Libro La Ciudad Y Los Perros | 2025-2027 |
The ringleader was known as El Esclavo —the Slave. He was thin, with cunning eyes that had learned to spot fear like a shark smells blood. His lieutenants were El Boa , a brute with fists like sledgehammers, and El Poeta , a quiet, bitter boy who wrote verses about death in a hidden notebook.
Alberto turned his face to the window and closed his eyes.
"The only way," El Poeta whispered one night, "is to steal the key from the Commandant while he sleeps. That is suicide."
One morning, during weapons training, a rifle fired a live round. The bullet struck Ricardo Arana—El Jaguar—in the chest. He died before the ambulance arrived. The report called it a "cleaning accident." libro la ciudad y los perros
El Jaguar listened from the shadows. "No," he said. "We don't need the key. We need the night guard drunk. And we need a scapegoat."
But El Poeta, who had been on the roof that morning, saw the truth. He saw El Esclavo hand the loaded rifle to El Boa. He saw El Boa aim not at a target, but at the back of El Jaguar’s head. He saw the premeditated murder—because El Jaguar was going to confess to Gamboa about the stolen exam.
As the bus took him away, he saw a young cadet on the parade ground, being circled by three older boys. The boy’s eyes were wide with terror. No officer watched. No one would come. The ringleader was known as El Esclavo —the Slave
The pack hesitated. Then they laughed. This one, they decided, was made of the same rotten wood as them.
The true war began with a stolen exam. The Fourth Year cadets had the answers to the chemistry final, guarded in a locked drawer in the Commandant’s office. El Esclavo needed them to avoid failing and repeating the year—a fate worse than death, for his father had promised to send him to a reformatory.
The trial was a farce. The cadets closed ranks. The teachers wanted to avoid a scandal. Only Gamboa pushed for the truth. And then, the accident happened. Alberto turned his face to the window and closed his eyes
One Tuesday, a new cadet arrived. His name was Ricardo Arana, but they called him El Jaguar because of the way he stared—unblinking, golden, and cold. He did not flinch at the circle. He did not beg. When El Boa grabbed his collar, El Jaguar broke his nose with a headbutt.
The night was moonless. Alberto climbed the jacaranda tree, his heart a drum of terror. He sliced the window pane, crawled inside, and found the drawer. As he touched the exam papers, a flashlight blazed.
The circle, he knew, would never end.
Their ritual was the "circle." Each night, a new recruit was chosen. The victim was dragged to the latrines, stripped of his belt or his rations, and humiliated until he cried. If he told a teacher, they would beat him worse. The unwritten law was simple: silence is the first and last commandment .