Pepe de Cea must have remembered that I was born in Argentina and could communicate with Spanish-speaking horses. I was also the only one of his intimate friends likely to be at home and in bed at 1.30 a.m. He did not even apologise for his arrival.
‘It’s my mother-in-law again,’ he explained. ‘And I will not calm myself. And I do not need a drink. Get dressed and come!’
‘Oh, God! Not donkeys?’
‘A mule. When I came home it was in the courtyard.’
Mrs Fellowes had a vague and gossamer charm. Her daughter, Barbara, who had impulsively married Pepe when he was a minor attaché in the London Embassy, inherited the charm and added the assurance proper to a young Spanish matron. Pepe adored the pair of them and welcomed the frequent visits of his mother-in-law to Madrid, although on occasion he had to explain her peculiarities to the police. Nothing could shake Mrs Fellowes’ belief that Spaniards were cruel to animals. She had a habit of wandering about the more primitive quarters of the city – since animals had pretty well disappeared from the glittering centre – with a bag of carrots and breathless rebukes.
‘She hasn’t stolen it?’ I asked.
‘She says it chased her home trying to bite her.’
‘What is she doing about it?’
‘Nothing. It terrified her. She has gone to bed, more convinced than ever that my cruel countrymen brutalise their animals with whips and red-hot pokers.’
‘And Barbara?’
‘Barbara is with her. In the way of women they have both decided it is all my fault.’
‘I don’t see how it could be. You were out.’
‘That’s why.’
‘Well, shoo the mule away!’
‘I can’t. You never saw such a vicious-looking brute. I think its mother was a hyaena. Its ears are about half a metre long and it bares its teeth at me.’
‘Any flame from its nostrils?’
‘Not yet. But don’t light a match when it snorts at you!’
I had no experience of mules, only knowing that some of them can kick forwards, which a horse usually can’t, and that the seat of one’s pants is by no means safe even when holding the head. Still, it seemed a simple matter to accompany an unduly nervous friend and remove the beast. Other complications he would have to settle himself. The mule’s proprietor might turn out to be an angrily obstinate carter who would refuse compensation and insist on an official complaint. The worst risk was what Mrs Fellowes would say in court if the police ran her in. No magistrate was going to take a lenient view after being lectured on his compatriot’s supposed cruelty to animals.
Pepe’s seventeenth-century house was in an unfashionable district off the Atocha, but within its courtyard he had the quiet and privacy of a village. He parked his flashy sports car in the street and we entered the court through a narrow archway. The mule was standing on the cobbles – a huge, black draught mule, a mediaeval gargoyle of a mule. Half a wooden post dangled from its halter. Its tail was bald except for an obscene tuft at the end. Its snarling teeth were bright yellow in the light over the front door and quite long enough for any reasonable hyaena.
‘It pulled that post down for the sake of carrots?’ I asked.
‘Or to attack my mother-in-law. When they met, it was tied up in front of a tavern with the cart alongside.’
‘Well, we’d better start with some more carrots.’
Edging past the mule, Pepe disappeared into the house. He returned with only two carrots, saying that he couldn’t find any more in the larder. I sent him back to forage for something else and to assure his women, if they came down, that I would handle the problem without unnecessary violence. I certainly was not going to force that mule to do anything against its wishes.
I advanced upon it, preceded by the longest carrot. One ear was reassuringly forward; the other was half way down its neck, apparently investigating sounds from the broken pillar. It accepted the carrot with a snort and a start as if it had been dreaming of the things and suddenly found they were a real presence.
With head and neck aligned like a striking snake and baring its fearful yellow teeth it proceeded to examine me. I stood still only because I did not dare to turn my back. Its oddly prehensile nose was velvet and friendly. Its brown eyes, though mischievous, were showing no white. When I found that it enjoyed being patted and talked to, I realised that the fighting-stallion effect was artificial. That mule had been deliberately taught to smile – either to keep off thieves or, more probably, to earn free drinks for its owner. Quite obviously it had been treated with affection as one of the family. But the family was poor. Carrots had seldom come its way. Its intent in breaking loose and chasing Mrs Fellowes into a smart trot had been to get some more from her bag.
Pepe, returning from the house with a long parcel in greaseproof paper, was impressed. If he had been brought up among horses he would soon have seen, as I did, that this hideous monstrosity was as friendly as a child’s pony. But I did not disturb his opinion of me and asked him what he had in the parcel.
‘Brazos de Gitana,’ he replied. ‘It was all I could find. Barbara is giving a party tomorrow. Do you think he’ll like it?’
I said it would certainly be new to him. There were over a couple of feet of this delectable cake, somewhat resembling a Swiss Roll and stuffed with gently foaming cream. I tried a piece on the mule. I doubt if he found it as welcome as carrots, but it was an agreeable change from hay and the remains of the family’s chick-peas. He faced it boldly and with growing interest like a man trying out a first-class French restaurant with a lunch voucher.
‘Do you think you can entice him back with that?’ Pepe asked.
‘I think we can. Where to?’
‘She isn’t quite sure. You know how she wanders about dreaming that she is St Francis. She believes the tavern was somewhere between the Atocha station and the Plaza de la Cebada.’
They were the best part of a mile from each other. We were bound to attract a following of idle and interested spectators while leading a draught mule on a random search through the back streets of Madrid. Pepe could not be anything but a young and monied señorito and I am always recognised as English.
‘Have you decided what we are going to say to the police?’ I asked him, removing the length of worm-eaten post from the mule’s halter. It was deeply carved and suggested the pillar of a verandah rather than a mere hitching post.
‘We just found it wandering. And you with British public spirit and responsibility …’
‘On the contrary. You, Pepe, with the splendid and generous impulse of a Spaniard …’
‘Suppose you ride it?’ he suggested.
I pointed out that there was no reason to believe the mule had ever been ridden and that it was a long way to the ground. If we had a cart, we might drive it.
The mention of wheels brought Pepe back to the automobile age.
‘I’ll run down to the Atocha goods yard and hire a cattle truck,’ he said. ‘There’s sure to be one about and we’ll only need it for ten minutes.’
That was probable. The tavern and deserted cart could not be far away since the mule seemed to have vanished round corners and into Pepe’s courtyard before anyone could spot what had happened and take off after it.
When he had left, the night wore on for me and my peaceable companion. In the street outside there was even an hour of silence. I supplied the mule with a bucket of water and another mouthful of cream and sponge cake. He then went to sleep on his feet; so did I on the front steps, for I felt reluctant to ring the bell and wake up the house just to tell Barbara and Mrs Fellowes that their mule at present was contented and affectionate. While the future was uncertain, witnesses were better away.
About four in the morning Pepe silently free-wheeled into the courtyard, taking the corner with the skill of long practice.
‘Got one!’ he exclaimed. ‘There was nothing at the station, so I had to go down to the slaughterhouse. I found a man who had just delivered some cattle and was glad to have the job.’
‘Did you tell him what it was?’
‘Only to move a beast to the Atocha station.’
A dilapidated van backed up to the archway which was too low for it to enter the court. The driver came round and let down the tailboard to form a ramp. He was a real sun-dried tough from Burgos. He said that if he had expected a mule, which he hadn’t, it should not be one frothing at the mouth. God knows what he did expect! Livestock in the centre of Madrid must be rare.
I had no time to explain that the froth was whipped cream, for the mule panicked. Evidently it had never travelled in a van. It folded its ears back and flung up its gaunt, black head to have a better look, nearly lifting me off the ground. The man from Burgos circled cautiously round it and caught it a whack with his stick which would have earned him a lecture from Mrs Fellowes. The mule, too, was scandalised by this normal method of starting nervous cattle up a ramp. It bucked and let go with its off hind leg. Not viciously. It was only protesting against such treatment when out of harness. That hoof fairly whistled past the driver’s stomach; the head then twisted right round at an unnatural angle to inspect him.
I entered the van with the sticky parcel of Brazos de Gitana. That was effective. The mule bared its yellow fangs in the usual smile and clattered up the ramp at me. I tied it up while it lovingly filled my ear with cream. The driver had taken refuge in his cab; so I closed up the tailboard and joined Pepe in the front seat.
The driver was crossing himself. I think it may have occurred to him that we had just exorcised the old house and that this grinning ‘weremule’ was the result. He was in a nightmare anyway. Nothing made sense. When Pepe directed him to the station and then, as soon as we were safely away from home, turned him off to the Cebada through a labyrinth of one-way streets, he shrugged his shoulders and gave it up.
It did not take us long to discover the mule’s starting point: a little square with a patch of paving in the middle on which were some empty carts. Outside a tavern was a narrow verandah with a sagging roof. One of its supporting columns was broken. An old-fashioned carter was being supported by the tavern keeper and his fellows while two policemen tried to take notes of his remarks. He was magnificently in liquor. So, I think, were the rest of them. If they had only recently noticed the absence of the mule, it stood to reason.
Fortunately we were loitering along the opposite side of the square, too far away for the driver to hear what all the excitement was about. Pepe snapped at him to turn right and so startled the man that he did. We bounced the wrong way up a one-way street, straightened ourselves out and were compelled to arrive at the Puerta del Sol.
‘And now?’ the driver asked, pulling up right in the centre of Madrid.
‘Straight on,’ said Pepe confidently.
There was really no straight on; but the man from Burgos took it that he should continue north – which he did, looking more and more suspicious, until there was little of Madrid left. We could not discuss in his presence what on earth we were to do. We did not dare to tip the mule out into the road in front of a witness who knew Pepe’s address and was certain to talk.
‘To whom does this animal belong?’ the driver asked sullenly.
‘Friend, it belongs to us both,’ Pepe answered.
‘Then listen, both of you! I am not a man for jokes. The transport of cattle is my living. There are inspections. There are licences. What we are going to do is to stop at the nearest police station.’
I foresaw no trouble in clearing myself of the charge of stealing a mule; but Spanish summary justice is slow, and it would be at least a month before my passport was returned and I was formally congratulated on my innocence. As for Pepe, he could only denounce his mother-in-law’s habits and opinions – which would not lead to peace at home – or pay an immense fine as a gilded youth who had amused himself at the expense of the public.
The mention of licences worked on his despairing imagination. He said:
‘As you like. It’s not our fault that the chap we expected never turned up. To us the police can do nothing.’
‘Nor to me.’
‘If God wills. I don’t know the regulations of the Veterinary Service.’
‘What have the vets to do with it?’
‘Hombre! You don’t think I would get rid of a family pet for no reason?’
‘Family pet, my foot!’
‘You cannot imagine how fond of it my father was,’ Pepe protested, looking hurt. ‘And now it has to be put down.’
‘What’s the matter with it?’
‘Well you saw how it attacked with open mouth this gentleman whom it has known since it was a foal. In all fairness I must advise you to disinfect your van.’
‘Jesus! I have children at home!’
‘There’s nothing to worry about. It hasn’t bitten you. You have only to keep your trap shut.’
‘I’m not going another step,’ said the driver, stopping abruptly in a melancholy nowhere intensified by the first grey of dawn.
‘But I could not know you had children. Then we have only to settle accounts. We have come six times the distance you expected, so I’ll make it six times the price. Agreed?’
‘Since I am on my way home anyway, I won’t say no. But for the sake of us all, not a word!’ the driver added anxiously. ‘If this came out, they could order my van to be burned.’
‘Pepe gave him his solemn promise to keep quiet and we both had the effrontery to shake his hand.
There was no time to waste. The streets would soon be stirring. We stopped and unloaded in the first private spot we could see: a blind alley between a wall and the blank side of a narrow, isolated tenement house. I felt it a low trick to abandon this accomplished animal so far from home, but the police would soon identify it and meanwhile there was plenty of garbage for its entertainment. When the driver had reversed into the cover of the alley, the mule clattered down upon the concrete, ears forward and delighted to see me again. As soon as I had replaced the tailboard, the van gave one leap towards Burgos and disappeared.
Leaving the mule with one ear exploring the silence and the other twitching above a rubbish bin, Pepe and I tip-toed away. We had just turned the corner into the street when we heard it walking after us. I think it was not the first time the mule had been lost, and it had learned from experience – for all the horse species are nervous creatures and remember panic – that when on its own it became an outlaw hateful to human beings instead of a hard-working family friend. Pepe and I represented not only Brazos de Gitana but security.
The only escape route was through the front door of the tenement house and up the first flight of concrete steps. The mule stood outside extending its monstrous ears in our direction like the antennae of a visiting Martian. It would have heard nothing but the vague noises of early workers about to tumble out of bed if Pepe had not nervously started up another flight.
His footsteps were enough. The mule tripped quietly and confidently up the stairs and arrived on the landing with every sign of lasting affection and its nose in my pocket looking for crumbs. Finding no more sponge cake it started off after Pepe in the hope that he might have a bit left.
Pepe still did not understand those bared teeth. He dashed upstairs making far more noise than the careful mule which must have been bred from a mountain pack donkey. When all three of us were at last reunited we found we were on the fifth and last landing. The flats below were stirring but without excitement. A door shut. Two men exchanged good mornings. The day’s work had started.
The mule remained as still as we. If my theory is correct, he had caught the smell of our anxiety and assumed that we too were hiding from the public hostility which descended on him whenever his master, who should never have taught him to smile, spent long and forgetful hours in Madrid taverns.
When all was comparatively quiet again and later risers had pulled the blankets over their ears, I tried to persuade the mule to accompany me downstairs and into the open. He didn’t like it. He wouldn’t have it. The treads were narrow and a hoof slipped. He backed cautiously onto the landing again.
‘That’s fixed him,’ Pepe said. ‘Now all we have to do is to run.’
I refused to risk damaging a valuable animal which had put its mistaken trust in his mother-in-law. If deserted it might impulsively decide to follow at any cost and break a leg or its neck or probably both. I reminded Pepe that we had set out with the intention of returning stolen goods.
‘But we can’t just stay here!’ he screamed in a whisper.
There was something in that. Front doors might open at any minute. A sense of humour was too much to expect so early in the morning. We should be shouted down by all the inhabitants of the building and, as news of the mule spread, by those of the neighbouring tenement houses as well.
On this top floor were two apartments, one occupied and one still to let. Between them a half flight of steps continued up to a little penthouse in which was a wooden door giving access to the flat roof and the washing-lines. I suggested that we should go up and see if there was anywhere to hide.
‘Suppose the mule comes too?’
Any fool could see it was impossible, I replied. The door hammered on the opposite door and routed out a tenant who, at a guess, acted as part-time porter. Both of them started up the stairs, loudly debating about what could have tumbled down and giving us time to take refuge in a cupboard under the half-flight of steps, crouched among mops and buckets. The pair unbolted the roof door and saw at a glance that everything was standing up which should be. The side of the penthouse concealed the hole through which the mule had vanished, and naturally they were not looking for a hole since there was nothing which could have made one.
We remained where we were, panic-stricken through long minutes.
‘The empty flat!’ Pepe suggested at last. ‘If we drop off the parapet, we’ll land on the balcony.’
That was true enough, provided we did not go through it; so we tiptoed back to the roof, the landlord having left the door on the latch, but then were so flustered that we could not decide which balcony was the right one. In order to get our bearings we opened the door for a moment and looked down. It was like opening up a wasps’ nest. At least six women were screaming at each other simultaneously.
The balcony of the empty flat held, though quivering as we hit it. The concrete balustrade was high enough to hide us if we squatted down and there we had to stay. The window which led into the flat was shuttered and locked.
I insisted that I was only an interested foreigner, that I would have nothing to do with forcible entry and that probably someone would come to inspect the flat during the day and let us out. Pepe replied that we might just as well add burglary to other crimes and that what bothered him even more than his diplomatic career was Barbara. If he didn’t get home soon, she would assume he had been killed by her mother’s mule and telephone the police.
He sat down by the shutter and began to cut away the lower slats with a pocket-knife. It was a long job; the builder’s carpenter had been more conscientious than his masons. Meanwhile a small crowd gathered in the street, all talking at once, while women fluttered off to spread the was smaller than a standard door and manifestly too low for the mule to pass through.
But he could and he did tackle the flight of steps. It was amazing how that great, satanic, black brute could step so daintily. Approaching from below, at an angle of forty-five degrees to the horizontal, his head and neck of course went through the door easily, and before we could shut it. He liked what he saw and he liked us. He stretched out his forelegs alongside his neck and gave a heave with his hind. The door frame shuddered in its plaster, and he was through. He was on the roof.
It was near sunrise. We could see the range of the Guadarrama and the distant, fortunate traffic on the road to Burgos. I hoped the mule would be patient and enjoy the view, but it was thirsty and smelling water it reared up with no more trouble than a black cat, forelegs upon the roof tank, prodigiously outlined against the dawn. We crept away and bolted the door behind us after removing a few tell-tale black hairs from the lintel.
We were just about to sneak down the stairs to liberty and were discussing in whispers whether we could get away with a story of having come up to visit a girl or whether no story at all would be necessary. With luck it wouldn’t be; there was still no one about. And then a vast, muffled crash, without splinterings, crackings or any preliminaries, shook the top storey of that house in a single tremor.
‘God help us, he’s gone through the roof!’ Pepe exclaimed.
We waited. Nothing happened. It was the occupied flat into which the mule had fallen, but there was no protest from the tenant. Beneath us were only some faintly audible expletives from lower flats. The inhabitants were probably accustomed to any sort of thud echoing through the whole of that cheap, shockingly built tenement house. This one could have been caused by a wardrobe collapsing or father falling off a ladder and tearing the sink out by the roots.
But one could bet that such a thump would alarm the owner if he lived on his own palsied premises. Far down the bare well of the staircase someone burst out of a flat, news to other tenements. A self-important fellow on the balcony immediately below us was conducting a conversation with two other balconies and the street.
‘What’s happening?’ Pepe asked me, struggling to loosen slats without doing violent and audible damage.
‘A lady in hysterics and a dressing gown is saying that she is a respectable woman and that her bed has hitherto remained inviolate. I suspect she was in somebody else’s.’
‘I am not interested in local scandal.’
‘Yes, you are. She says that when she returned to her flat from an errand of mercy she found a mule in her bed. It was sleeping like a Christian with its head on her pillow. She thought it was the devil.’
‘Her theology seems a bit muddled.’
‘Well, one can see what she meant.’
‘Have they sent for the police?’
‘They have – and the Fire Brigade.’
‘How do they think it got there?’
‘The chap underneath is talking about a rain of frogs in his grandfather’s day.’
‘A café talker! Irrelevant as always!’
‘No, he isn’t. It’s agreed all round that the mule dropped from the sky. Even if it could climb stairs, it could not get through the door. And the landlord swears that anyway the door was bolted.’
‘Why the hell wasn’t it hurt?’ Pepe asked, wrenching free another couple of slats.
I listened until I got the public verdict. The sturdy common sense of the people had arrived at the only possible answer. The mule had come down on a parachute. On the other hand no parachute had been found. The persistent and dogmatic voice on the balcony below said that parachutes were now superseded, that his wife’s cousin had told him that the Americans were experimenting with antigravity.
‘Like monkeys,’ someone answered obscurely.
‘It is the Russians who use monkeys. From the Americans one can expect nothing less than a mule.’
Pepe was inclined to be anti-American, so I passed this on to him as evidence of their unassailable prestige. At the time it did not seem to register. He lay on his back and kicked the glass out of the pane behind the slats he had removed.
‘Crawl through that quick!’ he ordered. ‘And mind broken glass!’
We padded through two empty rooms and opened the front door a crack. Not a face was turned in our direction. The passage and living room of the opposite flat were full of tenants, whispering to each other and trying to get a glimpse of the mule. It must have been still luxuriating on the squashed bed, weary of travel and possibly smiling in its sleep. Evidently no one had the courage to wake it up.
Silently shutting the door of the flat behind us, we mingled with the overflow and started to peer over shoulders. That was a mistake. The owner of the house spotted at once that we had no right to be there. It had not occurred to us that downstairs a policeman had already been posted to keep out the curious.
‘And where have you come from?’ he demanded suspiciously.
‘Would you be good enough to tell me where I can find the proprietor of this building?’ Pepe asked.
‘I am.’
Alongside the landlord was a young Spanish clerk, black-suited, trying to look experienced in such accidents.
‘And this gentleman?’
‘The local agent of my insurance company.’
‘Then it could not be more convenient,’ Pepe said with the impressive, formal courtesy of the diplomatic service. ‘I am the official interpreter of the American Embassy. This is the Technical Officer. He speaks, unfortunately, little Spanish. Now, where can we talk freely?’
I was alarmed that Pepe should have deprived me of any control over whatever he was planning. However, the landlord’s shabby, groundfloor flat to which he led us at least contained a much needed drink. Since we were in the respectable company of capital and insurance, the policeman in the hall ignored us.
‘As between allies we beg for the utmost discretion,’ Pepe began. ‘Now, we understand that in the course of an experiment in the stratosphere some animal was prematurely released …’
‘I got it at last, and interrupted in English:
‘Ask him which animal!’
Pepe did so.
‘Ah, only the mule!’ he exclaimed in a tone of relief. ‘The mule, yes! It was computerised for 41.63 North, 19.00 West. A cruiser is standing by.’
‘Where is that?’ the insurance agent asked.
‘North of the Azores. In the circumstances an unacceptable error.’
‘But my roof!’ the landlord complained. ‘One does not expect such carelessness from a great and honourable nation.’
‘That is the reason for our visit. If you and your agent will be good enough to call at the American Embassy at 11.30 precisely and ask for the Naval Attaché, the matter will be settled on the spot. All we require, as I said, is the utmost discretion.’
‘And what shall we do with the mule?’
‘To avoid questions and to give an appearance of normality the Minister of the Interior has suggested that the Fire Brigade should winch it down and hand it over to the police.’
I got up and shook hands all round.
‘Your car is waiting?’ the landlord asked.
‘We do not leave a car in public places where it might arouse embarrassing curiosity,’ Pepe replied.
Two streets away we found a bus and were home for breakfast. The next day’s papers informed us without comment that a mule, inexplicably discovered on an isolated roof, had been tranquillised and removed by the Fire Brigade and eventually restored to its owner. The incident did not even make the front page. Of course not. Only the improbable is news. The impossible is not.
But I could not leave it at that. I spent several evenings haunting the Plaza de la Cebada until I came face to face with that unmistakeable animal outside the same tavern and now between the shafts of a cart. Its proud possessor told me over his second litre that, by God, I was a friend and so he did not wish me to put my faith in rumours. It was quite untrue, he said, that his mule had strayed into the garden of the American Embassy and been launched into space, travelling twice round the world between midnight and dawn. No, not at all! For the sake of its smile and numerous accomplishments it had without doubt been stolen by a circus manager and escaped from the van – unhappy, loyal creature – into the nearest house.
And then a woman! Always a woman behind every commotion, true? Her husband was away, so she left the door open for her lover. And in walked Sebastiano.
The carter rose from the table, steadying himself with a hand upon my shoulder, unharnessed the mule and ordered:
‘Aupa, Sebastiano!’
The mule obediently performed a curret and pawed the air as if trained in the Spanish Riding School. I could at last understand its apocalyptic pose against the water tank.
‘So you see,’ the carter went on, ‘she fled in panic slamming the door and my clever Sebastiano tried to cut his way out through the ceiling. That was enough to bring the roof down. Now it can be seen how they build houses for the poor!’
The police, I gathered, had tended to approve his theory though it was hardly more believable than Pepe’s impromptu space fiction. I sympathised with them. Anyone possessed by Sebastiano was bound instinctively to be in favour of ascent from hell rather than descent from heaven.