Libro La Ciudad Y Los Perros May 2026
The pack hesitated. Then they laughed. This one, they decided, was made of the same rotten wood as them.
But El Poeta, who had been on the roof that morning, saw the truth. He saw El Esclavo hand the loaded rifle to El Boa. He saw El Boa aim not at a target, but at the back of El Jaguar’s head. He saw the premeditated murder—because El Jaguar was going to confess to Gamboa about the stolen exam. libro la ciudad y los perros
One morning, during weapons training, a rifle fired a live round. The bullet struck Ricardo Arana—El Jaguar—in the chest. He died before the ambulance arrived. The report called it a "cleaning accident." The pack hesitated
The ringleader was known as El Esclavo —the Slave. He was thin, with cunning eyes that had learned to spot fear like a shark smells blood. His lieutenants were El Boa , a brute with fists like sledgehammers, and El Poeta , a quiet, bitter boy who wrote verses about death in a hidden notebook. But El Poeta, who had been on the
The scapegoat was a timid, chubby boy named Alberto— El Paje (the Page). He was not a wolf. He was a mouse who wrote love letters to a girl he’d never kissed. El Jaguar forced him to memorize the layout of the office. "You go through the window," he said, pressing a razor blade into Alberto's trembling palm. "You cut the glass. You take the exam. If you scream, we find your letters and read them to the whole battalion."
El Poeta did nothing. He went to his bunk, opened his notebook, and wrote a poem titled The City of Dogs : Here the strong devour the weak, And the truth is a buried bone. We bark, we bite, we never speak, And the city is our prison of stone. Years later, Alberto—the former mouse—walked out of the academy’s iron gates for the last time. He was eighteen. He had a scar on his palm from the broken glass. He had learned to smoke, to curse, to never cry. He had learned that the city of dogs was not just the academy. It was Lima. It was the army. It was the whole country.