of it although he was by nature low in statue.
Thinking himself a man grown, Dodong felt he could do anything.
He walked faster, prodded by the thought of his
virility. A small angled stone bled his foot, but he dismissed it cursorily. He
lifted his leg and looked at the hurt toe and then went on walking. In the cool
sundown he thought wild you dreams of himself and Teang. Teang, his girl. She
had a small brown face and small black eyes and straight glossy hair. How
desirable she was to him. She made him dream even during the day.
Dodong tensed with desire and looked at the muscles
of his arms. Dirty. This field
work was healthy, invigorating but it begrimed you,
smudged you terribly. He turned back the way he had come, then he marched
obliquely to a creek.
Dodong stripped himself and laid his clothes, a
gray undershirt and red kundiman shorts, on the grass. The he went into the
water, wet his body over, and rubbed at it vigorously. He was not long in
bathing, then he marched homeward again. The bath made him feel cool.
It was dusk when he reached home. The petroleum
lamp on the ceiling already was lighted and the low unvarnished square table
was set for supper. His parents and he sat down on the floor around the table
to eat. They had fried fresh-water fish, rice, bananas, and caked sugar.
Dodong ate fish and rice, but did not partake of
the fruit. The bananas were overripe and when one held them they felt more
fluid than solid. Dodong broke off a piece of the cakes sugar, dipped it in his
glass of water and ate it. He got another piece and wanted some more, but he
thought of leaving the remainder for his parents.
Dodong's mother removed the dishes when they were
through and went out to the batalan to wash them. She walked with slow careful
steps and Dodong wanted to help her carry the dishes out, but he was tired and
now felt lazy. He wished as he looked at her that he had a sister who could
help his mother in the housework. He pitied her, doing all the housework alone.
His father remained in the room, sucking a diseased
tooth. It was paining him again, Dodong knew. Dodong had told him often and
again to let the town dentist pull it out, but he was afraid, his father was.
He did not tell that to Dodong, but Dodong guessed it. Afterward Dodong himself
thought that if he had a decayed tooth he would be afraid to go to the dentist;
he would not be any bolder than his father.
Dodong said while his mother was out that he was
going to marry Teang. There it was out, what he had to say, and over which he
had done so much thinking. He had said it without any effort at all and without
self-consciousness. Dodong felt relieved and looked at his father expectantly.
A decrescent moon outside shed its feeble light into the window, graying the
still black temples of his father. His father looked old now.
"I am going to marry Teang," Dodong said.
His father looked at him silently and stopped
sucking the broken tooth. The silence became intense and cruel, and Dodong
wished his father would suck that troublous tooth again. Dodong was
uncomfortable and then became angry because his father kept looking at him
without uttering anything.
"I will marry Teang," Dodong repeated.
"I will marry Teang."
His father kept gazing at him in inflexible silence
and Dodong fidgeted on his seat.
"I asked her last night to marry me and she
said...yes. I want your permission. I... want... it...." There was
impatient clamor in his voice, an exacting protest at this coldness, this
indifference. Dodong looked at his father sourly. He cracked his knuckles one
by one, and the little sounds it made broke dully the night stillness.
"Must you marry, Dodong?"
Dodong resented his father's questions; his father
himself had married. Dodong made a quick impassioned easy in his mind about
selfishness, but later he got confused.
"You are very young, Dodong."
"I'm... seventeen."
"That's very young to get married at."
"I... I want to marry...Teang's a good
girl."
"Tell your mother," his father said.
"You tell her, tatay."
"Dodong, you tell your inay."
"You tell her."
"All right, Dodong."
"You will let me marry Teang?"
"Son, if that is your wish... of
course..." There was a strange helpless light in his father's eyes. Dodong
did not read it, so absorbed was he in himself.
Dodong was immensely glad he had asserted himself.
He lost his resentment for his father. For a while he even felt sorry for him
about the diseased tooth. Then he confined his mind to dreaming of Teang and
himself. Sweet young dream....
-------------------------------------------
Dodong stood in the sweltering noon heat, sweating
profusely, so that his camiseta was damp. He was still as a tree and his
thoughts were confused. His mother had told him not to leave the house, but he
had left. He had wanted to get out of it without clear reason at all. He was
afraid, he felt. Afraid of the house. It had seemed to cage him, to compares
his thoughts with severe tyranny. Afraid also of Teang. Teang was giving birth
in the house; she gave screams that chilled his blood. He did not want her to
scream like that, he seemed to be rebuking him. He began to wonder madly if the
process of childbirth was really painful. Some women, when they gave birth, did
not cry.
In a few moments he would be a father.
"Father, father," he whispered the word with awe, with strangeness.
He was young, he realized now, contradicting himself of nine months
comfortable... "Your son," people would soon be telling him.
"Your son, Dodong."
Dodong felt tired standing. He sat down on a saw-horse
with his feet close together. He looked at his callused toes. Suppose he had
ten children... What made him think that? What was the matter with him? God!
He heard his mother's voice from the house:
"Come up, Dodong. It is over."
Suddenly he felt terribly embarrassed as he looked
at her. Somehow he was ashamed to his mother of his youthful paternity. It made
him feel guilty, as if he had taken something no properly his. He dropped his
eyes and pretended to dust dirt off his kundiman shorts.
"Dodong," his mother called again.
"Dodong."
He turned to look again and this time saw his
father beside his mother.
"It is a boy," his father said. He
beckoned Dodong to come up.
Dodong felt more embarrassed and did not move. What
a moment for him. His parents' eyes seemed to pierce him through and he felt
limp.
He wanted to hide from them, to run away.
"Dodong, you come up. You come up," he
mother said.
Dodong did not want to come up and stayed in the
sun.
"Dodong. Dodong."
"I'll... come up."
Dodong traced tremulous steps on the dry parched
yard. He ascended the bamboo steps slowly. His heart pounded mercilessly in
him. Within, he avoided his parents eyes. He walked ahead of them so that they
should not see his face. He felt guilty and untrue. He felt like crying. His
eyes smarted and his chest wanted to burst. He wanted to turn back, to go back
to the yard. He wanted somebody to punish him.
His father thrust his hand in his and gripped it
gently.
"Son," his father said.
And his mother: "Dodong..."
How kind were their voices. They flowed into him,
making him strong.
"Teang?" Dodong said.
"She's sleeping. But you go on..."
His father led him into the small sawali room.
Dodong saw Teang, his girl-wife, asleep on the papag with her black hair soft
around her face. He did not want her to look that pale.
Dodong wanted to touch her, to push away that stray
wisp of hair that touched her lips, but again that feeling of embarrassment
came over him and before his parents he did not want to be demonstrative.
The hilot was wrapping the child, Dodong heard it
cry. The thin voice pierced him queerly. He could not control the swelling of
happiness in him.
“You give him to me. You give him to me,"
Dodong said.
-------------------------------------------
Blas was not Dodong's only child. Many more
children came. For six successive years a new child came along. Dodong did not
want any more children, but they came. It seemed the coming of children could
not be helped. Dodong got angry with himself sometimes.
Teang did not complain, but the bearing of children
told on her. She was shapeless and thin now, even if she was young. There was
interminable work to be done. Cooking. Laundering. The house. The children. She
cried sometimes, wishing she had not married. She did not tell Dodong this, not
wishing him to dislike her. Yet she wished she had not married. Not even
Dodong, whom she loved. There has been another suitor, Lucio, older than Dodong
by nine years, and that was why she had chosen Dodong. Young Dodong. Seventeen.
Lucio had married another after her marriage to Dodong, but he was childless
until now. She wondered if she had married Lucio, would she have borne him
children. Maybe not, either. That was a better lot. But she loved Dodong...
Dodong whom life had made ugly.
One night, as he lay beside his wife, he rose and
went out of the house. He stood in the moonlight, tired and querulous. He
wanted to ask questions and somebody to answer him. He wanted to be wise about
many things.
One of them was why life did not fulfill all of
Youth's dreams. Why it must be so. Why one was forsaken... after Love.
Dodong would not find the answer. Maybe the
question was not to be answered. It must be so to make youth Youth. Youth must
be dreamfully sweet. Dreamfully sweet. Dodong returned to the house humiliated
by himself. He had wanted to know a little wisdom but was denied it.
When Blas was eighteen he came home one night very
flustered and happy. It was late at night and Teang and the other children were
asleep. Dodong heard Blas's steps, for he could not sleep well of nights. He
watched Blas undress in the dark and lie down softly. Blas was restless on his
mat and could not sleep. Dodong called him name and asked why he did not sleep.
Blas said he could not sleep.
"You better go to sleep. It is late,"
Dodong said.
Blas raised himself on his elbow and muttered
something in a low fluttering voice.
Dodong did not answer and tried to sleep.
"Itay ...," Blas called softly.
Dodong stirred and asked him what it was.
"I am going to marry Tona. She accepted me
tonight."
Dodong lay on the red pillow without moving.
"Itay, you think it over."
Dodong lay silent.
"I love Tona and... I want her."
Dodong rose from his mat and told Blas to follow
him. They descended to the yard, where everything was still and quiet. The
moonlight was cold and white.
"You want to marry Tona," Dodong said. He
did not want Blas to marry yet. Blas was very young. The life that would follow
marriage would be hard...
"Yes."
"Must you marry?"
Blas's voice stilled with resentment. "I will
marry Tona."
Dodong kept silent, hurt.
"You have objections, Itay?" Blas asked
acridly.
"Son... n-none..." (But truly, God, I
don't want Blas to marry yet... not yet. I don't want Blas to marry yet....)
But he was helpless. He could not do anything.
Youth must triumph... now. Love must triumph... now. Afterwards... it will be
life.
As long ago Youth and Love did triumph for
Dodong... and then Life.
Dodong looked wistfully at his young son in the
moonlight. He felt extremely sad and sorry for him.
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