51 pages • 1 hour read
Gabriel García MárquezA modern alternative to SparkNotes and CliffsNotes, SuperSummary offers high-quality Study Guides with detailed chapter summaries and analysis of major themes, characters, and more.
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On a Monday at 6 a.m., Aurelio Escovar, a "dentist without a degree" (73), opens his office. He takes out a set of false teeth mounted in plaster and begins polishing them. At 8 a.m., his 11-year-old son interrupts Aurelio's work to tell him that the mayor is there and wants his tooth pulled. Aurelio says to tell the mayor that Aurelio is not there. Aurelio's son says the mayor can hear him. Aurelio continues his work.
Aurelio's son calls to him again. He tells Aurelio that the mayor says he's going to shoot Aurelio if he doesn't take out his tooth. Aurelio, moving "without hurrying" (74), stops polishing and opens his desk drawer, which holds a revolver. He tells his son to let the mayor come and shoot him. The mayor enters with half of his face shaven and the other half in pain, swollen, with "a five-day-old beard" (74). Aurelio tells the mayor to sit down then begins to boil his dental instruments.
Aurelio examines the mayor's infected tooth then tells him it must be pulled "without anesthesia" (75) because he has an abscess. The mayor agrees. Aurelio uses his hot tool to grasp the Mayor's "lower wisdom tooth" (75) then, just before pulling the tooth, says, "Now you'll pay for our twenty dead men" (75).
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By Gabriel García Márquez