THE HOUSE ON ZAPOTE STREET
About the Author
Quijano de Manila is the pen name of Nick Joaquin. He started writing
before the war and his first story, “Three Generations” has been hailed as a
masterpiece. He has been recipient of almost all the prestigious awards in
literature and the arts, including the National Artist Award for Literature in 1976.
He was also conferred, among other recognitions, the Republic Cultural Heritage
Award for Literature in 1961, the Journalist of the Year Award in the early 1960s,
the Book of the Year Award in 1979 for his Almanac for Manileños, the national
Book award for several of his works, the Ramon Magsaysay Award for
Journalism, Literature, Creative Communication Arts (the Asian counterpart of
Nobel Prize) in 1996, and the Tanglaw ng Lahi Award in 1997.
Dr. Leonardo Quitangon, a soft-spoken, mild-mannered, cool-tempered
Caviteno, was still fancy-free at 35 when he returned to Manila, after six years
abroad. Then, at the University of Santo Tomas, where he went to reach, he met
Lydia Cabading, a medical intern. He liked her quiet ways and began to date her
steadily. They went to the movies and to basketball games and he took her a
number of times to his house in Sta. Mesa, to meet his family.
Lydia was then only 23 and looked like a sweet unspoiled girl, but there
was a slight air of mystery about her. Leonardo and his brothers noticed that she
almost never spoke of her home life or her childhood; she seemed to have no
gay early memories to share with her lover, as sweethearts usually crave to do.
And whenever it looked as if she might have to stay out late, she would say: "I'll
have to tell my father first". And off she would go, wherever she was, to tell her
father, though it meant going all the way to Makati, Rizal, where she lived with
her parents in a new house on Zapote Street.
The Quitangons understood that she was an only child and that her
parents were, therefore, over-zealous in looking after her. Her father usually took
her to school and fetched her after classes, and had been known to threaten to
arrest young men who stared at her on the streets or pressed too close against
her on jeepneys. This high-handedness seemed natural enough, for Pablo
Cabading, Lydia's father was a member of the Manila Police Department.