They were passing the bar they had gone by before and the music was blaring out into the street. What had Friar
Carrillo called it? Rock and roll. Very popular with the young. Something bothered her. And suddenly Megan realized what it was. When they had passed the theater, the friar had said: It's disgraceful what the cinema is permitted to show these days. That movie is pure pornography. The most personal and private acts are there for everyone to see.
Megan's heart began to beat faster. If Friar Carrillo had been locked up in a monastery for the past twenty years, how could he possibly have known about rock music or what was in the movie? Something was terribly wrong.
She turned to Lucia and Teresa and said urgently, "We've got to return to the store."
They watched as Megan turned and ran back, and they quickly began to follow her.
Graciela was on the floor, desperately fighting to get free, scratching and clawing at Carrillo.
"Goddamn you! Hold still!" He was getting winded. He heard a sound and glanced up. He saw the heel of a shoe swinging toward his head, and that was the last thing he remembered.
Megan picked up the trembling Graciela and held her in her arms. "Shh. It's all right. He won't bother you anymore."
It was several minutes before Graciela could speak.
"He—he—it wasn't my fault this time," she said pleadingly.
Lucia and Teresa had come into the store. Lucia sized up the situation at a glance.
"The bastard!"
She looked down at the unconscious, half-naked figure on the floor. As the others watched, Lucia grabbed some belts from a counter and tied Miguel Carrillo's hands tightly behind his back. "Tie his feet," she told Megan.
Megan went to work.
Finally, Lucia stood up, satisfied. "There. When they open up the store this afternoon, he can explain to them what he was doing here." She looked at Graciela closely. "Are you all right?"
"I—I—yes." She tried to smile.
"We'd better get out of here," Megan said. "Get dressed.
Quickly."
When they were ready to leave, Lucia said, "Wait a minute."
She went over to the cash register and punched a key.
There were a few hundred peseta notes inside. She scooped them up, picked up a purse from a counter, and put the money inside. She saw the disapproving expression on Teresa's face.
Lucia said, "Look at it this way, Sister. If God didn't want us to have this money, He wouldn't have put it there for us."
They were seated in the cafe, having a conversation.
Sister Teresa was speaking. "We must get the cross to the convent at Mendavia as quickly as possible. There will be safety there for all of us."
Not for me, Lucia thought. My safety is that Swiss bank.
But first things first. I've got to get hold of that cross.
"The convent at Mendavia is north of here, right?"
"Yes."
"The men will be looking for us in every town. So we'll sleep in the hills tonight."
Nobody will hear her even if she does scream.
A waitress brought menus to the table. The sisters examined them, their expressions confused. Suddenly Lucia understood. It had been so many years since they had been given choices of any kind. At the convent they had automatically eaten the simple food placed before them. Now they were confronted with a vast array of unfamiliar delicacies.
Sister Teresa was the first to speak. "I—I will have some coffee and bread, please."
Sister Graciela said, "I, too."
Megan said, "We have a long, hard journey ahead of us. I suggest that we order something more nourishing, like eggs."
Lucia looked at her with new eyes. She's the one to keep an eye on, Lucia thought. Aloud she said, "Sister Megan is right. Let me order for you, Sisters."
She ordered sliced oranges, tortillas de patatas, bacon,
hot rolls, jam, and coffee.
"We're in a hurry," she told the waitress.
Siesta ended at four-thirty, and the town would be waking up. She wanted to be out of there before someone discovered
Miguel Carrillo in the dress shop.
When the food arrived, the sisters sat there staring at it.
"Help yourselves," Lucia urged them.
They began to eat, gingerly at first, and then with gusto,
overcoming their feelings of guilt.
Sister Teresa was the only one having a problem. She took one bite of food and said, "I—I can't. It's—it's surrendering."
Megan said, "Sister, you want to get to the convent, don't you? Then you have to eat to keep up your strength."
Sister Teresa said primly, "Very well. I'll eat. But I promise you, I won't enjoy it."
It was all Lucia could do to keep a straight face. "Good,
Sister. Eat."
When they had finished, Lucia paid the check with some of the money she had taken from the cash register and they walked out into the hot sunshine. The streets were beginning to come alive, and the stores were starting to open. By now they have probably found Miguel Carrillo, Lucia thought.
Lucia and Teresa were impatient to get out of town, but
Graciela and Megan were walking slowly, fascinated by the sights and sounds and smells of the town.
Not until they had reached the outskirts and were heading toward the mountains did Lucia begin to relax. They moved steadily north, climbing upward, making slow progress in the hilly terrain. Lucia was tempted to ask Sister Teresa if she would like her to carry the package, but she did not want to say anything that might make the older woman suspicious.
When they reached a small glade in the highland,
surrounded by trees, Lucia said, "We can spend the night here. In the morning we'll head for the convent at Mendavia."
The others nodded, believing her.
The sun moved slowly across the blue sky, and the glade was silent, except for the soothing sounds of summer.
Finally, night fell.
One by one the women stretched out on the green grass.
Lucia lay there, breathing lightly, listening for a deeper silence, waiting for the others to fall asleep so she could make her move.
Sister Teresa was finding it difficult to sleep. It was a strange experience lying out under the stars, surrounded by her sisters. They had names now, and faces and voices, and she was afraid that God was going to punish her for this forbidden knowledge. She felt terribly lost.
Sister Megan too was having a difficult time getting to sleep. She was filled with the excitement of the day's events. How did I know that the friar was a fraud! she wondered. And where did I get the courage to save Sister
Graciela? She smiled, unable to keep from being a tiny bit pleased with herself, even though she knew such a feeling of pride was a sin.
Graciela was asleep, emotionally drained by what she had gone through. She tossed and turned, haunted by dreams of being chased down dark, long, endless corridors.
Lucia Carmine lay still, waiting. She lay there for almost two hours and then quietly sat up and moved through the darkness toward Sister Teresa. She would take the package and disappear.
As she neared Sister Teresa, Lucia saw that the nun was awake on her knees, praying. Damn! She hurriedly retreated.
Lucia lay down again, forcing herself to be patient.
Sister Teresa could not pray all night. She had to get some sleep.
Lucia planned her moves. The money taken from the cash register would be enough for her to take a bus or a train to
Madrid. Once there, it would be simple to find a pawnbroker.
She saw herself walking in and handing him the golden cross.
The pawnbroker would suspect that it was stolen, but that would not matter. He would have plenty of customers eager to buy it.
I will give you one hundred thousand pesetas for it.
She would pick it up from the counter. I would rather sell my body first.
One hundred and fifty thousand pesetas.