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The Black Monkey

black monkey story 21s century literature

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
128 views4 pages

The Black Monkey

black monkey story 21s century literature

Uploaded by

hazeljane474
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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The Black Monkey

by Edith L. Tiempo

Two weeks already she had stayed in the hut on the precipice, alone except for the visits of her husband.
Carlos came regularly once a day and stayed three or four hours, but his visits seemed to her too short and
far between. Sometimes, after he had left and she thought she would be alone again, one or the other of
the neighbors came up unexpectedly, and right away those days became different, or she became different
in a subtle but definite way. For the neighbors caused a disturbed balance in her which was relieving and
necessary. Sometimes it was one of the women, coming up with some fruits, papayas, perhaps, or wild ink
berries, or guavas. Sometimes the children, to grind her week’s supply of corn meal in the cubbyhole
downstairs. Their chirps and meaningless giggles broke the steady turn of the stone grinder, scraping to a
slow agitation the thoughts that had settled and almost hardened in the bottom of her mind. She would
have liked it better if these visits were longer, but they could not be; for the folks came to see her, yet she
couldn’t come to them, and she, a sick woman, wasn’t really with her when they sat there with her. The
women were uneasy in the hut and she could say nothing to the children, and it seemed it was only when
the men came to see her when there was the presence of real people. Real people, and she real with them.
As when old Emilio and Sergio left their carabaos standing in the clearing and crossed the river at low tide
to climb solemnly up the path on the precipice, their faces showing brown and leathery in the filtered
sunlight of the forest as they approached her door. Coming in and sitting on the floor of the eight-by-ten
hut where she lay, looking at her and chewing tobacco, clayey legs crossed easily, they brought about them
the strange electric of living together, of showing one to another lustily across the clearing, each driving his
beast, of riding the bull cart into the timber to load dead trunks of firewood, of listening in a screaming
silence inside their huts at night to the sound of real or imagined shots or explosions, and mostly of another
kind of silence, the kid that bogged down between the furrows when the sun was hot and the soils stony
and the breadth for words lay tight and furry upon their tongues. They were slow of words even when at
rest, rousing themselves to talk numbingly and vaguely after long periods of chewing.
Thinking to interest her, their talk would be of the women’s doings, soap-making and the salt project, and
who made the most coconut oil that week, whose dog has caught sucking eggs from whose poultry shed,
show many lizards and monkeys they trapped and killed in the corn fields and yards around the four
houses. Listening to them was hearing a remote story heard once before and strange enough now to be
interesting again. But it was last two weeks locatable in her body, it was true, but not so much a real pain
as a deadness and heaviness everywhere, at once inside of her as well as outside.
When the far nasal bellowing of their carabaos came up across the river the men rose to go, and clumsy
with sympathy they stood at the doorstep spiting out many casual streaks of tobacco and betel as they
stretched their leave by the last remarks. Marina wished for her mind to go on following them down the cliff
to the river across the clearing, to the group of four huts on the knoll where the smoke spiraled blue glints
and grey from charcoal pits, and the children chased scampering monkeys back into forested slopes only
a few feet away. But when the men turned around the path and disappeared they were really gone, and she
was really alone again.
From the pallet where she lay a few inches from the door all she could set were the tops of ipil trees arching
over the damp humus soil of the forest, and a very small section of the path leading from her hut downward
along the edge of the precipice to the river where it was a steep short drop of fifteen or twenty feet to the
water. They used a ladder on the bushy side of the cliff to climb up and don the path, let down and drawn
up again, and no one from the outside the area could know of the secret hut built so close to the guerilla
headquarters. When the tide was low and then water drained toward the sea, the river was shallow in some
parts and the ladder could be reached by wading on a pebbly stretched to the base of the cliff. At high tide
an outrigger boat had to be rowed across. They were fortunate to have the hiding place, very useful to them
whenever they had to flee from their hut on the knoll below, every time a Japanese patrol was reported by
the guerillas to be prowling around the hills.
Two weeks ago, in the night, they had fled up to the forest again, thinking a patrol had penetrated. Marina
remembered how she and Flavia and Flavia’s daughter had groped their way up to the precipice behind
their faster neighbors, how the whole of that night the three of them had cowered in this dark hut while all
around monkeys gibbered in the leaves, and pieces of voices from the guerillas on the river pieced into the
forest like thin splintered glass. And all the time the whispered talk of their neighbors crouched in the
crevices of the high rocks above them floated down like echoes of the whispers in her own mind. Nobody
knew the reason for the harm sounded by headquarters unto the next morning when Carlos and two other
guerillas paddled around the river from camp and had told everyone to come down from their precipice
and return to the huts; it was not enemy troops but the buys chasing after the Japanese prisoner who had
escaped.
Following the notice of Carlos, old Emilio and others went back to the knoll the day after the alarm. She
had stayed, through two weeks now. Sick and paralyzed on one side, she had to stay where she was a
liability to no one in case of danger. She had to stay until the Japanese prisoner was caught, and if he had
been able to slip across the channel to Cebu and a Japanese invasion of this guerilla area was instigated,
she would be safe in this hideout.
Listening closely for several nights, she had learned to distinguish the noises made by the monkey in the
tree nearest her door. She was sure the tree had only one tenant, a big one, because the sounds it made
were unusually heavy and definite. She would hear a precise rustle, just as if it shifted once in its sleep and
was quiet again, or when the rustling and the grunts were continuous for a while, she knew it was looking
for a better perch and muttering at its discomfort. Sometimes there were precipitate rubbing sounds and
a thud and she concluded it accidentally slipped and landed on the ground. She always heard it arrive late
at night, long after the forest had settled down. Even now as she lay quietly, she knew the invisible group
of monkeys had begun to come, she knew from the coughing that started from far up to the slope, sound
like wind on the water, gradually coming downward.
She must have been asleep about four hours when she awoke uneasily, aware of movements under the
hut. Blackness had pushed into the room, heavily and moistly, sticky damp around her eyes, under her chin
and down the back of her neck, where it prickled like fine hair creeping on end. Her light had burned out.
Something was fumbling at the door of the compartment below the floor, where the supply of rice and corn
was stored in tall bins. The door was pushed and rattled cautiously, slow thuds of steps moved around the
house. Whatever it was, it circled the hut once, twice and stop again to jerk at the door. It sounded like a
monkey, perhaps the monkey in the tree, trying to break in the door to the corn and rice. It seemed to her it
took care not to pass the stairs, retracing its steps to the side of the hut each time so she could not see it
through her open door. Hearing the sounds and seeing nothing, she could not see it through her open door.
Hearing the sounds and seeing nothing, she felt it imperative that she should see the intruder. She set her
face to the long slit at the base of the wall and the quick chilly wind came at her like a whisper suddenly
flung into her face. Trees defined her line vision, merged blots that seemed to possess life and feeling
running through them like thin humming wires. The footsteps had come from the unknown boundary and
must have resolved back into it because she could not hear them anymore. She was deciding the creature
had gone away when she saw a stooping shape creep along the wall and turn back, slipping by so quickly
she could deceive herself into believing she imagined it. A short, stooping creature, its footsteps heavy and
regular and then unexpectedly running together as if the feet were fired and sore. She had suspected the
monkey but didn’t feel sure, even seeing the quick shaped she didn’t feel sure, until she heard the heavy
steps turn toward the tree. Then she could distinguish clearly the rubbing sounds as it hitched itself up the
tree.
She had a great wish to be back below with the others. Now and then the wind blew momentary gaps
through the leaves and she saw fog from the river below, fog white and stingy, floating over the four huts on
the knoll. Along about ten in the morning the whole area below would be under the direct that of the sun.
The knoll was a sort of islet made by the river bending into the horseshoe shape; on this formation of the
two inner banks they had made their clearing and built their huts. On one outer bank the guerilla camp hid
in thick grove of madre-de-cacao and undergrowth and on the other outer bank, the other arm of the
horseshoe, abruptly rose the steep precipice where the secret hut stood. The families asleep on the knoll
were themselves isolated, she thought; they were as on an island cut off by the water and mountain ranges
surrounding them; shut in with it, each one tossing his thought to the others, no one keeping it privately, no
one really taking a deliberate look at it in the secrecy of his own mind. In the hut by herself it seemed she
must play it out, toss it back and forth.
Threads of mist tangled under the trees. Light pricked through the suspended raindrops; the mind carried
up the sound of paddling from the river. In a little while him distinctly. Neena! Neena! Her name thus
exploded through the air by his voice came like a shock after hours of stealthy noises.
He took the three rungs of the steps in one stride and was beside her on the floor. Always he came in a
flood of size and motions and she couldn’t see all of him at once. A smell of stale sun and hard walking
clung to his clothes and stung into her; it was the smell of many people and many places and the room felt
even smaller with him in it. In a quick gesture that had become a habit he touched the back of his hand on
her forehead.
“Good,” he announced, “no fever.”
With Carlo’s presence, the room bulged with the sense of people and activity, pointing up with unbearable
sharpness her isolation, her fears, her helplessness.
“I can’t stay up here,” she told him, not caring anymore whether he despised her cowardice. “I must go
down. There is something here. You don’t know what’s happening. You don’t know, or you won’t take me
stay.”
He looked at her and then around the room as though her fear squatted there listening to them.
“It’s the monkey again.”
“Man or monkey or devil, I can’t stay up here anymore.”
“Something must be done,” he said, “this can’t go on.”
“I’ll go down and be with the others.”
He raised his head, saying wearily, “I wish that were the best thing, Neena, God knows I wish it were. But
you must go down only when you’re ready. These are critical days for all of us in this area. If something
breaks–the Jap, you know, think what will happen to you down there, with me at headquarters. You’ve
known of reprisals.”
He looked at her and his sooty black eyes were like the bottom of a deep drained well. “I wish I could be
here at night. What I’m saying is this: it’s a job you must do by yourself, since nobody is allowed out of
headquarters after dark. That monkey must be shot or you’re not safe here anymore.”
“You know I can’t shoot.”
“We are continuing our lessons. You still remember, don’t you?”
“It was long ago and it was not really in earnest.”
He inspected the chambers of the rifle. “You didn’t need it then.”
He put his life into her hands.
She lifted it and as its weight yielded coldly to her hands, she said suddenly, “I’m glad we’re doing this.”
“You remember how to use the sight?”
“Yes,” and she could not help smiling a little. “All the o’clock you taught me.”
“Aim it and shoot.”
She aimed at a scar on the trunk of the tree near the door, the monkey’s tree. She pressed on the trigger.
Nothing happened. She pressed it again. “It isn’t loaded.”
“It is.”
“The trigger won’t move. Something’s wrong.”
He took it from her. “It’s locked, you forgot it as usual.” He put it aside. “Enough now, you’ll do. But you
unlock first. Remember, nothing can ever come out of a locked gun.”
He left early in the afternoon, about two o’clock.
Just before the sundown the monkey came. It swung along the trees along the edge of the precipice, then
leaped down on the path and wandered around near the hut. It must be very, very hungry, or it would not
be so bold. It sidled forward all the time eying her intently, inching toward the grain room below the stairs.
As it suddenly rushed toward her all the anger of the last two years of war seemed to unite into one
necessity and she snatched up the gun, shouting and screaming, “Get out! Thief! Thief!”
The monkey wavered. It did not understand the pointed gun she brandished and it came forward, softly,
slowly, its feet hardly making any sound on the ground. She aimed, and as it slipped past the stairs and was
rounding the corner to the grain room she fired again and once again, straight into its back.
The loud explosions resounded through the trees. The birds in the forest flew in confusion and their high
excited chatter floated down through the leaves. But she did not hear them – the only reality was the
twisting, grunting shape near the stairs and after a minute it was quiet.
She couldn’t help laughing a little, couldn’t help feeling exhilarated. The black monkey was dead, it was
dead, she had killed it. Strangely, too, she was thinking of the escaped prisoner that she strangely feared
him but was curious about him, and that now she could think of him openly to herself. She could talk about
him now, she thought. Shoe could talk of him to Carlos and to anybody and not hide the sneaky figure of
him with the other black terrors of her mind.
She realized that she was still holding the gun. This time, she thought, she had unlocked it. And with rueful
certainty, she knew she could do it again, tonight tomorrow, whenever it was necessary. The hatter of some
monkeys came to her from a far up in the forest. From that distance, it was vague, a lost sound; hearing it
jarred across her little triumph, and she wished, like someone lamenting a lost innocence, that she had
never seen a gun or fired one.

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