Metallic and far ranging. His shouts, loud, clear, sometimes one after the other and vibrating. You could hear his voice from a great distance. His lungs seemed made of steel. Severo told me about it:
It happened in San Alberto, very near Parral. Severo had left Parral during a pe- riod of combat to pay a visit to his girlfriend, but being a civilan, he ran the risk of being taken for a spy. This was on his mind as he headed toward San Alberto, where General Villa also happened to be, accompanied by about five hundred men. When Severo got to his girldfriend’s house, her family told him that, to avoid suspicion, he should start splitting wood in the patio. But Villa himself rec- ognized that the young man was not from that town. After watching him for a time, he slowly walked up to him and said, “Hey, son, what’s the latest news from Parral? You’ve just gotten here, haven’t you?” Severo, quite surprised, answered quickly, “Yes, General, I’ve just come from Parral where the Villistas were fighting in the trenches. I got out as best I could, but it wasn’t easy, because the firing was very heavy and the boys were in a bad way.”
Villa’s soldiers in San Alberto were under orders by the general not to approach the doors of the houses under any conditions, not even to ask for water. Almost all of them were camped around a field near town. They had already lit their fires and begun roasting meat for dinner.
When Villa heard what Severo said, he immediately let out a shout to his men. One of those shouts he would use in battle—vibrant, clear and moving, “We must go to the aid of our boys! The Changos have pinned them down, and they need us! Let’s go!”
Severo said that when all those men heard the General’s voice, they stood up as one, leaving everything behind, without even touching the food. They ran straight to their horses, and before you could blink an eye, they rode off in a cloud of dust.
“The Villistas were one single man. Villa’s voice could unite them all. One shout from him was enough to mount his calvary.” That’s what Severo said, with the echo of the General’s voice still ringing in his ears.