The Visitation of the Gods by Gilda Cordero-Fernando
The following text is provided for academic use only. In case of typographical errors and some missing contents, students are encouraged to look for printed copies which may be available at the University of Antique Library or other libraries, or from other sources.
The letter
announcing the visitation (a yearly descent upon the school by the
superintendent, the district supervisors and the division supervisors for
"purposes of inspection and evaluation") had been delivered in the
morning by a sleepy janitor to the principal. The party was, the attached
circular revealed a hurried glance, now at Pagkabuhay, would be in Mapili by
lunchtime, and barring typhoons, floods, volcanic eruptions and other acts of
God, would be upon Pugad Lawin by afternoon.
Consequently,
after the first period, all the morning classes were dismissed. The Home
Economics building, where the fourteen visiting school officials were to be
housed, became the hub of a general cleaning. Long-handled brooms ravished the
homes of peaceful spiders from cross beams and transoms, the capiz of the
windows were scrubbed to an eggshell whiteness, and the floors became mirrors
after assiduous bouts with husk and candlewax. Open wood boxes of Coronas
largas were scattered within convenient reach of the carved sofa, the Vienna
chairs and the stag-horn hat rack. The sink, too, had been repaired and the
spent bulbs replaced; a block of ice with patches of sawdust rested in the
hollow of the small unpainted icebox. There was a brief discussion on whether
the French soap poster behind the kitchen door was to go or stay: it depicted a
trio of languorous nymphs in various stages of deshabille reclining upon a
scroll bearing the legend Parfumerie et Savonerie but the woodworking
instructor remembered that it had been put there to cover a rotting jagged hole
- and the nymphs had stayed.
The base of
the flagpole, too, had been cemented and the old gate given a whitewash. The
bare grounds were, within the remarkable space of two hours, transformed into a
riotous bougainvillea garden. Potted blooms were still coming in through the
gate by wheelbarrow and bicycle. Buried deep in the secret earth, what
supervisor could tell that such gorgeous specimens were potted, or that they
had merely been borrowed from the neighboring houses for the visitation? Every
school in the province had its special point of pride - a bed of giant
squashes, an enclosure or white king pigeons, a washroom constructed by the
PTA. Yearly, Pugad Lawin High School had made capital of its topography: rooted
on the firm ledge of a hill, the schoolhouse was accessible by a series of
stone steps carved on the hard face of the rocks; its west windows looked out
on the misty grandeur of a mountain chain shaped like a sleeping woman.
Marvelous, but the supervisors were expecting something tangible, and so this
year there was the bougainvillea.
The teaching
staff and the student body had been divided into four working groups. The first
group, composed of Mrs. Divinagracia, the harassed Home Economics instructor,
and some of the less attractive lady teachers, were banished to the kitchen to
prepare the menu: it consisted of a 14-lb. suckling pig, macaroni soup,
embutido, chicken salad, baked lapu-lapu, morcon, leche flan and ice cream, the
total cost of which had already been deducted from the teachers' pay envelopes.
Far be it to be said that Pugad Lawin was lacking in generosity, charm or good
tango dancers! Visitation was, after all, 99% impression - and Mr. Olbes, the
principal, had promised to remember the teachers' cooperation in that regard in
the efficiency reports.
The teachers
of Group Two had been assigned to procure the beddings and the dishes to be
used for the supper. In true bureaucratic fashion they had relegated the
assignment to their students, who in turn had denuded their neighbors' homes of
cots, pillows, and sleeping mats. The only bed properly belonging to the Home
Economics Building was a four-poster with a canopy and the superintendent was to
be given the honor of slumbering upon it. Hence it was endowed with the
grandest of the sleeping mats, two sizes large, but interwoven with a detailed
map of the archipelago. Nestling against the headboard was a quartet of the
principal's wife's heart-shaped pillows - two hard ones and two soft ones -
Group Two being uncertain of the sleeping preferences of division heads.
"Structuring
the Rooms" was the responsibility of the third group. It consisted in the
construction (hurriedly) of graphs, charts, and other visual aids. There was a
scurrying to complete unfinished lesson plans and correct neglected theme
books; precipitate trips from bookstand to broom closet in a last desperate
attempt to keep out of sight the dirty spelling booklets of a preceding generation,
unfinished projects and assorted rags - the key later conveniently
"lost" among the folds of Mrs. Olbes' (the principal's wife) balloon
skirt.
All year
round the classroom walls had been unperturbably blank. Now they were, like the
grounds, miraculously abloom - with cartolina illustrations of Parsing,
Amitosis Cell Division and the Evolution of the Filipina Dress - thanks to the
Group Two leader, Mr. Buenaflor (Industrial Arts) who, forsaken, sat hunched
over a rainfall graph. The distaff side of Group Two were either practicing
tango steps or clustered around a vacationing teacher who had taken advantage
of her paid maternity leave to make a mysterious trip to Hongkong and had now
returned with a provocative array of goods for sale.
The rowdiest
freshman boys composed the fourth and discriminated group. Under the
stewardship of Miss Noel (English), they had, for the past two days been
"Landscaping the Premises," as assignment which, true to its
appellation, consisted in the removal of all unsightly objects from the
landscape. That the dirty assignment had not fallen on the hefty Mr. de Dios
(Physics) or the crafty Mr. Baz (National Language), both of whom were now
hanging curtains, did not surprise Miss Noel. She had long been at odds with
the principal, or rather, the principal's wife - ever since the plump Mrs.
Olbes had come to school in a fashionable sack dress and caught on Miss Noel's
mouth a half-effaced smile.
"We are
such a fashionable group," Miss Noel had joked once at a faculty meeting.
"If only our reading could also be in fashion!" -- which statement
obtained for her the ire of the only two teachers left talking to her. That
Miss Noel spent her vacations taking a summer course for teachers in Manila
made matters even worse - for Mr. Olbes believed that the English teacher
attended these courses for the sole purpose of showing them up. And Miss Noel's
latest wrinkle, the Integration Method, gave Mr. Olbes a pain where he sat.
Miss Noel,
on the other hand, thought utterly unbecoming and disgusting the manner in
which the principal's wife praised a teacher's new purse of shawl. ("It's
so pretty, where can I get one exactly like it?" - a heavy-handed and
graceless hint) or the way she had of announcing, well in advance, birthdays
and baptisms in her family (in other words, "Prepare!"). The lady
teachers were, moreover, for lack of household help, "invited" to the
principal's house to make a special salad, stuff a chicken or clean the
silverware. But this certainly was much less than expected of the vocational
staff - the Woodworking instructor who was detailed to do all the painting and
repair work on the principal's house, the Poultry instructor whose stock of
leghorns was depleted after every party of the Olbeses, and the Automotive instructor
who was forever being detailed behind the wheel of the principal's jeep - and
Miss Noel had come to take it in stride as one of the hazards of the
profession.
But today,
accidentally meeting in the lavatory, a distressed Mrs. Olbes had appealed to
Miss Noel for help with her placket zipper, after which she brought out a
bottle of lotion and proceeded to douse the English teacher gratefully with it.
Fresh from the trash pits, Miss Noel, with supreme effort, resisted from making
an untoward observation - and friendship was restored on the amicable note of a
stuck zipper.
At 1:30, the
superintendent's car and the weapons carrier containing the supervisors drove
through the town arch of Pugad Lawin. A runner, posted at the town gate since
morning, came panting down the road but was outdistanced by the vehicles. The
principal still in undershirt and drawers, shaving his jowls by the window,
first sighted the approaching party. Instantly, the room was in a hustle. Grimy
socks, Form 137's and a half bottle of beer found their way into Mr. Olbes'
desk drawer. A sophomore breezed down the corridor holding aloft a
newly-pressed barong on a wire hanger. Behind the closed door, Mrs. Olbes
wriggled determinedly into her corset.
The
welcoming committee was waiting on the stone steps when the visitors alighted.
It being Flag Day, the male instructors were attired in barong, the women in
red, white or blue dresses in obedience to the principal's circular. The Social
Studies teacher, hurrying down the steps to present the sampaguita garlands,
tripped upon an unexpected pot of borrowed bougainvillea. Peeping from an
upstairs window, the kitchen group noted that there were only twelve arrivals.
Later it was brought out that the National Language Supervisor had gotten a severe
stomach cramp and had to be left at the Health Center; that Miss Santos (PE)
and Mr. del Rosario (Military Tactics) had eloped at dawn.
Four pairs
of hands fought for the singular honor of wrenching open the car door, and Mr.
Alava emerged into the sunlight. He was brown as a sampaloc seed. Mr. Alava
gazed with satisfaction upon the patriotic faculty and belched his approval in
cigar smoke upon the landscape. The principal, rivaling a total eclipse, strode
towards Mr. Alava minus a cuff link. "Compañero!" boomed the
superintendent with outstretched arms.
"Compañero!"
echoed Mr. Olbes. They embraced darkly.
There was a
great to-do in the weapons carrier. The academic supervisor's pabaon of live
crabs from Mapili had gotten entangled with the kalamay in the Home Economics
supervisor's basket. The district supervisor had mislaid his left shoe among
the squawking chickens and someone had stepped on the puto seco. There were
overnight bags and reed baskets to unload, bundles of perishable and unperishable
going-away gifts. (The Home Economics staff's dilemma: sans ice box, how to
preserve all the food till the next morning). A safari of Pugad Lawin
instructors lent their shoulders gallantly to the occasion.
Vainly, Miss
Noel searched in the crowd for the old Language Arts supervisor. All the years
she had been in Pugad Lawin, Mr. Ampil had come: in him there was no sickening
bureaucracy, none of the self-importance and pettiness that often characterized
the small public official . He was dedicated to the service of education, had
grown old in it. He was about the finest man Miss Noel had ever known.
How often
had the temporary teachers had to court the favor of their supervisors with
lavish gifts of sweets, de hilo, portfolios and what-not, hoping that they
would be given a favorable recommendation! A permanent position for the highest
bidder. But Miss Noel herself had never experienced this rigmarole -- she had
passed her exams and had been recommended to the first vacancy by Mr. Ampil
without having uttered a word of flattery or given a single gift. It was ironic
that even in education, you found the highest and the meanest forms of men.
Through the
crowd came a tall unfamiliar figure in a loose coat, a triad of pens leaking in
his pocket. Under the brave nose, the chin had receded like a gray hermit crab
upon the coming of a great wave. "Miss Noel, I presume?" said the
stranger.
The English
teacher nodded. "I am the new English supervisor - Sawit is the
name." The tall man shook her hand warmly.
"Did you
have a good trip, Sir?"
Mr. Sawit
made a face. "Terrible!"
Miss Noel
laughed. "Shall I show you to your quarters? You must be tired."
"Yes,
indeed," said Mr. Sawit. "I'd like to freshen up. And do see that
someone takes care of my orchids, or my wife will skin me alive."
The new
English supervisor gathered his portfolios and Miss Noel picked up the heavy
load of orchids. Silently, they walked down the corridor of the Home Economics
building, hunter and laden Indian guide.
"I
trust nothing's the matter with Mr. Ampil, Sir?"
"Then
you haven't heard? The old fool broke a collar bone. He's dead."
"Oh."
"You
see, he insisted on doing all the duties expected of him - he'd be ahead of us
in the school we were visiting if he felt we were dallying on the road. He'd go
by horseback, or carabao sled to the distant ones where the road was
inaccessible by bus - and at his age! Then, on our visitation to barrio Tungkod
- you know that place, don't you?"
Miss Noel
nodded.
"On the
way to the godforsaken island, that muddy hellhole, he slipped on the banca -
and well, that's it."
"How
terrible."
"Funny
thing is - they had to pass the hat around to buy him a coffin. It turned out
the fellow was as poor as a churchmouse. You'd think, why this old fool had
been thirty-three years in the service. Never a day absent. Never a day late.
Never told a lie. You'd think at least he'd get a decent burial - but he hadn't
reached 65 and wasn't going to get a cent he wasn't working for. Well, anyway,
that's a thorn off your side."
Miss Noel
wrinkled her brow, puzzled.
"I
thought all teachers hated strict supervisors." Mr. Sawit elucidated.
"Didn't you all quake for your life when Mr. Ampil was there waiting at
the door of the classroom even before you opened it with your key?"
"Feared
him, yes," said Miss Noel. "But also respected and admired him for
what he stood for."
Mr. Sawit
shook his head smiling. "So that's how the wind blows," he said,
scratching a speck of dust off his earlobe.
Miss Noel
deposited the supervisor's orchids in the corridor. They had reached the
reconverted classroom that Mr. Sawit was to occupy with two others.
"You
must be kind to us poor supervisors," said Mr. Sawit as Miss Noel took a
cake of soap and a towel from the press. "The things we go through!"
Meticulously, Mr. Sawit peeled back his shirt sleeves to expose his pale
hairless wrists. "At Pagkabuhay, Miss What's-her-name, the grammar
teacher, held a demonstration class under the mango trees. Quite impressive,
and modern; but the class had been so well rehearsed that they were reciting
like machine guns. I think it's some kind of a code they have, like if the
student knows the answer he is to raise his left hand, and if he doesn't he is
to raise his right, something to that effect." Mr. Sawit reached for the
towel hanging on Miss Noel's arm.
"What I
mean to say is, hell, what's the use of going through all that palabas? As I
always say," Mr. Sawit raised his arm and pumped it vigorously in the air,
"Let's get to the heart of what matters."
Miss Noel
looked up with interest. "You mean get into the root of the problem?"
"Hell
no!" the English supervisor said, "I mean the dance! I always believe
there's no school problem that a good round of tango will not solve!"
Mr. Sawit
groped blindly for the towel to wipe his dripping face and came up to find Miss
Noel smiling.
"Come,
girl," he said lamely. "I was really only joking."
As soon as
the bell rang, Miss Noel entered I-B followed by Mr. Sawit. The students were
nervous. You could see their hands twitching under the desks. Once in a while
they glanced apprehensively behind to where Mr. Sawit sat on a cane chair,
straight as a bamboo. But as the class began, the nervousness vanished and the
boys launched into the recitation with aplomb. Confidently, Miss Noel sailed
through a sea of prepositions, using the Oral Approach Method:
"I live
in a barrio."
"I live
in a town."
"I live
in Pugad Lawin."
"I live
on a street."
"I live
on Calle Real…"
Mr. Sawit
scribbled busily on his pad.
Triumphantly,
Miss Noel ended the period with a trip to the back of the building where the
students had constructed a home-made printing press and were putting out their
first school paper.
The
inspection of the rest of the building took exactly half an hour. It was
characterized by a steering away from the less presentable parts of the school
(except for the Industrial Arts supervisor who, unwatched, had come upon and
stood gaping at the French soap poster). The twenty-three strains of
bougainvillea received such a chorus of praise and requests for cutting that
the poor teachers were nonplussed on how to meet them without endangering life
and limb from their rightful owners. The Academic supervisor commented upon the
surprisingly fresh appearance of the Amitosis chart and this was of course
followed by a ripple of nervous laughter. Mr. Sawit inquired softly of Miss Noel
what the town's cottage industry was, upon instructions of his uncle, the
supervisor.
"Buntal
hats," said Miss Noel.
The tour
ended upon the sound of the dinner bell and at 7 o'clock the guests sat down to
supper. The table, lorded over by a stuffed Bontoc eagle, was indeed an
impressive sight. The flowered soup plates borrowed from Mrs. Valenton vied
with Mrs. De los Santos' bone china. Mrs. Alejandro's willoware server rivalled
but could not quite outshine the soup tureens of Mrs. Cruz. Pink paper napkins
blossomed grandly in a water glass.
The
superintendent took the place of honor at the head of the table with Mr. Olbes
at his right. And the feast began. Everyone partook heavily of the elaborate
dishes; there were second helpings and many requests for toothpicks. On either
side of Mr. Alava, during the course of the meal, stood Miss Rosales and Mrs.
Olbes, the former fanning him, the latter boning the lapu-lapu on his plate.
The rest of the Pugad Lawin teachers, previously fed on hopia and coke, acted
as waitresses. Never was a beer glass empty, never a napkin out of reach, and
the supervisors, with murmured apologies, belched approvingly. Towards the end
of the meal, Mr. Alava inquired casually of the principal where he could
purchase some buntal hats. Elated, the latter replied that it was the cottage
industry right here in Pugad Lawin. They were, however, the principal said, not
for sale to colleagues. The Superintendent shook his head and said he insisted
on paying, and brought out his wallet, upon which the principal was so offended
he would not continue eating. At last the superintendent said, all right,
compañero, give me one or two hats, but the principal shook his head and
ordered his alarmed teachers to round up fifty; and the ice cream was served.
Close upon
the wings of the dinner tripped the Social Hour. The hosts and the guests
repaired to the sala where a rondalla of high school boys were playing an
animated rendition of "Merry Widow" behind the hat rack. There was a
concerted reaching for open cigar boxes and presently the room was clouded with
acrid black smoke. Mr. Olbes took Miss Noel firmly by the elbow and steered her
towards Mr. Alava who, deep in a cigar, sat wide-legged on the carved sofa.
"Mr. Superintendent," said the principal. "This is Miss Noel,
our English teacher. She would be greatly honored if you open the dance with
her."
"Compañero,"
twinkled the superintendent. "I did not know Pugad Lawin grew such
exquisite flowers."
Miss Noel
smiled thinly. Mr. Alava's terpsichorean knowledge had never advanced beyond a
bumbling waltz. They rocked, gyrated, stumbled, recovered, rolled back into the
center, amid a wave of teasing and applause. To each of the supervisors, in
turn, the principal presented a pretty instructor, while the rest, unattractive
or painfully shy, and therefore unfit offering to the gods, were left to fend
for themselves. The first number was followed by others in three-quarter time
and Miss Noel danced most of them with Mr. Sawit.
At ten
o'clock, the district supervisor suggested that they all drive to the next town
where the fiesta was being celebrated with a big dance in the plaza. All the
prettier lady teachers were drafted and the automotive instructor was ordered
behind the wheel of the weapons carrier. Miss Noel remained behind together
with Mrs. Divinagracia and the Home Economics staff, pleading a headache.
Graciously, Mr. Sawit also remained behind.
As Miss Noel
repaired to the kitchen, Mr. Sawit followed her. "The principal tells me
you are quite headstrong, Miss Noel," he said. "But then I don't put
much stock by what principals say."
Miss Noel
emptied the ashtrays in the trash can. "If he meant why I refused to dance
with Mr. Lucban…"
"No,
just things in general," said Mr. Sawit. "The visitation, for
instance. What do you think of it?"
Miss Noel
looked into Mr. Sawit's eyes steadily. "Do you want my frank opinion,
Sir?"
"Yes,
of course."
"Well,
I think it's all a farce."
"That's
what I've heard - what makes you think that?"
"Isn't
it obvious? You announce a whole month ahead that you're visiting. We clean the
schoolhouse, tuck the trash in the drawers, bring out our best manners. As you
said before, we rehearse our classes. Then we roll out the red carpet - and you
believe you observe us in our everyday surrounding, in our everyday
comportment?"
"Oh, we
know that."
"That's
what I mean - we know that you know. And you know that we know that you
know."
Mr. Sawit
gave out an embarrassed laugh. "Come now, isn't that putting it a trifle
strongly?"
"No,"
replied Miss Noel. "In fact, I overheard one of your own companions say
just a while ago that if your lechon were crisper than that of the preceding
school, if our pabaon were more lavish, we would get a higher efficiency
rating."
"Of
course he was merely joking. I see what Mr. Olbes meant about your being
stubborn."
"And
what about one supervisor, an acquaintance of yours, I know, who used to come
just before the town fiesta and assign us the following items: 6 chickens, 150
eggs, 2 goats, 12 leche flans. I know the list by heart - I was assigned the
checker."
"There
are a few miserable exceptions…"
"What
about the sweepstakes agent supervisor who makes a ticket of the teacher's
clearance for the withdrawal of his pay? How do you explain him?"
Mr. Sawit
shook his head as if to clear it.
"Sir,
during the five years that I've taught, I've done my best to live up to my
ideals. Yet I please nobody. It's the same old narrow conformism and
favor-currying. What matters is not how well one teaches but how well one has
learned the art of pleasing the powers-that-be and it's the same all the way
up."
Mr. Sawit
threw his cigar out of the window in an arc. "So you want to change the
world. I've been in the service a long time, Miss Noel. Seventeen years. This
bald spot on my head caused mostly by new teachers like you who want to set the
world on fire. In my younger days I wouldn't hesitate to recommend you for
expulsion for your rash opinions. But I've grown old and mellow - I recognize
spunk and am willing to give it credit. But spunk is only hard-headedness when
not directed towards the proper channels. But you're young enough and you'll
learn, the hard way, singed here and there - but you'll learn."
"How
are you so sure?" asked Miss Noel narrowly.
"They
all do. There are thousands of teachers. They're mostly disillusioned but they
go on teaching - it's the only place for a woman to go."
"There
will be a reclassification next month," continued Mr. Sawit. "Mr.
Olbes is out to get you - he can, too, on grounds of insubordination, you know
that. But I'm willing to stick my neck out for you if you stop being such an
idealistic fool and henceforth express no more personal opinions. Let sleeping
dogs lie, Miss Noel. I shall give you a good rating after this visitation
because you remind me of my younger sister, if for no other reason. Then after
a year, when I find that you learned to curb your tongue, I will recommend you
for a post in Manila where your talents will not be wasted. I am related to Mr.
Alava, you know."
Miss Noel
bit her lip in stunned silence. Is this what she had been wasting her years on?
She had worked, she had slaved - with a sting of tears she remembered all the
parties missed ("Can't wake up early tomorrow, Clem"), alliances
forgone ("Really, I haven't got the time, maybe some other year?")
the chances by-passed ("Why, she's become a spinster!") - then to
come face to face with what one has worked for - a boor like Mr. Sawit! How did
one explain him away? What syllogisms could one invent to rub him out of the
public school system? Below the window, Miss Noel heard a giggle as one of the
Pugad Lawin teachers was pursued by a mischievous supervisor in the playground.
"You
see," the voice continued, "education is not so much a matter of
brains as getting along with one's fellowmen, else how could I have risen to my
present position?" Mr. Sawit laughed harshly. "All the fools I
started out with are still head-teachers in godforsaken barrios, and how can
one be idealistic in a mudhole? Goodnight, my dear." Mr. Sawit's hot
trembling hand (the same mighty hand that fathered the 8-A's that made or broke
English teachers) found its way swiftly around her waist, and hot on her
forehead Miss Noel endured the supreme insult of a wet, fatherly kiss.
Give up your
teaching, she heard her aunt say again for the hundredth time, and in a couple
of months you might be the head. We need someone educated because we plan to
export.
Oh, to be
able to lie in a hammock on the top of the hill and not have to worry about the
next lesson plan! To have time to meet people, to party, to write.
She
remembered Clem coming into the house (after the first troubled months of
teaching) and persuading her to come to Manila because his boss was in need of
a secretary. Typing! Filing! Shorthand! She had spat the words contemptuously
back at him. I was given a head so I could think! Pride goeth… Miss Noel bowed
her head in silence. Could anyone in the big, lighted offices of the city
possibly find use for a stubborn, cranky, BSE major?
As Miss Noel
impaled the coffee cups upon the spokes of the drainboard, she heard the door
open and the student named Leon come in for the case of beer empties.
"Pandemonium
over, Ma'am?" he asked. Miss Noel smile dimly. Dear perceptive Leon. He
wanted to become a lawyer. Pugad Lawin's first. What kind of a piker was she to
betray a dream like that? What would happen to him if she wasn't there to teach
him his p's and f's? Deep in the night and the silence outside flickered an
occasional gaslight in a hut on the mountain shaped like a sleeping woman. Was
Porfirio deep in a Physics book? (Oh, but he mustn't blow up any more pigshed.)
What was Juanita composing tonight? (An ode on starlight on the trunk of a
banana tree?) Leon walked swiftly under the window: in Miss Noel's eyes he had
already won a case. Why do I have to be such a darn missionary?
Unafraid,
the boy Leon stepped into the night, the burden of bottles light on his back.
After
breakfast the next morning, the supervisors packed their belongings and were
soon ready. Mr. Buenaflor fetched a camera and they all posed on the sunny
steps for a souvenir photo: the superintendent with Mr. and Mrs. Olbes on
either side of him and the minor gods in descending order on the Home Economics
stairs. Miss Noel was late - but she ran to take her place with pride and
humility on the lowest rung of the school's hierarchy.
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