| PART THIRD: THE LIGHTHOUSE
5. CHAPTER FIVE
 (continued)Pedro Montero, the brother of the general, dismounted into a
shouting and perspiring throng of enthusiasts whom the ragged
 Nationals were pushing back fiercely. Ascending a few steps he
 surveyed the large crowd gaping at him. and the bullet-speckled
 walls of the houses opposite lightly veiled by a sunny haze of
 dust. The word "PORVENIR" in immense black capitals, alternating
 with broken windows, stared at him across the vast space; and he
 thought with delight of the hour of vengeance, because he was
 very sure of laying his hands upon Decoud. On his left hand,
 Gamacho, big and hot, wiping his hairy wet face, uncovered a set
 of yellow fangs in a grin of stupid hilarity.  On his right,
 Senor Fuentes, small and lean, looked on with compressed lips.
 The crowd stared literally open-mouthed, lost in eager stillness,
 as though they had expected the great guerrillero, the famous
 Pedrito, to begin scattering at once some sort of visible
 largesse. What he began was a speech. He began it with the
 shouted word "Citizens!" which reached even those in the middle
 of the Plaza. Afterwards the greater part of the citizens
 remained fascinated by the orator's action alone, his tip-toeing,
 the arms flung above his head with the fists clenched, a hand
 laid flat upon the heart, the silver gleam of rolling eyes, the
 sweeping, pointing, embracing gestures, a hand laid familiarly on
 Gamacho's shoulder; a hand waved formally towards the little
 black-coated person of Senor Fuentes, advocate and politician and
 a true friend of the people. The vivas of those nearest to the
 orator bursting out suddenly propagated themselves irregularly to
 the confines of the crowd, like flames running over dry grass,
 and expired in the opening of the streets. In the intervals, over
 the swarming Plaza brooded a heavy silence, in which the mouth of
 the orator went on opening and shutting, and detached
 phrases--"The happiness of the people," "Sons of the country,"
 "The entire world, el mundo entiero"--reached even the packed
 steps of the cathedral with a feeble clear ring, thin as the
 buzzing of a mosquito.  But the orator struck his breast; he
 seemed to prance between his two supporters. It was the supreme
 effort of his peroration. Then the two smaller figures
 disappeared from the public gaze and the enormous Gamacho, left
 alone, advanced, raising his hat high above his head. Then he
 covered himself proudly and yelled out, "Ciudadanos!" A dull roar
 greeted Senor Gamacho, ex-pedlar of the Campo, Commandante of the
 National Guards.
 
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