balustrades; the perilously worn balconies; the toothless slatterns who hung their dingy laundry across rows of drooping rope suspended between doorways; these belonged to her, too. Sorrowful Saturnina, her neighbors called her, harmless bag of bone and flesh buffeted by forces so much greater than herself; crazy old woman, living trough of memory and despair. How she liked to rock back and forth on her perch every day and think about Tomás, her sweet and only boy, calling out his name.
"¡Tomás! ¡Tomás! "
She rocked steadily back and forth, calling out to him as if he were in the next room, as if he would be bringing her a bag of yarn, a misplaced pair of glasses. But today only the image of Tomás's bloodied body and that last, startled look on his face rose before her.
Though Saturnina lived through the turmoil at the end of Batista's regime and the beginning of Fidel's, she remembered very little, images of the violence and injustice of those years imprinting themselves on her memory as if they had been observed by someone else. She moved through the days and months after Tomás's death practically, methodically— the way someone moves through a series of facts memorized but not quite understood. She had always known about Tomás's interest in politics; she had never realized how actively he had been working against Batista, joining the Revolutionary Directorate and running an underground student network that provided food and shelter for dissenters of every political stripe. He had been arrested several times, but so had many of the university students who were members of the Directorate, and who had sworn themselves to the overthrow of Batista.
Saturnina remembered asking Tomás's classmate, Armando, to tell her what had happened.
"They singled him out. They singled a lot of us out," Armando explained. "They saw Tomás as part of the Directorate's conspiracy to assassinate Batista."
"Was he?"
"I don't know, Saturnina."
"You must know, Armando. You were with him."
"I just helped him shelter dissenters. We never told one another anything that could be used against us."
"He sheltered people, Armando. He would never kill."
"He never turned anyone away. Maybe he should have."
"He sheltered people."
"He sheltered dissenters. That was enough to get him killed, but I don't know."
"Who killed him, Armando?"
"I saw the American pull the trigger. I saw him," Armando explained. "I don't know who hired him or why."
Even now Saturnina tried to imagine the moment when the American with the thin mustache had called out her son's name, Tomás Olivera Díaz, and how Tomás had stepped forward, with that frankness that was intrinsic to his character, and discovered a cocked revolver. Not a single friend standing on the dock with Tomás that day could explain to Saturnina what had happened to the American, who seemed to have been absorbed by the chaos that followed. She knew with an abiding faith that her son, in his last flicker of consciousness, had recognized and forgiven him. The boy who helped everyone the way she had taught him would have forgiven this, too. She imagined the American, lit cigarette in hand, standing in a far corner of the dark interrogation room that last time Tomás had been arrested by Batista's men and then abruptly released.
"They didn't want to kill him there," Armando explained.
"But they did kill him, didn't they?" Saturnina asked.
"Yes, Saturnina."
"Are you sure, Armando?"
"Yes."
"Are you sure he's dead?"
"Yes, Saturnina."
"But why, Armando?"
"I don't know, Saturnina."
At her insistence, Armando recounted to her over and over again the details of what had happened until Saturnina could imagine the burnished revolver's soft gleam, smell the acrid cloud of powder expanding through the air, and feel the pressure of the stranger's finger on the trigger. Armando told her the story of her son's assassination, and with each retelling the details would reverberate within Saturnina, heaving, fading, reconstituting themselves within the ebb and flow of her obsessive desire to witness Tomás's last breath, as she had witnessed his first. She had gone to the city morgue with his wife Vania and his friend Armando to identify his body, but she had never been able to reconcile the son she loved and raised with the body lying on that table, the flesh of her son's face as hard and cold as its metal surface.
"This is not my son. I don't know who this is."
"It is," Armando and Vania explained.
"¡Tomás! ¡Tomás! " Saturnina called out now, as she had that day in the morgue.
The fragments of Armando's story, so difficult to accept, began to dance across the shifting surface of her mind, hurtling her backward and forward through time, until eventually she began to insist to Vania, Tomas's young widow, that Tomás would rise, like Lazarus, awakening to this world again.
"This son of mine will come back," she insisted.
In 1959, still nursing the terrible wound of Tomás's death, she and Vania poured into the streets of Havana along with every race and class of Cuban. They were celebrating the end of Batista and the arrival of Fidel— El Caballo, the Horse— who had descended from the Sierra Maestra like an avenging angel in green army fatigues and a long beard to liberate them all from Batista's puppet government, a regime whose brutality had been sanctified and financed by the United States. That very week Saturnina played charadas, but instead of putting her peso down on number 17, Lazarus, the beloved whom Christ raised from the dead, her favorite saint since Tomás's death, she played the number 1, the Horse.
" Saint Lazarus won. Paid 50 pesos."
She had spent countless hours explaining this irony of fate to her favorite mongrel, who rocked behind her on three legs, his white coat gray with fleas.
" Saint Lazarus," she would intone, her left eyebrow cocked meaningfully. "Not the Horse."
It was a bad omen. The Horse was not what he seemed. He would delay the arrival of Lazarus. Saturnina was certain. Fidel would not liberate them. He would be their torment, just as Batista had been. Saturnina remembered crying out to the skies, hoping her words would reach Tomás:
"You died fighting Batista. This puñetero Fidel is the same."
Today, however, something had shifted. She knew it. Rocking back and forth on her stairwell perch, she could see that the morning sky held new auguries. The bad omen of '59 had been undone. The Horse was gone. The promise of Saint Lazarus had come to pass. The tears rolled down Saturnina's ancient face. She had waited for what seemed an eternity, but her faith had been rewarded. Christ would raise Tomás. She had prayed, believing; and believing, she knew. Tomás would be back soon.
The sound of a trumpet blaring in the distance startled her. From the top of the broken stairwell, she looked down through the gauzy scrim of her cataracts at the entranceway far below and noticed an odd figure hovering there, glowing as white as the flesh of a coconut, his countenance aggrieved. It was the angel of the annunciation. She was certain of it.
"Pobresito," Saturnina whispered, trying to imagine the angel's burden. "I will do as you command. Don't be sad."
There was no time to dawdle. She must spread the message: Fidel had fallen, and her son Tomás would be here soon. She must tell La Milagrosa, one grieving mother to another.
C H A P T E R F I V E
Poor Justicio! The stranger's words had left him shattered. He walked back across the street to the garage where he had left the bicycle cab, mounted, and began pedaling away. To see the bodies of the Pérez boys tumbling to their deaths was like witnessing