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Authors: A. E. Hotchner

Papa Hemingway (33 page)

BOOK: Papa Hemingway
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"The subject never interested me until now."

The band struck up, the wooden gates swung open, the picadors moved close in on their high, skinny horses, and somebody pointed me in the right direction as the two grooms on their horses started into the ring, followed by Antonio and Dominguin, walking side by side, with El Pecas the customary three steps behind them. All the other men fanned out in back with the mule teams bringing up the rear. We got a big hand. I still couldn't bend my knees, but I watched Antonio and tried to swing my right arm stiffly the way he did. The distance across the ring was easily four miles.

We stopped in front of the President's box, saluted and bowed our heads, and I followed Antonio into the
callejon
where Ernest was awaiting me.

"How did it look?"

"You had just the right amount of modesty and quiet confidence."

"I felt like a bull's behind."

The trumpets sounded and Luis Miguel's first bull came charging in, a great black swirl of hump muscle and horn. Miguelillo, the sword handler, gave me a cape.

"What do I do now?" I asked Ernest.

"Hold it at the ready and look intelligent but not too eager."

"Do I know you?"

"Not too well. I've seen you fight. You're no pal. I want you to have fun but don't get caught. They don't have habeas corpus in Spanish jails."

Luis Miguel's cape work was pretty good.

"Study the bull," Ernest said.

"He looks all right to me."

"What's wrong with him?"

"He's got awfully big horns."

"They all look bigger down here."

"Aren't they
pic-
ing him an awful lot?"

"Yes."

"Too much?"

"They're cutting him down for Miguel because he hurt his leg in Malaga."

"I thought he was limping a little."

"How are your legs?"

"Awful but under control."

Dominguin cut one ear for his performance, but Antonio was fabulous with a splendid bull with whom he danced exuberantly; "dance" is the only word for the ballet
-faena
he performed with his mesmerized beast who responded to his every lead as if this were a
pas de deux
they had rehearsed all morning; Antonio was awarded both ears and the tail and he demanded a tour of the ring for the courageous bull.

As Antonio passed by us during his own triumphant circuit of the ring he shouted to Ernest, "Tell Pecas he's looking great. Have you told him how to kill yet?"

"Not yet."

"Tell him."

"Don't look at the horn," Ernest told me. "Sight for where the sword is going in. Keep the left hand low and swing it to your right as you go in."

"What do I do then?"

"You'll go up in the air and we'll all catch you when you land."

Luis Miguel did badly with his last bull, but Antonio really turned it on with his, and the President gave him the ears, tail and a hoof, which is the ultimate that can be awarded, but if the crowd had had its way they would have quartered the bull and given him the whole thing. He beckoned to me. "He wants you to take the tour with him," Ernest said, giving me a helpful nudge.

Antonio waited until I trotted over to him. An avalanche of flowers, sandwiches, cigars, candy, hats, wineskins, shoes, fans, cigarettes, handbags, sunglasses, mantillas, boots, fountain pens, money, pipes, belts, and tiaras was cascading down on us. "Keep handbags and slippers. Let my men pick up everything else," Antonio said.

So around we went, the crowd wildly showering us, and by the time we had completed our second tour of the ring I was pretty heavy with handbags and an assortment of ladies' shoes.

Suddenly Antonio was swept up on the shoulders of a large group of men who intended to parade him across the ring and through the town all the way back to his hotel.

I looked around. All the
cuadrilla
had left. I was alone in the center of the ring. I suddenly discovered how fast you could move in that tight-legged suit and I reached the Chevrolet just as they were pulling out.

When we were safely back in Antonio's room and getting peeled out of our suits, I found out about the handbags and shoes as a succession of beauties showed up to reclaim them. Wine and food came up from the kitchen and soon the room was packed with jubilant people. My only bad moment came when one of the more spectacular ladies, who had come for her alligator bag, asked about my scars and I didn't have even the remains of an appendectomy to show her.

Four days later, in Bilbao, the
mano a manos
ended abruptly and for keeps when the mounting pressure from Antonio finally caught up with Dominguin. It happened while Dominguin was placing the bull for the picador. It is one of the most elementary moves in bullfighting and every matador does it thousands of times. But Dominguin inexplicably moved into the bull instead of away and its horn caught him in the groin and slammed him against the horse. The picador drove his lance into the bull as Dominguin was tossed into the air, but the bull disregarded the lance and caught Dominguin again as he came down and chopped at him several times on the sand before they made the
quite
and ran him to the infirmary.

Ernest went to see him in the hospital that evening. Dominguin was suffering very much from the penetration of the horn, which had ripped up into his abdomen and very nearly taken his life. Ernest talked to him for a short while in a low voice, and Dominguin nodded and smiled a little.

Afterward, walking back to the hotel, Ernest said, "He's a brave man and a beautiful matador. Why the hell do the good and brave have to die before everyone else?" He did not mean die as in death, for Dominguin was going to survive, but what was important to his living had died. I remembered Ernest once telling me, "The worst death for anyone is to lose the center of his being, the thing he really is. Retirement is the filthiest word in the language. Whether by choice or by fate, to retire from what you do—and what you do makes you what you are—is to back up into the grave."

A heavy mist was falling and the Bilbao streets glistened with refracted light. I looked at Ernest, who was pulling up the collar of his trench coat against the rain, and I felt the eerie sensation of walking down a sidewalk in Lausanne alongside Lieutenant Henry, who had just left his dead Catherine in the hospital.

The following day we drove from Bilbao to Saint-Jean-de-Luz, a town on the Gulf of Vizcaya, a few miles beyond the Spanish border and close to Dax, where Antonio was to perform before Gallic
aficionados.
The new Lancia, which was the first Ernest had actually owned, took the bad Spanish roads in beautiful stride and Ernest was very proud of it.

We stayed outside of town in a gracious, flowered, commodious hotel, the Chantaco, where we ate wonderful Basque food, and afterward we went into Saint-Jean-de-Luz to the Bar Basque for coffee and cordials. (Mary and Annie had gone back to Malaga from Bilbao, so we were just Bill, Ernest, myself and Honor, who, for some time now, had been functioning as Ernest's secretary, filing the notes, clippings and photographs that Ernest needed for the
Life
article.) Ernest raised his glass.

"I have a
dicho
he said. "The
cuadrilla
will miss El Pecas."

"El Pecas will miss the
cuadrilla
," I answered. "I certainly will."

After Antonio's
corrida
the following afternoon, a rather lackluster performance, Bill drove me to Biarritz, where I boarded the
rapide
for Paris. The following day, I received a cable from Madrid telling me to disregard the newspaper accounts, and that the Lancia was wrecked but they were okay. It was signed: Love Papa. I telephoned the Suecia, where I knew they would be. Ernest told me that after leaving Biarritz they had stopped for dinner, then set out on the road to Madrid. Bill had fallen asleep at the wheel; the Lancia had left the road at high speed, ripped up several cement roadmarkers, careened across a ditch and a field, but had not turned over; nor did any of them have so much as a scratch.

"Absolutely can't blame Bill," Ernest said. "He's done all the driving all summer, and damn fine, and I shouldn't have pushed him on this. I should have known it was too late to start out."

"I guess he feels pretty bad about it." I knew Bill prided himself on his driving.

"He does now but I'm working on him. He'll be all right. He feels awful about wrecking the Lancia."

Ernest returned to New York on the
Liberte
toward the end of October. I had had no news of how the rest of the summer had passed, other than this item which ran in
The New York Times:

hemingway asks thief to return his wallet

MADRID, Sept. 16 (UPI)—Ernest Hemingway appealed today to the pickpocket who robbed him at a bullfight in Murcia last week to return his wallet even if he keeps the $150 that was in it.

He said the wallet was a gift from his son Patrick, a professional hunter in the East African colony of Tanganyika.

"I beg of you to send-back my billfold with the image of St. Christopher in it," Hemingway said in an ad published by the newspaper Pueblo. "As for the Qooo pesetas ($150) it contained, your skill deserves that prize as a reward."

When I met Ernest at the boat he seemed preoccupied and subdued; one of his preoccupations was with a diamond pin he had bought for Mary at Cartier's in Paris. It was a beautiful pin but he was worried because Mary had really wanted a pair of diamond earrings which he had refused to buy because they were too expensive; this pin was being brought as a peace offering.

"How did Mary seem to you?" Ernest asked. Mary had left a month earlier and I had seen her briefly in New York on her way to Cuba.

"Well, fine, but she was pretty upset about the summer."

He nodded his head slowly. "I know. Neglect. And she has a proper beef, you know. I was just having so damn much fun . . . well, it wasn't organized around her. There were us guys and the road and Antonio's fights and all that, and Miss Mary was mostly parked in various places. Pretty great places, but still and all . . . of course, I invited her on almost all of the trips but she said they were too tiring or too dull. She didn't want to go and she didn't want me to go."

"Well, summers fade away pretty fast."

"Yes, but I've invited Antonio and Carmen to Cuba and then to drive with us to Ketchum and stay there for a while, and Mary just sees it as a lot of work."

"Which it will be."

"But a lot of fun, too."

"Fill me in on what happened after I left," I said.

"Sorry to say, it wasn't the September and October we had planned on. Antonio wound up spending a month in jail for using picadors who had been suspended—so there were no bullfights. And just before that my Hong Kong security pocket was pierced for the first time—lost everything."

"I read about it."

"Those events certainly cooled off the summer, which had the ultimate chill put on it by a letter I received from my brother Leicester. It seems he has written a book about me that, among other things, contains some of my letters and he wanted permission to print them. I wrote him my general attitude toward books about people who are still alive, and especially one member of a family writing about that family, especially one as vulnerable as ours where my mother was a bitch and my father a suicide. It always seemed better to me to skip the whole thing and try for a better record, and I am damned if I will permit the Baron to write about it and dredge up all the trouble I've ever been in as well, just to make money. It might be better to buy the whole thing from him and get a release, but as I explained to him, no Hemingstein has ever yet paid for anything he could prevent with his own two hands."

Ernest stayed in New York for a few days to conduct some business but the air of preoccupation clung to him. The summer was over. Not just another summer, but
the
summer, the last good time of a life of good times. Unfortunately, some of what had happened that summer in the disguise of levity was to come back to haunt Ernest. The tide that he had always easily swum against was destined to push him out to the open sea. But this had been the best summer of his life, he had said, and no one could take that away from him.

As I drove him out to the airport he continued to worry about Mary. "Do you think Miss Mary will like the pin?" he asked.

"Sure she will. It's a lovely pin."

"I hope so."

"Sure she will."

"I guess it wasn't much fun for her. I just wish she wouldn't take it out on poor Bill."

"She had some fun, quite a lot. She'll be all right."

"She hasn't written since she left. And I've got Antonio coming."

"Don't worry, Papa. Please don't worry. Everything will be all right."

"I just hope she likes the pin."

Part Four

Our nada who art in nada, nada be thy name

thy kingdom nada thy will be nada in nada as it

is in nada. Give us this nada our daily nada

and nada us our nada as we nada our nadas and

nada us not into nada but deliver us from nada;

pues nada. Hail nothing full of nothing,

nothing is with thee.

a clean, well-lighted place

BOOK: Papa Hemingway
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