
Transcriber’s Note:
Chata and Chinita
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II.
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VII.
VIII.
A dusty evening in a remote Mexican hacienda sets the stage, where Tio Pedro, the gruff gatekeeper, wrestles with the heavy iron doors as the sun slips behind distant hills. A lone traveler, ragged in a battered leather suit and leaning on a weary mule, arrives pleading for shelter, his humble appearance clashing with the gate’s stern guardian. Their brief, tense exchange hints at the clash between duty and compassion that threads through the household’s daily rhythm.
Inside the sprawling courtyard, the walls are adorned with dark trophies—stuffed animals and serpentine carvings—that lend the place a grim, almost mythic aura. The bustling herders, absorbed in their own stories, barely notice the newcomer as he slips past toward the stables. Against this vivid backdrop of rugged hospitality and quiet intrigue, listeners are invited to follow the stranger’s uncertain steps and discover the lives intertwined within the walls of the hacienda.
Language
en
Duration
~17 hours (996K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
KD Weeks, Nick Wall and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive)
Release date
2021-01-12
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
b. 1846
An elusive 19th-century writer, she appears in historical records more as a byline than a widely documented public figure. The surviving references suggest an author active in the Victorian era, but biographical details are scarce and not well preserved online.
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