The  soda biscuits and the tortillas started the same way. Flour and baking soda  sifted onto the oil-cloth-covered table through a piece of wire screen nailed  to a wooden frame. Melted lard and sour milk poured a little at a time into a  well in the centre of the mound of flour. Then all this worked into dough,  sticky and lumpy for the biscuits, floury and smooth for the tortillas.
            
            Twice a week  Octavius picked over the pinto beans and put them to soak in one of two  enameled pots. While the beans soaked in one, the other held cooked beans,  reheated twice a day. He added meat from time to time. Salt pork, or deer or  javelina when Pra had shot something. Sometimes they ate just the beans, mashed  in a skillet with fat and eaten scooped up in a tortilla. Always the succulent  green jalapeño peppers.
            
          Octavius liked  the monotony of it all, the subtle shift in the taste of the bean pot, the  steady contrast of the peppers, his routine with the biscuits and the  tortillas. The biscuits they ate in the morning, with coffee and rancid butter.  And then honey. José found the honey.
            
            *
            
  José had just  walked out of the desert one day. From the south, all the way from Durango, he  said. Certainly the thirty miles or so from Nogales. He never asked about pay  or hours, or even about a job. He started doing things. Neat in his person,  with a sparse untrimmed beard, José observed everything with the same sweet and  ironical disinterest. He seemed to know about mining, and so fitted in with  Daniel and Tamayo, with the drilling and blasting and timbering at the work  face, while Octavius and LeRoy shoveled ore and worked the winch, and pushed  the ore cars through the tunnels on the narrow-gauge tracks. Pra never worked  underground.
            
            *
            
  The day they got  the honey—a Sunday, Pra had taken Daniel and Tamayo across the border to see  their families, and LeRoy had gone for the ride—José climbed the hill just  above the mine entrance, to a patch of flowering cactus. He lay on the ground  alongside this thicket, studying something in the air above his head. Twice he  lifted himself on one elbow and squinted in the direction of the ridge high  above. Then he moved to another cactus patch, where he repeated the procedure.
  
  When he was  satisfied he called to Octavius, who was waiting below, to follow him, and to  bring a small satchel of gear José had already prepared, together with a large  tin pail and a military-type folding spade.
            
            *
            
  They climbed  slowly for most of the morning, in the crisp, clean air, zigzagging upward on  the loose stony soil and over the decayed, sharp edges of the porphyry dikes  that extended to right and left at regular intervals across their path. José  paused from time to time to fix his bearings on something at the top of the  mountain, where a weathered dike, heavily fissured and seamed, formed a final  vertical wall.
  
            Just below the  summit he found what he was looking for. In one of the narrowest fissures,  folded into the rock face, a black hole scarcely visible from more than a few  feet away. Octavius could now see the bees coming and going, and hear a steady  hum from inside the rock.
            
            *
            
  José studied the  crevice and the rock around it, probing finally with particular interest a  small vertical opening, just a crack, about two feet to the left and a little  down from the bee cave.
  
  José took the  satchel from Octavius and laid out its contents: a stick of dynamite, a couple  of blasting caps, three or four feet of black-powder fuse, some matches, a  knife, a crimping tool for the blasting caps, a smooth stick about eighteen  inches long and, finally, the canteen of water they had brought to drink from.
  
            With the knife he  cut the dynamite stick into two unequal pieces. Then he cut off a bit at the  end of the length of fuse and stuck the fresh-cut end into a blasting cap and  crimped the cap onto the fuse expertly, his hands around to one side and his  face averted.
            
            He worked the cap  with its tail of fuse gently into the cut end of the smaller piece of dynamite,  from which he had scooped out some of the filling, and bent the fuse back along  the side of the dynamite, so that when he tamped it into the widest part of the  crevice, the open end first, the cap and fuse held snugly in place. He did this  slowly and methodically, with great delicacy of touch, pushing with the stick  in one hand and feeding the fuse with the other, until the charge reached a  depth that satisfied him.
            
            He scraped  together a small mound of alkali dust from the base of the cliff, made a crater  and poured in enough water to make a thick putty, with which he plastered in  the dynamite, filling the crevice around it completely, leaving the black fuse  sticking out. An inch back from the free end of the fuse he made a partial cut  and bent it on itself, exposing fresh powder that would light readily. He put  everything back in the satchel except the matches, one of which he held ready  to strike, and motioned to Octavius to pick up the bucket and spade and move  along to the shelter of a corner off to the side.
            
            *
            
            After the thump,  which sounded as though it came from somewhere inside the mountain, not at all  the ear-splitting crack Octavius had expected, they went back to have a look.  The rock between the dynamited crevice and the bee cave had fractured neatly at  an angled depth of eight inches to a foot and the slab had fallen away, leaving  the hive exposed but undamaged, and the bees, thousands of them, lying dead or  stunned, all over the surface of the combs and down the slope.
            
            They made two  more trips up and down the mountain, that evening and the next morning, filling  the bucket each time with sticky gobs of honey and beeswax. There was even more  they left behind, ancient stuff, black and tarry, some of it hard as rock,  smelling of long-dead flowers.
            
            There was still  honey in the bucket when José drifted off, the way he came, walking across the  desert.