A Century in Bilbao
The boy touched the wall, his mind wandering through the tunnel. No one knows if it still stands, if it was demolished, or if it was never even built. The truth rides on shaky lines. But according to Basque mythology, "everything that has a name exists." That's why the boy was silent. Although half a century had passed since the conflict, fear is inherited. In his case, from his grandmother. The one who was his age when he first entered. His family had come for the inauguration of the majestic hotel. The one that, they said, Bilbao needed to be on par with other European capitals. The grandmother, then a child, only had eyes for the dome.
The previous year had passed with its highs and lows. But it left clues. Few imagined that the publication of a certain Hitler would point the way down a deadly path. Or that Chaplin, then engrossed in the premiere of "The Gold Rush," would end up being its antagonistic mustache. Because that day in Bilbao, there was only one thing on everyone's lips. It had dawned with that gloomy air that Tuesdays have. The clouds played a trick, a reminder that in this land, all four seasons can occur at once. 1926 was going to end with a historic snowfall right in the middle of Christmas. But in the newly arrived January, they suspected nothing. Although they appreciated the warmth emanating from the lobby. 200 rooms, all with private bathrooms and telephones. The little girl who would one day be a grandmother was in that age when young minds play at stringing letters together to give them meaning. "Exquisite service," she read and looked up, searching for applause. She didn't find it. The phrases above her head spoke of what the hotel had cost, both financially and in terms of agreements. To that end, they created the Gran Hotel Carlton Society, composed of renowned businessmen and families. Bilbao possessed industry and commerce capable of competing globally, but it lacked a hotel of its caliber. That was the impetus that made it possible. The Carlton was finally inaugurated. But getting there was as difficult as staying there. A maxim shared by all those who have stayed there throughout its first century. Which brings us to Lorca.