We start where we left off – with Martin at his brother’s
graveside, in the pouring rain, his raw emotions a mix of profound grief and
even deeper rage, screaming, asking his brother to give him the name of the
woman who took his life, then swearing to him that he will discover the name of
that woman, that he will follow the trail of the Prado Castelos, and that once
he finds her….that woman will SUFFER.
(Cue another lightning strike and more ominous choir music.) Martin slumps onto his brother’s grave and
cries uncontrollably, while we see flashbacks of him proudly watching his younger
brother (the only family he had) graduating from college with honors.
At the Prado Castelo’s sprawling finca on the outskirts
of Mexico City,
his nana is happy “el niño” Emiliano is back and remarks that the family is
once again complete. They all decide it’s time to break out the champagne and
celebrate his return.
Virginia wastes no time invading Emi’s
personal space and telling him they’ll have to go party at a few new
clubs.
He gently moves Virginia’s wandering hands aside and tells
her there will be plenty of time for that, though he is clearly not
interested.
Then he turns to Veronica
and says what he
really wants to do is go horseback riding the next
morning.
His mom (who looks WAY YOUNGER
than him) suggests they ride in a car instead, because poor sickly Virginia can’t ride
horses much.
Emiliano quickly nixes the
idea, and Virginia
reassures him she will be fine riding a horse.
Back at Demetrio’s graveside, the priest walks up to Martin
and gently leads him away. They arrive
at Demetrio’s rat-hole, er, humble but messy abode, where Nanciyaga is ready
with a pile of towels to help Martin dry off.
Martin tells the priest he plans to leave the next morning, so the
priest goes to the bedroom, brings back a manila envelope, and hands it to
Martin, telling him that before dying his brother made sure everything was in
order (well, except for the messy house).
He informs Martin that he is now the owner of Demetrio’s share of the
gold mine “La Morenita,” which will make him immensely rich. Martin angrily tosses the manila envelope on
the floor and says he doesn’t give a damn about that money, but he swears he
will use all the gold in that mine to be with the same woman who caused his
brother’s death. He shows the priest the
“V”-shaped pendant with her two last names engraved on it, and again he swears he
will find its owner. After all, he knows
that his brother used to work for her family, so it will not be difficult to
find her and avenge his brother’s death.
The priest warns him: “Vengeance will not bring back your
brother, but it will hurt you.” “Father,
what that woman did is unforgiveable. So
I beg you to stay out of it.” “I can’t,” says the priest “because my duty is to help you.” Martin replies: “Dedicate
yourself to saving other souls, because mine no longer matters. Mine is already condemned…..I will avenge my
brother.”
Veronica is in her bedroom about to go to bed, when she
receives an unexpected visit from Emiliano.
He tells her he needs to speak with her and that it cannot wait until
the next morning. She is surprised and
then perplexed when he suddenly embraces her.
Red alert to lady
members of the Patio – we now get our first view of Martin bare-chested and
in the shower. Add to that the
incredibly sad look on his face….it’s enough to make any one of us sign up to
console him. He once again starts
crying, remembering how he promised his mother on her deathbed that he would
take care of his brother. He thought
bubbles: “I failed you, brother. I failed
both of you.”
Emiliano tells Veronica he missed her so much when he was
away and wonders why she didn’t visit him when he asked her to do it. She reminds him she had to stay there to help
out his father with the business. “While you were away I tried to support him
and to learn from his administrator, Demetrio Silveira.” Emiliano asks if he is still with them. “He no
longer works for Prado Castelo. But he
is the one who prepared me. Demetrio
truly was a very capable man and helped us very much.” He notes how well she speaks of him. Virginia
happens to walk by the bedroom door and hears as Veronica admits to Emiliano
that she and Demetrio were quite close.
He asks if they were a couple. “And what if we were?” challenges
Veronica. Emiliano says he just wants to
know if she is going out with him or someone else. Veronica is intrigued by his question and
asks what is going on with him, over-emphasizing the word “primo” (cousin) as she speaks to him. He begs her not to use that word with him and
reminds her they are not related by blood and could even marry each other if
they wanted to. Sadly for him, she
doesn’t plan to marry any time soon and, besides, she has always seen
him as her cousin.
Martin is visited by Magdalena,
Dr. Botel’s wife. The priest is still
there and explains to Martin that Botel was Demetrio’s best friend, the one who
prepared his body for burial and who forbid anyone to open his coffin, because
he did not want anyone to find out how he died.
(Could it be he didn’t actually shoot himself? File that in the “unresolved mysteries”
folder for now, peeps.) The priest and
NanC leave, and Magdalena continues having a
looooong chat with Martin. She assures
him that Botel is not a violent man. “That’s not the impression I got when I
asked him about my brother Demetrio.” Magdalena asks
why he didn’t tell Botel he was his brother from the start, and explains that almost
no one there likes outsiders (“fuereños”) – “They all show up looking for gold and only find their perdition in
alcohol.” “Or they find death,” says
Martin.
“That’s right. I’m truly very
sorry. Botel and I loved Demetrio very
much.” She tells him that Botel and
Demetrio were business partners and inseparable friends, and both men started
drinking more and more as they dug and failed, time and again, to find any
gold. (Cue flashbacks to the two buddies
drowning their sorrows at the local bar.)
“If he and my brother were such
good friends, perhaps you two heard him speak of his girlfriend. Do you know her name?” asks Martin. “No, he never wanted to tell us. He said it
had to be a secret until he built the fortune that she wanted him to build
before she would marry him.” Magdalena tells Martin how Demetrio suffered because that
woman never visited him there as she had promised. “Of
course, such a self-interested woman would never come to a place like this one,”
says Martin. Magdalena
also tells him that for months Demetrio received no letter from that woman,
then finally he received one that destroyed him completely. “Telling
him that she was marrying another man,” adds Martin. “That’s
right,” agrees Magdalena. “With
that, your brother forgot about everything, did nothing but drink, stopped
going to the mine. My husband and
everyone else kept working until they found the new gold vein, and when Botel
informed him that he would be a millionaire, your brother went crazy, screaming
that he had missed the deadline that woman gave him to return as a millionaire.” Martin laments: “And
now he would be married to a demon, but at least he would be alive.”
Veronica tells Emiliano that by the look on his face she can
tell he does not want to take over the management of his father’s
business. He reminds her he only studied
business to please his father and that she knows his true passion is
anthropology. That’s why she helped
convince his father to let him study his second career. Now Emi wants her to also help convince his
father to allow him to dedicate himself to anthropology and museums. Salma and Virginia, who have been listening
at the door, now suddenly walk in. Salma
convinces Emi to go to bed, then confronts Veronica about what she just heard. So it was Veronica’s fault her son went to
study far away. And now it’s her fault
that he shirks his duty to run the family business. Veronica reminds Salma that her son’s
“passion” is the study of pre-hispanic civilizations (which oddly required him
to travel far, far away from Latin America??!!) She doesn’t understand why her aunt won’t
just let her “grown up” son do what he loves to do. (Preach it, sister.) Salma wonders out loud if Veronica’s real
motive in backing her son’s passion is that SHE wants to be the one running the
family business. She warns Veronica to
stay out of it and to leave it up to “his parents” to decide if they will grant
their “little boy” er, very grown (and kinda old-looking) son, permission to
follow his passion. Then Salma forbids
Veronica from ever again bringing Emiliano into her room “especially dressed like that.”
“Oh, come on, tia” says
Veronica, a little exasperated. “You tell me that as if I’m wearing a sexy
negligee and trying to seduce him. I’m
in pajamas.” As a final parting
shot, Salma tells Veronica that if she watches Veronica’s actions more closely
than she does Virginia,
it’s because SHE (Veronica) could follow in her own mother’s footsteps. Cara impactada de Veronica!!!!
Back at the humble and messy abode, Botel is now there apologizing
to Martin, telling him Demetrio was his friend and he hopes he will be too,
unless he prefers to forget about it all and sell him his part of the
mine. Martin says t’s not for sale. The mine is all he has left of his brother,
so he is holding on to it. But he asks
Botel to manage the mine himself, because he has to leave town first thing in
the morning to attend to an important matter.
Young Ana Perla walks through town in the late evening with
her grandfather. He says it’s a good
thing he is with her. She apologizes for
arriving late, but her ride on the riverboat taxi was delayed due to the
storm. He warns her that something bad
can always happen when one least expects it, which is why he never lets her go
out on her own, and he doesn’t like her going so frequently to Mina
Escondida. She reminds him that she goes
because the old teacher needs someone to help her. Besides, she could have just stayed there and
spent the night in her cousin Blanquita’s home.
Her grandfather tells her that he does not like her spending so much
time with her cousins Blanquita and Polo because their father gives them too
much freedom. It’s just because they are
bored, points out Ana Perla, since there is not much to do in Mina Escondida,
although today everyone was excited because an outsider came to town and
everyone wanted to meet him. He grabs
her arm and tells her firmly: “You are NOT going to meet him or anyone
else from the outside.”
NanC tries to convince Martin to have dinner, but he is not
hungry. She offers to bring breakfast in the morning, but he tells her it won’t
be necessary because he will be leaving early, but he will return. He tells her he will continue to pay her to
care for that place, and she can stay there if she wants, but she must leave that
place exactly as it is now – a complete mess.
NanC leaves and he sits there contemplating the “V”-shaped pendant. He thought bubbles: “V.
Prado-Castelo. V. for Vengeance.”
The next morning, Martin waits for the riverboat taxi at the
mining town’s pitiful excuse for a dock.
The priest comes to speak with Martin and makes one last, futile attempt
to talk him out of his planned vengeance.
Martin tells him not to worry, that he will not commit any stupid act of
violence. All he wants is for that woman
to pay with the same currency, to suffer the same way his brother suffered, to
feel the same anguish his brother felt living there. “I
want her to cry tears of blood, just like him.” (Ok, then, that doesn’t sound terribly
violent, Martincito. Just cruel and
unusual punishment, that’s all.) Vengeance
is like a boomerang, warns the priest, and all it does is cause more damage.
That same morning, Veronica and Emiliano are out riding
their horses on his father’s extensive property, with annoying Virginia lagging behind
them. She finally catches up with them and
whines that they didn’t wait for her, but she admits that she needs help to
perfect her riding style and tries to recruit them. They both tell her there are plenty of
instructors at the club, prompting Virginia
to declare that in that case they are all going to the club the next day. Emiliano can’t wait to see Sanson, a horse he
remembers no one could dominate, but Veronica proudly informs him that she has
been making strides with Sanson and gaining his trust, and he now even allows
her to mount him. “I don’t doubt it. You are
capable of taming any savage with your sweetness,” says Emiliano.
Martin returns to his Mexico
City apartment with his good friend Alfredo, who tells
him he still can’t believe Demetrio committed suicide for a woman. Martin can’t believe it either, and he can’t
accept it, but anyone could have gone insane in the hell hole his brother was
living in. He begs Alfredo to leave
because he needs to be alone. As he is
leaving, Alfredo tells him he already informed Claudia and he expects she will
soon be there too.
Virginia
whines to her aunt that Emiliano only has eyes for Veronica. Salma reassures Virginia
that she knows she is better for Emiliano, because even though they are both
adopted, Virginia’s
origins are very different from Veronica’s.
Plus, she likes that Virginia
is sweet and amiable, while Veronica is rebellious and inconsiderate. Virginia
then “confesses” her life-long love for Emiliano and Salma promises her full
support because she thinks Emiliano could not find a better wife than her.
Now alone in his apartment, Martin gets on his laptop and
promptly finds information online about the Prado Castelos and their membership
in an exclusive club where they also own a large stable of prized horses. His doorbell soon rings and we are all
introduced to Claudia, who wastes no time trying to “console” him by seducing
him. She reminds Martin that when they
were an item they used to have so much fun with Demetrio. (So what better way to pay tribute to
Demetrio than by having fun right there and then in memory of him? No, she didn’t ask this last question, but
that’s what she clearly had in mind.)
Claudia also reminds Martin how upset he had been with Demetrio because he
was dating someone but refused to tell Martin who it was. “I
shouldn’t have allowed him to distance himself so much from me, much less for a
woman who is not worth it,” moans Martin.
He starts sobbing: “He was like my son”. Claudia seizes her chance and they begin to
make out, but Martin abruptly stops, leaving Claudia all hot and bothered. He reminds her what they had is over, so
doing that is not right. But there’s
nothing wrong with it if we are both free, she insists. “I
think I will not be free for a very long time.” Claudia is now intrigued
and wants to know if he is seeing someone.
He tells her he has to do “something” that he doesn’t think she can
understand, then leads her to the door and sends her off – to what I’m sure
will be a nice, cold shower. Once she is
gone, he promptly slumps onto his sofa and begins bawling again.
Next morning at the club, Veronica is out riding feisty
Sanson. At the same time, Martin shows
up at the club house for a pre-scheduled tour of the facilities. Back with Veronica, who has had to jump off
Sanson because he is getting a little worked up. Emiliano gets upset and tells Veronica he
could not handle it if something bad happened to her. She assures him that she is fine, and no
matter how long it takes her, she is going to tame that horse!!!! She insists on leading Sanson back to the
stables herself. Meanwhile, Martin is
inspecting all the horses in the stables.
Virginia,
with her perfect timing, comes over and takes Emiliano with her to greet some
friends. Veronica continues on her merry
way towards the stables, leading Sanson by his bridle. As they near the stables, Sanson gets feisty
again, pulling back as Veronica continues to pull on his bridle. Martin comes out, sees what’s going on, and
senses danger. He runs over to help. Veronica releases the bridle as it chafes and
burns her hand, and Martin grabs it and calms down the horse. Then he turns to ask if she is ok. They exchange glances, and from the look in
their eyes, it is love at first sight for both of them.
(end of #2)
Labels: imperdonable
© Caray, Caray! 2006-2022. Duplication of this material for use on any other site is strictly prohibited.