A Knock at the Door

by M.G. Warenycia

            The overtaxed AC unit wheezed and strained against the exhalations of the fatigued, sweat-basted bodies that packed, tighter and tighter, into the already-crowded subway car. It did not offer even token resistance to the evil melange of odours accumulating with each succeeding stop. The northbound train hauled units of production away from the downtown core like a boilerman’s shovel dragging spent ashes from a still-warm firebox. Through the windows, its passengers could observe the southbound train carrying scantily but expensively clad clubbers to drink and dance, and, if they were fortunate, acquire a man who would spare them from riding the subway for a few weeks or months of Friday nights. At the end of the line, you would glimpse serried platoons of this army, advancing clumsily down the sidewalks to the gates of the great night hotspots on stilettoed feet, hoping it might be assumed that they had come out of one of the Porsches or Benzes in the parking lot, rather than a bus two or three stops away.

            There was a time, not so long ago, but already seeming more of a half-forgotten dream than a tangible memory, when Angeline Boucher would have been heading out on the cusp of a sweltering summertime night like this one. Only she would not have rode the train. She could have walked, in fact, and more than one night witnessed her, with a squad of housemates, staggering home, heels dangling in the air, skin-hugging dresses and miniskirts taxed by gross quantities of poutine, pizza and artisanal burgers, which they would have virtuously shunned in the light of sober day, a good portion of which would end up in the sinks of the Edwardian duplex they inhabited – to be cleaned up by the least successful of the night’s huntresses…usually Angeline herself.

            Not that Angeline was the ugly duckling – quite the opposite. Clad in yoga tights and sneaker whites, or in a winter ensemble arranged around her prized ultramarine blue, coyote-fur-trimmed parka, she was a veritable goddess among that urban tribe, sometimes loosely referred to as hipsters, though, really, the subcultural lines are blurry. A lean oval face, broadest at the prominent cheekbones, relieved of its severity by a subtly retroussé nose and shaded by an umbrella of jet black bangs; roseate lips painted crimson to contrast with the marble whiteness of her complexion, and a pair of wide, searching eyes whose tint precisely matched Holbein Manganese Blue Hue. Add to that long, supple limbs and the hands of a pianist, her comprehensible yet exotic (to Torontonians) accent and one did not wonder that so many of her classmates asked her to serve as a model for their own life drawings. When, of course, it was that they wanted a traditional Romantic, Pre-Raphaelite or Flapper-era vision of beauty and not something chosen for ‘are you avant garde enough to pretend you find this attractive?’ sorts of images.

            The wheels gave a banshee screech, rending her out of her meditations. “Due to track maintenance…we apologise…” in the staid female voice of the intercom. It was almost 8 p.m. The sun stabbed in at low angles, flickering through the window frames, stinging those manganese blue hue eyes, but the heat and the soothing rhythm of the tracks lulled her once more into somnolence. She drew an old sketchbook. She did not take out a pencil. She was too tired to make art and, besides, the way people were jammed into the subway car, her elbows would get jostled something fierce. She had learned early on what people wanted to see. They wanted to feel guilty, or to be persuaded they were tyrannically oppressed so as to impart some faint degree of pathos into their lives. Insecure from childhood, she craved praise and acceptance. Had she not been both talented and consciously beautiful, this would have been enough.  She had imagined the City would be a safe harbour of like minds in which she could be the Angeline Boucher she sometimes dared to daydream was her real but hidden self. Unquestionably, she had succeeded, in every objective sense…

            She happened upon a sheet of heavy watercolour paper, wedged among the leaves of the sketchbook. A ‘portrait’ of one of those trees in the Sahara which are otherwise perfectly normal-looking but just so happen to be hundreds of kilometres in all directions from the next nearest living tree. It was executed with a brush and pure India ink, with an airbrush-smooth graduation of reds and oranges in the background, representing the sunset. For added interest, she had put a pen-and-ink-wash Egyptian ruin, with headless columns and rubble off to one side in the middle ground. She submitted it, two winters ago, as part of her portfolio for the semester. She’d even constructed themed series dealing with current events and cultural heritage, which she had tried to make an expression spectacle of discovering through her artistic development. Not only did her professors fail to display the enthusiasm they showed for her classmate Becky’s (‘Jake’ by third year) exploration of ‘transcendent’ sexuality through abstract expressionist acrylic paintings and junk sculptures (in a literal and figurative sense), or Zabeeha Al’Sulaiman’s crude copies of famous paintings – sometimes actual commercial prints – with hijabs drawn or painted over the female figures. Zabeeha – not that it mattered – had gingery red hair, freckles and hailed from some hinterland town not unlike Angeline’s own hometown.

            The watercolours – her favourite medium, though she worked in many others – of rolling hills, bucolic farmsteads and cosy villages dominated by church steeples were taken as generic landscapes, mere technique exercises, probably assumed to have been made with wall calendars or postcards as reference photos.  Actually, it was her hometown and its environs. It had been embarrassing in the extreme to stand, waiting five or ten minutes, while her favourite art-history prof, a scatterbrained ex-hippie, scrutinized her ‘masterpiece’ series: a half dozen large canvasses, depicting religious scenes taking stylistic inspiration from medieval illuminated manuscripts and Jules Breton’s paintings of devout peasant women, transposing them into modern urban environments. “Oh, wow, wow, I can tell you were really connecting with the medium…your colour balance, the way it carries the composition…” the prof gasped and mumbled in awe. Then came the let-down. The professor had been spending all that time searching for the disguised irony and subversive innuendo she was sure from the first must have been incorporated into the painting…searching long and hard because she didn’t want to appear ignorant or hurt a student’s feelings by interpreting incorrectly and therefore de facto implying the student had failed to communicate their message. “Mmmh!” Brenda – the prof’s name; everyone called her by her first name – exclaimed after a swig of steaming peach tea from the tacky mug that never left her desk. Professor Brenda proceeded to congratulate Angeline on how she had cleverly subverted traditional iconography to satirise the ways in which the Catholic Church inculcated backwards medieval ideologies into modern women, particularly marginalized, uneducated ones.

             The pièce de résistance – depicting a latter-day Mary Magdalene in jeggings and a Canada Goose jacket, encountering Jesus, personified as a dreadlocked homeless man – was particularly incisive in showing the absurdity of internalized patriarchy in ‘current year.’ Angeline smiled uncomfortably. She had intended, in fact, to portray the spiritual journey of a modern young woman finding herself – and God – in present-day Toronto. The only irony was in her deliberate application of archaic styles to present-day models embodying the true sincerity of past artists who saw spiritual themes in the living world around them. Pious women in 14th century Books of Hours wore wimples and long dresses; those in Breton’s paintings were clad in the peasant garb of late 19th century northwest France. The spirit which inspired those old artists was present in their world, not frozen perpetually in the image of first century Roman Judea, to be contrasted with a pure and crass materialism for today. Angeline had occasionally started attending services at a church that still did Latin Mass on some occasions – though she did not make confession or take communion – in order to put herself in a frame of mind closer to that of the artists she meant to channel.

            She waited patiently for the other passengers to clear out before attempting to wheel the tower of stacked and strapped-together suitcases and bags she was handling. She winced at the jolt coming up the stretched-up handle of the suitcase forming the base of things, winced in anxiety not for the paints, books and clothes inside, but for what was on top – a very small cat carrier, inside of which a very large cat cringed in mute terror. “It’s ok, Giselle, my baby! Mama is here for you…” she kissed soothing words of comfort to the anxious feline, but grew suddenly uneasy and trailed off. She hurried on; it was only a few blocks, and when she was standing up walking straight ahead, she could not see into those plaintive yellow orbs behind the wire grate. She could barely remember when she’d been anywhere near this far on the line, but that’s where Google Maps comes in.

            The neighbourhood was mostly modest, late-20th century bungalows and split-levels, though here and there rapidly rising property values manifested themselves in massive brick edifices with cathedral ceilings and double or even treble garages, built to the very edges of their respective lots. The general quality of the place was more prosperous and confident than…what was it, four years ago? She did not remember so many eye-catching garden plantings – a lot of houses had impressive displays of peonies, as well as red and fuchsia climbing roses, presently in full bloom. The driveways no longer harboured rusty ‘beaters’ and primer-spotted Astro vans. Upscale Hondas and Toyotas stood alongside smaller members of the BMW and Benz families, lending an air of modest but ambitious respectability. The complex of 60s-70s Brutalist highrise apartment blocks looming behind the station, with their weather-stained cladding and dungeon-like, syringe-strewn stairwells had seemed to oppress the very atmosphere beyond their press-bar actuated, mesh-windowed steel doors – its character of tired gloom only enhanced by the colourful murals depicting an idealized version of the community – seemed to fade into the background; a relic of uglier times and no longer the representative face of the neighbourhood’s identity.

             Such occasional jaunts into ‘Fordland’ had only reassured her of the wisdom of her decision to reside downtown – sometimes in Queen West, Baldwin Street for a semester and change, then Kensington Market. The number of roommates required to hold down a place there inevitably led to conflict over fridge space, toilets and showers fouled, and misappropriation of booze and other common resources. More aggravating still was the talk; the scheming, almost always clothed as well-meaning concern for a ‘gurlfriend,’ wanting the best for her. Such eye rolls, and hushed (but not so much they wouldn’t be overheard) conversation shattered fragile egos, broke up promising relationships. But striking out on one’s own, away from the cannibalistic flock of a particular roommate situation, demanded sacrifices. Sacrifices one would not even consider but for the wet bleakness of November, the anger of family-less Christmases, and the interminable, ice-bound nights of December, January, February…black nights of bone-soaking damp cold that no coat or blanket could resist; nights where a young life’s accomplishments grew dim and one had to flee from oneself to keep from suffocating out of existence.

            It was always comforting to know that, tough and frustrating as things were, it was better than being out by Kipling, Finch, or, God forbid, Kennedy. She had gone out rarely, always only after receiving repeated invites, to birthday or dinner parties in such parts. How satisfying it was to sigh about the difficulties of travelling ‘all the way’ out to Scarborough or Etobicoke and to see the envy in the faces of people who merely shopped and studied where she lived. Then, when she finally had a proper spacious condo to herself – a condo practically overlooking the Lake – she was too afraid to attend any more of those parties.

            She gazed up at the cuboid lowrise, a parkette on one side, a modest corner strip mall with a Shopper’s Drug Mart, florist, fish-and-chips shop, Afghan supermarket and some other typically suburban GTA shops. The sky as bright and the breeze noticeable fresher and cooler han where she’d come from, and a massive relief after the subway. Yes, this was it, undoubtedly. Beige, flush tinted glass, with chrome details and milk-white orb lamps along the flagged walkway. Always the artist, Angeline reckoned it had a sort of toned-down Art Deco revival style with a Middle Eastern palette. A fresco of winged goddesses and picture writing, maybe a pair of pharaonic sentry sculptures too – those would be a nice touch. On entering the faux-marble floored lobby, she was pleasantly surprised to find a mosaic on the walls by the empty front desk, though it was just a geometric pattern. The emptiness of the halls and elevators was mildly disquieting to someone who spent most of her days – and nights – never leaving the radius of other humans’ body heat, without a full five minutes of silence week to week, but she reasoned that the families (mostly immigrants, she suspected) were probably all in their apartments eating supper. The melange of aromas assailing her nostrils from every direction confirmed the hypothesis.

            Not that she was bothered. Her lithe physique belied the fact she was something of a foodie and had sampled the cuisines of much of the known world since arriving in Toronto. Mind, there were always times – more often in the last year or so, it seemed – when she craved some old-fashioned provincial home cooking. Her grandmother made all kinds of wonders – cipaille, vitréais, pudding chomeur, the best pea soup in the world – things you couldn’t really make correctly just by following recipes off the internet…even if she’d had a proper kitchen to herself, the money for the right ingredients, and the time and energy all on the same occasion. That was all in the past, though; so far in the past she couldn’t remember much else that happened around then, or wouldn’t. You could get lots of poutine in Toronto, true. But she was reluctant to let loose into ‘hangover food,’ even if it was late and she was very drunk. She didn’t want to become sloppy, careless; lose her edge. One thing leads to another and she would end up like…it did not bear thinking now.

            A beseeching, kittenish mew escaped from the carrier atop the luggage stack. “Oh, calm down…” Angeline whispered, dragging her fingers along the carrier’s grate as she wheeled her baggage along. “You’ll be out soon…” she trailed off as she came up to the end of the hall which overlooked the street above a radiator and a broad ledge decked with houseplants that looked like miniature palm trees. “Makes it easy to watch the street and parking lot,” she mused to herself, before shaking off unpleasant memories of peering through a screen of monstera and spider plants to watch for a man – or men – in a green ’93 Camry at the behest of a shitty roommate who left in the middle of the night while Angeline was at work, taking the espresso machine, a jumbo bottle of Point Pelee and a pair of Ray-Bans that didn’t belong to her. Never heard a word about that again.

            “Room three-zéro-a’whun,” she enunciated, rolling her feet. She raised an arm, drew up her parachute-like sleeve with the other hand, and daintily flicked the door with the backs of her fingers, so that the stubby, green-painted nails clacked against the resonant wood. The hallway deserted. She heard a shuffling and a tinny clanking through the door; a few more seconds, then the shlick of the chain and the thunk of the bolt, and the door swung open.

            The young man who opened it had not changed much from the last Angeline remembered, what, three…no, more like four years before. That was Dayna’s house party, maybe? Or at the samba studio…Even the same hairstyle. He was wearing a baggy faux-silk mandarin shirt and holding a dish towel and wooden spoon. The pair stood in silence for a moment, till Angeline giggled and asked, “You’re cooking?”

            “Oh?” the fellow looked at the towel and spoon. “Oh, yes, well, not much of a chef – heating food enough to make it edible, I guess, is how you might put it,” forcing a laugh and retreating back into the kitchen to lift a lid and give some bubbling, spicy goo a stir.

            Angeline took this as a sign to come in and heaved her luggage over the sloped threshold with a winsome “Hmph!” then stood demurely at the edge of the open living room.

            “Oh, sit down, make yourself comfortable,” the man emerged again from the kitchen, sans utensils. “Goodness, it’s a lot to catch up on. I mean, there’s Facebook and all, but you’re hardly ever online and one doesn’t always like to follow people’s business; makes for bad, erh, you know…Coffee?”

            “No thanks,” Angeline bowed and looked about for a seat. “Way too much caffeine in my veins already today.”

            “You can use it as a couch; that’s what I normally do when people are over – not that folks from uni come out here often,” the man motioned to a neat, post-less IKEA bed presently covered with patterned rugs and throw pillows like a Persian divan. Meanwhile, he seated himself on a battered old ottoman, racking his brains for a way to ask ‘how things have been’ without probing that which politeness does not permit to be probed. He came up blank. “Eh, you must have taken a while to reach. We should let this little fellow out, no? Cooped up there so long…” Taking Angeline’s silence as assent, he unstrapped the carrier from its place and heaved it down to the floor. “Ough! Hefty feller you got ‘ehr!” An enormous, beaver-shaped black-and-white cat shambled out of the carrier on incongruously frail-looking legs, proceeding to sniff and scout around the room.

            “Mmh hmm,” Angeline cleared her through, twisting her toes together under the bed. “Her name is Giselle. Really, Ruslan, I’m so grateful, you don’t know how much…To find someone who would take…”

            “Bah! It’s nothing,” Ruslan blushed. “You took in some of my furniture while I was moving house way back when. And gave me that antique sidetable. Matches the place too, Art Deco antique, not some Nordic particle board crap or ‘midcentury’ hipsterness. So, hmm, you been doing ok lately? Going to Montreal for the long weekend?”

            “I like how you’ve set this place up,” the girl responded, wriggling in her seat and patting its springy surface with her palms. “You’ve got a theme going…like, adventure, silk road, Himalayas. Neat! Did you draw those?” She cocked her chin at an arrangement of framed monochromes, most depicting exotic scenes in keeping with the rest of the décor.

            “Yes, actually. Pen and ink, based off the sort of illustrations you find in Victorian travel journals, which you can find online. It used to be a popular thing, before mass jet travel, the internet and convenient cameras; pretty much the only way to get an idea of what some far-off land was like, if you planned to travel or wanted to write a book set there…” realizing he might be boring the charming young lady seated on his couch-bed, Ruslan changed tack. “Have you found a next apartment yet? Just, it’s an odd time to take a vacation, no? Rentals, even in Scarbs, are getting snapped up in hours of people posting them. I have a friend from uni – you don’t know him – like six, seven places he and his girlfriend checked, and not like they are looking for a bargain basement deal. Fifteen, sixteen hundred and of course that’s not counting utilities. Heck, CAMH is moving out of their place over by U of T. Three hundred thirty-three percent rent increase, just like that. So I tell the man, best withdraw to Markham, be amongst your own people. Look me, I’m out here because I’d be homeless if I insisted on staying in ‘the Core.’ People paying a hundred-and-ten percent of their income for a rabbit hutch.” He saw that Angeline’s attention was drifting. The cat was rubbing its solid, round head against her leg, coating her tights with a clingy residue of coarse hairs, like a loveable porcupine cheerfully quilling its victim. “You live in downtown still, yes? Kensington, right?”

            “Mmh,” she kept gazing about the room. “I mean, I’m moving, but, yeah.”

            “Ah. And, where to…right, none yet…how did you find it?”

            “Oh, it was alright. Lotta real local culture; you’ve got so much colour, diversity and all the old homes. Plus the shopping’s great. I mean, duh!” She managed to look back at Rusland and laugh; the cat head-butted her shying feet but was ignored.

            “Ehh,” Ruslan sighed. “Scarborough doesn’t have diversity? It’s an ideal I guess. Yeah, I see it. Character, history, the whole Jane Jacobs mixed-use neighbourhood package. Everything Toronto is supposed to be, but that’s mostly just in people’s imaginations, or thirty years ago. I’d live there myself, but only if I had money, or else you’re sleeping in a windowless ex-laundry room. One needs a certain basic minimum of space, or else how do you paint? Have people over? Or even just pace about when you feel like it alone at night?”

            “I dunno, I have a full bachelor. I cook n’ stuff. I mean had.”

            “Ugh, that’s lucky. Must cost, what, two grand, twenty-five hundred? Wah, that’s more than a barista makes in a whole month…one and a half times their income…” Even as each sentence left his lips, Rusland was inwardly berating himself; “Why did you do that? What good do you think you’ll get out of pushing things? Is it so important that she knows that you know? Probably why she hasn’t even said ‘hi’ on Facebook in years and why Teresa and Emilia and everyone no longer have any gossip to tell.” Naturally, he did not speak these thoughts aloud, though he was convinced he had been speaking in a tense, inquisitorial tone that had put his guest on edge.

            As if to confirm his suspicions, Angeline turned and glanced about the room with an astonishment which seemed to spring out of nowhere. “Wow! Is that yours, too?” She pointed to a large watercolour of a calico cat luxuriating on a Louis Farouk settee.

            “Yes, in fact,” the sweetness of her voice and the unaffected smile in her voice washed away his anxiety but left him quite confused. “I did that one for a friend who went to med school out in BC. His cat. It would cost a fortune to ship it out that far, so I scanned it for him to make prints if he wants. Took me an awful lot of failed attempts to figure out how to get the effect of fur without making it look rough or muddying the colours.” He frowned as he saw himself spilling accidentally into another lecture, but was again relieved as, far from being bored, Angeline’s limpid eyes sparked with unaffected delight.

            “Really? Awesome. You totally killed it. Like those portraits, too…”

            “Kriehuber is my inspiration for those. Parker ballpoint pen for everything, except when I needed solid-solid black, or to wash in backgrounds.”

            “It’s so much more…ngh! I know what I want to say but…the word!…Like, you know, something that you can tell somebody poured a lot of attention and energy into, like art that shapes you as you’re shaping it, through the intensity of the process….raffiné, cultivé…”

            “Refined? Hmm, well, it’s nothing compared to what you turn out, but I try.”

            “No, for real. Like, compared to, you know, how in OCAD the number one thing is photography. Which, okay, you can take a photo that required lots of time and judgement, but anybody with a few hundred buy a digital camera or even an iPhone and photoshop, and honestly you can’t tell the difference whether they did four years studying photography in school or if they just bought a camera and started snapping pics two weeks ago – except based on what they take pics of…normal stuff or trying to gross people out, or be ironic, or make some statement that’s supposed to be all brave and shocking but is just what everyone else is doing.”

            “Such as? I think I see what you mean, though…Lazy, I guess.”

            “I mean, like,” Angeline’s pallid complexion flushed with uncharacteristic anger; “Say you wanna be, ‘oh, I’m so avant garde that I laugh at silly people with backwards habits and organized religion.’ So, like, this girl I know, you take some photos of people dressed as nuns or mocking some famous religious painting for attention. And if somebody complained, she’d get all outraged, like, ‘oh, how dare you, the church has been oppressing womb-myn for centuries…’ yeah, brave act of rebellion. An’ you know, one time I saw she posts on her wall asking people why there’s all these people on the streets with black marks on their faces. It was the start of Lent. You gotta ask, why such people…ugh!”

            “And they’re the same people who would say the French cartoonists were asking for it,” Ruslan hoped he had grafted something onto the topic without stealing it from Angeline.

            “Exactly. This girl also had one of those Himalayan salt lamps in her dorm and believed in horoscopes. People want all the street cred of being an ‘artist,’ but they don’t want to live the life.”

            “You mean hipsters?” but the passion of the moment had so infused Angeline’s graceful frame that she did not notice his question.

            “…They think that living at a certain address, having those ugly glasses and a fixed gear bike makes you an ‘artist.’ And if you don’t play along, you can’t be one; doesn’t matter if you can draw or play an instrument or whatever. Screw that. And you have to believe everyone who can read a book and use a paintbrush voted for Justin Trudeau and Olivia Chow…”

            “Right, completely agree…”

            “…They don’t want to make the sacrifices. Those neighbourhoods in Paris, you know, that the Impressionists and those modern masters lived in; people moved there because it was cheap and shabby, which meant they could devote their lives to their passion and still pay the rent. The places became special because they lived there. It’s like the total opposite here, where you pay crazy rent, which means you have to work at two or three mundane jobs and never have time for actually creating anything, just so you can live in a place that looks n’ feels like where some authentic starving artist who eats $22 burgers, and…ngh! It’s like, a product you buy: you.”

            “But you lived in Queen West or Kensington Market, no?” Ruslan chimed, instantly regretting it in his head: “Stop. Why can’t you just stop?” He was doubly intrigued now, wondering what exactly it was about this topic that got her so riled up.

            “…And it’s like, if you don’t play along and pretend all that stupid stuff matters, then everybody hates you. And if you seriously try to…be what they pretend to be, they’re scared to ever talk to you or laugh behind your back…! Like, joke’s on you!”

            “I see, yes, I know what you mean,” although Ruslan’s understanding of the problems that tormented the young lady was intellectual and detached. As an overheated boiler venting steam, Angeline suddenly returned to her usual wistful demeanour, staring longingly at the cat which had now mounted the bed beside her and, this exertion completed, was kneading a sleeping place for itself. She stroked its dense, somewhat greasy fur, occasionally wiping her hand against the blankets to scrape off static-clung hairs. As she did this, she half-closed her languid eyes, cooing softly in joual baby talk to it, fully aware that as long as she wasn’t looking at him, Ruslan would not take his sight off her – she could guess he was envisioning her replacing the central female figure in a dozen famous paintings.

            “That’s my favourite kind of cat; you could make her the star of a YouTube channel which would consume thousands of cumulative labour-hours each day!” he suggested, trying to be humorous with obviously tongue-in-cheek grandiosity.

            “Ha-ha, oh, good they don’t allow pets in the studio, or I’d never get anything done!”

            “Mmh, what is she? Looks like Maru, if he was black and white. Scottish fold – one of the prick-eared ones?”

            “Hah, no. You’re right, this loafer could get a job, with her celebrity good looks. Actually, she’s a Laurentian Shorthair, purebred, registered and everything. Got her from a breeder’s in Hull, back in second year. Cost me twelve hundred bucks, too.”

            “Oooh, precious kitty! Pricey as a Canada Goose jacket, one of the top-of-the-line ones, at that.” Ruslan darted into the kitchen to check the pots simmering on the stove. He opened the fridge and surveyed the contents shelved on the door. “Ask or don’t ask,” he debated with himself, laying hands on two bottles of wine. “No,” he concluded in his head, “Just one,” reflecting that, while the commonsense advice holds that naturally prudish and awkward persons, in social situations, especially those involving the opposite sex, ought to toss away inhibitions and try to be fun and playful, it never worked out very well for him in practice. He didn’t want to appear to have ulterior motives. On the other hand, it wasn’t like ‘keeping proper distance’ these last couple years had won any victories. And if it went badly; if he got an indignant ‘that is NOT OK,’ the worst case scenario was…more of exactly the same. He returned to the living room holding a bottle of Red Label. “Something to drink?” he asked, furtively watching Angeline’s reaction. “Been so long, you must have a lot of stories. I’d uh, if you feel like sharing…” toning things down as the embarrassment hit almost before each word had left his mouth; “Catch up on old times, I mean. I’ve always…admired your sincerity, as an artist, you know. How you live your life, determined to be what you want, not just have and act, or…” He wanted to bash his head against the coffee table.

            To his surprise, Angeline responded warmly, “Ah, thanks, definitely!” taking the bottle off him and filling her cup. “Hmm, Red Label ‘wine beverage,’ Kingston, Jamaica…oooh-kay. Didn’t know they could grow grapes down there.” Things moved more smoothly than Ruslan dared imagine, as Angeline regaled him with all kinds of random anecdotes about OCAD life, gallery shows, and her attempts at learning to cook traditional French cuisine. She was also gulping back the 13.5% alcohol fortified wine with a vengeance, leaving him to strategically nurse his initial half of a coffee mug’s worth. Maybe the second bottle would have to come out. Afraid now of seeming like he was only pretending to pay attention, waiting for an opportunity for…whatever. Ruslan searched for a talking point. Alas, he had been too lost in those huge and radiant, yet icy, blue orbs, the measured movements of those tactfully bared porcelain shoulders and the slender but well-formed thighs pressing smoothly against the black leggings confining them….he could only recall with any clarity that very last thing she’d said. “Cooking, eh? I suppose, done well, it’s an art in itself. French especially. You never learned growing up?”

            “What do you mean?” the passion in her face flared once more.

            Caught off guard, Ruslan stumbled. “I mean, I thought you grew up in some little village, farm country… and you’re always keen on history and culture…you know, from mother to daughter, traditions, that sort of thing…thought your mom or grandma would have taught you,  I don’t know. Not to stereotype or anything.”

            Angeline quietly rested her eyes inside her cup for a moment. “My grandma died when I was seven. My mom never taught me how to make anything, except Kraft Dinner. She wanted to smother anything creative I ever tried to do. Like, ‘who do you think you are?’ Everything was like that.” She brooded on her words, taking a long, loud sip and pouring another cup.

            “I see…I see…” The only one in the room not affected by the tension was Giselle, sitting sphinx-like, flapping her short, clumsy tail against the bed. “I thought your dad was a painter. Odd they wouldn’t support you then…”

            “I dunno, if you find him you can ask. My stepdad is a house painter, which isn’t painting; just coating shit in coloured liquid.”

            Ruslan had scanned old photos of childhood birthday parties, with balloons and sheetcake aplenty, and a seemingly affectionate, unselfconscious working-class family on her Facebook. If that was the stepdad, he looked an awful lot like Angeline. Then again, a small Québec village settled four hundred years ago, everyone probably was more or less related. Or relations could have soured. Pretty much nothing new had been uploaded to that page in at least a year. Too nervous now to do anything but dig himself deeper, he carried on. “I thought you visited them lots, like when you got Giselle here. And Aida posted lots of albums of you guys on road trips to Montreal.”

            “Montreal is nowhere near my place.” The hot anger dissipated into cool and airy contemplation. “There’s not really hotels or anything, and nothing to do, unless they want to play dairy maid.”

            “Like Marie Antoinette.”

            “Hah, yeah. Plus we usually go in Aida’s car. I wouldn’t want to drag people out to the middle of nowhere and people don’t speak English…” She trailed off, lost in some melancholy reminiscence.

            Mustering his courage, Ruslan moved over to the bed and sat down there, though keeping a good two or three feet down from Angeline, the cat interposed between. “You keep in touch though, right?” he asked tenderly, now petting the cat, making clicking noises, “good kitty,” and so forth, to put a thin disguise on his surely-perceived plan that their hands should come into contact, with adoring the kitty providing plausible deniability for both parties.

            Angeline was silent for another moment or two – their hands brushed slowly, not staying but nor did she flinch away. “They know I’m in university, studying fine arts…” Ruslan could see her eyes in the shadow of her glossy bangs, looking vaguely at the coffee table in front of her, but seeing something far away – something which he could not see. Her lips parted, revealing the barest hint of even, gleaming teeth, but no words escaped. The foamy clatter of a pot lid startled Ruslan from his trance, and he dashed up towards the kitchen before lentil soup met stove burner and all his neighbours would be irritated by the smoke alarm going off.

            When he got back to his guest after ploughing up the tarry matter on the pot bottom with a long spoon, Ruslan was dismayed to see her standing up beside her luggage, looking perfectly at ease, as if no profound sentiments had crossed her mind all evening, though her cheeks were glowing crabapple pink from the wine. “Going already?” was the best he could do. “Who are you staying with tonight? I know some ex-classmates who might help with the apartment hunting…there’s a lot of units around here, actually, seeing as it seems time’s soured you on downtown…Need help getting tubbums into her carrier?” He picked up the cat, which was purring contentedly, wrapping its paws over his chest like a sleepy, well-fed baby.

            “Hee-hee! She likes you!” Angeline tittered.

            “Seems so! Well, you know, I am a cat person…”

            “Me too!”

            “Yes, that’s pretty obvious. You know, there’s this author, horror-mystery stuff, wrote a fascinating essay on the character differences between cat people and dog people…a bit overboard sometimes, but funny…and true! Pretty much, anyway. I’ll send you the link on F-B…”

            “Actually, I’ll be spending the night on the road.”

            “What the?!?”

            “Travelling!”

            “Oh, right.”

            “I’m going back home for….a while…”

            “With Aida and them?”

            “No…I mean home-home. Not Montreal. I’ll be taking the Greyhound.”

            “Oh. How long will you be staying?”

            “I dunno. A while. Anyways, I haven’t got a new place in Toronto yet, and the people on Bunz weren’t any help. Seeing how much she likes you…”

            “You want me to be cat sitter for Giselle here?” Ruslan sighed.

            “If you’re ok with it. Otherwise…the Humane Society…”

           “Kitty Auschwitz?” Ruslan puffed with righteous indignation. “Good Lord, no, no. It can’t happen. Such a wonderful creature, but…do you have to be travelling now, then? Why not wait?…”

            “Listen, things have been…” Her looks said she knew that he knew – if only intuitively and through fourth-hand gossip. “My mom is…sick. And I have to see her. I can’t keep hiding out here. I can’t run away…”

            Ruslan wondered if that was the meaning of Angeline’s coming to Toronto. Running. Then hiding from what she’d fled. The lights and rush of the City did appear to be a king of anaesthetic for a lot of young people, usually from elsewhere, whether from foreign countries or Northern Ontario, the Maritimes and such places (which was essentially the same thing).  It pained him to contemplate this secret muse of his as being one with the cookie-cutter hipsters; the castrated race of interns competing in obsequiousness; the hackneyed academics quoting post-modernist drivel like religious mantras to accompany vicarious lives, the coffee shop toilers with their resentful herdist attitudes; the meth-scabbed slumpartment dwellers whom three generations on welfare had stripped of all ambitions beyond the fulfilment of the animal appetites. It was inadmissible in the scheme through which he viewed the world. Wiser men that he believed it; if Thomas Hardy, Lombroso and such genius minds were agreed, surely there had to be something to it – that a vessel so exquisite, seemingly embodying so much history and culture (all the more if it was done unwittingly) should, after all, contain a soul undistinguished amid the low and level plain of millennial North American urban humanity. Were the laws of environment so ironclad that the types which inspired the poets and novelists of one or two centuries prior were now no more than stories themselves? Was it so stupid to wish that there were still real flesh-and-blood people who were ‘The Solitary Reaper,’ ‘The Tired Gleaner,’ or ‘Tess of the D’Urbervilles?’ It was undeniable – he insisted to himself – that such permutations of the human character existed – even if they tended to suffer unhappy fates. If it were otherwise, where would anyone have got the idea? Though whether they still could exist in a modern metropolis…

            “I’ve got to go, or I’ll miss the bus and they only come like every two or three hours. You’ll take Giselle, then?”

            “Yes, yes. I’ll look after her till you get back. Oh, I don’t have your address or phone in Québec. I mean, if I needed to get in touch with you…”

            “It’s ok. I’ll probably be staying at a hotel in Montreal while I’m there, not at my parents’ house.”

            Ruslan wanted to ask how that possibly made things ‘ok,’ since he’d be equally at a loss how to reach her. He knew how little she came on Facebook and emails…he’d feel cheated, since he’d never know if she read them or not. Before he could find the words, though, Angeline had slipped nimbly outside. He managed to catch a glimpse of the hall-end door swinging shut on its pneumatic hinge. He had the cat and a suitcase full of sketchbooks, painting supplies and canvasses to ponder upon in the sleepless hours after midnight.

            The leaden white paint clung like a curse to the clapboard walls of the bungalow, grudgingly conceding, flake by flake, to the age and decay which had eaten away at the rest of the house. The mesh screens of the small-paned sash windows, kept open because there was no AC, were holed and gashed by squirrels’ teeth and errant songbirds. The grass around was green and lush from the summer rains, but unmown. An old navy blue LTD, stuffed with random items like an impromptu storage shed sagged to the wheelwells under an open carport. A Chevy van in marginally better condition rested in the gravel drive. The asphalt shingles of the roof were peeling up at the edges like the petals of burnt pinecones. It was not a farm; there were houses on either side and across the road, spaced not that much farther apart than in a typical suburb. For all that, though…perhaps it was the contrast with throbbing, bustling downtown Toronto, or perhaps it was other memories…the bungalow might as well have been in a different postal code from its neighbours. The property had an atmosphere common only to itself – though how much of that was due to its physical condition and how much to other, less quantifiable factors could not be easily determined.

            The CBC news wooshed and crackled on an elderly CRT television. A sluggish retriever was dumbly gnawing a rubber kong, inherited from a predecessor, lolling on the brownish-olive carpet whose pile was cropped and felted with years. The syrupy savour of sausages crisping in a well-greased skillet wafted out of the kitchen. A stiff-faced, knob-jointed woman prodded and turned the blackening meat logs with a two-pronged melamine fork. “Christ, you don’t haftah burn them ta ashes! The money’s gotta last till the first. Gawd, half of everything you gotta throw away, even the daag won’t eat it,” a beefy armed, square-headed man in a rough patterned cardigan shouted from the sofa in the living room.

            “Well, if you were workin’ instead of on pogie…”

            “Don’t come at me with that crap. It’s my pension; they won’t give me anything else ‘cause I worked too damn much. If it wasn’t for me doing twenty-seven years in the mill, how much d’ya think you’d get?”

            “I’m just sayin’…”

            “When you get out and earn it for your goddam self, then you can say whatever you like. Hmph! Yeah, you’d haftah work a lot ‘a overtime, the way thing’s lookin’ now, ya would.”

            At first she had not noticed it above the scrape of the fork and the clatter of dishes. But after the sink was full of hot and soapy water, she paused and listened. Had she really heard anything? The TV was getting in the way. “Turn it down!”

            “Whaaat?”

            “The TV. I heard somebody knockin’ at the door.”

            The man grumbled, but complied.

            “A minute ago,” she considered, glassy-eyed; “I heard someone knocking at the door. Knocking real light. A couple of times, now that I think of it.”

            Probably Jo-hos. Or somebody sellin’ something.” The man turned the volume back up and returned to watching the news, but the woman was gripped with a curiosity – almost a compulsion. It made her uneasy. She went to the front of the house and flung open the rickety screen door, stepping in her socked feet onto the sagging porch. She looked searchingly, left and right, down a long and empty road.

           

          Copyright © 2017 by M.G. Warenycia

Memoirs of Sint Maarten: “Sunshine Foods”

            I had left the Pitusa Hotel early in November, to reside in Sandy Ground, on the French Side. As described elsewhere in these memoirs, Yanyi/Yiyi/Xinyi Liu’s mom – my hopeful future mother-in-law, aka Ah-Ying, aka Sherry Ying – in an effort to help me remain on the island until, I suppose, circumstances might render me useful, had arranged with a friend (more like ‘frenemy’) of hers, Amy, for me to live and work in Amy’s restaurant. Amy – I forget her last name and her restaurant’s business card, which I still keep, does not have it – had been cheerful and full of promises to Ying when we’d sat down for drinks and negotiations under the sea-almond tree in the courtyard of the Honeymoon Spot (long since defunct). She assured Ying of the grand prospects of her recently-acquired establishment and all the useful skills I would learn in her service. In private, Amy assured me Ying would soon come to her senses and realize that, whatever one thought of me personally, having her daughter married to a dutiful lad with a Canadian passport was a safer bet for the long term than trusting the whims of a ‘husband’ (boyfriend/sugar daddy), old Reuben Beauperthuy, who was wise in the ways of the world, and of the ways of women in particular; who was ever on guard against collectors of auriferous minerals,  and whose children and siblings  were keen to guard their inheritance from the painted claws of some Oriental usurper. Time was to prove Amy correct – small consolation thought it has been.

            The weeks of sixteen-hour days dragged on, my burden lightened only by the fact that the Honeymoon Spot’s business was mercifully poor, partly owing to its location in a sketchy part of the French Side far from any of the major tourist or residential districts, partly (such, at least, was the opinion of Rosie, Amy’s Afro-Cuban aide de camp – another ‘frenemy’) because Amy insisted that the restaurant’s menu be built around French cuisine, real French cuisine, with no relation to the islands. Hence, it had none of the lure of exoticism that drew folks from the tired grey Metropole to joints with bright, fun, unashamedly Antillean names like ‘Talula Mangoes,’ ‘the Boo Boo Jam,’ or any of the menagerie of establishments which in name and/or décor drew on deep-rooted images of Creole belles and West Indian hospitality. As it was, Amy preserved the cartoonish murals around the compound which depicted scenes of turn-of-the-last century Sheriffs pursuing rogues on the US-Mexico border, somehow related to the previous incarnation of the Honeymoon Spot, with the new addition of French cuisine cooked by Chinese chefs who didn’t understand it and an Afro-Cuban who disapproved of it, which nobody was much interested in trying, and which gave bad impressions to those who did. The only repeat customers were friends and relatives of Amy’s, and Xinyi’s mom, who once came with Reuben for lunch and had much awkward explaining to do when Reuben saw that the pesky Canadian troublemaker was still on the island and had, by obvious inference, been given the means of staying there through the assistance of Ying herself.

            As business failed to pick up and the chefs she hired kept abandoning ship, Amy grew more lax and I was permitted to go off on walks into Marigot in the afternoon, where I would feed my soul with the charming French colonial architecture (in my opinion, the best colonial architecture by far), the flowers and trees which made the whole town lush and colourful as a Toronto garden in summer, and the awe-inspiring sight of the Sea. At that point in my life, I had not yet read Edmund Burke’s essay on the theory of the Sublime, but I understood intuitively the aesthetic sensation Burke describes as I strolled below the clifftop fortifications and stared out at the waves – there, a deep blue-black, not turquoise like the sea at Philipsburg – the waves and the incomprehensible vastness in which the white sailing boats tossed disconcertingly, and in which I stood on my tiny, salty rock.

            I wasn’t getting much done, however, and unpaid servitude in a restaurant, in the most isolated corner of the island, was obviously not sustainable. Because the Dutch Side was where I’d first resided and where most of my friends lived, and because, as far as I could tell, the Chinese community was more numerous and capable of insulating its affairs on the Dutch than on the French Side (the Dutch SXM police being a lot more…easy-going…than the paramilitary Gendarmes), it was the natural assumption that I must seek a job on the Dutch Side. My emphasis on the Chinese business community was quite logical: who else would hire an illegal? Yes, maybe one of the strip club brothels (anti-euphemistically referred to as “whorehouses” on SXM), but the job descriptions…ehh, I likely would not have had much luck. Thankfully, at the Honeymoon Spot, business was terrible, and, out of either pity or grudging acceptance that imposing harsher conditions on an employee who was already working for free might lead to legal troubles, Amy let me spend weekday afternoons heading over to the Dutch Side in search of paid employment.

            I would take a bus over the mountains which fill the middle of the Island, disembarking in the lowlands, by the Great Salt Pond. What to do then? I should add that I did not own a cell phone at the time. I did the only thing I reasonably could do: I trekked and I tramped, all along the gravel road shoulder, underneath the scorching tropic sun, stopping whenever I found a likely-looking establishment and asking the boss or whichever employees were present if they needed anyone. In other words, I was doing what the misguided stereotypical Baby Boomer in North American memes tells the younger generation to do when looking for work (though such a method has long since become absurd and useless up there). I had only been a high school student in Canada and had not finished Grade 12, thus it was my first experience of seriously looking for work anywhere. Naturally, everything was a rejection, which worried me and made me grow timid. I favoured the smaller and shabbier establishments (though not so small and shabby they looked like they didn’t need any staff besides the owner), both grocery stores and restaurants, both because it was probably that their requirements would be less (in terms of skills and “papers”) and because the staff were usually more laid-back and friendly. Mind you, I did go to the gigantic A-Foo Supermarket in downtown Philipsburg, whose 2nd floor offices resembled a busy mid-century newsroom or typing pool.

            After a day of fruitless searching, I would stop by at the Pitusa Hotel to pay a call on Wu, the night watchman, who had become one of my first friends on the Island. Wu lived in apartment in the rear of the hotel, where it opened onto the back courtyard on the edge of the Salt Pond. The Pitusa had originally been a grocery store, the New China Supermarket, circa the 1960s-1970s. Sometime early in the long tourism boom which enriched the Netherlands Antilles through the 80s and 90s up until the Great Recession of 08-09, it had been converted into a hotel. In common with most of the locally-run hotels and guesthouses on Sint Maarten, a fair proportion of the rooms and suites were not rented out as hotel rooms, but as apartments on a monthly basis – while I was there, the rates ranged from $400 USD at the squalid bottom to $700-900 or so, with the most desirable apartments being situated on the second floor, away from the street. In the largest and furthest-back, with a kind of sunroom overlooking the courtyard lived Teresa Mock, the owner of the hotel and unofficial empress of the local Chinese community. The apartments which lined the corridor that ran through the bowels of the Pitusa from A.T. Illidge Road to the pondside courtyard were inferior in furnishings and comfort – upper floors, for instance, were created by sliding sheets of plywood over brackets mounted into the concrete walls. This meant that the ceiling below was just high enough for a man of average height to stand up, while he’d have to stoop uncomfortably on the second floor. As a result of the haphazard partitions necessary due to the converted floor plan, some of these units were spacious, while some would be condemned in more well-regulated lands for having insufficient space for their often-numerous occupants. All suffered from a lack of sunlight and ventilation. The tenants of these were almost entirely Chinese supermarket and restaurant workers or migrants from the Dominican Republic, with one St. Lucian family, one set of Jamaicans and one Guyanese couple rounding out the lot.

            Wu and his colleagues – a shifting set of three to five men who, at least on the Island, lives as bachelors – dwelt in an apartment that appeared to have been stuck onto the structure of the hotel as an afterthought, like a barnacle on the body of a whale. It was cramped, crowded and unbelievably filthy….the seatless toilet was black – not brown – inside its bowl; the bathing area was a rough concrete trough in which the occupants (police-phobic Wu excepted) had once slaughtered a kidnapped goat. A very literally kidnapped goat. I nonetheless enjoyed visiting, because Wu was a good-hearted fellow and I could watch pirated movies and listen to Chinese music, of which I was fond. In those days of trekking around looking for work, he gave me bowls full of oatmeal, cooked very thin and made with powdered full-cream milk and sugar mixed in, a heavenly refreshment at the time, as I had no money at all to buy food or beverages (though I could get water out of the hose round back of the hotel) to sustain me on my wanderings. I still remember his generosity with extreme gratitude.

            One day, where I’d been unsuccessful as usual, Wu suggested that we go together to a supermarket two buildings down from the hotel and ask there – he would go as my middleman. Before I proceed further: the company that operated the supermarket in question is still in business as of the last time I checked. While the law holds that true statements cannot count as defamation (put another way, it is a defence to a charge of defamation to show that a statement is true, among other things), I nonetheless consider it prudent to change the names of the supermarket and the owners for the purposes of this account. Besides, several years after I left the Island for the first time, the supermarket in question moved into new premises, markedly more modern and hygienic, to all appearances, than the ones in which I lived and toiled. Too, the hardships now memories, I am immensely thankful to – I shall him here – Mr. Vong for making available a means by which I could remain on St. Martin for the sake of my beloved Xinyi, longer than would otherwise have been possible.

            Back in October (it was now very late in November), Wu had taken me around to “Sunshine Foods” (not its real name) and asked about finding me work. Back then, though, it was mainly just an idea to get me more integrated into the community, give me something to do, and help me pick up the Chinese language – Mandarin being the lingua franca at Sunshine Foods. I was turned down by Mr. Vong, who (accurately) remarked that I looked like a scholar, not fitted for the brutal manual labour and long hours the job would entail. Now, somewhat curiously, although I didn’t look the least bit more workman-like, Mr. Vong’s attitude was changed. The part of Wu’s pleadings which seemed to affect him the most was when Wu stressed that my visa would soon expire, making me an “illegal”…thus, I would not be going to complain to any labour or employment standards commission. My evident desperation, demonstrated by the fact I had not abandoned my noble but impractical quest, also seemed to weigh, although perhaps I am being too harsh on Mr. Vong’s character.

            There were two modes of being a grunt-level employee at an SXM supermarket back in those days. It probably hasn’t changed. These were crudely described as “Chinese-style” and “Black-people-style.” The two methods got the same monthly salary for the same types of work and levels of experience. The employees on “Black-people-style” worked six days a week, eight hours a day, got paid fortnightly, looked after their own rent and food, and went home after work as employees do in most of the Western World. The employees who worked “Chinese-style” worked thirteen-hour days (with two hours off in the middle of the day for a siesta, unless it was an especially busy day), seven days a week (half-days on Sundays), and were paid monthly. The compensation for this extra labour was that Chinese-style employees got to live in company-provided housing and got free lunch and supper provided by the company kitchen. Boss and workers ate together, “from the big pot” 吃大锅饭, as, apparently, is the case in a lot of old-fashioned Chinese businesses back in the motherland. Since I had no money for first and last month’s rent on an apartment, and could hardly endure seven days a week of heavy labour waiting for it while sleeping on the streets, I opted for “Chinese-style” employment. It would also be better for showing commitment, for camaraderie and improving my Chinese – which was not a mere whim, since Xinyi’s mom had truly terrible English.

            When Ying found out that I had secured a position at Sunshine foods, she was delighted…to this day I’m not entirely sure why. I would remain on the island longer, for sure (and why she wanted me to do that was not clear either), and I suppose it made up for how her finding me the place at Amy’s restaurant had turned into such a mess. The night before I was due to start work at Sunshine Foods, Ying came to up to Sandy Ground to pick me up in her maroon Suzuki Ignis. I loaded all my worldly possessions into the jaunty hatchback, then we journeyed back to the Dutch Side.

            The hardships began as soon as we arrived at the Sunshine Foods workers’ compound, a walled courtyard containing two low, unpainted concrete shacks. One of these was the residence of the Chinese “coolies” (the term was still used by the SXM Chinese, so I’ll use it here). I unloaded my suitcases and stripey plastic bags (what are those called?), and Ying returned to the Blue Flower restaurant on Bush Road, across from the Photo Gumbs, where she, Xinyi, Xinyi’s uncle and aunt, and her two cousins lived.

            There wasn’t much to say about the worker’s dorm. It was a crude rectangle, divided into two rooms by a doorless portal, each the size of a bedroom in a typical Canadian house. Each room had cots and the front room had a bunk bed (the top of which I would get, once it was available), all with rickety red metal frames. Some of the men (not me) had cabinets for their possessions. Seating was one’s bed or else plastic lawn chairs and milk crates. There was a CRT TV and a DVD player for the 80s and 90s films and karaoke tapes the workers sometimes watched (I never saw an actual television feed on the TV). The bathroom was small, dark, its floor covered in sand. The shower was a green garden hose with a squeeze nozzle run through a hole in the wall. I noticed later that a small print of “Chairman Mao goes to Anyuan” was placed above the interior of the front door, like an icon of a saint. Fitting for an above of peasant-turned-proletarians. There was no bed space available to me the first night. A makeshift was improvised. A couple cartons that had once held jugs of Alberto-brand vegetable oil were flattened and tossed on the floor. My shoulderbag served as a pillow and a thin cotton print bedsheet as my blanket. Even under this frail covering, it was like a sauna. The cinderblock walls – a wretched material for the tropics, popular because cheap and hurricane resistant – exhaled humidity and there was no fan (forget about AC) to provide relief. The floor here, too, was dirty and I could hear the sand scrunching loudly beneath the cardboard as I shifted position. During the night, I neither slept fully nor quite woke. Extreme fatigue kept me sedated yet occasionally I would open my eyes (possibly sometimes I was dreaming), because I was disturbed by the attentions of insects. In darkness, it seemed (or this was my dream) that I was being ravaged by hordes of ants that were making a feast of my exposed skin, especially my forearms. I brushed them off, and scratched and clawed, digging hard under the welts. At other points, I suspected mosquitos and so cocooned myself in my bedsheet, as I’d read accounts of US soldiers at Ke Sanh doing to protect against being bitten by rats. In hindsight, it probably was mosquitos; I had no recollection of buzzing, but Sint Maarten mosquitos are small and quiet compared to the species that ravage campers in Canada in the summertime, and I was really half out of my mind. The next morning, sore and tired, I started work.

            I will tell my experiences in anecdotes; scattered vignettes. That is not unlike how I experienced it. Indeed, one of the strangest aspects of those days, which I observed and which struck me as uncanny, even frightening, at the time was how a whole period of three or four months felt like a disturbingly real dream or a drunken trance…there was something not quite real about it. Part of this must have been the simple consequence of chronic exhaustion and the perfectly natural anxieties caused by being away, thousands of kilometres away, from home and family for the first time in my life. I suspect, however, that there were things about the character of where and in what situation I found myself that affected my mind in ways that would not have occurred had I been equally far or farther from home, but in a society which operated according to the familiar and fundamentally homogenous laws of the Metropole; the Big City of the Global North. The light was different; the angles in which life happened were jagged and askew – folks in a place like Toronto don’t realize just how flat and geometrically ordered and uniform their world is, and how disorienting it is to find yourself in a place that does not conform to such principles. Shocking, too – first in the “OMG” sense; in the longer term, in the sense that it made one’s mind operate – was how rules…not the petty superficial ones but the primal “that’s life”/”that’s how the world works” sort of rules that prevail in every Big City in the West (irrespective of its paper laws) did not apply. Nobody was even away of the existence of the worldviews and mindsets which most everyone take as universal back home. The treatment of animals, notions of time and space, the isolation or connectedness of the individual; all were unrecognizable from their Toronto equivalents. On a more formal level, the understanding that one could not and should not appeal to a higher (temporal) authority to deal with certain situations, and that one not only can but must deal with them yourself personally was new. In Toronto, I could only conceive of calling the police to help Xinyi; people would be angered, critical, disapproving and mocking (as they were when being told the story later, except some immigrants and Québécoises, who are less crassly practical) if one acted oneself. On SMX, oneself was the only way.

            With a few exceptions, most of the staff at Sunshine Foods had no fixed role. So it was for me. Where the boss thought I was needed (i.e. where my inexperienced labour could be applied most efficiently), I went, and I toiled, from eight in the morning until a little after the supermarket closed for night, officially at 9:00 p.m., closet to 9:30 on Fridays and Saturdays. Like jumping into cold water, my experience of the labouring life in what, really, wealthy tourists, timeshares and resorts aside, was the Third World, began with a rude surprise, though it did not become more comfortable with time. My first tasks – to which I was thankfully assigned to with lower frequency later on – were in the…I shall call it the “packing department,” as it combined the functions of the produce and meat/deli departments of a North American supermarket. In one extremely cramped, white-tiled room, divided for half its width by a partition wall, vegetables and fruits were shrink-wrapped into Styrofoam trays, bulk foods like brown sugar (GUYSUCO) were taken from hundred-pound sacks, weighed out into plastic retail bags and bar-coded.

            In this same room, a few feet away, wholesale cases of imported frozen meat were dumped out onto a long stainless steel table. Workers, armed with metal scoops, would stab at the heaps of fast-thawing flesh and shove the bits into bags, which they would weigh on digital scaled and printout barcode stickers for (five pounds people a common size, though this varied). I say “stab,” because one of the worst features of the work was the savage pace. One had to dump, measure and pack hundreds of pounds of meat at a speed that required punching with the scoop, twirling that bag and smacking on the barcode sticker as faster than your limbs could sanely move, hampered as they were by the slimy texture of the objects one was packing and the slipperiness of blood and grease-smeared hands – no gloves, and, of course, one always had to snatch up some errant fragments with one’s fingers. I mention “fast-thawing” because any frozen item would thaw quickly in that stifling heat. There was a fan mounted behind a grate high up in the wall, but it accomplished very little.

             In the same room, ground beef – of rich ruby colour and unnervingly high fat content – was produced by dumping couple-inch-square blocks of meat from cases marked “stewing beef” into a sturdy, Age of Steam-looking Hobart grinder. There was also a meat saw, whose exposed blade, in those cramped, slippery, rushed conditions, cost one St. Lucian and one Haitian meatcutter most of one hand each within the brief span of about six months. The saw was used to chop down beef shanks, oxtails, ribs and frozen beef tripe into chunks suitable for retail. The ground beef shanks, tripe, oxtail etc. were scooped and packed the same as turkey wings, chicken feet and the like. Chicken feet, pig snouts and pig ears were packed into Styrofoam trays. I remember the oxtail as having an especially nasty texture in the hand or crushed against the lip of the scoops. The barcoded bags or Styrofoam trays were piled into spare shopping cards, then wheeled out for shelf-stacking by either us packers or other employees. The vegetable and fruit section was obviously preferable to work in compared to the meat section, though we did sometimes have to pack, using the same equipment, gross things like salted pig ears, pig tail and pig snouts, all of which came off a ship in plastic tubs from Drummond Export, of Drummondville Québec – these and the buckets of pork lard were all emblazoned with the logo of the company, which was a maple leaf and a crude map of Canada. Every day, I saw the image of my country, which felt a little weird, given the strange products it was attached to.

            The meat section was exponentially more busy than the produce section, because both Saint Martiners and Dominicanos (the largest ethnic minority and a huge block of Sunshine Food’s customers), in general, do not have so much of a fondness for vegetables and fruits, both cuisines being extremely heavy on the meats and dry and fried starches. Hence, a supermarket, catering to such a clientele, could hardly resemble, say, an Asian or Middle Eastern supermarket in Toronto or Vancouver, with lavish and colourful mounds and pyramids of the fruits of “every herb-yielding seed.” Worst of all was clean-up duty in the meat room, a grotesque misery to put a spoiling touch on the end of an already long and hard day. It meant being stuck alone with the St. Lucian meatcutter, an insufferable prick who took a Calvinist’s delight in his toil and made a point of being a thorn in my side. The general attitude among all the workers was akin to that of prisoners in a gulag – in a positive way, i.e. we all have to serve out our time together; let’s try not to make it any more unpleasant than it has to be. The Lucian meatcutter, whose name was Cyprian, had a Gossip Girl enthusiasm for bitching, in whiny, snivelling fashion, to the boss about this or that issue, including his coworkers, of which I was just the worst; the veritable bane of his existence. He was short, wiry (though he rapidly fattened when no longer employable), with a bouncy, childish exaggeration to all his movements and sentences. In contrast to his habit of effeminate whinging, Cyprian was ever boasting of his sexual prowess, as if the whole world’s women must wish for nothing more than a 5’5” St. Lucian meatcutter who smells like a rotting carcass. He seemed to have a particularly strong dislike for white people and Chinese (not too keen on Jamaicans, either), and tried to inflame my temper (not without some success) by making insinuations about Xinyi, which neither evidence nor rumour corroborated. Judging from the occasional fights with Chinese workers, I assume he was no comrade to them either.

            At the end of the day, the room would be strewn with fragments of bone and gristle, some of it in the form of “meat sawdust” generated by the ever-busy saw, and some undoubtedly hidden or overlooked relics of the previous day’s work. The stink was terrible; imagine being locked in a small room, in 30-plus degree heat, with roadkill that’s just starting to ripen. The process of cleaning involved hosing the whole room down – bits of meat would ricochet and gum onto one’s face or clothing – while dousing all surfaces with bleach. The bleach water would be wiped on tables with rags and pushed as a floodtide along the floor with a broom, dragging animal detritus with it towards the floor drains. This carcass-water would be a centimetre of two deep, and would absorb into the foam and fabric of one’s shoes, making them reek incurably. I threw out the pair I’d worn there immediately when I quite the job.

            I was a vegetarian before I went to SXM, but I gained a powerful new reason to remain one during my time there.

            Stocking shelves at Sunshine Foods was the same as one might know from a North American grocery store, though, because of the old fashioned technology, most every item had to be slapped with a paper sticker listing the price in Netherlands Antilles Guilders. I liked stocking shelves, compared to some other tasks, although I was not very good at it because I worked slowly (sometimes out of a subconscious desire to avoid something worse), and, due to my inexperience, I always had to go running to Hardat Singh, the Indo-Guyanese chief stocking person to ask what price to stick on which product. A good chap. The best parts of shelf-stocking were that it was lighter than some of the other jobs, I wasn’t being watched by an angry manager all the time, and, most of all, I got to interact with members of the public, who were often quite forward in striking up a conversation with this curiosity that I was – a white boy, with manners that indicated a bourgeois upbringing, doing menial and probably under-the-table labour in a Third World country. Usually, people assumed I was Dutch, or a pale Latin American. One old Rastafarian, with a sharp eye and well-travelled mind, greeted me and told me he knew I was “Russian.” Close enough. He never asked me why on earth I was working there – something everyone else did, if they spoke to me (or they might speculate on it with a shopping companion). He merely smiled, mentioned cryptically that he had been to many places and seen many things, then stated, more in the manner of a theory than a friendly complement, that I was “a good person,” and left to finish his shopping. Unusual, so it sticks in the memory.

            I also met the first illiterate adult I’d ever encountered, a middle-aged man who asked me, in hushed tones, in regards to a can he was holding, if “this says Jamaican cheese on it?” He was not blind, and scrutinized the tin of cheese as any consumer might when they were reading ingredient labels and so on. The tin was one of those big red cylindrical tins which are still used to package the Jamaican version of cheddar cheese, which, as far as I can tell (living in Kingston now for nearly three years) is the only kind of cheese produced here. It did in fact say “Jamaican cheese,” in big, bold block letters on the bright red-and-yellow tin. Sad; an eye-opening lesson that not all of the world has had the advantage of a basic education, something taken for granted in Canada, and of the painful embarrassment the illiterate must feel on the fringes of the 21st century world.

            Two added bonuses to shelf-stocking were Eurodance music and a chance to see Yanyi or family members of hers that came in for shopping. I love 90s Eurodance, though I was much too young for clubbing when it was being made. Ah, Z103.5, DJ Danny D (!!!), live-to-air Wayback Wednesdays at Club Menage…Unfortunately, Eurodance is not popular in the Caribbean. On Sint Maarten, one heard it but rarely, most often blasting out of a passing Frenchman’s car. Rarer still, a song would be played over the radio while I was out stacking shelves – the sound was best by the dairy case. I remembered one particularly good song (much of the impression no doubt being from the comforting taste of the fondly familiar), which took me years to find. Googling was no help. A chance clock on a YouTube sidebar some nine years later and I learned it was “Self Control” by Cardenia. There was, more frequently, a lot of 80s pop-rock, which I don’t mind, but don’t love, either.

            A couple weeks after I started work, I was told by more than one colleague that Xinyi had been in the store. She’d come with her uncle and cousin to grab a few things for the restaurant. The rumour was credible, since all the Chinese staff knew Xinyi Liu by sight – she came in all the time when her family lived at the Pitusa – and, if they wanted to BS me, they could have driven me mad with reports of more sightings, but they did not. Sadly, I was either in the back or, more likely, on delivery then, and missed her.

            Another duty which views with the meat packing room for awfulness was garbage duty – heaving the damp garbage in my arms into the truck, jumping around in the bed and beating the accumulated filth with a metal pipe to compact it, and the trip to the dump itself. But, I have written of that specific part of my experiences on SXM elsewhere, so I will not bother with it here.

            The manner in which the garbage was handled was only one of many unscrupulous practices the supermarket engaged in. It is very easy to understand, for me, why whistle blowers in the case of X corporation doing illegal and hazardous whatever, are so rare and why, when one does come forward, it’s usually some disaffected officer or higher-up. In any situation where the worker has a rich and benevolent State to cushion their fall, the power differential is inevitably moderated; X corporation can threaten disloyal servants with demotion and the loss of their bonuses and privileges, but they cannot threaten true destitution, homelessness and starvation because they do not have the means to deprive anyone to quite that extent. When one is looking down the barrel at such Fates, however, and where there is no immediate harm to anyone, there is little motivation to turn whistle blower and dedicate one’s time and energy (a mere shadow of which remains at the end of 80-hour work weeks) to becoming a noble public servant, particularly when you know that society as a whole and, especially the State, does not give a crap about you. On the other hand, I was quick to warn my friends and acquaintances about the sharp practices that we employees were compelled by the need for food and roofs over our heads to facilitate. Personal connection and knowing somebody won’t rat you out for the heck of it makes a big difference.

            Probably the most legitimately dangerous practice, one with an actual potential for causing harm to a customer, was that of mixing old meat with new. I have mentioned the meat packing tables and the practice of scooping chunks of the relevant carcass part into clear plastic bags of several pounds’ weight, making a barcode sticker for each bag and placing them out for retail sale. While business was brisk, it was possible that some bags did not sell. The problem for a specific bag would grow exponentially more acute as discerning customers noticed the increasingly spongy texture to their squeezing, prodding fingers, the soggy label that showed a relatively distant “packaged on” date, and the off huge of the bag’s contents compared against its neighbours. The fresher and staler meats had to be the same price. Even in a relatively underdeveloped country, it would be a source of scandal if it were known that locals had to buy rotting meat at reduced prices while tourists and expats, who generally have more money, got fresh goods at the Grand Marché. Also, even if there was no violation of the letter of the law by this sort of meat-selling tactic, the hipster fad for extreme-aged meat had not caught on in Soualiga. A means of disguising the old meat had to be found. The solution adopted can hardly be called ingenious, but it was effective.

            The bags of meat in the display bin which were adjudged unsaleable were taken into the packing room, slit open and spilled out onto the packing table, one or two at a time. The bags plus the attacked – and dated – barcode labels were discarded. It is important to point out that this process could not be done at just any time. It had to be saved for when more of the same meat product had been taken from the freezer container in its wholesale cases to be laid out onto the packing table and bagged for retail. Once there was a big heap of turkey wings, stew-beef cubes or oxtail segments on the table – fresh ones – the meat from the unsaleable bags would be vigorously tossed in and blended with the heap, mixing old and new thoroughly enough that, chunks jammed together in a clean, taught new bag, supported by a freshly printed barcode label with a new packing date, the consumer would not notice…hopefully. It is important to add that, to the best of my knowledge, nobody became ill as a result of any of these practices. The unsold meat mixed and repacked was never rotten completely, though I do recall it being strongly discoloured (oxtail and stew-beef darkening especially much, with a noticeable green hue) and changed in texture – if it weren’t altered in quality to the point it would repulse a customer, there would have been no need to waste precious work time on the above-mentioned procedures. Once or twice, a savvy Soualigan, who no doubt had heard rumours of the nefarious tricks employed by Chinese supermarkets, would call my attention to the questionable appearance of the meat on display, challenging me about the honesty of our labels and the source of the products. Such an individual usually gave a brief tirade about the dishonesty of certain grocers, the superior ethics of other eras, ethnicities or establishments, and then left without purchasing anything. The majority, evidently, were perfectly satisfied with our goods.

            Fruits and vegetables did not escape the schemes of the unscrupulous managers. To this day, I am sceptical of shrinkwrapped Styrofoam trays that hold their contents too tightly. I have reason to be sceptical, since I practiced all these techniques myself. Now, to a certain extent, the shape, size and susceptibility to bruising of different varieties of produce govern the choice of packaging. Fair enough. Nonetheless, I would advise the reader to be wary of any supermarket that makes a disproportionate use of those tray packs. The choice to use them is often deliberate, for the worst of reasons. A veteran worker showed me a simple trick that provoked an “oh, that’s why they use these” from me. Tomatoes, especially, though also apples and plums, tend to develop mould and bruising in localized spots. If these fruits are stacked in a pyramid, like in one of those colourful photospreads of an Afghan market in a National Geographic, it is easy for the customers to detect. Moreover, on discovery that they’ve been handling rotting or mouldy fruit 0 perhaps having even got some of the spores and juices on their fingertips – the customer will be disgusted and will be less inclined to buy any of the fruit in the display, even the perfectly sound ones. But…if you place the fruits on a Styrofoam tray, mould spot or bruise-down, then, making sure not to disturb the fruits as you do it, shrinkwrap them tightly so that the mould or bruises are pressed firmly into the bottom of the tray. No matter how the customer tilts or shakes the tray, they will not be able to discover the flaws – not till they have taken it home and opened it up to eat.

            The cabbages and lettuce sold by Sunshine Foods might have appeared peculiarly small compared to those sold by places like the Grand Marché (the standard of quality food on SXM). This had nothing to do with the variety or source of the vegetables – they were generic types sourced mostly from California via Miami, like anywhere else. Lettuces and, even more so, cabbage, tend to yellow and rot from the outside in. Thus, when the appearance of a head of either fell too far below the level at which a customer might buy it, it was taken in back, near the shipping containers used for storage and the refuse heap. We would squat on milk crates atop the damp, uneven concrete floor, lay down an empty cabbage box in front of us, and go to work on the refuse heads with a heavy-bladed knife, hacking and peeling the rotten leaves, the box conveniently collecting the waste. The “fresh” head, paler and much-reduced in size, would of course be re-bagged with labels declaring the new packing date.

            Canned goods were safe from us, but if a frozen or dry item was in a plastic pack with a best-before date inked on at the factory, should such a date be passed, this could also be dealt with in the packing room. Nail polish remover will take off the best-before date without producing any blurring or discolouration of the packaging. There’s no indication that there ever was a best-before date. I remember we had to do this once with a huge shipment of harina Pan – the white cornmeal that is used to make the staple arepas, pupusas etc. of Venezuela and Colombia. Incidentally, harina PAN is the best-tasting cornmeal in the world, and I have eaten cornmeal from eight or nine countries. I think it was still exported from Venezuela back then. Grotesque economic mismanagement and the neglect of agriculture by the Chavez-Maduro government has since put an end to that.

            That one Lucian meatcutter aside, I didn’t have a particularly bad relationship with any of my coworkers. There was one Jamaican forklift driver, a friendless workaholic whose rigid and demanding attitude and obsession with extreme rushing in all things did not endear him to his countrymen, let alone the rest of us. Thankfully, I saw little of hi, since he mainly worked at the mat warehouse in Pointe Blanche and, for probably coincidental reasons, I was not sent there much. While we didn’t all like each other, and there were a couple rivalries, such as between the Dominican and Haitian delivery truck drivers, who hated each other for the reasons Dominicans and Haitians hate each other, there was sense of being in the same boat. While we might not enjoy it, we were all sailing together and each had to do his lot to make the journey less miserable for all. Those few, like the Jamaican forklift driver and the Lucian meatcutter, who bought into the creed of “work shall set you free”…neither of them gained very much for their gleeful embracing of their penance.

            I did have to go, very regularly, to the Cole Bay warehouse, which was the dry goods warehouse for things brought in from the shipping containers in the Port, but not yet needed on the retail shelves. Here we stored all the uber-popular items like NIDO milk powder, pasta, vegetable oil, various kinds of kecap (the sweet Indonesian soy sauce necessary for Nasi Goreng, a fast-food staple on the Island thanks to the Dutch Empire’s broad reach), dried beans, hot sauce, Busta soft drinks and soy milk, which is very popular and cheap on Sint Maarten. I almost forgot to mention ROMA detergent powder. The coarse, crumbly blue-flecked white powder with the dutiful, over-dressed Latin American housewife on the label was by far the number one choice across the Island for cleaning clothes and, allegedly, dishes as well. All these items were in wholesale packages, which presented some difficulties because of how we had to handle stuff. The ceiling of the warehouse was very high, taller than the average two storey house, and the shelves went almost right to the ceiling. There were no ladders or stairs. Reaching the top was effected by riding on top of a pallet, lifted by a forklift, up to a certain level. One person would be packing the pallet. Another person got onto the shelving structure and climbing up the even higher level where the goods in question were stored. These would be handed or tossed down to the guy on the pallet being held up by the forklift. There were no Health & Safety inspectors, so who was to say it was an improper method of work? I will say that walking around at that height, on a wobbly shelf, with a hard concrete floor below, with the tops of cans, bottles and boxes as your (very unstable) floor, is nerve-wracking by itself. It was a good deal more nerve-wracking straining to prise out the appropriate number of thirty or forty-pound cases of whatever product and move with them safely, always being yelled at to speed up and knowing that, if you moved too slow, you might be out of food and shelter when you arrived back at the supermarket. It wasn’t any better for the guy on the pallet, who had to somehow pack it securely, making sure not to drop anything (a wholesale case of tomato paste or a forty-pound box of detergent dropped from twenty-odd feet would make a bad day for whoever it hits), while the platform on which he is standing gets continually smaller and more uneven.

            Liquor and beer also came to the Cole Bay warehouse in shipping containers on the backs of trucks, but it was not left there. It was tossed down, by the case, from the containers, to workers below, who packed it onto pallets, which were loaded by forklift onto trucks for delivery to a locked, gated-off section inside the warehouse area of the supermarket itself. It always worried me when we had to unload a container of booze, especially Guinness. The tall bottles, made of thin glass, broke easily. This was a problem for us workers because, if a case broke, it was supposed to come out of our paycheques at the end of the month. $40 or $80 is a lot of money to have deducted when your monthly salary is $400 to $900. Sweaty hands from the intense heat, the height from which the cases were tossed down to forearms which became pretty bruised up (sharp sided cases of beer flying into your arms a couple hundred times in succession will do that), plus the attitude of the owner’s brother, who supervised the Cole Bay warehouse, ensured dropped cases were a regular occurrence. “John” Vong spoke quickly and with a stutter, and what he seemed to think words meant did not necessarily match what they meant to the person he was yelling at. Every day, all the time, it was the same…I can still hear it in my head, his familiar catchphrases. “You wuh-king too slow! Fast-fast!” “You packing no good! You packing no good!” I never witnessed any speed of work satisfy John’s wishes. As for how one was supposed to arrange the layers of items packed on a cargo pallet…admittedly I was a complete rookie, but, you try packing a pallet that must be stacked to the height of a man or higher, with bones, crates, tins, bottles of entirely different shapes and sizes. Once or twice, Mr. “You packing no good” got egg on his face when, after reprimanding us coolies and showing us how it was done, one of his self-packed pallets collapsed and made a mess. Curiously, this never provoked any change of mind on his part. He would just look at us and grin and laugh stupidly, his face looking for all the world like an Asian version of former president George W. Bush.

            We “Chinese-style” workers, of which I was the singular non-Chinese example, really did “eat from the big pot,” so to speak, boss and workers at one table, in a kitchen at the back of the supermarket, dark and dingy as a coal mine. The usual chef was Ah Long, or Zhang Long, a lively, cheerful young peasant from Zhumadian in the central Chinese province of Henan. He was also the baker at Sunshine foods, who every day except Sunday made the five-for-one-US dollar “titi” bread that was Sunshine food’s most famous specialty. Titi bread itself, as far as I have been able to discover, is a specialty of St. Martin and possibly a few neighbouring islands in the Lesser Antilles as well. Ah Long was a good cook, and Henanese food is hearty, warm-flavoured food very suitable for labourers exhausted at the end of a long day. It made sense, as most of the coolie workers were Henanese – the boss’ family were from Jiangxi and two of the foreman-level workers were Cantonese. Even the harsh and not very culturally-sensitive bosses on the transcontinental railroads, during their construction, found that, while the Chinese would work hard and long for little pay, they could not be without at least a basic semblance of their accustomed diets. The major change which the workers had to endure was in eating rice every day, something they’d never done before moving to the West. Ironic, given how, in North America, it is believed that all Chinese eat rice as their sole staple. However, the heartland of China does not grow rice in any great quantities; my fellow coolies, all peasants in their homeland, grew wheat, corn and sweet potatoes – never rice. It also helped that Henanese cuisine, with its emphasis on strong flavours and techniques like braising and stewing, is not so critical of the freshness and quality of ingredients as the lighter techniques and tastes of, say, Cantonese or Fujianese cooking. You see, the food for us workers, for economy reasons, came off the shelves. The cabbages and lettuces which could no longer be chopped down and re-packed; the apples too bruised for the shrinkwrapped tray trick to work anymore…A too-common dish was a watery soup, the bulk of which was provided by a sack or two of golden apples – I’m not sure of the cultivar name – chopped into large pieces and boiled.  As far as I can tell, this had nothing to do with any culinary culture; nobody would buy the apples and feeding them to us, who had no choice in the matter, saved using something else that the penny-pinching managers would have to fret over. The apples had their sweetness neutralized in the huge soup pot and they didn’t have a very appealing texture. Potatoes would be the logical choice, to most people’s tastes, but potatoes store well and are in high demand on SXM, hence I don’t recall a single occasion where we had potatoes in the soup. To this day I’ve not eaten another golden apple – and definitely not as soup. At least we didn’t develop scurvy. In terms of quantity and quality, the food was adequate for Third World coolies who hadn’t the cash to supply their own.

            All the workers  lived with were either Henanese or Manchurians. The Manchurians were swaggering and prideful, fun to hang around with and fond of drink – the Russians of China, if you will. One particularly spritied fellow, who went by “Mark” (real name Ma something or other), was an actual Manchu who looked like this watercolour portrait of one of Qianlong’s Imperial Guard that’s often reproduced in history books. He was a fanatic Manchu nationalist who believed that Manchuria should be independent of Han rule and that the Qing Dynasty should be restored. Mao became a minor legend, the fame of which even extending to some of the black and Dominican youth in the neighbourhood, because of an incident at the potato containers. Sunshine foods had a couple ‘reefer’ containers parked on an empty plot of land, not far from the supermarket, which were used for storing potatoes. Almost all the potatoes one ever saw on Saint Martin (Dutch Side or French) were the same type, which I figure must have become dominant due to some colonial-guilt-ridden subsidy agreement. They were lumpy and covered in blackish clay, packaged in fifty-pound burlap sacks labelled “Dutch Table Potatoes” and, unsurprisingly, were produced in the Netherlands. The boss’ brother was supervising a gang moving a quantity of potatoes, and he must have gotten a bit too zealous in ordering and insulting the workers. The Manchu, in a shocking display of insolence (or a righteous defence of his proper dignity as a descendant of the great Qing), fought back – and not with words alone. From a position atop a mini mountain of potatoes, he hurled lumpy, muddy tubers down upon the boss’ brother, hitting him numerous times. Shockingly, he was not fired, and afterwards boasted with justified pride of the occasion.

            The Henanese were solid peasant folk; the archetypal humble tillers of the soil, tolerant bearers of burdensome Fate, possessed of preternatural patience and endurance that was romanticized in Hollywood and Western literature about China for so long, but which is so rarely met with among the Cantonese who form the bulk of Western Chinese immigrant populations. Taller than their Southern compatriots, with distinct longish rectangular faces, calm teardrop-shaped eyes and frequently with wavy or curly hair, they are generous folk, in my experience. Poor as they themselves were, my coworkers often helped me with small gestures of kindness. Seeing me walking in my socks on the sandy, grimy floor of the dorm, they bought me a pair of sandals. Seeing that I was trying to learn Chinese, I was given a couple little books to assist. If I tried to pay, my money would be refused. On the other hand, they were generally terrible businesspeople. While it was a common path to leave Sunshine Foods and set up a restaurant as soon as one had saved up enough (not too long, in spite of the low salaries, due to the extremely low threshold costs for starting a business on Sint Maarten), the restaurants established by Henanese were typically smaller, less fancy and less successful than those of their Cantonese counterparts and none of the truly fashionable, big-name Chinese restaurants (or supermarkets) were owned by anyone but Cantonese. Because of the background of my colleagues, and because this was in the days before everyone was on social media, I have long since lost contact with all of them.

            By far the best task to be assigned to during my days at Sunshine Foods was assistant to the delivery drivers who, God bless them, kenned my state of mind and took a shine to me, and make it clear to the boss that they liked having me as their side man on delivery trips. The bosses, for their part, liked to have me out with the delivery drivers because they suspected the drivers of using company time and gas for private purposes and occasionally taking an extra case of this or that common good from the warehouse to sell on their own account. Both suspicions were well-founded, as I personally witnessed. An extra case of Baron hot sauce sold to the Dominican shop beside the brothel at the Dump (my silence purchased with a very tasty Dominican rice pudding); a 24-pack of one-pound sugar bags stashed in the driver’s private car for him to sell later; an hour spent waiting in the truck, parked near the airport on the French Side staring at the bucolic scenery as a driver visited one of his women and came back with some jugs of local moonshine.

             I am proud to say I never ratted, and if an employer thinks that is unethical, then so is feeding people greening meat and paying for heavy manual labour at a rate of $1.13 US an hour (extrapolated from my monthly salary). I should add, this was in a country where the minimum monthly wage was $600-800 USD, calculated on forty-hour workweeks. In my first month, despite a promise of minimum wage, I got $400. As I recall, it was $450 or $500 the next month. The Haitian (“Pappy”) and Dominican (who was called something that sounded like “Hadda,” but I never saw it spelled on paper) might have hated each other, but they were kind to me, rescuing me, albeit temporarily, from the nasty, brutish labour and bullying and insults associated with the other tasks I might have been put t. It was also an incredibly enriching experience.

            In the mornings, we’d get a list of the places we’d have to deliver to and what their order was. I’d grab a titi bun or two and a bottle of water and we’d hit the road. There would be restaurants, bars and supermarkets, French Side and Dutch. The supermarkets were mostly small ones – sometimes nothing more than a zinc-roofed shack – that did not have their own warehouses or sufficient capital to order whole containers of goods directly from Miami. Sometimes, though, we would deliver to a huge supermarket, such as Sang’s, which was vastly bigger and more modern than Sunshine Foods. Presumably, this would be because they happened to have run out of some specific item which we still had in stock and the owner, being Chinese, preferred to deal with another Chinese (the Grand Marché never ordered anything from us, as far as I can remember). Some of these establishments were owned by blacks of different nationalities – the Haitian driver, Pappy, forced me to show off my French, talking to some shopkeepers he was friends with…other Haitians. He took great delight in this, as did his friends. They saw themselves as members of Francophone culture, in a way, and regarded the language as infinitely superior to English. A couple were owned by Indians. I remember one bright but tiny and cluttered shop run by a Sikh, one of the only ones I ever saw on SXM, in a location very out of the way, where the trees seeped like veins among the scraps of civilization, and the angles of the roads and buildings were disorienting in the extreme. A lot of places we went were like that, had that effect on me, especially in the mountainous middle of the Island. The whole experience felt like a drunken dream, although I didn’t drink and my actual dreams in that time were few and unremarkable. It was some queer effect of the lighting, the atmosphere, the extreme and irregular geometry. That and the emotional state I was in, finding myself in a totally new place – a new kind of place – for the first time in my life, and experiencing that while I was facing the problems of poverty and being an illegal alien, etc. I should add, there was another benefit of delivery work related to that last point: I escaped the immigration raids that were sweeping the Dutch Side at the time. Once, me, Pappy and Wang Hemin (one of my dorm mates) were pulling out of the Sunshine Foods parking lot, nosing our way through the chaotic traffic just as the VKS and Immigration police were finding their own parking spaces. They carried off a couple people at Sunshine foods that day. I suspect, though, if I were to return to those parts today, I would feel them equally different to the Metropolis as they felt then, though my sense of their difference would be more curious and approving than confused and fearful.

            By far the majority of our customers were Chinese, and here both my rapidly growing knowledge of Mandarin and my personal identity came in handy. History and stereotypes led to me frequently being taken for a manager/boss by the clients, who would approach me as the man to deal with, which felt nice. Most important of all (to me) some of these grocers and restaurateurs knew Xinyi and her family, and so were valuable sources of information and encouragement. I was also introduced to an aspect of island life that is absolutely hated by a lot of people – I myself relish it. This is the fact that, especially if you for whatever reason especially stand out (I did), everyone will know what you are up to. Go to town to a restaurant and an internet café? The people back at the hotel probably know what you were up to before you reach back in the evening. I remember the first such shock very well. We were delivering with the Nissan pickup, to the Hong Kong Restaurant and Supermarket at Cornelius M. Vlaun and Cannegieter Streets. I had never eaten or shopped there, and had never seen any of its employees in my life. Some of the Hong Kong’s workers had come out to help us move the stuff off the back of the truck more quickly. I noticed that one of the men, black shirt, somewhat spiky medium-length hair, was looking at me rather intensely. “Hey, you’re the guy who’s come from Canada to marry…” he either said “to marry Ah Ying’s daughter,” or “to marry the woman who owns the Blue Flower’s daughter,” which amounts to the same thing. Speaking to me, but for the other parties gathered round, he gave a brief synopsis of my purpose in coming to the Island and the difficulties I’d encountered up to that point. While I’ve since come to accept such a thing as part for the course of Antillean life, in my whole lifetime I’d never had an encounter like that, and I reckon the natural reaction of the Toronto mind, running into some never-before-seen random fellow who knew where they were from, where they resided and who their significant other was, would be to call the police and report a case of stalking. Once I got over my initial surprise, it was flattering that the story of Mike and Xinyi had already spread far and wise, and was considered exciting enough to gossip and inquire about.

            The Peking Supermarket was another of my favourite places to visit on delivery. The woman who was usually the cashier was an attractive, sweet-natured thirty-something who knew Xinyi and her mom from playing mahjong together and other social activities. She and her colleagues were cheerleaders for my quest; the boss lady and her friends giggled with glee at my demonstrations of speaking Mandarin and writing Chinese and were of the opinion that me and Xinyi getting together would be a very good thing for all concerned – enough to put someone in my good books. Her name slips my mind, but I remember fondly all the people who could see something sweet and valuable in our romance. I noticed that it was a rule, with almost the sureness of a mathematical law, that the uglier and more miserable a woman was, the more hostile, mocking and disapproving she would be of me flying down and undergoing all of the adventures I was undergoing to be with and help Xinyi, whereas, beautiful and happy women would invariably feel that it was a sweet and touching story and would wish me and Xinyi success and happiness together.

            The boss of Sunshine Foods was a tall, slim, dapper gentleman with an anachronistic moustache. He asked me often about things, and even made me tell the story at the ‘big pot’ dinner table. His wife, an ungainly, shrill-voiced woman with a face for which “a bleached frog” is the most apt metaphor, on hearing the story, became pointlessly indignant. She huffed and puffed furiously and outright declared that she refused to believe it; refused to believe that a young man from a good middle-class family in Canada (which she had visited but was herself unable to immigrate to), would leave everything to fly down here for something so silly as love – and for a girl whose family had nothing to offer in the way of money or prestige, and were, to put it lightly, known as not the nicest people to deal with. “I don’t believe it! I’ll never believe it!” she shouted over and over. Aye, that I would leave Canada to become, voluntarily, an illegal immigrant and endure such real hardships as…working for her and her husband! I asked, rhetorically, why else would I be down here, doing this? She well knew it couldn’t have been for the money!

            Yes, the pay, for all I put in, was not much, but, because I was working “Chinese-style” it was all mine – no need to spend any money on rent or food (for the most part). I used my first month’s pay to buy a cell phone, one of those indestructible blue-and-white Nokia stick phones which had long since been phased out in Canada but which were still popular on SXM. This would allow surreptitious communication with Xinyi, which, up till then, had to be done by email when I went into Philipsburg to visit the internet café (Cyberlink, was it?) in a mall that backed onto the Pondfill…can’t remember the name of it. Was it the Percy M. Labega Centre? At the time, Xinyi and I didn’t talk much on the phone – there was still a lot of awkwardness and the rageful hostility of her nominal stepdad, Reuben…the whole situation I would not understand for a couple months yet.

            The brutal work schedule put an end to the weekendly group trips up to the Boo Boo Jam in Orient Bay with Keon Scott, Guyanese Ricky and whoever else was tagging along. Notwithstanding that inconvenience, my schedule at least allowed me Sunday afternoon off, after 1:00 or 2:00 p.m., when Sunshine Foods closed early. The Blue Flower closed at 11:00 p.m. every night, which meant that, on an ordinary day, reaching the workers’ dorm grimy and tired at around 9:30, then leaving to wait in line for my more senior dorm mates to finish showering, then to scrub off the residues of a thirteen-hour workday, then to change clothes and make myself presentable, then to walk the twenty minutes or so to the Blue Flower…it simply was not possible. On Sunday, though, there was plenty of time.

            My body might have ached from head to foot, but the inspiration of love readily overpowers such trifles. I would wash up at the dorm, having skipped lunch, so that I could better savour the meal at the Blue Flower later, which would be expensive already for a Chinese restaurant judged by Sint Maarten standards, and a positive luxury on my below-local-minimum-wage income (but an absolute necessity in terms of my purpose on the Island). I would spend the next several hours hanging out with Keon, Chamel and Lindo, shooting the breeze (as we say in Canada). Of course, Xinyi would always be the number one topic on my mind and tongue. Maybe I would stop by Wu, though I didn’t necessarily want to on days like that, at least not for too long, because of his pessimism and his spiteful hatred of Xinyi and her family for reasons that, besides a generally shared opinion that they were beyond the bounds of reputable society, weren’t very clear…certainly, he’d never been mistreated by Xinyi or her mom, but that was no obstacle to looking down on them. Then, once darkness was falling and the dinner hour was night, I would marshal my courage and walk the route up Illidge Road, left at the Roundabout, onto Zagersgut Road, past the mint-green-and-white People’s Supermarket, the big-blue-and-white English Seventh Day Adventist church and the small yellow Spanish Adventist church, to the Shell gas station, turn right onto Bush Road…at the same building which houses the Jerk Hut, which yet stands, to its left as viewed from the street…and into the Blue Flower.

            Ahhh! Even now, as I sit and write in my apartment in the Country Club atop Long Mountain, overlooking Kingston and the Caribbean Sea, just past sunrise on this rainy May morning, when I retrace my route…even though the Google Map of Philipsburg has no “street view” available and I’m only using the grey minimalist roadmap, I get a hint of that overwhelming, gooey feeling, slightly lightheaded, my legs feeling every so much like they’ve turned to jelly! I have no idea if Xinyi, whatever she’s doing now, misses me or if the same memories and feelings ever intrude upon her waking or sleeping mind. I hope that they do, more than I hope for anything else. Aye, as I prepare to set down my fountain pen and type this up, I realize all the more that, whatever I might achieve, if achieve I do, in my legal or other career here in Jamaica – or any other part of the world – it must pale into insignificance next to the smile in those furtive, deep-set eyes of obsidian intensity that I saw in a Chinese restaurant on Bush Road, Philipsburg, Sint Maarten. Also, I know that the “love” (which term people use so lazily) that might be inspired by a Canadian passport, professional salary and a bag full of degrees is like an insult next to that which a little chef and catherdess felt for a broke, artsy, foolhardly illegal immigrant coolie working in a supermarket down the road. 小猫,我想你!

Le Fonctionnaire

            Despite his long service in the colony, it could not be said of him that he was loved or even well-liked by most of the locals. Peau noire or peau blanche – those not from l’Hexagone, at least – were, if anything, colder and more reserved around him than when he first arrived all those many years ago. As compared to other metropolitans who found themselves marooned on this tiny, largely derelict demi-island outpost of the Republic, however, he had one inestimable advantage which rendered his social isolation tolerable, even pleasurable. You see, he knew the true reasons for the natives’ quiet hostility, or was sure to a degree that was as good as knowing. The blacks resented him for his position and his status as a representative of metropolitan authority; the whites, because his zealous energy and incorruptible adherence to rules and impersonal, impartial procedure reminded them that their languid, aristocratic ways could no longer compete in the world and would inevitably be soon relegated to the dustbin of history, along with their sugar estates and slurring Ancien Régime pronunciation. They all resented him because he was important; it was he who kept things running, who made the big decisions and yet they could neither beat him not convert him. In fact, they would have preferred the peaceful latter option…it worked with all the rest, after all. Alas, the climate, the women and the rum were queerly ineffectual against this stalwart soldier of the Service Civile. If anything, his moral and physical conquest through sheer plodding endurance gave him greater satisfaction than any of the more readily quantifiable accomplishments of his career – the kilometres of metalled roads, the increase in the number of motorcars imported and the corresponding decrease in the horse and mule populations, the percentage of felons apprehended, the land acquisitions for the State taken from outmoded feudal planters and grossly irrational peasants alike.   The Functionary mused on his upbringing, one of six children in the household of an honest, overworked pubic school teacher in an unremarkable arrondissement of tidy, uniform apartments inhabited by clerks and grocers, cookie-cutter images of themselves. He had moved onwards and upwards since those days of outwardly respectable penny-pinching and unstinting toil. He remembered how his mother would buy bread and lock it in the cupboard, only setting it on the table when it was stale, and would serve rancid butter because its pungent flavour meant one used less of it. Wine and butcher’s meat only appeared when coworkers of his father or extended family came to visit. He contrasted those hard yet edifying days of his childhood and youth with the situation of his table now. A local garcon in starched shirt and silk waistcoat to serve him, and, each dinner, when he dined at home, would have a bouillabaisse or a competently prepared bisque, a cutlet of beef or pork, or a roast chicken fresh from the hold of one of the new reefer ships (the scraggy creole ‘fowl’ being fit for gambling – but not dining – upon), accompanied by an astringently dry Bordeaux and baguettes of finest wheat flour – none of the stomach-clogging yams or maize paste the natives relished with their foetid salt cod. A junior clerk might balk at his grocer’s bill, but he was no junior clerk, and there were none who, invited to join him at his table, did not brag about the experience afterwards. There was method to his excess, for he was not a man for idle luxuries: it was often the stomach – he had observed several cases himself – where degeneracy first began.

            Yes, he was a man of significance in this insular little world. This was the main reason he eventually stopped returning ‘home’ to France on his annual holidays, even for major family events. The last time was, what, six or seven years ago? His old classmates, against whom he had measured himself for so long, had either faded into obscurity or occupied their own posts in distant corners of the Empire, lords of their own primitive fiefdoms, forgotten to Paris. His sisters had married men who would now be awkwardly beneath him socially, were they to meet, something the sisters’ apparently congenital hauteur would not permit them to suffer. His two brothers lay buried in the mud of Ypres and Verdun. Imperceptibly, he had got to the point where he had no friends left in the metropole. The place itself had become strange to him. The cafes and cabarets of his university days had vanished after the war – the loss of a couple million regular customers probably had something to do with it; the galleries and salons where he had once gone to feel like an erudite, cultured man of the world were now cluttered with the works of the Dadaists and Cubists, crude abortions on canvas which left him shuddering in disgust. The orderly checkerboard streets of the fashionably shabby sections of Baron Haussmann’s Paris with his pals now swarmed with furtive, scheming Annamites and sullen, tribal Berbers – foreign students and the lowest grade of menial workers…when they were not busy plotting the downfall of the Republic, that is. Traumatized into masochism by the War, the shattered, anchor-less remnants of France were committing a gay, absinthe-drunk suicide. There was more order and sanity out in the colonies. Hence, he chose to travel, when he got the time off, to other points in the Antilles, or even to Senegal and Cochinchine, which all seemed more familiar to him than ‘home’ now. He would not return to live out his days as a curmudgeonly pensioner, staring glumly out at the fast-decaying city beyond his narrow filmy windowpane. No, no, thrice no! Besides, what good would the modest savings from his civil servant’s salary, generous as it was by local standards, be to support him in that expensive city? Most of all, should he return to Paris, he would be a nobody from the moment he stepped off the quay, into the amorphous drab-coloured human sea. Here, resent him or not, there was none either black or white who could ignore his word on any matter of significance in the colony. Even the békés no longer openly vied with him for power and the governor’s favour, not after the War. Those relict nobles, led by the venerable but impoverished Signeur Desmonts, had been begging for yet more cash to prop up their backwards and inefficient sugar mills, salt pans and plantain groves. It would feed the workers, what with the war going on, so they said (not mentioning it would feed their own pocketbooks, at the metropolitan taxpayer’s expense). The Functionary had instead advocated the funds in question be allocated for a trade school and a factory making replacement parts for automobiles, so that the natives could learn discipline, modern manufacturing processes and use their wages to purchase a nutritionally superior diet from the stores in town. True, the factory collapsed and the natives seemed to prefer purchasing idleness with plantains and corn paste to purchasing meat and bread with work, but education might correct such habits in time…and the Functionary had triumphed over the békés. Hah!

            The Functionary wore a contented smile on his rosy, well-fed face. He was taking a stroll after dinner at the Blue Flower (he would have preferred it be called the Fleur Blue, but the French language was not as dominant as one would have hoped). The prices were a little high for the natives and the location a bad one for tourists, but one could get real, authentic Chinese food there, even many passably-prepared French dishes, and the best imported liqueurs sat on the bar shelf side by side with the most flammable local swill. Corn-chicken soup to start, prawn satay, then a plate of ginger beef paired with a fortifying brandy-and-soda. Ca, c’est bon! And it did not hurt that the place was run by two belles Tonkinoises, a mother and her young daughter, equally seductive in their own exotic ways. He never went beyond the most perfunctory flirtation, but the experience, for eyes, stomach and ego, was gratifying nonetheless. He felt so invigorated, in fact, that he dismissed his chauffeur, who had been waiting patiently outside for him as he dined. The doctors, they said that a bit of exercise was good for the circulation, not so? And the heat, one had to be on guard, as it thickened the blood – one reason, they also said, why men of good French stock grew so sluggish and listless after a few years out in the Antilles. The Functionary was a bit sceptical of this last theory, for he had not suffered such impairments himself in more than two decades. So many years of late hours behind a desk had rendered him heavier and slower than he once was, though. Time used to be, he would go riding past the old Desmonts property, along the Rue de Hollande, dressed in his best sporting clothes, gold pocketwatch chain dangling across his waist. It sparkled so bright in the equatorial sun that he had no doubt they could see if from the weather-scoured veranda of the Desmonts house – old man Desmonts and the exquisite and bewitching Yvette. That old fool! Why, his face sagged with worry just as his roof and balconies sagged from neglect and debt. And he stubbornly insisted on promising Yvette’s delicate milk-white hand to that young Hayot chap. And she would be won over by a handsome smile and a dashing Troupes Coloniales uniform, much as there was no rebellion in that. How some young women shackle themselves to pious tradition and others destroy themselves in blind revolt, with equal fervour! A pity how things went…it was from good sources that he had heard that a Lieutenant Hayot was missing in action in Flanders; it was standard procedure to add in the records a ‘presumed dead.’ And Hayot was such an uncommon name, it was not a great assumption. How was he to know she would go ahead and…why, it was against his own interests! Not that he was ever keen to marry her father’s debts…but in principle, why, it was just illogical!…The Functionary shook the unpleasant memory from his conscience. Ridiculous as it all seemed to him (what did he have to feel guilty for?), he did not pass the Desmonts farm anymore – in ruins though it was – except by car, and even then he preferred to take the roundabout way across the border, coming down over Orient Bay side.

            He was strolling along a narrow spit of land forming the northern rim of the Simpson Bay lagoon, unimaginatively referred to as ‘Sandy Ground.’ It was a picturesque, but easily traversable, spot. Not very valuable land, though, as the softness of the ground and the lack of space kept anyone from building hotels or warehouses on it. Even the indigent fishermen and conch divers whose irregular, tumbledown huts constituted the only human habitations knew not to demand of the thin soil support for more than the scattered clumps of salt-yellowed coconut palms and wind-flattened sea almonds. This very lack of prospects had the beneficent result of keeping the sand spit in its pristine state – if not wilderness, then ‘feral,’ one might say. Being on the western flank of the island with no higher ground beyond it, the blood-red sun sinking below the sea, the lurid, inky form of the mangrove woods in the foreground throbbing and shrieking with the cries of the frogs and strange night birds, some of which probably did not exist in any textbook….it was as close to the sublime as the Functionary cared to venture.

            He crossed over the bridge connecting the sand spit with the outskirts of the town. It was an unusually quiet night, but then, it was Monday, early in the month, and the improvident salt and sugar workers would understandably be short of cash for amusement. Still, he did not like to see the streets empty at such an early hour. It bespoke a lack of commerce; hinted at lurking crime. Such nights were rare, with the economy doing decently well, but he felt uneasy nonetheless. It was purely the residue of childish fancy, of course, but sometimes the skeletal acacia trees and the frowning mountains casting jagged shadows upon the largely electricity-less town acted in unhealthy ways on imaginations, even ones as atrophied as his. He arrived at the cemetery encircled by the Rue Charles Tondu and the Rue de Sandy Ground. A dramatic scenery, with its centuries-old stone walls and raised crypts in the old French Catholic style which seemed to be afflicted with an unfortunate tendency to veer into almost Pagan designs and decorations. Many years before, it had been a good journey from the centre of town, but with the expansion in hotels and the increasing number of workers migrating from other islands and the metropole, the edges of the town were swiftly flooding out past the spot which, due to its surrounding walls and perhaps too the superstitious trepidation its purpose inspired, gave the site a feeling of splendid isolation.

            At the roadside across from the main gate, an old crone, black as her costume was obscenely bright, stood at a ramshackle stand selling coconut flavoured iced cream, produced in situ with an archaic wooden barrel-churn. He wondered if she had a vendor’s permit and license from the sanitary inspector. He decided that she did not. Women like her were why fevers and parasites of the gut were so widespread among the populace. Weakened by a lifetime of such ailments, ingested with food that was not sustaining to behind with, was why the children could not concentrate on their studies and why, as adults, they found a fair day’s work beyond their bodies’ capacity. The shameless irresponsibility! He made a mental note to give an order to the sanitary inspector the next day.

            So much history, so much inheritance of darkness and squalor. The Mission Civilisatrice had its work cut out for it yet. He would take a walk through the cemetery. The rise in the price of land had meant some of the more respectable families in town now had plots here. The difficulty, during the War, of sending remains home to France through the U-boat blockade unavoidably led to a number of white metropolitans being interred, which in turn led to sturdier gates, better-vetted staff, and strict new legislation against the desecration of tombs in the service of certain unspeakable religious practices. Not that grave-robbing had been a problem on the island, but it was known that the voodoo cult had adherents among the natives, citoyens français though they might be on paper. Indeed, their number and zeal would only be augmented by the influx of migrants from Guadeloupe, Guiane, and above all Haiti, that eternal repository of gruesome antediluvian lore and, more practically significant, the knowledge of poisons and crimes that the houngan and bokor practice for the awe and silver of a credulous, benighted people under the guise of magic and sorcery. If there was one ministry which deserved a greater share of the Republic’s budget, it was the Ministry of Education! But that was why the colony needed a man like him. He studied the impressive brick and stonework tombs with satisfaction. Pristine, well cared for. The displays of emotive religious symbolism were a little rich for his secularist eyes, but it was reassuring to see that the sons and daughters of France were remembered and respected for their sacrifices far from home with a suitable expenditure of labour and materials. Here was a marble column indicating the resting place of a brilliant biologist whose studies of tropical insects, particularly the Lepidopterans, were cited in university textbooks in Paris itself. He had drowned when a storm caught the frail vessel he was sailing to Martinique in. They had shared many a drink and philosophic discussion. That was before the War. Goodness, the passage of time. There was Madame Saunier, a famous theatre actress, once. Her planter husband brought her out on what she thought would be a romantic adventure, largely to embellish his presence in society. The climate and her husband’s infidelity soon caused her to fade and wither, and that was the end of the illustrious Madame Saunier. Over there was a baroque sculpture and a plaque…The Functionary had forgotten the name for years; it was that rake son of a Breton count who had come down to forge a name for himself growing cacao and finding the lost pirate treasure which some ancestral manuscript would lead him to. A sad case, that one. A genuine scholar, fluent in many languages and competent in a few of the useful sciences to boot; just the sort of man France would need to rebuild itself. Only twenty-six years old. The head and liquor softened his morals, the women softened his wits. Killed in a duel of, of all the tragic wasteful ends a man could meet. A duel! In nineteen…twenty-one it must have been.

            There were others lying nearby, not as sensational perhaps but similar enough. Cirrhosis. Yellow fever. Syphilis. They came out from tired, routine lives in cities, stuffed to the gills with book-learning but with scant wisdom of the world. The freedom that island life allowed – enforced, really – upon their eager young psyches proved an incurable and invariably fatal poison. Mind, though, the Functionary reflected, if it had not been so…if the brighter talents and bolder personalities had not proved so uniformly subject to the dangers of colonial life, he, with his industrious mediocrity, would still be a low-level clerk, copying forms or listening to irate and incomprehensible natives demanding make-work jobs and adjudication of trivial quarrels. Quelle horreur! The spirit of the place may have favoured Romantics like them, but time and the iron laws of Fate favoured the Functionary. Eh-heh, there was the sepulchre, ornately carved but of cheap limestone, of the lovely Mademoiselle Desmonts, Yvette Desmonts. She was a creole belle of the classic sort. A modern-day Josephine, but not so petty and indecisive. White, at least by the standards of the place; the very likeness of one of Bouguereau’s Gypsy girls or jug-bearing Iberian maids. He had a most delightful time with her…she was the passionate Mediterranean temperament to the core, alternately fiery and tender as her starry black eyes and wild raven tresses. Mon Dieu! Quelle saveur!

            Of course, marriage was out of the question. With her dowry of antique fineries and jewellery would have come her family’s debts. The former had been dwindling and the latter accumulating since sugar was first squeezed from the curse’d beet and undoubtedly constituted a vastly greater sum than what the pitiful dregs of the Desmonts Estate could be mortgaged for. If, in fact, anyone could be found foolish enough to give a mortgage, let alone purchase, that wasteland, already half-swallowed by the pitiless bush. Despite putting on an appearance of nonchalance, it had bothered him a good deal when she died. And in such a tragic fashion, too! Her father must have pulled many strings with the village priest for him to have found that the young lady had drowned by misadventure while swimming. Swimming, by a rocky shore, at midnight? In a full satin ball gown? And then when the young Monsieur Hayot returned a month or so later, all covered in medals…well, who was he to blame? He had only relayed what he understood to be the facts of the situation. Those shells they were using over there could pulverise a body to atoms and it would remain ‘missing in action’ for a hundred years. That the man should then, having survived the gas and shells and machine guns, belatedly carried out the Hun’s work for him…really, it was too much for anyone to have predicted.

            Grim reflections in a melancholy location, most would say, but the Functionary was not the least disconcerted. Drama had little effect on him and his stolid, practical nature did not allow him to weep over the follies and extravagences of more fragile natures than his. Weighing things from a utilitarian perspective, he saw in these stone markers a kind of racing scoreboard, in a manner of speaking. Those poetic inscriptions, contorted cherubim and pensive saints in granite and marble; they were the symbol of his opponents’ defeat. He himself, from his smooth brogues (polished daily by his garcon), plain but well-made charcoal suit covering his hearty paunch, all the way to his placid, soft-featured face and balding, greying pate – he as he had made himself, unaided by connections or family name, or deeds of ribbon-decked butchery – was the symbol of his own victory.

            “They may have despised me, or hated me, as the case may be,” he mused; “But their sentiments were born of fear. They knew I would surpass them, as sure as Fate, oui. Or, they wanted me and knew I would not have them. C’est la vie, c’est la vie.” He drew out a cigar from his coat pocket, relishing the fragrance, the glow of the embers in the deepening twilight, the rhythmic the rush of the waves against the breakwater just beyond the wall. Magnificent. Suddenly, he perceived a harsh intrusion amid the twilight symphony, in the form of an alternating gravelly scraping and soft thudding. He turned around. How had he not noticed, walking down the path? He felt the embarrassment one always feels upon realizing one has been observed (even possibly observed) for a time without knowing it, regardless of how blameless one’s conduct might have been. It was a pair of labourers clad in ragged overalls and wide-brimmed hats of fraying straw that half-concealed their faces. They were busily engaged with pick and shovel. Tomb robbing? No, for they did not startle, and there was no monument, just a hole in the raw earth. They had evidently been at work for some time. The Functionary was surprised, even irritated – it was among his many responsibilities to sign off on all death certificates. What was more, this was a very respectable section of a respectable cemetery – one reserved, not legally of course, but through custom – for whites and those coloured folk who had distinguished themselves by their wealth or service to La Patrie. He had heard rumours of how family burial grounds were a magnet for occultists seeking skulls and bones for charms, burial finery, or even – not that he would permit the papers to publish a word of it – the raw material for the creation of the dreaded ‘zombi.’ It would be understandable that some fearful peasants whose loved one had died in unusual circumstances might feel insecure about burying him or her up there in the ragged hills where the light and the law did not yet reach. They would desire, perhaps at the cost of a substantial bribe to the watchman, to have their relative interred in a location safe from the witchdoctor’s diabolical arts. Understandable, oui, but not permissible. If someone wanted to die like a Frenchman, they would have to learn to live (and pay) like one.

            “Hey, garcon,” he shouted, though the youngest of the two men looked as old as he; “What are you doing here, at this hour? Explain yourself!”

            The labourers did not stir from their task. The knotted, coal-black arms heaved the damp clods over the edge of the grave with a rhythm that was uncannily machine-like. He realized he had inadvertently spoken in French, the French of France. To rustics like this, who had probably not completed even four years schooling – how absurd! Unfortunately, despite living the better part of his adult life in the Antilles, he knew almost no Créole and affected to know even less. As far as he was concerned, it was the purpose of the Mission Civilisatrice to educate, not to pander to people’s bad habits. However, now he was compelled to let the rules of propriety slide a bit. “What are you…Kisa w’ap fè? Who permitted….kis moun ki pèmèt ou fè sa a? Ehh, err, mwen…mwen rapote…bay jandams la!” He was satisfied he’d given a passable expression of his thoughts, at least enough so they ought to knew he, an official obviously above their own station and capable of making life very hard for them, wanted an account and now! The elder labourer glanced up briefly. The Functionary observed his weathered white-bearded face, a broad, insolent grin stretched across it. The old man mumbled something in thick Créole which the Functionary did not understand. The younger joined him a guttural chuckle. Their spades never paused in their monotonous work. The Functionary had read a report from a colleague in Guadeloupe that the Panama fever brought with returning workers was doing a number over there. He himself had voiced disapproval of the new policy of encouraging married civil servants to come with their families, so as to make the colonial service more attractive to a diminished pool of recruits. The fools in Paris had not seen with their own eyes how the unfamiliar climate played havoc upon the constitutions of white bourgeois women and children. Yes, that was it. He had noticed when he called on Plantard’s house the previous weekend – Plantard the newly-arrived marine engineer – their youngest daughter was fairing rather poorly. Ghastly pale; almost blue around the eyes. Maybe…but then, he should have heard the news at the office today. Plantard was cheerful and perfectly at ease. And that grave was not being dug for an infant. It was long and deep. He regretted this scenic stroll. He made his way to the gate and hailed the first taxi that came by.

            The Functionary was breathing heavily and glossy with sweat; he dug his fingers under his collar, straining to loosen it. He had the taxi take him back to the office, where a good portion of the staff were still at work. The Functionary’s eyes darted nervously about, till he spotted Lévesque. He dealt with the newspapers; he would know. Supressing his anxiety, the Functionary asked, “Hey, err, bon soir, Georges, did something happen to…who is being buried tomorrow, at the cemetery over Sandy Ground way?”

            Lévesque replied with a Gallic shrug; “Beats me. I didn’t know there was a funeral tomorrow, but, you know, I’ve been off island a lot lately.” The Functionary’s anxiety swelled. He clapped a sweaty palm on the shoulder of Mayotte, a black who the Sous Prefecture had doing typing and translation. Mayotte was poor and ambitious; whatever he thought privately, he would not question an…unusual…request coming from a superior, even if it kept him half an hour or so late. He sent Mayotte off in his chauffeur’s car to make inquiries at the cemetery. The Functionary tried to distract himself with some perfunctory paperwork in his office. Mayotte returned and with impeccable politeness let the Functionary know that the labourers he described – indeed, any labourers at all – were nowhere to be seen and, since he had encountered no one to inquire of, he had returned empty handed. The Functionary started to become angry. All events of any significance in the colony, any act or thing in being which left the faintest statistical trace; all were recorded in his files. Any act or thing not in his files either did not exist or could not be a phenomenon of any significance. So it had always been. That was the line between civilization and barbarism – the barbarian was things and acts per se; the civilized man was figures expressed as things and acts. The line could not be erased, or even be permitted to blur. He went to the telephone and asked the operator to ring up Doctor Hutard, who was also the coroner. Such a trifle as the death of a vagrant in a sewage gutter would not escape the Doctor’s methodical attentions. Doctor Hutard knew of no deaths, certainly not of anyone who would have funds sufficient for a plot in the town cemetery.

            “Yes, yes,” the Functionary growled into the mouthpiece; “Everyone has told me that. But no one can tell me why two men would be in the cemetery after sundown, digging a grave, when nobody has died to fill it.” He slammed down the receiver. He beat a tattoo with his fingers upon the desk. Aha! He picked up the phone again and had the operator connect to the gendarmerie building. He explained to the duty Sergeant that he had personally observed an attempted grave robbery in progress in the cemetery by Sandy Ground and gave descriptions of the ‘suspects.’ No doubt, he added, they intended to commit a breach of the statutes against the practice of witchcraft. Furthermore, the gendarmes were to bring the suspect to the Sous Prefecture so he could identify them. Since the Functionary stood as an official with more authority, at least outside of emergencies, than most of the gendarmes, he was sure his request would be obeyed. At least he would get some answers. In the interests of setting a good example to his subordinates, the Functionary made a point of keeping no alcohol of any kind in his office, going so far as to pass the lavish Second Empire liquor cabinet that came with the office onto Lévesque (who did not resent the imposition in the least). Now he forgot about those pretences as he hurried down the stairs to ask Lévesque if he had any of that Guavaberry liqueur he liked to buy on the Dutch Side. Lévesque was only too obliging to his plainly very distressed supervisor. The Functionary poured himself a neat tumblerful and walked back up the stairs. 

            Why had it so unnerved him to happen across those workmen digging that grave? There wasn’t anything peculiar about them or the hole they were digging that should make it in any way out of the ordinary. Still, he struggled to dash it all from his mind. A few warm gulps of the liqueur, a stack of documents reviewed and signed off, and his nerves cooled. He reclined on a settee, perusing the newspaper and listening to the crickets. Maybe a quarter of an hour or so and he would go back to the Blue Flower to have some drinks and shoot a few rounds of pool. First, though, he had to settle this perplexing matter. It was only a couple minutes before a pair of gendarmes entered the Sous Prefecture office with the head groundskeeper of the cemetery hunched and quivering between the two tall, well-armed officers.

            “Hmph! What were those men doing digging in the cemetery his evening?” the Functionary began interrogating the groundskeeper as soon as he was down the stairs. “The prefecture hires you to keep watch on things. There was nobody else there, eh? It’s not a big place. What, you get a cut for…for selling the bits and pieces of the dead for some mad charlatan to make fetishes and plant curses? Ah! But….” He continued without giving the groundskeeper the chance to say a word; “But, why dig a grave at all? None of the authorities – for whom I speak – know of any scheduled burial. Concealing a murder maybe? Hiding it in plain sight, heh?”

            “Awah! Mais non, monsieur!” the groundskeeper shook with fear but seemed genuine in his confusion. “I swear, oh bon Dieu, I let nobody dig any graves today, none. Nobody puts a spade in the ground unless I give permission…and I do not let anyone tamper with the records. No, I am honesty itself for these ten years. You can ask the governor himself!”

            “So, it is negligence in honest good faith then? Hmph! You were sleeping. Too much clairin on the job, maybe? The two labourers…I saw them myself…digging a grave, near the seaward wall, in the corner towards town.”

            The gendarmes leaned away from the suspect, hanging their heads and thrusting hands into pockets. Finally, one of them interjected: “Sir, I’m afraid…I don’t mean to be insubordinate or to question your judgement in any way but…” The other finished for him: “Sir, we both went into the cemetery with this fellow and…neither of us saw anything. There was no grave in the location you spoke of. No fresh graves anywhere in the cemetery tonight, actually.”

            The Functionary stammered a syllable of protest but caught himself before he invited further embarrassment. He had seen it with his own eyes; how could this be? The gendarmes and their temporary prisoner stared and shuffled in place, awaiting an escape from the awkward situation. The Functionary racked his brains trying to come up with something to say to prolong things until he could figure out how to get the answers he hungered for, but to no avail. “Ugh, yes, yes, fine then. Dismissed!” The gendarmes hastened out with palpable relief.

            The three visitors were barely out the door before the Functionary again went over to Lévesque’s desk. Lévesque had been packing up for the day but sat down again when he saw his boss’ appearance. “Everything alright, chief?” he asked. “You’ve been pushing yourself awful hard last few weeks. Ought to relax sometime. Maybe we can hit up some of the nightclubs on the Dutch Side, you know? If the missus will allow, hehe – keeps me on a tight leash, she does!” Lévesque’s trite attempt at humour went unnoticed. The Functionary was drawing on all his powers of concentration to steady his hand and pour the liqueur into the tumbler. He sucked back a neat two ounces and yanked his silk pocket square out of his coat, roughly towelling his clammy forehead with the fine paisley cloth. Damn it! He saw it with his own eyes! He’d spoken to the workmen, insolent as they were. The damp crunch of spade edge into soil; it was clear as the sound of the liquid passing down his own throat. He clacked the tumbler down, making Lévesque jump in his seat. How could a possibly meaningless occurrence have put him in such a dreadful funk? He had seen what he saw…was he mad? He did not drink to excess, used no narcotics, nor did he suffer from any loathsome disease such as might affect the faculties of reason and perception. As he rifled through the possible interpretations of the uncanny event, though, he rather preferred to assume madness, at least madness of some temporary and curable sort. He would go to the Blue Flower. If the leisure and social company did not calm his work-addled brain, he might as the woman who ran the joint if she could refer him to a good clinic practicing their traditional folk medicine. He had read magazine articles telling of the astounding things Chinese physicians could do with fine needles inserted at strategic nodes along the nervous system. And it would not carry the stigma that would attach were he to visit a Western doctor on account of ‘nerves.’

            The Blue Flower, at least, was its usual self. For some inexplicable reason, this surprised him. The regularity of it all was immensely soothing. In a small island, patronising the same haunts, one got to know the curious habits of the other patrons as well as people in the metropolis know those of their immediate family. There was the American rum runner, who told tales as sodden as his product of midnight runs, one hand on the wheel, the other gripping a Thompson gun; of boats lost to the Coast Guard and the legendary fêtes that followed a successful run. There was the university man in his neatly-pressed wool suit, studied in Paris, New York or somewhere, eyes behind steel-rimmed spectacles fuming with righteous rage against the colonialist, which he would spend the wee hours venting into a typewriter in his cramped rented garret, someday the philosophy of a tragic misfit or the prophet of a new nation. There was the jovial policeman grown heavy with bribes, full of easy tolerance and generous good cheer. The voluptuous Dominicana drawling cosily in her incomprehensible tongue and the lean, cat-eyed hostess rasping bad English, competitors in the arts of seduction. These and many other familiar characters, once maybe annoying, now put his heart at ease better than the liqueur could ever do. He had already exceeded the maximum recommended dose of the latter medicine. The booze, but more so the events of earlier in the day kept ruthlessly penetrating into his conscious thoughts, though. He would be playing a winning game, then miss shot after shot with only a couple balls left to sink. “Who were those men in the cemetery? Perhaps they filled the hole after I caught them…” Clack! “What was it the paper said that the cartman saw, beside the Holland road that October night…a woman in a long white dress? At midnight, wasn’t it? Rubbish…but then that gendarme said he saw it too….” Clack! The cue skimmed the top of the cue ball and he stumbled against the edge of the table. Patrons, from experience expecting the Functionary to trounce most of his opponents, had best heavily on the games and grumbled in disgust, while newbie challengers smiled at their good fortune.  The hostess practically hissed at him – at least he thought she did – when he hunched over the bar to pick up another drunk. Had something changed about him, something that was not present before?

            His head was swimming. He had to get out of there. As he stood waiting for the hostess to count up the change on his bill, he considered asking her about the Chinese folk medicine clinic, but the cold menace in her eyes made him feel ashamed, though precisely what rule of etiquette he had transgressed, he was not sure. As he staggered out the door, the unsettling thoughts clawed fiercer and fiercer; he could not beat them away. He demanded his chauffeur to drive him to the cemetery. He had to return and look again. If he was suffering from the heat or whatever affliction earlier in the day and simply imagined seeing things that weren’t there, well, he would not see them again. And he would have his chauffeur, a big powerful man, accompany him. They would force the groundskeeper to come along. If the grave was there after all, the man would get a hiding – aye, he would be left to starve in the gutter, and if any of his relatives had government jobs, they would lose those, too, should they dare to offer him assistance! The Functionary had enough pull for that and it wasn’t as though a groundskeeper was irreplaceable. When they arrived at the gatehouse of the cemetery, though, they found the groundskeeper had gone home. There was not a soul to be seen, in fact. The Functionary briefly mooted the idea of breaking in to have a look anyhow, but a cursory glance revealed that the very security precautions the Functionary had advocated for now made their accessing the cemetery impossible. A fist-sized padlock; an iron gate with inch-thick bars…the masonry walls, he surmised, would have broken glass embedded on their tops. The realization that there would be no chance at all of solving the mystery that night threw the Functionary into a state of paralysing enervation. It was barely 9:00 p.m. when he reached home. Fatigue, overwork, that is what had got him down, was playing games with his otherwise utterly reliable senses. He reflected that sleep would be impossible and he should go out again. All those drinks earlier had made him peckish for something salty and greasy. The night was young and he didn’t want those familiar faces – faces he needed to respect his authority if he was to perform his job smoothly – he could not have them thinking that the high-ranking civil servant in charge of so much on their little island had gone off his rocker, could he? A dish of red-cooked pork, some hot and sour soup and a few cups of tea later and he felt back to his old self. The clouds lifted as imperceptibly as they had fallen over him. Well, well…he would be more careful about adequate sleep and leisure in the future, definitely. He cleaned up at the pool table, schooling a couple of the strangers who’d falsely reckoned themselves pros earlier in the evening. Bam! He even sank a few trick shots on playful bets, proving to himself he was back to his normal tip-top form. After heading him well past eleven, sleep came swiftly.

            A couple hours later he woke with a start. He’d had a dream, a dream which chilled the marrow of his bones. The dream was of the cemetery and the two workmen digging as they mumbled some heathenish chant. It was a memory, not a hallucination. There was no possibility of it being otherwise. Then he heard the croaking scream of the ghoul-eyed potoo bird cutting through the fog of his thoughts, striking him with the cold reality of the night – so dark, so isolated and terrible. He was limp with sudden fear. Fear of the fathomless waters that prowled with unrecorded monstrosities a mere stone’s throw away and a thousand miles wide. Fear of the tangles of rude shacks and huts, leprous with rust and rot, brooding over nightmares that predate civilization and which could not be described in any European tongue. Fear of the ragged hills, clad in impenetrable thorn scrub; hills hose very forms were calculated like mathematical formulas to summon forth those lurking horrors out of the ether, seeding them into the souls of men. The briny reek of the étanges floating through the window tortured him. Fear, too, of the people. The grinning, threateningly indolent peasants; the stone-lipped market women in their obtuse vestments; the grand blancs with their seventeenth century faces frozen in time, arrogantly scoffing at the Enlightenment even to this day; the cunning, rat-eyed Chinese serving him spoiled food with treacherous pleasantries. They all glared at him, their venomous laughter ringing in his ears. What madness made him ever decide to ship out to this barren speck of saline dust halfway around the world? He had to leave, to leave now. He had to be among the warm press of bodies, of Men of Reason. He had served his time, served too much. What matter his pension? Fah! “Mon Dieu,” he wailed aloud; “I must be back home…home, in Paris!”

            He wanted…needed to be home. He could not die here. He could not be buried here, amid blacks and degenerate whites and all their manifold hybrid gradations, among those grotesque Pagan tombs. Not in that grave, so near that woman. It wasn’t his fault…there would be no woman waiting at the crossroads in Paris…he would be safe. So what if they thought he’d really lost it…been hiding a case of the…like all the libertines he condemned, the hypocrite! So what? What mattered was that he should flee to Paris while he still had the power.

            He sat down at his desk and wrote to the governor. He was sick, absolutely unfit for duty; it would only do to send him home and promote a replacement. They could choose Lévesque, even Mayotte would do. It didn’t matter. He had to leave within the fortnight. No, on the very next steamer.

            The governor read the resignation letter the following day, though not without a great deal of unease on his own part. For it still bore the marks from where it had been crumpled in the cold, stiff hand of its author, as he held it when they found him that morning.

終

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Copyright © 2017 by M.G. Warenycia

Loyalties

            Three o’clock on a Friday afternoon was about the best time you could pick to sneak unnoticed out of a midrise apartment building in a working-class suburb. Pretty near perfect, in fact. The factory labourers would be punching out of the afternoon shift, and waiting for the sluggish buses that would haul their well-flogged carcasses home. The final bell of the nearby public schools had another thirty minutes before they rang out in unison, while the housewives and grandparents who collected their own children would have set out so that they’d be there waiting on time. The derelict elements of the population – sadly numerous in such buildings – would be sleeping off the effects of last night’s booze, meth, or prescription meds. Any repairmen or TV and cable people called out to install or fix something would have either come earlier in the morning or else would be arriving later on in the evening when their clients were home. On top of all that, the daytime has a symphony of background sounds, from the subtle and normally unperceived to the migraine-inducing: cars and trucks on the busy arterial roads that surrounded the neighbourhood; subway and LRT trains clattering and screeching on the tracks which run down a cut in the parklands behind the row of slummy apartments.

            If you followed what might seem like common sense and tried to slink out of your apartment at three o’clock in the morning, on the other hand, you would find that at least a couple of your neighbours took note of the fact and had proceeded to make inferences as to what you were up to at such an hour, when all reputable businesses in the area except the gas station and the 24-hour Shoppers’ Drug Mart have locked their doors. The boldest of them – most likely elderly or an immigrant to the City – may even quiz you about things, or at least hide a snicker-provoking insinuation in their greetings the next time you pass each other in the stairwell. Not that they are unaware that you might have been stepping out to grab a phone card, or some medicine to deal with the flu. But I would suggest that those would be seen as less probable explanations than that you were out to obtain medicine not sold by any national chain (not without a physician’s approval, anyway) or for some forbidden liaison, amorous or mercenary. This and much else Varun Seepersaud had learned in two years of dwelling in just such a ‘slumpartment,’ one of countless cookie-cutter examples crowding in a belt around the outer fringes of the 416.           Varun had been born and raised in the kinder, cleaner suburbs of Mississauga, beyond the last stops on the subway line which mark the effective limits of car-less settlement. There, an extended clan of Seepersauds had been established since sometime in the reign of the first Trudeau, the philosopher king-prime minister who threw open the country’s doors to immigrants from ‘non-traditional source countries,’ thereby initiating the use of spices for cooking and the introduction of the mango to grocery stores. The family pattern had been the one that was then almost a guaranteed rule for immigrants: patient, steady labour and the gradual, accumulative acquisition of durable consumer goods, cars, a house and other aspects of bourgeois security which sound awful in post-modernist academic papers, but which seem pretty darn sweet to the children or grandchildren of indentured cane-cutters. Not that Varun Seepersaud did much reflecting on history. He hadn’t left the comfort of an owned solid brick two-storey in a low-crime area out of a desire to pursue some dream of becoming a consumerist facsimile of a tortured fin-de-siècle artist. That might have been the guiding ideal of most of his circle of friends and roommates (often two very different categories), but it was not what motivated him to live downtown, for the several years that he managed it. He’d actually studied poli-sci and business, which wasn’t the most impractical choice he could have made…though to be perfectly honest with himself, he knew by third year that he was just filling time.

            After he’d graduated, he relented and moved to where the living was cheaper. It wasn’t too much of a loss, when he really considered it. Everyone had drifted off into their own weird subcultures or private miseries after graduation, anyhow. Everyone fighting their own battles…times were tough. Last month, he’d sold the used Acura CSX his parents had bought him in undergrad. Sure, it was good on gas and never had any breakdowns, but saving gas and new fan belts or brake shoes doesn’t count for much when your insurance is eight grand a year and you make less than thirty, with rent taking half. Financial questions had been in Varun’s head every waking hour the last few months. He hadn’t mentioned to his parents that he sold the car they’d bought for him as a gift. The last time he visited, in fact, for a family BBQ on the Canada Day long weekend, he’d told everyone he’d parked down some side street he couldn’t remember the name of…it took a couple hours and changes of spotty holiday bus routes to reach back, though face was saved…till the next long weekend.

            Breanne certainly knew. He hadn’t heard a word from her since she’d had to bum a ride to Club Menage two weekends ago. Their schedules didn’t allow for him to ‘pick her up,’ given how long it would take to TTC it across town to reach her before then heading downtown together…and could you even call that ‘picking someone up’? He’d offered to escort her home to make up for things, but it was almost one and the subway stops before two, so each had to rush back their own separate ways, he to the east, she to the west. He was chivalrous enough to text and ask if she’d got home alright. By four a.m., she hadn’t answered, so he texted one of her girlfriends. She let him stew till the afternoon. Yes, they got him safe and sound, was the reply – but it was slyly hinted things had not been pretty. Given that the TTC must know who are the main users of its services on weekend nights, Varun inwardly lamented, why are there only washrooms at the ends of the line?

            Work at his Uncle Mohan’s used car dealership kept him busy a few hours a week, Best Buy a few more, but the first was just family pity and the second was unsteady. Life was week-to-week now; confusing struggle to get back in the groove, if that was even possible. Observing the crushing social isolation of a lot of his peers in uni, he was glad that he and remained tight with Sean, Kamal, and the rest of the gang he’d grown up and gone to elementary and high school with. Otherwise he’d probably still be killing himself to pay for residence, bars, board game cafes and other largely ineffective means of warding off loneliness. They’d help each other out, too, sometimes – real buddies, not just people who got drunk together…though, unfortunately, Varun always found himself on the receiving, not the giving, end these days. In fact, he was heading out right now to see Sean about some little…job, or trade, call it what you want. Sean was good for those things, and he needed to get back a car, any car, if he wanted to keep Breanne – not that she’d ever crass enough to admit it. Two grand, cash in the pocket – more if things went his way. That was more than what he would make in a month schlepping for Uncle Mohan or the folks at Best Buy. Real buddies, cheesy coming-of-age gangster movie style, yes sir. And then there was Paco, who made sure he got sunlight and exercise…was practically his ‘agent’ for meeting chicks – not that he intended to stray from Breanne, of course. Paco was also a dog. Most people thought of him as a ‘pit bull’ but he was an American bully, if you wanted to be precise. Varun remembered, when he first got Paco, about 18 months ago, and he showed up at one of the regular backyard BBQs as Uncle Mohan’s house in Mississauga – the whole clan pretty much lived on the same street. The reaction of people – the ladies, especially – was like, “oh my God, he’s so scary!’ but also, ‘protect me!’ and…they didn’t say this out loud, but he could read it in their body language…’oooh, it must take a beast to control an animal like that!’ Heheh….Roweena had picked the name. Roweena Persadie, dark and skinny and smart and silly. They’d gone all the way from kindergarten through grade 12 together, though now he only saw her at those backyard parties or if  a mutual friend invited both of them to the same event. His dad and her dad were best friends back in the old country, as retold in endless rum-soaked stories he never paid much attention to. He supposed her logic had run something like, ‘he’s a pit bull, and Pitbull is Hispanic, so the dog has to have a Spanish name.’ It seemed a little stupid, but Roweena was cute.

            First he would go see Sean in the west end, then on to Mississauga in the evening – no mean feat on public transit. It was hard to keep a clear head…Did you ever notice how loud a dog’s toenails and panting sound in apartment lobbies? Right as Varun laid hold of the vestibule door – “Hey, Paco! And Varun!” The voice came from the open door of the superintendent’s office. Dammit! She should have been out checking the other properties she managed – since she lived in Varun’s building, its affairs usually got taken care of before noon. Stifling a groan, Varun hailed her back, “Heyyy….!” He preferred not to call her by anything, since to refer to someone who lives in your building and sees you practically every day by their job title would be snobbish, while ‘Mrs. Mavrokordatos’ was unpronounceable and calling a normal, modern day person ‘Athena’ just seemed weird. What was the short form of that? Could you even make one?

            “Gosh, somebody’s getting to be a big boy!” Mrs. Athena Mavrokordatos cooed as she rushed out to pet the lapping, tail-wagging pooch.

            Ugh! Every time…then again, Varun remembered, he had been turned away from enough places where the landlord didn’t want the liability of a ‘banned breed’ (yeah, banned in Québec!) in their building. Mrs. Mavrokordatos, on the other hand, was crazy over Paco: “It’s not the dogs, it’s the owners they oughtta ban!” Of course, a woman who had a pack of breeding Scotch terriers in her employer-supplied housing unit could hardly complain about a bachelor with a single dog.

            “Oh my goodness, if you guys were in – “she always addressed them as if Varun and Paco were equally her tenants – “I’d have got the guy to come in n’ take a look at the pipes – he was in, y’know, patching up the walls in 407; they say nothing’s come in since Sunday but I want the guy to have a look just in case. Don’t wanna have to do it all over again if there’s still a leak in your unit.”

            “Oh, ehhh…” Varun wanted to think of some excuse, but the super was just pretend-annoyed and he was too tired to come up with anything.

            “Now I gotta do another water shut off…who’s a gooh-boy! Who’s a gooh-dog!”

            “I uh, I forgot. Slept in, sorry. Late night,” Varun mumbled, pulling the leash to urge the dog through the vestibule doors but trying to be gentle enough that the dog-loving super would not think badly of him. “Yeah right,” he thought but did not say. “Another leak? More like to check if I am packing up to move out before rent day.” Varun had been over a week late three of the last four months.

            It was a hot summer afternoon, which meant Kennedy Station was humid as the rainforest exhibit at the Science Centre. On the plus side, while the trains belched out their cargo of half-dead workers and students, they’d be practically empty when they shot back westbound. After the smelly human tide had washed past him, Varun entered the car, only to dart out, yanking Paco behind him; “nope, nope, nope!” That car had no AC…near fatal torture, that. He slid into the next one down just as the chimes dinged. Cold and nearly vacant. While the WiFi signal lasted, he alternated between perusing a police foundations textbook that his buddy Joe had given him after the latter made it into the York region PD and the demands of social media. He suspected Joe wanted company on the job. Moreover, he was one of those guys who thinks what works for him must be right for everyone else. Varun had to admit that all that police overtime looked like a fortune next to the grudging sub-minimum payouts Uncle Mohan was giving him. ‘Immigrant family solidarity’ is often a euphemism for cheap labour. Then again, Joe was a beefy 6’3” and one of those Boy Scout types who always plays the good guy and somehow manages not to f**k up their chances at everything. The background checks they did for the police were like something out of 1984. And that was before you even got accepted into training. But, then, what else was he going to do? Law school? Med school? Yeah right, mom and dad.

            The train progressed swiftly and smoothly from green and sunny suburbs, past the scuzzy slum-in-a-drum towers by Vic Park, then underground into the heart of the City. At Bloor-Yonge, the train immediately filled up, as it was now moving outwards vis-à-vis the heart of the City. Varun hated the foetid press of bodies, with the inherent threat of pickpocketing, molesty touching, and, above all, the germs on people – the ‘great unwashed- is not an empty figure of speech. Varun was broad-minded enough to know you couldn’t exactly blame people for travelling in the only way possible for them, but, still….a friend of his got partial kidney failure after contracting gastroenteritis like four or five times in two years, probably spread by homeless people – it was epidemic in Toronto shelters – touching subway poles and stuff. This afternoon, though, Varun didn’t have to worry. Paco was lolling at his feet, tongue-hanging smile on his face. He wouldn’t have known where they were headed, as Varun had always taken the Acura when going out to visit his family. The passengers pouring into the subway car were not so relaxed. In the analysis for seating and standing positions which every seasoned straphanger performs upon entering a car, a ‘vicious dog’ sitting opposite the entrance raised red flags, making them hustle as far down as they could. Those compelled by the press of flesh to be nearest Varun and Paco twisted in their seats, tucked in their extremities and wore fearful discomfort on their faces, “well, I never!” Paco did not notice and Varun pretended not to notice – though he was secretly enjoying himself.

            Varun was not entirely at ease, though. The signal was dead on his phone. Wind Mobile! Sean was supposed to call him…though with all the people around, he would have to be cautious how he responded. If there was business to discuss, no matter whether it was sketch stuff or merely buying some car or computer parts (though now that Varun thought about this…) it was phone calls, a meeting in some ethnic restaurant where no one could overhear them, or else a walk through some innocuous suburb. Sean probably knew the seasons of every flower and tree better than any professor of urban forestry, even if the only Latin he knew was the mottos tattooed on his skin.

            Out of the station, Varun stood in the snaking line at one of the bus stops by the station gates. He didn’t have far to go. Still, he didn’t like the sight of the inky mauve clouds boiling up from off the Lake. He wasn’t carrying an umbrella. Moreover, he was feeling low in the world and didn’t want to show up at Uncle Mohan’s looking like a drowned rat. Nowadays, people driving eight-year-old Civics seemed to his eyes like smug, privileged, planet-ravaging jerks.

            The bus rolled up right as the first peals of thunder echoed down the concrete canyons. As Varun stepped onto the platform and gave Paco a tug, a smoke-coarsened, nasal female voice whined, “Heyyy, you’re naaht gonna let him on heah, are you? He’s got a dawwwg!” A shabby, witch-faced woman with permed, obviously dyed ‘red’ hairm who probably played a lot of Bingo, scowled venomously at him. The driver stared at Varun and Paco. The driver’s natural inclination – Varun gave him the benefit of the doubt – would have been to do nothing, but Ms. Frizz – Varun had troubled picturing a Mr. for her – shuffled up past the yellow line, blocking Varun from paying his fare. “You can’t let him on,” she droned; “he’s got a dawwwg!” he driver waited glumly for the problem to resolve itself.

            Behind him, Varun heard grumbling. Lest the crowd take Ms. Frizz’ side, he tried to state his case: “He’s my pet; he doesn’t bite” – people love dogs, don’t they? – “And I was just on the subway like two minutes ago; nobody had a problem.”

            Ms. Frizz was not placated. “He’s got a dawwwg. It’s rush ‘owah. You can’t bring a dawwwg on the bus at rush ‘owah. Read the siiign.” She gestured to the metal plaque deeper into the bus and presently invisible to all parties concerned, which spells out a bunch of draconian rules which are basically never enforced, unless drivers want to be pricks. Varun knew that the sign did say something about how, during ‘rush hours,’ drivers could, at their discretion, choose to exclude people with pets. But, come on, who followed those things?

            Unfortunately for him, while there might have been one or two people won over by Paco’s cuteness – plus his risqué identity – the bulk of the commuters were interested solely in getting home as quickly as possible and therefore, as such crowds always do, instinctively turned against the party who appeared most bullyable and likely to yield – definitely not the scruffy, prune-like old woman with all the time in the world to wait (retired? Welfare? Varun decided on the most unfavourable reading: that she’d reached retirement age after a life on welfare). Varun was not by nature quarrelsome. He backed down and retreated, leaving Frizz to pucker in triumph as the bus sped away.

            There was no choice but to carry on by foot. Alas, Varun did not know the area and Sean, being Sean, had never texted or email Varun the address. As he hurried along the sidewalk, keeping to the main road, he whipped out his phone. A solitary drop of rain struck his thumb. “Awww, shit!” Varun muttered. While the signal had been dead in the tunnel, Breanne had missed-called him. Twice. That wasn’t like her at all. A few more rain drops pattered down the screen. Paco whimpered – he wasn’t any fonder of foul weather than his owner. “Damn it, come on!” Varun raged at the device as he fumbled with it, the touch screen refusing to obey his will as the water-slick surface blurred the signal from his fingertips. As his finger swiped about the screen like a drunken ice skater, the desktop menu flashed into the ‘incoming call’ display. Frustration slowing his reactions, he accidentally swiped the green. “Noooh!” he groaned. It was Roweena, all sweet-voiced, asking him some perfunctory small talk stuff, which he perfunctorily answers so as to avoid seeming rude. He could hear lots of noise in the background; she must already be at Uncle’s. Indeed, she announced that was the case and that everyone was waiting for him to arrive – ‘everyone,’ of course meaning her. She then asked how the job hunting was going, trying to be as non-demeaning as one can be asking such a question. She received evasive mumbling in reply, exactly as she expected. Fighting to contain her excitement, she told Varun that there was this rich old guy whose cat she’d helped save after the kitty had been bitten by a raccoon – Roweena was a veterinary assistant at a clinic by Church and Wellesley. He was so grateful to Roweena…well, so, on her own initiative, she’d pressed him with a hard luck story about this friend of hers stuck grinding away in retail (she’d actually said her “boyfriend” but she did not tell this to Varun), even though he was full of talent and had a BA in some vaguely useful subject from Ryerson University. There was wisdom in her whinging, for it was known in the clinic that the owner of Sheherezade – the cat she helped save – was a middle-ranking official in some bloated, well-funded government department. This gentleman, cheeks still damp with tears of joy as he embraced his beloved pedigree Laurentian Shorthair, was only too eager to agree to put in a good word for a promising candidate who would also help meet diversity quotas. In other words, she’d got Varun a job. True, the starting wage was only $16 an hour, barely a living wage according to the newspapers. On the other hand, it was a secure job behind a desk; a mythical prize in the current economy. She added that, as a vet’s assistant, she made about the same…

            Why would she mention that? Varun asked himself. He muttered that he was busy at the moment, which was enough for Roweena, who wished him speedily on his way. Varun wouldn’t have gone into the details, anyhow. Roweena taken care of, he called Breanne back. He kept walking, phone against his ear, waiting. He didn’t know what those two missed calls were for, but he was sure, at least, that she was mad. It rang out. He called again. And again. Same result. Okay, real mad, then. He sighed and decided this time to leave a voice mail…hmm…voice mail inbox full. Breanne was not a very organized girl, but it did seem a little too convenient to be a coincidence. He could handle it tonight, he guessed, if he got home early – and if that didn’t look possible, he could find some moment to slink away from the party that evening and sort things out there.

             He was keen to put his phone away because the storm was picking up and he wasn’t entirely sure which way he was supposed to be going. The sky over the City was now one vast milky umbrella, foretelling a long and steady rain. It also made navigation difficult, as he couldn’t discern direction using the now-hidden sun. The neighbourhood was not an old one, by Toronto standards. There were none of the richly carved Gothic Revival homes and repurposed turn-of-the-last-century garment factories that beautify the south and east, nor were there many of the lot-spanning glass-and-steel prisms which embody Fritz Lang’s dystopian vision in the latter day 6ix. The area was, instead, divided by numerous irregular side streets lined with modest brick-and-cladding houses, small but with generous yards, in the cosy but generic architecture of postwar suburbia. Towering birches, blue spruce and bushy Norway and silver maples, lush with the rainy summer, told of the practical policies of City governments past, before localist ideology dictated that fragile red oaks and sugar maples be planted in asphalt fertilized with road salt. Every couple of blocks, a squadron of Brutalist apartment towers glowered among themselves in silent counsel; their origin story was rooted in well-meant, grossly ineffectual social engineering designed to uplift the habitually indigent, threatening poor by planting them in close proximity to the more industrious and ambitious members of their class. The sidewalks were uncannily bare of pedestrians, except for the odd shambling form bundled in a shapeless coat, bowed and hooded against the spitting rain. In the covered entryways of the sombre towers, groups of three to five youths could be glimpsed, furtive and hostile, watching the street. Passing a windowless corner wall, Varun observed that some community organization probably led by naïve students who lived far away, had put up a mural in bold, plastic colours. There was a Captain Planet-esque globe in bright green and blue, a stylized bus and towers, black-and-white portraits of Gandhi, MLK and Mother Teresa (copied off famous press photos of each, which appeared disjointed when put together). Among this ill-proportioned scenery, a suitably multicultural gang of youths cavorted together with no apparent object. The figures were garbed and coloured like a cartoon from the early 90s, with backpacks and shoes, watches etc. that gave the impression of roller blade gear, sans rollers. Above all, drawn to a different scale, the upper torso and head of a hijab’d exaggeratedly Somali-looking young woman floated, her arms folded eyes burning with all the baleful hatred of a coddled grad student. Varun shuddered, knowing this was not a good place to be lost in.

            What was it Sean said? Left at the Coffee time in front of the dental clinic, left again, like you’re going in a spiral…Which Coffee Time? There’s gotta be more than one in the area…he rung Sean’s phone; no answer. “Maaan….for real?” On the bright side, he could see the next intersection up ahead: a glassy new mixed-use midrise complex, a gas station and a strip mall…if anything, there’s be a Shoppers’ or somewhere he could buy an umbrella and a donut-n’-coffee place he could grab a bite and wait out the rain. The beneficent owners of the business strip had installed glass awnings anchored on cathedral-style flying buttresses for a hundred and fifty feet or more. Varun sheltered against the wall beside a huge potted shrub and brushed out the water which had slimed his hair gel. He looked at this phone. A text from Breanne: “dnt act like u dnt understand.” Understand what? He was aware it was something about their recent difficulties, but was this, say, bait for him to apologize or offer to make amends or was she, God forbid, telling him things were done? The wind blew unseasonably cold, as if in concert with his predicament. He reluctantly pulled back his jacket cuss and tapped out the least-potentially-disastrous message he could come up with at the moment, chilly, wet and agitated as he was. “Yes I kno. I’m sorry babe. Nything I can make it up…”

             As he was about to send the message he heard a voice growl something about “the fruits.” It sounded queer and distant under the patter of the rain on the glass canopy and the crunching roll of cars passing in and out of the strip mall parking lot. He noticed it above other distance voices in the lot and from shop entryways only because of the language. “Fruits.” Who says fruits, with an ‘s,’ in any normal conversation? Varun pondered, distracted for a moment from his task. His question was answered a split second thereafter, in a most unexpected and terrifying way, when a wildly bearded and haggard face loomed up, shadowing his phone, which he dropped in fright. “Hmm? So you gonna give ‘em back ta me then?” the glassy-eyed, abominably filthy patriarch standing in front of him asked.

            Varun, true to his Canadian upbringing, responded to being terrorized by the socioeconomically pathetic with obsequious politeness. “I’m, ah, sorry, uh, sir, give what back? I don’t know what you mean…”

            “Is’sat it, mmh? What’s that then, I’m no better n’ some rat ‘er dog ya find on the streets, huh? It’s mine, mine by rights, so sayeth…mmhm..” the gravelly, mucous-clotted voice cracked and sputtered as Varun backed against the wall, unable to escape the streetside prophet’s hypnotic stare. “The fruits ta’ he who sows the seed!” the stranger wailed, with particular emphasis on ‘seed.’ “N’ I sowed the seed, I did, in twice five miles of fertile ground, n’ the golden sun was whirlin’ round!” the old man came close to Varun’s face, whispering almost conspiratorially.

             Varun cringingly attempted to reason like a guilt-ridden prisoner: “I can help, listen, if you need something – “his nervous eyes caught the LCBO logo on the plaza sigh a few metres to his left. “I’ll, uh, get it for you, don’t worry.” Far from being placated, the old man seized him with a nut-brown hand, the shiny, sun-scorched surface of which resembled an exoskeleton which scraped and scratched, rather than touched, the tender skin on the younger man’s collar bone and throat. Varun bruised his shoulders falling back into the wall. He writhed left and right, but despite thrice weekly gym sessions, he was powerless to shake the malodorous wraith who clung tenaciously to him as the sucker-legs of a gypsy moth caterpillar cling to the hair and clothes of an unlucky passer-by on whom they dropped from their tree.

            “Ah…ah-haah!” Varun tried to stifle his cries. Everyone was hiding from the rain; there was no point embarrassing himself.  His assailant, meanwhile, was jabbering in a mixture of King James Bible and lower class Canuck slang. Apparently he mistook Varun for someone who’d stolen or done some other wrong against him. The man’s immediate object seemed to be to poke and dig at Varun’s eyes and mouth with his scabrous claws. Varun attempted to resist, but even though he outweighed his adversary by a good forty pounds, fear, confusion and, above all, cringing disgust rendered him dazed and feeble, like trying to run in a dream. Just as the man’s sodden beard scratched across the chest of Varun’s jacket, his eyes bugged out like a pair of pickled lychees. “Naawaahooh!” he let out the most ghastly primal wail that Varun had ever heard from a two-legged being. Varun’s attacker spun round, flailing his arms in vain grabs for support. Varun, too stunned himself to react, stood back and observed – Paco had seized the hobo about his femur, his jaws clamped like a vice. He did not bark, only let out a seething frothy growl. The man swung and grunted, trying to steady himself to kick the dog with his free, boot-clad foot, but the stout beast, solid as an 85-pound ham, its veins coursing with adrenaline, was far beyond his powers to contend with. When the man tried to bed down to strike the dog with his fists, the dog wrenched the leg it held away off the ground, sending the hobo toppling into the pavement. Now, the old alchy was crying like a whipped puppy, transformed into the picture of sorry helplessness. “D-don’t hurt me, mister, I didn’t mean no nothing’ by it. Oh gosh, oh gosh, I’m sorry, mister, please don’t let him hurt me no more.” Varun, true to his nature, immediately felt sad for the fellow. Life on the street all those years couldn’t have been easy…

            “Calm down, Paco, easy boy, it’s okay now,” Varoon soothed as he picked up his phone and Paco’s leash. He was about to offer the battered hobo help to stand when Paco charged up, snapping at the prostrate man’s throat, causing him to scream in panic. Varun glanced at the man’s hand…he was gripping a glass bottle that had presumably been lying beside the nearby recycling bin. Wretched as his life was, the prospect of having his jugular munched out by an angry pit bull did not seem worth it and he relinquished the bottle. As Varun and Paco left, they could hear the old hobo howling curses addressed to them, passing drivers and whatever old companions he might have seen in his inebriated visions. “Cowards! Tryin’ ta beat up an old man. He sicked his dog on me, didn’t ya see? F***kin’ tryin’ ta kill a defenceless old man. Yer a f***kin’ goof, ya know that?”…

            Varun slopped into the Coffee Time, whose weather-stripped double doors silenced the greybeard loon. He ordered a large of the chain’s nearest facsimile of the Double-Double and sat down at a table looking out on the intersection. He set his phone on the table but wanted to warm up and steady his nerves a bit before calling Sean again. No missed calls or new messages – good, if only because it meant less to think about. The rain was coming down in sheets now and lightning flickered off in the distance. A proper summer thunderstorm was brewing. There would be downed power lines and birds’ nests on the sidewalks tomorrow morning. Maybe even a foolhardy swimmer taken in by the undertow along the lakeshore. If someone had been following Varun all afternoon, they might be forgiven for thinking he seemed even more stressed and uneasy than when he set out on his journey. He paid no attention to Paco, who, this being a working class neighbourhood, didn’t attract the nervous attention he might have at a café downtown. He just stared out the window, contemplating the people in their cars, the ruffled, quivering maples trees and the birds that were probably hunkering among their branches or in hollows – he particularly imagined owls, for some reason – watching the storm as he was. The buzz of his phone vibrating along the table started him out of his meditations. “Hey, Sean!”

            Sean spoke low and excitedly, but said very little, leaving the other party to fill things in. “Yo, what the f***k, mate? Been waitin’ for you…”

            “Yeah, uh, sorry. Listen, I just got attacked by…I’m not kidding…this crazy homeless guy. For real. Just came out of nowhere n’ went all apeshit on me. This is one sketch f***kin’ place you’re living in, bro. On top of that, man, I just don’t know my way around here. Did you even give me the address?”

            Slow, heavy breathing. “…You got ‘em…?”

            “Hmm?…Oh, yeah…yeah. Listen, I’m at the Coffee Time. By the gas station. Remember, I don’t have the car, since last month…”

            “…” Sean mumbled something. His words were unintelligible, but he was plainly displeased. “In the mall with the fish n’ chips place and the Guyanese bakery?”

            “They got a Guyanese bakery in here? I mean, yeah. So, you can, uh, come and pick me up?”

            “…I could have got you some work, you know, but…yeah, yeah.”

            “Okay, I’ll be on the lookout for you.”

            “Driving a green Altima.”

            “Oh? New – “ Sean hung up before Varun could finish.

            Ten minutes later, a dark green Altima with rims and windows tinted to obsidian blackness was idling at the edge of the lot. “You couldn’t park a little closer?” Varun though, annoyed at the prospect of dashing through the rain and curbside pools.

            “In the back,” Sean called out, rolling the driver’s window down when Varun reached. “Christ, you couldn’t walk three blocks? I don’t like having that thing behind me.”

            “But you didn’t give me the add…” Varun gave up before he finished the sentence and it was silence for the rest of the mercifully short ride. Varun couldn’t be sure – after all, it is not easy to keep your bearings riding in a car, in a thunderstorm, in the evening – but Sean appeared to be driving in circles and doubling back on parallel streets. He could barely catch a street sign, what with the water running down the window blurring his view, but he was sure they’d passed certain houses and shops more than once.

            The car crawled down an alleyway long and only a single lane wide, with a high concrete wall on one side and some sort of brown-brick old-fashioned industrial building on the other. The tall grass and springy young saplings growing unkempt at every seam and border of the pavement, and the plethora of weather-greyed cargo pallets and peeling drums lying about suggested it was abandoned or at least neglected by whoever owned it. Down past a bend in the U-shaped lot, in the corner, behind a row of loading bays with filmy windows and padlocked gates, they stopped. “Here,” Sean said curtly as they piled out. He led Varun not into the derelict factory but to a high chain link fence where the factory premises adjoined the backyards of a row of houses, which could barely be seen for the dense weeds and shaggy old trees which spilled over the barrier. “Come on.” Sean had peeled back a door-sized section of chain linking, the edges of which had been clipped by heavy shears. Clever, Varun thought; when the person lets go, it will spring back into place, the cuts hidden among the foliage.

            “Whose place is this?” Varun asked as they walked across the long, uneven lawn towards the back of the house. It was evidently an old building, wide enough to block off the view of the street, mottled brick on both stories with a faded shingle roof and green and white wood trim which looked quaint from afar but which closer inspection revealed to be badly in need of a reno. Sun-bleached Fisher-Price vehicles and deflated basketballs were scattered around about the back porch.

            “I wouldn’t say,” Sean explained, “but it’s okay since he’s not in the country. Some rich Chinese, foreign investor type. They’re not coming into the country for another ninety days and won’t be moving in till probably next year – they’re rebuilding; this one’s gonna get knocked down. Prolly gonna put up one of them ‘monster homes,’ flip it, eh? But that suits us just fine. I know the guy charged with gutting the place…it’s a three-week job, but if he tells ‘em three months, what the hell do they know? Gonna get some use of the place beforehand, y’know? And if anybody goes off ratting to the cops, they’ll be knocking on Mr. Ching Chong’s door in Shanghai or wherever.” Sean burst into menacing laughter.

            “Ha-ha,” Varun attempted to play along, “poor guy won’t know what they’re f***king talking about,” but he sounded so awkward. He was really out of his depth now…

            Sean knocked a rhythm on the sliding door at the rear of the house. They were ushered in by a disreputable-looking tough – a bird of Sean’s flock. The house was empty of the finer touches of domesticity, but the basic structure and surfaces were all intact and there were couches and chairs, either abandoned or brought in after. It was like there was a house party going on. There were people milling about – mostly men, though – bottles and disposable cups of assorted types of booze were all over the place; pungent, but not entirely unwelcome, aromas wafted through the air and a massive sound system pulsed late 90s-early 2000s hip hop and reggaeton through the floorboards. Varun did not inquire what was happening on the upper floors. He did not inquire about anything – indeed, he passed among the bodies and bottles in an almost catatonic state, following Sean past the herculean bouncers, down into the basement.

            “There’s for providing the entertainment,” Sean shoved a wad of bills into Varun’s passively obliging hand. “Er, I should say, half of it. I did you a favour, bet five hundred bucks…on yours, of course. Me, I like to hedge things, put a little on both sides, y’know? Not like I’ve got a dog in the fight,” his teeth gleamed in the dim light. “You can leave or stick around; up to you,” Sean offered, making his way towards a wall of people in the centre of the basement, which had had its wood and drywall-based partitions knocked out. The music was low and indistinct down here, but the crowd was noisier and frantically alert and energetic. Nobody was dancing. “’Course,” Sean shouted over the hubbub, “if you can’t stay, word of honour, you’ll get yer share of the winnings – if you win,” he punched his chest and laughed.

            Varun desired nothing more than to be out of that dungeon; to be at ease among friends and family in gentle, harmless, familiar Mississauga. But he could not tear himself away. He could not resist making his way, zombie-like, into the wall – it was actually a ring – of people. Pushing through till he was pressed against the four-foot-high barrier that edges the circle of bare concrete. A stentorious voice bellowed a ritualized declaration and the circle was empty no more. He knew he would regret what he would see, but he could not turn away. Not when the two squat, muscular dogs, ears pricked, teeth bared, stalked each other around the ring to cheers, jeers and the waving of handfuls of cash. Not when, obeying the instinct bred into them over generations and cultivated by rigorous training, they leapt at each other, determined that only one – if any – would leave. Not when his pet and companion, thrilled by ancestral bloodlust, severed the ear of his russet-coated foe. No, not until the russet-coloured dog, equally matched physically but with keener technique, turned the fight and crippled Paco with bites to his hamstrings, before moving in and disembowelling his weakened opponent. Then and only then did Varun tear his body away – he ran sobbing through the twilight and the freezing downpour – though his mind would not leave. Not that night, or any other night.

            When, heedless of the rain and tree-blasting lightning, Varun entered the subway, he did not go west, to Mississauga, but east, towards downtown. When he sat, alone, at the row of bar-style stools looking onto Yonge Street in the Hero Burger, masticating a wild Alaskan salmon and ciabatta burger like it was so much cud, he did not bother to check the text that Breanne had sent him. She’d grown tired of putting up a pouty front and included a link to an ad for a concert in the beaches they could go to, seeing as he’d be getting a new car on payments when the cheque for his new job came in. Nor did he check the texts from Roweena, with an attached duckface photo, asking where he was and if Paco was handling the GO Train alright. Nor the voicemail when she repeated her enquiries because ‘everybody’ (she) was worried. No; he just stared mindlessly out the window. A hipster student type who’d been one or two behind him in line knelt down on the other side of the floor-to-ceiling windows; knelt on the wet, gum-spoor-dotted sidewalk, no doubt relishing the experience for its gritty authenticity. With a bluff, sanctimonious grin, he handed a burger combo worth a sixth of a min-wage worker’s daily income to a hunched, Aboriginal-looking man squatting cross legged under an umbrella, beside an illegible cardboard sign. He saw the hipster look left and right, swelling with pride at the grandness of his generosity. Above all, he saw the squinting, mouth-breathing wreck of a man take the assemblage of Angus beef and layered toppings firmly in his swollen, black-nailed hands and tear it into two more or less even portions, offering one to the grateful maw of a husky in a Maple Leafs sweater, and smile.

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Copyright © 2017 by M.G. Warenycia

Chaco

by M.G. Warenycia

            The straw-blonde blades of the elephantine grass drew invisible lines across Tuco’s shins and calves, only coming to his attention when a bead of sweat found them. The tall grass and the desiccated quebracho trees that huddled in clumps across the savannah hid him from the aim of the Bolivian’s Mausers, but not from the heat and the thirst that was killing him as surely as any bullet. Tuco was not the type to despair easily, though, just as he was not one for dramatic displays of joy or pride – though there were exceptions. It was perhaps a fundamental trait of his people, this passivity that endured without complaint, suffered without self-pity. To a different fragment of his heritage – forgotten to living memory – he owed another side of his character, latent, but as irrepressible once erupted…just like the faint bluish muzzle that remained no matter how closely he shaved. It was fortunate he grew up in a countryside not unlike this harsh subtropical zone, except in being marred by the hand of plough-driving man. He observed the dense lines of acacia and wild olive, grey and green amid the yellow sea, which he knew meant a shallow creek, which ran with life-giving water and which – almost as important – curled around the thicket into which the recoiling enemy had fallen back. He trod onward, hunched and stealthy, the red dust mixing paint with his sweat, contemplating succour in water and blood…

            When the Colonel pinned the badge of brilliant cloth and noble bronze upon his chest, he had given a piece of paper to Tuco that, the Captain told him, explained that his country was grateful and proud for his fearless defiance of the risk of death, leading the charge when the platoon leader was down and the battle depended on coming to grips with the enemy and driving them from their emplacements. It was true, as well, that the men of the regiment credited Tuco with this quality, so vaunted by the nation that she now fed with bread and beef, and shod with leather, her very same children who, mere months earlier, she was content to witness toiling under the meridional sun with bared backs, sand flies and chiggers gnashing their naked and stone-scuffed feet. But the officers who mentioned Tuco in despatches and the comrades who slapped his muscled back did not understand what lay beneath the surface of that visage, impassive and unchanging as Machu Picchu’s stones. They thought that Tuco was unmoved by the risk of death. In fact, he was driven by hunger for a victory that could never be found on the battlefield alone. The hunger that impelled him was as savage and monomaniac as that which drove men from hardscrabble villages in Galicia and Extremadura to throw down their last doubloon for a rapier or arquebus and passage across the unfathomed ocean to lands more idea than place, trying their hand in a game whose stakes were conquest or death. The treasures that Juan de Solis and Jeronimo Cabrera sought were yellow and glittered; those which Tuco craved were black and liquid, and red and pulsing…

            Tuco had lived in the district of San Ignacio all his life. In fact, the entirety of his experience, from birth to adulthood, had occurred within a day’s ride from the Estancia Narvaez, on which his father worked until drinking himself to death somewhere in his forties. For boys born as he was, there was never a moment of choosing a job or career. One entered life and did the things incidental to its preservation with more or less regularity. For a few tedious years, as determined by some big men in Buenos Aires, Tuco and his ilk were imprisoned for a portion of each day in a large room where they were lectured on all manner of subjects in words seldom more comprehensible than those spoken by the priest at Mass. After this, one took to living – living full-time – which occasionally required an expenditure of sweat and pain. The priest had explained that this was a kind of tax upon sins which had been gathering interest on Man for a while (though some folks seemed remarkably unconcerned about paying this tax). Some laid bricks and some dug ditches; some carried heavy loads in the manner of donkeys, but by far the most toiled in the care and processing of crops grown on the properties of men – other men; men not like them; men who had much land. Most of all, it was in the maté plantations where the eons-old exchange of sweat for bread took place. Tuco was tough and uncomplaining. He did every task well, so that whereas the other lads were allowed to sweat and earn bread for a few months out of the year, between which intervals they drank themselves to sickness and spent themselves to beggary, Tuco remained where he was, month after month, year after year.

            The estanciero, on horseback in white suit and broad-brimmed hat, watching the shirtless, shoeless men growing wealth, saw this and was pleased. Tuco soon began to receive more silver and copper each month than the men who worked beside him and, because he did not use it to buy liquor or women, he worked strong and steady when drink and sickness made those beside him grow weak-limbed and slow…which added more coffee cans full of silver to the mine under the floorboards of his room.

            At rest breaks or relaxing after work, Tuco’s colleagues – mostly young men like himself, Indians and Mestizos, plus a smattering of the European migrants who had fallen through the cracks or reprised their old-country roles – shared a few topics of conversation, adjusted and reframed but never varying in their basic substance. Prominent among these was each man’s hypothesizing what he would do with his pay; a mental analgesic for the physical sufferings of their toil. This man would save up and buy a donkey and a cart, hiring himself to transport crops, wares or fuel. Another would accumulate the capital to buy a stock of goods and rent a small shop to sell them from. And this other would hoard away cash till he could purchase a plot of land to farm on his own account, with no estancia, no padrone looking over his shoulder from his high horse. Not maté if course, nor sugar.  Perhaps tobacco or vegetables for the market; maybe a few dairy cows, a flock of chickens…No man bandied about grand visions and gilded stratagems for becoming a big proprietor or figure of renown himself. Anyone who boasted he would have a hundred hectares of land or someday own a substantial enterprise and have doctors and lawyers for sons would have been scorned as a daydreamer; as one who was paradoxically both a fool for desiring the unfeasible and a snob for outshining their own humble goals (if only in the battleground of the imagination). He must be ambitious, therefore mad. The men whose likenesses stood in greening bronze in the town square and whose names lay graven in the gateposts of lichened manors had been mad, too, of course.

            Tuco listened to these lectures as if they were fresh each day, nodding and smiling as appropriate, leaving unremarked (because he never seriously pondered it) the fact that the donkey prices, the shop capital, and the children’s educations became cachaça and dice, dead cocks and slow horses. Each month born anew, the same transformation occurred as if by an immutable law of the universe. Tuco listened, but he never commented on such tales. He remained taciturn because he did not have any of his own to share. Although he worked harder and wasted his wages less than his comrades, he had not given a moment’s thought to what he would do with the accretion; not even the most superficial speculation. His stoic heart harboured neither bitterness nor aspiration.

            As an earthquake jolting the volcano from its millennial slumber, a chancing glance of a pair of feather-lashed black eyes set his dormant heart boiling, steaming up a pressure which no force of reason or circumstance could cool or divert. There was not a week where Tuco did not attend the market, if for nothing but boredom, and there were plenty of fine distractions parading about and haggling at the stalls. The estate, however, was the real hub of the local economy, where almost everyone, man and woman, boy and girl, who was not a thoroughgoing merchant or burgher served their turn when larders ran low, dresses for quinceañeras and weddings needed purchasing, or when the paterfamilias (if he was not already on the estate) took ill or died. In every seasonal shift and harvest gang, there were always a few comely maids; an ample bosom, a sturdily shapely waist…what would spur the transient lusts of a red-blooded workman or overseer, usually traded at modest price without much expense or shame, but one never saw a truly beautiful woman; one who would not look out of place on a painter’s canvas (unless he were that type of painter who likes to depict, as ethnographic records or declarations of avant garde tastes, figures overbearingly rustic). No beauty who would be described by that adjective without qualification. Hunger as he might in his heart and work-exhausted daze, even an untraveled man like Tuco understood the deficiencies of the plebeian beauty which, while it might surpass others in moments of fatigue, darkness and rum, but which a gentleman would feel no little shame for having drunk of when daylight comes…sultry and alluring though she might be in the simple, bust-enhancing garb of a free-spirited barmaid or washerwoman, even her most sodden paramour well knew she’d ill fit the balls and soirees of the planters and rubber barons, turning squat and ungainly in dresses not drawn for her figure, clomping flat-footed in heels, a crude satire of a ‘Lady’… beauty that blooms frank and vigorous, just long enough to secure – or give the sense of securing – a modest, stolid provider, before being rapidly effaced by a life of unremitting toil. The human face and form, so said the Sage of Turin, expresses the spirit within, and in a rude and practical land will flourish rude and practical faces, hands and feet. But this, oh, this fair maid he espied…bearing a basket of plucked maté leaves cushioned upon silky tresses so black they shone blue in the late-noon sun…this was a different kind of Beauty.

            Tuco knew nothing of the myths of Greece and Rome to bestow upon her, in his mind, one of the analogistic appellations the poets favour to write up a woman’s character in three or four syllables. Nonetheless, he knew that the lithesome statue turning a glance so innocently bewitching, not five paces in front of him under the eaves of the drying-house shed, was of a different order. One sight of her rendered most of the rest of her sex crass and cheap – mere females – in comparison. There was something in this belle – who differed in no aspect of blood or clothing or colour from any other lass who laboured upon the estate – something that he could not have explained in concrete terms…something that embodied the same essential nature one perceived, instinctively, in the estate house’s Iberian colonial elegance, at once opulent and timelessly at one with the soil that bore it; in the hummingbird that feeds upon flowers, as if its beauty is nourished from theirs, floating rather than flying as ordinary birds do; or in the music that wafted on special nights out across the fields from the balconies of the great houses, sprinkling the dregs of rhythmless dreamsounds on the palm-roofed huts of the workers’ settlement.

            It unsettled him when he comprehended the sensation stirred up by the sinuous motions of her tawny arms, the nimble padding of her dust-kissed feet, unshod yet dainty and smooth, and, above all, those eyes which struck the onlooker like obsidian-tipped arrows. The sensation was like that – indescribable and of more than material origins – which was produced by the strange music which he would never admit a fondness for to his friends and drinking partners, but which drew him, unfailingly, to the doorway of his barracks room, no matter how tired his body. He could not reconcile it; for the one was a sound, never simultaneously associated with any unique sight, and the other was a visual phenomenon, very real, of course, but profoundly detached from any noise, smell or other merely concrete sensory impression. Moreover, that strange music which pulled at his soul in ways he did not understand was, he knew, a thing of the aristocratic folks – his bosses and their kin – made in and imported from across the sea in Europe; something which belonged to the rich blancos and their world, and which he had no wish to possess as his own. Tuco, after all, was not a man who coveted things which belonged to others, even when he could easily take them for himself. The angelic being in front of him was an India, with the same copper skin, black hair, almond-shaped eyes, proud cheekbones and firm but quiet jaw as he. She had been born to people like his, nourished on maize and beans, dwelling under palm-thatch roves like he – though judging by her nude soles and the many patches on her once-fashionable clothes, her household circumstances were somewhat below his own frugal but secure level. All these thoughts and a hundred more sprouting therefrom invaded and seized control of Tuco…and he did not even know her name, nor had he heard her speak a single word.

            Tuco had to hurry back to the fields and did not see the woman again that day. It was payday, and he took some of his earnings – in a move quite out of character – and splurged on as scanty a meal he could design from the menu without looking out of place, at a restaurant run by Germans which was frequented by the foremen, lower managers and the skilled workmen when they had the cash and fancied themselves able to sit alongside their social betters. The exotic black-beam-in-white-plaster architecture came with equally exotic dishes: huge joints of pork stewed without spices and cutlets coated in batter, served on mounds of vinegar-soaked cabbage, with bottles of nauseatingly sweet wine. But someone who worked in those other departments of the estate, so near but so foreign to Tuco, would surely have some threads of a story at least; some information regarding this girl who was the most beautiful to have set foot on the estancia (and that included the proprietor’s three daughters, seen regularly in carriages and at fetes in town…alas, though sheltered from sun and work, and adorned with fine silks and jewels though they were, no effort of presentation can compensate for unfortunately ordinary natural endowments)…this girl who was not only fine to look at, but something of a mystery and hence doubly alluring.

            As Tuco hoped, Rosario, the bookkeeper, and Herr Dreyse, the junior superintendent of the packing warehouse, whose granite-chinned frauline was supervisor of the girls at the sorting tables (which presumably included the object of Tuco’s desire), gave him fodder for a week of sleepless nights and wandering daydreams. Tuco found himself growing tipsy as he bought glass after glass of wine, for he had to wait through anecdotes about the latest sensational crimes, the minor celebrations around the return of Senor Narvaez’ son from his studies in Spain, and the ups and downs of agricultural commodity prices. His concentration never wavered, though, and each half-whispered factum entered his brain as a fish into a weir.

            There was a good reason why Tuco had not seen the mystery maid before, either working on the estate or at market. The girl – whose name was Ximena, Ximena de Aguirre – was of a family as poor as the one Tuco was born into, whose distinguished name was its sole attribute of note. Her father, who none but the older managers recalled (and those only as hazy impressions) had died in a barroom knife-fight when Ximena was yet an infant. The wife of the lawyer who employed Ximena’s mother as a domestic developed a fear – which none of the tellers could say was unfounded – that the recently-widowed servant harboured designs upon her prosperous husband (inevitably futile, but offensive to household peace nonetheless), and so dismissed her. Too proud to endure her peers witnessing her degraded to broiling in the fields or slaving in the packing house (no other cash employment being conceivable for an illiterate Guarani woman in such parts), and with the last few yards of her family patrimony sold off to pay her husband’s debts, Ximena’s mother took the child with her to Buenos Aires, that they might make a new life in ‘the Paris of the Americas.’ Ximena would have been about three or four then. Mother and daughter never returned to visit. Their relatives, receiving no wires of money nor parcels of presents from the city, made no effort to remain in contact (in their defence, it would have been a challenge, as there were no proper roads nor a complete telegraph or telephone system in those days).

            Herr Dreyse’s wife had become fast friends with the girl’s mother (both mother and daughter did indeed work in the packing house, though that was tentative). The veneer of metropolitan polish on the once-ambitious India, acquired in the City of Fair Winds, was sufficient for the Munich-raised Frau Dreyse, who had some education in her homeland and found herself in a backwards corner of a wild and alien land, with the added impediment of being resented by the working women (whose language she hardly spoke) and gently kept at arms’ length by the Ladies with a capital ‘L’ who were wives or sisters of the more prestigious members of the European staff. Indeed, Senora de Aguirre had been to the Dreyse household twice already for coffee and dinner. Fond the Senora was of regaling her provincial audience with dramatic and colourful anecdotes about life in the capital (Frau Dreyse hung on to every word about the utopia to the south, more accessible than the one she left across the Atlantic). As long and seemingly rambling as the Senora de Aguirre’s stores were, curiously – now that Herr Dreyse thought about it – not from any chapter or snippet of the cumulative hours of women’s chatter he’d been forced by politeness to overhear could he say or even reliably conjecture what exactly it was that mother and daughter de Aguirre did in B.A….that is, for her employment…or, for that matter, how they lived and why it was they left to return to what was plainly a harder life, devoid of the comforts and conveniences of civilization that tempted the youth of the countryside as a candle tempts restless moths. The local grapevine, intricate as it was, did not sprawl far beyond the red soil floodplain and its maté plantations, but for feeble tendrils here and there. Whatever the reason, the Estancia Narvaez and the small town symbiotic with it witnessed a sight rarer than a modern-day vision of the Virgin: an eager rural youth gone to the Big City to seek her fortune and fame (or some vague idea generally related thereto), returned, sound in mind and body, to her native soil…albeit no longer a youth and more sullen than eager.

            Naturally, such a rare spectacle incited gossip, most of it salacious or defamatory to a greater or lesser degree – though the various popular theories, however accurate they might have been, lacked substantive proof and in no way jeopardized the Senora and Senorita de Aguirre’s position at the estate or at the shabby-but-semi-respectable boarding house of Madame Schneider at edge of town, where mother and daughter shared a suite. Public opinion was not yet settled on where to place the pair. Undoubtedly, they were possessed of neither wealth nor honour, and, without any effective extended family, had no illustrious kinfolk to attach themselves to for status. On the other hand, the mother’s haughtiness was backed with enough composure, half-cooked worldliness and sheer feminine venom to be treated with some distant deference in public (whatever people said when out of range of her baleful glare), and the daughter – were it not for her ethnic features – was as polished and refined as any of the middling sort of eligible bride coming off the boats from Naples, Danzig or Cadiz.

            Throughout his lecture, Herr Dreyse cocked eyebrows and suggestively altered his inflection, although all-in-all nobody could have gleaned very much from what, beyond the bare-bone facts, was really nothing more than a little fodder for idle talk. At intervals, Dreyse had seen fit to drop odd mentions of the notable charms of the younger de Aguirre. It might have been perfectly unintentional, but Tuco couldn’t help but detect in it a sort of hinting, boisterously encouraging or disheartening according to his turn of mind at the moment.

            From that day, Tuco was like a catfish ogling a duck upon the water, entranced by whatever fatal mysteries might lurk within his prize. He daydreamed, something he had not done since he was a boy, but his work did not suffer. On the contrary, he went about his tasks with redoubled energy, especially when his gang was set in any place where the mostly female-staffed packing house workers and domestics might pass by – for he could not be sure, on account of her looks and city-smoothed charms, that Ximena would not be switched to some activity in the big house (while he fretted for the health and tender hands of her, so vivacious yet wincingly delicate, scrambling in the dry leaves, sewing bags and tacking boxes, he shuddered with foreboding at the obvious alternative). Once, he had been sent from the field to visit the bookkeeper’s office – only a few dozen yards from the house – so that he might request the urgent dispatch of some extra horses to replace an exhausted team.

            Dragging out his steps as he came in view of the house, Tuco was certain he caught sight of Ximena’s face – he convinced himself there was no more chance of mistaking it among the sallow visages of the Casa than among the coarse mugs of the labourers – and she appeared to notice him, for her eyes expanded like ink drops on tissue and her image vanished as suddenly as he had noticed it. He hung around the bookkeeper’s office for as long as he could, feigning uncertainty as to the message he was tasked with delivering, and making small talk with the clerk on duty who, while on good terms with Tuco, felt compelled to offer a drink and a call to the doctor. Tuco nursed the tumblerful of whiskey, paying attention enough to shake his sweat-beaded head whenever the clerk proffered a chair or medical attention, keeping his eyes glued to the stucco-framed windows of the house. After twenty minutes with no results, Tuco reluctantly headed back to the fields. He did not see Ximena again that day and finally gave in and stopped Dreyse as he was going home for the evening, asking if Ximena had been in the packing section that day. No, Dreyse replied with a too-placid expression; she and her mother had taken ill…nothing serious; it was the chill weather of late and overwork…and had stayed home from work.

            Tuco nodded. He scarfed a meagre supper at a tavern in the village and, uncharacteristically, took several drinks before returning to his room for sleep. The unspoken angst he felt lasted for a few days. He caught scattered glimpses of Ximena as she ducked in and out below the awnings of the packing warehouse or ate lunch with the other girls under the mimosa tree in the yard, but he never managed to find her alone. He told himself that he would surely have the courage to speak to her then. He had never lost his voice or his head in front of a woman before, although deep down he knew it might happen now.

            There was snickering among the field hands; the replacement of the female name in the lyrics of a bawdy tune with ‘Ximena.’ The bookkeeper’s clerk must have made insinuations. Or Dreyse. The other hands saw it as quite juicy that one of their own who was held (whether he himself knew it or not) as being more disciplined, stronger and harder working than the rest of them (as better, in other words, than they at the only thing they were capable of being in this life), was showing such disgraceful weakness. Most of them had several women, all of whom they might call ‘wife,’ though they would not so much as take one of them out for a fancy dinner, let alone house and provide for them (beyond a few gaudy prizes when harvest pay came in), even if they could. They boasted all the louder for the fact that the one means left them to demonstrate their manhood chronically debilitated them.

            It was the night of St. Lawrence’s day, Lawrence being the patron saint of the estate owner for some reason lost in time, on which the family would put on a feast for the village. The notable burghers and the families of neighbouring ranches and estates would dine on silver and fine china in the Casa Narvaez, accompanied by a band brought in from the city, if possible, playing facsimiles of popular European operas (though there had occasionally been Tango at the insistence of the padrone’s fashion-minded son, who the father indulged reluctantly). The workmen and their families dined outdoors, on the grounds, served by liveried staff from the estate, to the alternately sprightly and melancholy music of gaucho and Guarani. The food was plentiful and good; Senor Narvaez was a hard businessman and a harder ruler, but he was beloved as a rich and genial uncle on feast days, for the wine of his cellars – almost too decent for the throats imbibing it – flowed as blood from a gutted steer, running dry only when all livers present were well and truly saturated. Tuco staggered into an ornamental grove to relieve himself. Turning around he saw, silhouetted by the twin lights of the moon and the glowing party in the house, a figure he could have confused for no other. What few words passed between the might have been solely in his head. He did not think to ask how or from whom Ximena had learned of his intentions, nor what she thought about them. Whether she was more drunk than him, or simply wilful to the point of madness, was a question he declined to probe.

            Unlike his colleagues, Ximena knew how to keep her mouth shut. There was none of the expected whispers and tittering when he ran across Ximena’s coworkers…a fact almost beyond belief. It was no ‘fling’ or ‘escapade,’ not this time. Other than that first night, she talked a lot when they were together, so many stories, that must have been dull and familiar to her but which sounded like fairy tales to him – mind, like the originals which Perrault and the Grimms softened, they were not necessarily quaint or happy in their endings. Ximena rarely spoke about her own thoughts and feelings regarding any specific person or matter, but it was clear even to Tuco’s blatantly unworldly mind that Ximena herself was a character in many of these dramas, albeit an unmentioned one. He was quite sure, too, that she knew and wanted that he should realize this. It made him fear for her and want to protect her. Sometimes, when he was swinging his billhook at work, he would imagine himself warding off the now-purely-physical tormentors of Ximena, and would suddenly lose his balance as he hacked with absurd force at a superfluous twig or shoot

            Almost as suddenly as things had begun, Tuco came to understand that he now must move to the next stage. After several trysts of pure, amorous passion, Ximena began to show reticence; to pull away and make excuses. Ximena began to speak, with watered eyes, of propriety and her latest confessions at church. Tuco understood what this meant. He had been saving as much as possible at every paycheque, for he had known that, in the natural course of things, it must come to this mixed boon and burden. After all, Ximena was no cheap tavern whore; no simple Indio girl who might be savoured for the price of a new print dress or bangle every couple weeks. No; Ximena de Aguirre was a Lady who had to be courted as such.

            It was a week before he could even pretend to himself the courage to visit the elder Senora de Aguirre at her lodgings in town. The studied reclusiveness of the woman and the foreign graces of her daughter outweighed what comfort he might have drawn from the peeling shutters and creaking floorboards long since stripped of varnish by the footfalls of thousands of continually shifting tenants. The taciturn, crab-faced lady at the front desk led him up the shadowed, lightless stairs to the third floor apartment occupied by his love and her mother.

            Senora de Aguirre stayed half-hidden in the chiaroscuro effected by the single oil lamp on the oval, doily-draped table and the closed, age-yellowed silk curtains. The hot, golden light threw jagged shadows across her face’s prominent bones, shading the deep-set eyes in total darkness. Tuco attempted perfunctory introductions in Spanish as proper as he could manage and placed his gifts upon the table. Modest gifts, but significant given his slender paycheque and, given the Aguirre’s circumstances, they ought to have been received gratefully – Tuco kept this thought to himself. The shadowed figure said a few canned pleasantries in return, thanking him in the most formal and insincere manner possible for his presents. No offer of coffee or tea was forthcoming…in light of the address and the Spartan, out-of-style furnishings of the room, Tuco couldn’t tell if it was the embarrassed modesty of poverty, or a sign of disapproval, and he took his leave gracefully (so he felt, anyways).

            That was a Saturday, and in the following week, Tuco saw Ximena a couple times, though she was busy with work (as was he), and if he jeopardized his job for an assignation, he would have killed his biggest attraction. Ximena did not press him. On the other hand, she was frustrating in her evasiveness when he tried to question her about her mother. A daughter who, though her natural charms would give her profligate freedom in independence (for so long as a dreamy young girl’s mind can foresee, at least), nonetheless chose to remain by her mother’s side, going so far as to migrate to a sultry backwater she barely had memory of – foregoing, in the process, even the faintest fantasy of being a dancer, singer, or motion picture starlet – such a daughter would not marry without her mother’s approval, no matter how much she loved him. Indeed, the very fact she did love a man would firm her resolve, for the greater her sacrifice of her own selfish desires, the more she could relish her filial piety, assuaging whatever guilt or insecurities lurked in her lonely child’s mind.

            Tuco tried to glean tidbits from his colleagues in the fields, but they knew no more than he. He grudgingly shovelled out precious cash at the German restaurant in the hope that Dreyse or some of the diners would have some news…the regulars at Frau Schneider’s table being more in the class of people who Senora de Aguirre would want to associate herself with (though her sights were probably higher and her means lower) than common workmen, maids and market vendors. Dreyse appeared sympathetic and defrayed the cost of Tuco’s drinks, but he reluctantly conferred that he had nothing to offer, either, for the elder de Aguirre had ceased to work in the packing house, while his wife’s supervisory duties had kept her from paying calls on her friend. As for the younger de Aguirre, she was working, yes, but frequently left early, what with her mother being ill and the hiring of a nurse being out of the question.

            This puzzled Tuco. He was sure Ximena would have told him if her mother’s condition was so bad. He would have gladly offered – and secretly hoped he would be given the chance – to chip in to pay for a nurse or housekeeper, at least in the daytime, so that Ximena could work her full shift with her mind at ease. All labour was cheap in the province, but the labour of a girl or woman paid to do the things that all women knew was much cheaper than the labour of a strong young man, experienced in various kinds of specialized farm and mechanical work. And with his and Ximena’s incomes together – and everyone who knew the packing warehouse commented on what a diligent worker she was – they would survive just fine…a simple life, yes, but free from want in any of the real necessities of life. In this country, with land vast and boundless beyond the capacity of the hands tending it, a sober man with strong arms who neither gambled nor whored would never find himself without bread for his stomach and a roof over his head, despite it being the middle of a Depression.

            Thus Tuco reasoned with himself as he strolled down the street leading from the German restaurant through the market square and on down to the estate workers’ residences. The theories and plans he had constructed evaporated like rainwater on paving stones when the sun breaks through the clouds. He saw Ximena. She was going about her shopping, judging by the bags and baskets of different sorts of goods loading down her arms and shoulders. Her face, her hair, her smooth copper skin were as always, but there was guilt and shame in those obsidian eyes…feelings like he’d never seen before nor assumed her capable of. Her broad, rouged lips hung open wordless, but words would have been superfluous. It was natural, Tuco accepted, that Ximena should do the shopping for her small household, seeing as her mother was infirm and probably embarrassed by the mocking sidelong glances and over-loud whispers of the market women delighting in her newfound equality with them. It was not natural, though, that Ximena’s bag and baskets should be filled so inordinately full with fresh apples and pears, imported whitefish in tins, assorted Dutch and French cheeses, jellies and jams, crisp baguettes and other delicacies. It was natural that the nimble-fingered, keen-eyed girl should sew and mend clothing, maybe doing seamstress work in her off hours. It was manifestly out of place that she should bear under her arms not bolts of thin cotton prints, but rolls of salt-white linens, polychrome sateen and airy taffeta – such as the buttercream ensemble cascading in lacy ruffles to her ankles. Her padding, tender soles he glimpsed not, even as she curled and rolled her feet beneath her as if to hide them under her skirt – his gaze was denied by point-toed patent leather heels, decorated by useless silver buckles and so shiny he could see his defeat reflected within them. He did not ask her any questions or even look deeply into those bewitching eyes. He knew he would find only more lies.

            Dreyse, Dreyse’s wife, the overseer’s clerk…all must have known. However, much as Tuco wanted to reproach them, they couldn’t have known for very long. The young squire, Senor Narvaes, fils, as the only son of a wealthy family, had always been of a wilful, capricious nature; something Narvaez, père, had hoped a proper education in Europe might cure. Perhaps he might find a wife among some titled family in Spain, someone who would bring a restorative to the old gentry lines so long intermixing with each other – the Casa Narvaez had no need for that which money alone could buy. A few years earlier, and with a few more offspring in the line of succession, the son’s eccentricities would have received stern rebuke from the tradition-minded old man; if it wouldn’t harm his health, it was still bad form that a gentleman should prefer arepas and frijoles to beef and bread. Time and distance allow for reflection, however, and as Papa Narvaez read in the belated newspapers about the situation in the old country and searched his son’s infrequent letters for clues that he might be infected (like the rest of the university students and young dilettantes in Madrid) with the germs of godless, anarchic communism, his heart’s capacity for tolerance expanded several-fold. Love at first sight may not be the wisest policy, but no one has yet succeeded in refuting it with logic. Besides, as his wife nudged him, the sooner he got married, the less chance there was he would take off in a fit of idle heroism, like the Posada’s third boy, who had turned his mother’s hair white and sent her to the Confessional every week after he sailed to join the Republicans, shuttering churches and teaching some undoubtedly sinful thing called ‘interpretive dance’ to Andalusian peasants. And it was not the case that any of their forebears, the brave cavaliers who conquered the Andes and submitted the Pampas to the plough had taken Indian women as wives. Was not there a drop of Guarani or Mapuche blood in the noblest and most venerable families in the country – in them more than in the new arrivals? What did it matter if she were three fourths Indian, or even four fourths? Somehow her poor mother (there would be some headaches, admittedly) had managed to infuse her with all the charms and elegance of a true lady, who, once she stayed out of the sun and put on some proper clothes, would not look out of place in their grade of Society.

            Tuco had quietly left the estate as soon as he could. Fate had not been without sympathy for Tuco, and soon provided him with an opportunity to avenge his failing as a man, to forget Ximena’s treachery, or, if he could not forget, to win her back when the slick-haired fop flung her aside, as Tuco knew he would, leaving her to run to the arms of a true man, one who had proven himself as men from the dawn of history and before have done. He had not been in Paraguay six weeks before it happened that war broke out with Bolivia. He felt at home in the country he’d never visited, more at home than on the estate for, while the plantation and village Narvaez were familiar, he was cursed to ever remain a half-stranger, whereas on the farm he’d tramped out to near Encarnación, almost everyone was his own people; the people of his mother and father, who bore their features, ate their food and sung their songs in unconscious defiance of the conquerors’ will.

            Tuco cared not how it began. That some professors from America and England claimed to have found oil in the Chaco was not irrelevant to him – there would be good jobs when the fighting was through and the Bolivians driven out, especially for men like him, who had rare mechanical skills. Jobs that would pay better than working the soil – Ximena would need him to be solid and strong in every way a man could be when the cad came to scorn her. He did not hate the ‘Bolitas’; he had seen, after the first battle, that, officers aside, they were men like him. Sometimes the enemy was well-armed, with Krupp cannons and Madsen guns. In one battle, his regiment had been scattered with the Bolivians sent in great, tortoise-like vehicles running on tracks like steam excavators, whose hide was impervious to rifle and pistol bullets as the mapinguari’s. On other occasions, he and his comrades had charged enemy trenches, shocked at the lightness of their casualties, till the position had been stormed and they discovered that the enemy soldiers had only a fistful of cartridges to their state-of-the-art German-made rifles. Some of the smaller-built among the dead ‘men’ on the other side wore bushy, unkempt beards – a yank and a tug revealed tender, smooth faces that had yet to sprout a whisker of their own.

            The fighting that interspersed the stultifying boredom was rough, to be sure; the tribal vengeances that two generations prior would have been carried out with fragile bows and leathern bolos, now enacted with machine guns, grenades and armed biplanes. Had not most of them wallowed in the same barbarity a decade and some prior, the foreign observe-advisors and journalists would have chalked it up to the influence of savage heredity which had not yet time to adjust its techniques to modern tools which multiplied man’s destruction capacity a thousand-fold. By the spring, the headlines in the world’s presses were already alluding to a ‘meat grinder’ and ‘the nightmare of the trenches’ in the same breath and would soon have occasion to speak of a ‘South American Verdun’ or a ‘South American Passchendaele.’ The abysmal poverty of the two landlocked nations party to the conflict became the greatest hope for mercy, as neither could afford the bullets and shells to keep up the killing for very long, and the bankrupt states of Europe had not the cash to waste on an amusing but distant cockfight.

            General Estigarribia, commander in chief of the Paraguayan forces, knew this and so had his First Division on a forced march up the Arce-Saavedre-Alihuatá road, deep into the belly of the Chaco Humedo, so that if a ceasefire came, there would be a goodly spread of flags and markers on the sandbox map – Chile, Argentina, and the big foreign companies in Buenos Aires and Valparaiso were waiting like vultures to pounce on the victor with contracts and investments. The wily general knew, also, that the Edenic voluptuousness of the country was deceptive: the verdure covering the ground as modestly as a bridal veil hid a thin red soil that would collapse under the demands of a flock of goats, not to speak of an army of men. Not that he would have been averse to ‘foraging’ off the civilian population like a Napoleon or a Sherman; it was not so clever a strategy where the civilians were few and what passed for farms were a few hillside gardens stabbed into the charred soil with a digging stick. The aggressive strategy was a sensible way to capture some map-named points, but it was inevitable that the enemy would notice the glaring flaw in it that kept the general awake at night.

            Never having seen a map of Paraguay, Tuco did not know what it meant when panicked word spread along the line that the fort at Alihuatá had fallen, except that the great serpent of men and trucks turned round and marched double-quick, and that the number of biscuits and bully beef tins handed out each day grew smaller and the water trucks no longer filled their canteens quite full. On their retreat, hamlets where they’d bivouacked were charred and empty, the men in ditches, the women in the forests or on their way to hunger and the brothel in some large town No panpipes or melancholy songs perforated the leaden, humid night air; only the snarling of carrion-fed pie dogs and the screeches of predatory nightbirds.

            After setting camp for the night in the bed of a dry ravine (so their fires would not show to the artillery arrayed across the plain), Tuco was called, drowsy with sleep and the extra rations of a fever-felled comrade, into the Colonel’s tent. He was to be promoted to sergeant, in command of fifteen men, for an assault the next day, where he would be in the first wave. The ribbons pinned to his shirt shone to him only because he imagined they would shine for the eyes of another. The enemy was here? Tuco could not help asking. No, his superior replied; but they would be coming, advancing across the plain – his subalterns learned this listening to the radio. Tuco wondered how men fighting war could be so foolish as to talk their plans on a radio. Mortal fear overrode the thin shell of discipline formed in a couple weeks’ training, though, and Tuco asked how they meant to fight the Bolivians in the open ground again, for his brother soldiers and the radio had told him of how the Bolivians massacred the Paraguayans at Alihuatá and Campo Jordán, largely through employing those metal cars with caterpillar tracks, into which they had put some of their machine guns. No bullet could pierce their hides, and if men tried to approach close enough to throw grenades at them, they would be cut down by the machine guns or the Bolivian infantrymen around them. Was it not safer to retreat to a town, where they could shelter behind walls of stone and adobe, and so give themselves a fair chance? He had seen how one third of the men of his regiment were no longer with them, and the Bolivians had so many more soldiers, no matter what they did; more men, perhaps, he fretted, than they had bullets. The Colonel rose up, laughing and smiling down at Tuco, clapping a hand on his shoulder as one is wont to do in explaining some fact to an earnest but naïve child. Tables had turned, or would be shortly, the Colonel said, fondling his moustache. They would have help now: Argentina, uncomfortable at seeing the fighting spilling out to its own borders (and eager for its share of the wealth of The Hunting Land) had decided to send money and weapons to their side, to help them fend off the Bolivians so numerous. They were sending men, too; volunteers – the 7th Cavalry Regiment San Martin – with many rich men among them, some of whom were bringing great big rifles that folks used in far off places to hunt huge beasts called elephants; rifles which could put a bullet clean through the Bolivians’ metal monsters. The next day, when the Bolivians came rolling across the plain, they would await them at the ravine’s edge, in ditches and behind trees and boulders, kill their armoured cars, stop the advance, and then sweep over them like a brush fire. The Colonel clapped his hands and gulped a glass of brandy in premature celebration.

            It sounded fanciful, but the fanciful does not trouble the minds of men who have long lived outside the grey City, where people have grown trusting of the rules and textbooks by which humanity assumes the authority to dictate the conduct of the universe. He fell into sleep as easily on the eve of the great battle as a babe in the crib. Upon waking, there was, nonetheless, a strange residue of an unremembered dream. He recalled no unsettling sights, and there could not have been any nocturnal visions of disaster as would have waked him in a cold sweat. Still, he did not like that the feeling persisted through coffee and breakfast, no matter that the dawn arrived, revealing the landscape as obtusely bright and physical as he’d known it those past few months. And yet the curious sense of an impending something weighed on his nerves and made his fingers shake in lacing his boots and fumble twice as he loaded his rifle.

            The battle opened; it was as if the sky were covered by a sheet of invisible zinc drumming with a monsoon rain. But for the noise in the sky and the rumbling that came up through his feet and knees into his throat, the world was images and smells; ears were a superfluous annoyance. Events unfolded precisely as the Colonel had laid out. Onward came the men and boys of the enemy, the terror they must have felt being calmed by the olive-painted beasts crawling forward among them.

            The ivory trunks of the yatay palms, ramrod straight and arranged checkerboard fashion, flickered light and dark as the advancing army crossed in front of them. A minute more, and the Vickers tankettes emerged into open ground and Tuco lost count of the khaki-clad infantry swarming beside and behind them. Looking down his own side’s trenches from where he hunkered in a shallow gut, Tuco observed the allies the Colonel had spoken of with such enthusiasm – the Argentine volunteers of the 7th Regiment San Martin, disappointingly unmounted, waiting behind hastily constructed mud and log parapets on the right flank. It was easy to recognize them, even at a distance, by their crisp uniforms tailored like gentlemen’s suits, flared trousers and pale complexions. The second Tuco looked back at the advancing Bolivians, the volunteers’ anti-tank rifles boomed like a summer thunderstorm echoing across the plain, and the rifles and machine guns rattled and burped into action. Most of the tankettes stopped in their tracks, as if on order. Ten or fifteen seconds later, smoke and fire licked out from their hatches and seams, the crew occasionally following, before the vehicles flared up like piles of dry tinder.

            Despite the focusing influence of battle, Tuco found his attention inadvertently wandering over to his allies on the right, rather than the foe ahead of him. It was the sensation when one is in a crowd, or a place rich in nostalgia, when one instinctively expects to run into an old friend.

            From an unseen dugout down the line came a cascading relay of whistle blasts. Tuco checked his rifle, slapped his waist to feel the grenades hooked to his belt, and shouted cheers to his squad. Up over the embankment they charged, hunching low and ploughing headlong through the chest-high grass and thorn-scrub. He was blind until he burst into the clearing beneath the towering palms. A quarter of his squad did not come out of the grass, but the enemy had suffered worse. Lines of blue shadow and golden rays painted heaps of still and quivering bodies, mown like so much hay by the accurate rifle fire of the volunteers. A few tankettes were smouldering; the survivors running headlong to positions along a farther line of forest, situated at the base of a small mesa a couple hundred yards away, from which an emplaced skirmish line was taking potshots to cover their comrades’ retreat.

             Passing noon, the sun compelled Tuco and his men to drain their canteens. The narrow-crowned yatays provided almost no shade, though their fat, hard trunks and the bushes around them would do against the Bolivians’ bullets. Tuco looked with disgust to see the Argentines from their right flank just now slowly marching up, taking positions well back of the edge of the yatay grove. A runner was arriving from the rear, though Tuco guessed his message before he arrived and breathlessly poured out the report that the Bolivians were dug in in the next wood (so said the aircraft observers…though what could they know of the strength of an infantry position from in the sky?), which rose up in that direction. It was open ground in front; the Colonel did not want a frontal assault. There was a stream, though, in a shallow gully which curved around the left of the Bolivian position (Tuco could tell this from the vegetation; no need for an aeroplane). Tuco’s squad would go with Lieutenant Haber’s company through the ravine, outflank the Bolivians, and turn them to flight before they could bring up artillery or mortars. The Argentine marksmen on the right would give covering fire in order to pin the Bolivians and draw their fire while the maneuver was under way, of course.

            The straw-blonde blades of the elephantine grass drew invisible lines across Tuco’s shins and calves…The stream ran beside and around behind the Bolivian positions. Tuco, half-dead from heat, thirst, and sheer muscular exhaustion by the time they reached, could not believe that the enemy had not noticed eighty men staggering like heavily laden zombies to within a grenade’s throw. But, there they were, each bolita lying or crouching in the cool purple shade of the wood, calmly plugging away at the Argentineans across the field in front of them; not doing much damage, perhaps, but utterly safe themselves. Until Tuco’s men avalanched upon them at point blank range, that is. It was an affair of bayonets, grenades, daggers, shovels, fingers and teeth…not the sort of war which would appear on an Art Deco recruitment poster…

            Bolivian positions, further into the wood, held out, the odd sniper claiming an unlucky fellow who stood too long in the open, but the bulk of them were once more streaming back, split by the mesa. The full heat of the afternoon had burnt out whatever fight was left in either side. Tuco, his part played, the adrenaline spent, flopped into a half-finished foxhole at the base of a spreading acacia tree, accompanied by the corpses of a pair of Bolivian machine gunners. Resting his back on the parapet, he stared out from the forest’s twilit noon at the grassland which broke again at the edge of the forest island, through which the defeated Bolivians were scurrying. The prairie, dotted by the odd clump of thorny acacias and ragged quebrachos, stretched into an infinite horizon. The distant sky had grown dark, a blend of chalky ultramarine and purple, presaging rain, yet the sun struck the mesa with an uncanny brightness. He could hear the not-quite-extinguished battle popping ad cracking, but the whizz of bullets into the dirt a few metres away could not convince his mind of its relevance. His attention was concentrated exclusively on the mesa. It glowed radiantly, a curious deep, matte maroon colour which Tuco was sure could not be the natural hue of the stone.

            He opened his eyes. He was on his side, in the bottom of the shallow foxhole, facing into the dirt. Reflexively touching his head, though he felt no pain, he wondered how long he had been sleeping. He got up on his knees, peering over the parapet. The scene looked unchanged; the carnage exactly as he’d left it. A few of his platoon were visible here and there, quenching their thirsts behind cover or trading shots with the Bolivians lingering in the far corners of the wood. The Argentine volunteers, along with some Paraguayan troops carrying disassembled mortars and machine guns, were still crossing the open ground on the other side, between the wood Tuco’s men had just captured and their original positions. He was not surprised at all by what he saw among the ranks of friendlies, gingerly picking their way over the seized ground – though this very lack of surprise almost scared him at first. There, pointing directions to a mortar team as they advanced was a face familiar, even though Tuco had never seen it except before it had meaning to him. The glossy, knee-high boots, polished by some Indio boy orderly that morning and no doubt to be polished again when the sun fell; the gold braid on the weighty cuffs and on the stiff peaked cap, the glint of the mother-of-pearl grip of the pistol in the belt holster, and, above all, that face – refined, sensitive yet arrogant; the firm but delicate jaw and thoughtful eyes emanating the gentle fatalism of one who has succeeded by the mere fact of being his self. Tuco contemplated this discovery and wondered what to make of it. Then he looked at the hand gesturing to the mortar crew, fingers soft and uncalloused…as he studied this hand as best he could from the distance, the sun flamed upon something on it the way it flamed upon the queer mesa silently watching the scene, and Tuco knew what he must do…knew what he would do. The breech of his rifle opened; a stack of brazen bullets slotted in, sparkling as they vanished into the black belly of the Mauser. The Bolivian troops used the same rifles, firing the exact same ammunition as the Paraguayans. Solid, accurate guns, German-engineered. Precise far beyond the abilities of the chuño-fed conscripts who used them. At not even one hundred metres, on a steadily advancing target, a spot of red on the clean, pressed light-grey fabric told he could not have missed…

            Ordinarily, it bothered Tuco to see officers – rich men and the sons of rich men – being decorated with ribbons and medallions symbolizing the bravery belonging to the silent peons and barrio youths rounded up and traded for glory. He knew little of the dogmas preached by the trade unionists and professors, but he was conscious of his own manhood. He did not protest now, however. He stood, graven faced in the attentive ranks, as the General spoke into a microphone rigged up in front of the post office at the nameless settlement nearest the late battlefield. The General congratulated his boys (there were boys among them, but grizzled veterans, too) on their glorious victory, laying out strings of allusions and metaphors which produced no images in the soldiers’ minds. The General only regretted that it had come at the cost…numerically insignificant, but a sorrowful loss to the nation…of Lieutenant X, Major de Y…as well as one of the brave young souls whose sense of honour and love of freedom inspired them to come and fight as loyal friends of Mother Paraguay, Lieutenant Narvaez, 7th Cavalry Regiment San Martin….

            Tuco wore the sun-and-grime patina of the genuine grognard as naturally as he wore a campesino’s straw hat. Thus, his platoon mates came to the conclusion that he had been picked off by a Bolivian sniper during the night march through hostile territory. It was more credible than the truth, which no one would have bought besides the most cynical staff officer: that the indomitable Sergeant Tuco had deserted the ranks while much war remained to be fought.

            In a country corrupt and disorganized in the best of times (and now preoccupied with war), it was not hard for an unimportant man, no different in aspect from the average seasonal labourer, to move about unmolested by the forces of law and order. Crossing the border presented no obstacles, either, as Misiones was not formally incorporated into the Argentine state, and tropical backwaters run by Big Papa-Uncle types are not known for sophisticated bureaucracies and well-regulated customs controls. Spending freely to travel fast, Tuco was only a couple days behind the unfortunate Lieutenants personal effects (sending the body was impossible). Not wanting to create unnecessary difficulties, he lodged in a town several kilometres from the estate. Events of note in such parts are few enough that, posing as an itinerate labourer seeking hire on an estate, he could not avoid hearing, again and again, the news about the Casa Narvaez’ owner’s son having been killed on the battlefield. The other boarders at dinner, coarse working-class types like Tuco, agreed that the whole great war between Bolivia and Paraguay was a fool’s errand, the why and wherefore of which escaped them (mostly from want of reading), but it made the beans stick in his throat when Tuco saw the wistful glaze in rugged miners’ and cattlemens’ eyes when they reflected on how the old man’s only son, raised soft and spoiled how he was, nonetheless had so gleefully signed up to kill and die, meeting his end with his boots on, gun in hand, no shame to his conquistador forebears, real or imagined.

            The iron-grey sky was spilling an icy deluge, mudding the laterite roads and making each step an effort of will. Tuco was nonetheless grateful for the weather. It was an excuse to shroud himself in a long poncho as he made his way up the main street of the village he called home. None recognized him. It was as the returning soldier wished. He had on him a few days’ biscuits, dried beef, a Bible, a gold ring set with a diamond in the new-fangled fashion, and a Colt pistol from a dead Bolivian machine gunner’s holster.

            He detoured from the main road to cut through a maté field he’d worked planting. The field, whose bushes were high and full, stood on a slight elevation. It gave fine vantage of the immediate grounds of the estate – the great house, stables, garage and other outbuildings, and the ornamental gardens. The lilies sagged their waterlogged heads and the colours of the roses were dulled from the rain and cloud. The weather was matched in mood by the sombre military men in their grey cloaks who bowed to the assembled crowd and presented the arranged effects of the deceased Lieutenant Narvaez to his father. The old man’s face was white as his shirt, his suddenly aged frame drooping like his rain-soaked moustache. The old man’s trembling hands were usurped, though, by arms frail and feminine, belonging to one whose manifest grief was as profound as his own – but oppositely expressed. The woman’s ivory complexion was rendered more dramatic by the curtains of intricate black lace and silk that billowed around her frame, much reduced since Tuco had glimpsed her last, and her posture and motions would have convinced anyone she was a European lady – and an aristocrat at that – at least from a distance. There was no mistaking the face, though, and those brilliant almond-shaped eyes flashing a light which could not have come from the rain-muffled sun. She could not have seen him; he knew that, but he saw her clearly in those eyes, and in the wail, at once angelic and terrifying, which pierced the rain, and wind, and his soul.

           The funeral, such as it could be in the absence of a casket, proceeded with a satisfying combination of grief and decorum. The priest, who had known the departed when he was an altar boy, intoned the ritual phrases in correct and sublime Latin, the somber mood broken only once. Who would be so ignorant as to go hunting grouse or hare in such weather, and on such a day? But the mourners, in accord with the religious atmosphere of the occasion and with their minds on more important matters, were charitable enough to forgive the insensitivity of someone who was probably a sporting tourist come up from the city for the weekend; someone who could never know their hearts.