The man in the gray suit wept. He had been a judge. He had sentenced a cartel leader’s son. His family was dead. Now he was dead too, but his legs hadn’t realized it.
“He lost his arms carrying our violence,” said La Loca Teresa, a woman who claimed she could hear the prayers of rats. “Now he asks us to be his hands.”
ElĂas didn’t understand. He only knew that his stepfather’s fists had a rhythm, and the tunnel’s dripping water had another. He preferred the water. Los vagabundos de Dios - Mario Mendoza.epub
They drank. They sang a tuneless hymn. The man in the gray suit stopped shaking.
Samuel was their prophet, or their madman—the difference was irrelevant at four in the morning, when the city’s sewers exhaled ghosts. He had been a professor of medieval theology at the Javeriana. Now he wore a cassock made of trash bags and spoke to pigeons as if they were cherubim. The man in the gray suit wept
That night, they built a bonfire in the tunnel using a stolen shopping cart and pages from a discarded encyclopedia. The fire illuminated faces that had seen too much: a former nun who had lost her faith in a brothel, a veteran who still heard mortar shells in the hum of the city, a child who had never learned to speak but could draw angels with charcoal on walls.
And somewhere, in the static hum of a city that never sleeps, a small, armless Christ smiled. If you’d like a summary or analysis of Mario Mendoza’s actual novel Los vagabundos de Dios , let me know and I can provide that instead. His family was dead
ElĂas didn’t answer. He was drawing an angel on the tunnel wall with a piece of coal. The angel had no arms.