| R
I O H O N D O |
A
novel by Thomas Jarrett |
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Temple 1
by T. Jarrett, watercolor on paper
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Characters
|The Cross | The Cruzob
| E-mail Tom | Form of the
Book | More on the Setting | The
Opening | Thomas Jarrett | The
Title | author photo
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Rio
Hondo
is set in the Yucatan in the mid-1860s, during what is called the
War of the Castes, when the Maya took up arms and nearly drove the
non-Maya from the peninsula.
Despite the historical setting the book is not a historical novel
in the genre sense. The book is not so much about the setting or
the war as it is about love in a time of factionalism, terrorism
and its rationales and consequences, and the choices of individuals
conscribed by large forces of history.
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| More
on the Setting
The
Yucatan in this period was sharply divided between ladino (white)
and Maya populations. Ladinos controlled the north and west and
Maya the south and east of the peninsula. The book's main locales
are the two group's capitals, Merida and Chan Santa Cruz, the latter
hidden deep in the jungle. There is also a storyline related to
international politics, with settings in Rome, Paris, Brussels,
and elsewhere. |
The
Cruzob
The
name derives from the word for "cross." They were "the
people of the cross." They were Mazehualob (Maya) who considered
themselves God's truest believers. |
The
Cross
The
miracle cross that talked like a man was located in the capital
of the Cruzob, the community of Chan Santa Cruz, deep in the sothern
jungles of the Yucatan. |
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The Form of the Book
Rio
Hondo is a novel in thirteen chapters (each with an introductory
section displaced from the main action); it has some of the formal
qualities of a dramatic tragedy. |
The
Title
Today
the Rio Hondo ("Deep River") marks the border between
Belize and the Mexican state of Quintana Roo in the south of the
Yucatan peninsula. At the time of the story it was generally observed
by the Cruzob as the southern limit of their territory. It is a
place where the local and international stories intersect. |
Connection
with the Howard Hawkes / John Wayne movies Rio Bravo and
Rio Lobo
None. |
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| A
Few Merida Characters in Brief |
A
Few Chan Santa Cruz Characters in Brief |
A
Few International Characters in Brief
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- Tomas
Fuentes, a printer
- Maria
Marta Ordoñez de Medina, organizer of imperial ball
- Colonel
Esteban Medina de la Cruz, counter-terrorism specialist
- Xavier
Medina de la Cruz, bishop of Merida
- Hernando
Montejo, conservative conspirator
- Alfonzo
Poot, a spy
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- Vicencio
Reb, Secretary of the Cross
- Ricardo
Pano, spiritual leader (Tatich) of the Cruzob
- Ay
Xilam, military leader (Tata Chikiuc) of the Cruzob
- Ixchel,
healer, weaver, midwife
- Ixchup,
a young woman
- Joya,
Ixchup's friend
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- Napoleon
III, emperor of France
- Pope
Pius IX
- Ferdinand
Maximilian Joseph, Archduke of Austria and emperor of Mexico
- Carlota
(princess Charlotte of Belgium), empress of Mexico
- Jose
Maria Gutierrez de Estrada, advocate for monarchy
- Hugh
Blake, English diplomat
- Henri
Selavy, French diplomat
- Aruwarire,
Garifunda leader
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The
Opening
Chan
Santa Cruz, 1865
The
spring was sacred. Of course it was, it was all that kept them alive
through the dry years. No, it was more than that. It was a channel
to the otherworld, a current to the gods. To God, corrected Xavier,
his narrow shoulders slumped--there is only one. Yes, they agreed.
Their voices were clear and unhesitating, though the sounds were
foreign; to Xavier's ear they were not completely human. And this
is his True Cross. Hear it speak.
Xavier set down the rum and
tortillas of communion and wiped his forehead with a tattered amice.
Once pure and bright, the linen was now a dirty gray. The dry season
was drawing to a close, and Xavier's best estimate was that today
was the Feast of the Visitation of Maria. He laughed bitterly at
the impossibility of dressing in the liturgical color for that day,
which was white. He picked up his chalice, a hollowed-out coconut.
He saw his perspiring fingers reflected in its dark surface, which
had been worked smooth as glass. He glanced at his squatting acolyte,
who was humming an ancient melody in a strange key, his eyes lidded
slits, his voice soft and faraway, though Xavier knew he was watching
him closely. Even in this dim room that smelled of earth his head
burned; he imagined that his companion's gaze was boring into it.
Fever could kill him as much as his captors, or his friends--who
might never come or else might come and kill him along with the
others--or even the British gunrunners from Belize. Or whoever else
might be drawn to this, the last place on earth.
Xavier had grown thin and weak--thinner
and weaker; he had always been thin and weak. Yet even here, in
this unforeseen place, he had duties to perform. Those duties were
what had kept him alive when the others had been put to the machete.
Their blood had fed the spring as the Talking Cross had instructed,
and the power of the Cruzob had swelled accordingly.
Outside he heard howler monkeys
screaming in the jungle canopy. The sound was like the shrieks of
the insane.
"Very well, then."
Xavier whispered, turning to his companion. "Let us go."
He had been summoned to the
Nohoch Balam Na.
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Thomas
Jarrett
has
lived in Central and South America. He is director of publications
at the Asian Art Museum of San Francisco. Rio Hondo is his
first novel.
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E-mail
Tom
E-mail
me at "tom [at symbol] thomasjarrett [dot] com."
No
spaces, no quotes, all lowercase.
Here
is a link that will open your e-mail program and input all of the
address except the "com" at the end:
>>Clicking
here will open your e-mail program. You will have to type in the
"com" part of the address.<<
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