Authors: D. B. C. Pierre
âGoing up, sir?' he asks.
I try not to drop a load, but it's fucken hard. I see myself at that place last night, with the flies, and the nightclub pianist's rotting corpse, and today it's like I'm waiting for hula-girls to suck my boy, I swear. Leona Dunt could only dream of coming to this fucken place. An American family sweeps past me into the elevator, dressed like Tommy Hilfiger on a golfing convention; it's a mama with a tense ole man, and the traditional two kids â a good one
and a bad one. Type of folk who get lighthearted over dinner-music, and start talking about their feelings, to show how liberated they are. Your fucken cutlery drawer on parade.
âNow, Bobby, remember what we said â you know the deal,' says the mom.
â
Yeah
, Bobby,' says the dad in back, like a fucken sock puppet. The girl hoists her eyebrows.
âBut I don't
feel
so great,' says Bobby.
âWe planned the bay cruise days ago, and it's already paid for,' says the mom.
â
Days
ago,' says Dad.
The kid just sulks. The ole lady tightens her lips. âForget it, Trey, you know what he's like. Let's just hope it doesn't turn out like the
other time
, after we spent
all that money
on
scuba lessons
...'
World-class knifing, I have to say. And just one smug face left, on the girl.
I saunter toward smells of sausage and coffee, looking for a public phone. Outside, I see a huge patio laid out with a buffet. I stupidly pick up a menu. The cheapest thing on it costs more than a fucken helicopter joyride. Then a waiter starts to hover, so I keep walking towards some bathrooms that are in a service area by the pool. I pass a real-life psycho on the way, too; an up-and-coming one. This fat little dork is standing next to another kid in the pool, being a real pal, while his little sister dive-bombs the water around them. Then, out of earshot of his buddy, the fat kid snarls at his sister: âI told you to jump
on
him, not
near
him . . .' A future senator, guaranteed.
I pass some lounge chairs facing the bay, with boats and parachutes gliding past them, and the squeak of bitty children in the surf nearby. I start fantasizing that some kid starts drowning right in front of me, and I jump in and save him. In my mind, I rehearse what I'd tell the reporters, and I even see the newspaper headlines spinning up. âJuvenile Hero Pardoned,' and shit. After a minute, it's the fucken president's kid I'm saving. The president weeps
with gratitude, and I just shuffle away. See me? All this drags through my head like a fucken rusty chain.
To snap myself out of it, I go find a phone on the street outside the hotel. I punch in Taylor's number.
âGlassbadanbow?' says a kid. He's handing out flyers by the road.
âSay
what
?'
âJew like croose in Glass badan boat?'
âTayla,' the phone answers. I wave the kid away.
âMexico calling,' I say.
âHi, killer.'
Something's wrong, I can tell. I get a pang to curl her up around me, her and her safe, deodorized world, where her biggest problem in life is getting bored, or smelling Glade around the house. Probably her biggest personal secret is eating boogers. She's been bawling just now, you can tell.
âEverything okay?' I ask.
Taylor gives a sniffly laugh. âI'm just like, what the fuck, you know? This damn guy I was dating . . .'
âThe doctor?'
âThe so-called doctor, yeah. I just want to run away,
God
...'
âKnow how you feel.'
âAnyway, where are you?' she asks, blowing her nose.
âAcapulco.'
âDirty dog. Lemme see the map â are you, like, by the beach?'
âYeah, on the main boulevard.'
âThat must be the Costera Miguel Aleman â there's a Western Union agent at a place called
Comercial Mexicana
.'
âI'll make it up to you, Tay.'
âBut listen â it's Sunday tomorrow, and I can't get the cash till Monday. The agent's open till seven Monday night, so if you go at six . . .'
âNo sweat,' I lie, watching the last credits drip off the screen.
âAnd babe,' she says. Beep. The line goes dead.
*
The fucken
Love Boat
is here. I swear to God, from those ole shows my mom watches, with the horny cruise director, and Captain Stupid and all. It has the Wella Balsam kind of logo on the funnel. Star-studded Acapulco, boy.
I pull my head into the cab as the bay falls away behind us. Pelayo's truck bangs over some hills, then heads north along this TV-movie coastline, with coconut trees, whole fields of them. The beach ain't as white as
Against All Odds
, and the water ain't as blue, but hey. A lagoon runs alongside us for part of the drive, right out of
Tarzan
or something. We even pass through a military roadblock, with a fucken machine-gun nest, no bullshit. My intestines pump, but they end up just being kids, these soldiers, like cartoon ants, in oversized helmets.
After a few hours, we leave the road and turn down a track toward the sea. The track ends with some logs sunk into the beach, and jungle backed up behind. It's a minuscule town, of slummy wooden houses, with pigs, chickens, and grizzly-looking dogs around. Not even slummy, more like out of
National Geographic
. Fucken paradise. Pelayo parks behind a store that's held together with Fanta signs, and a porch of dry palm leaves. Two men lay in hammocks there, sucking beer. A flock of kids gather as we pile out of the truck. You can tell Pelayo's the dude around here. He's probably like the Mr Lechuga of town, except human. Now I'm the alien in his world. He takes trouble to make me feel at home, snapping at the kids to get away, and calling up a beer from the store. I just stand quiet, nose up to the breeze, listening to a dictionary full of new bugs. Ungawa wakashinda, I swear. Pelayo opens the beers with his teeth, and proudly walks me to a covered patio on the beach. Two older men sit at a table, and an ole lady leans behind a makeshift bar.
A naked kid suddenly brushes past her, trying to spear a wounded crab on the sandy concrete. He finally stabs it clean through the back, â
Yesssss!
' he says, stopping to pull back an imaginary lever with his fist. Pelayo kicks the crab out of my way, and sweeps me to a table by the beach.
A crowd of bottles gathers on the table. Toward evening, a young dude turns up who speaks some English; a lean, smart-looking guy called Victor, with braces on his teeth â something you don't see much down here. He tells me how important it is for him to get ahead in life, so he can bring wealth into the village and all. Makes me feel like the lowest fucken snake. He translates the words painted between the mud-flaps on the truck. âYou see me, and suffer,' they mean. â
Me ves, y sufres
.'
When I first show signs of being loaded, the boys offer me oysters as big as burritos, right out of the sea. Fucken forget it. I ate one when I was a kid, and it felt like something I sucked down the back of my nose. They even offer me the oysters at a time when I have a booger-plug ready to suck down my throat. Without thinking, I point at my nose while I suck it down, then pull a face, and point at the oyster. They drop Acapulco-sized loads over that. They can't look me in the face for an hour after, for the fucken loads they drop. Typical of me to introduce slime to paradise.
After a tequila, as lions and tigers stir under this silicon-clear evening, I try to explain the beach-house dream, the mud-flaps, and Fate. I'm a little loaded.
Fucken
loaded, actually. But as soon as I start to talk about it, Victor and Pelayo take my arm and lead me up the beach, through the palms, where bats now orbit, to a place ten minutes away, where the jungle almost pushes you into the sea. Kids follow us, shining in and out of the surf. Then Victor stops. He points through the fading light, and I squint to follow his finger across the sand. There, all locked up, almost hidden in the jungle, sits an ole white beach-house. My place.
The boys say it's okay to camp here until Monday. Maybe longer. Maybe for fucken ever. After they totter home up the beach, I sit on the balcony of the house, let the evening filter off the sea and through my soul. Suddenly all the different waves inside me alloy into one tune, with feathers of my original dream dancing the edges of this new symphony; my ole lady down here,
checking out the neat sanitation, reflecting on how good things got. I may have to change my name, or become Mexican or something. But it's still
me
, without any trace of slime around. I look out over the garden of this place, onto the beach, and see Taylor there running around in her panties, brown like a native.
I spend all Sunday in this Valhalla, lazing with my dreams. When I wake Monday morning, a hot, wet wind blows across me, and my boy is like fucken reinforced cement, like he's chipped off Mount Rushmore. My hand's nowhere near him, he's just being guest of honor at his own little parade. I look around to see the sky clouded over, and shabby gray pelicans swoop and dive into the surf. The heads of coconut trees swish and move around at the speed I wish my life would go, cool and smooth. For the first time in a while, there's that little edge of gladness to be waking up this morning. Today's my birthday.
Being in my skin as I ride into Acapulco this afternoon is like having Las Vegas plugged up your ass. I'm sixteen, and Las Vegas is plugged up my fucken ass. I'm on my feet before the bus even gets into town, buzzing with potentialities; tropical fish and birds, banana leaves, monkeys, and sex. The beach-house. Turns out it belongs to an ole fruit farmer behind the village, who doesn't use it at all. Victor thinks I could probably stay there for free, if I tended it.
The boulevard in Acapulco is sticky this evening, colored lights blare as big as ideas along its length. Victor loaned me a straw hat, to soften my coconut-tree hair, and oyster-shell ears. I catch my reflection in the window by Comercial Mexicana; Huckleberry Finn, boy. I put on my guns before entering the store, to compensate for the hat, I guess, then just strut around in a circle, like a dog deciding where to lay down. I eventually spot the Western Union counter, with folk waiting around it, including shiny red and white folk from home. An attendant sees me right away.
âUh â I'm expecting a wire from Houston, Texas.'
âName?' asks the clerk.
My face starts to calculate Pi. âUh â I ain't sure who she sent it to . . .'
âYou have the password?' asks the guy. Fuck. I feel more people line up behind me.
âI better call and get it,' I say, shuffling away from the counter.
Folk look at me strangely, so I keep on shuffling, right out of the store; out of the freezer, back into the fucken oven. I have to get hold of Taylor. Maybe she didn't send it, once she knew about the password. I have no points left on my phonecard. I can't even call Pelayo. Vegas sputters and dies in my ass.
I walk up the boulevard until I find a phone. I don't know if it's like TV, where you can call anybody collect, from anywhere. I decide to call her collect. Sweat flows between my mouth and the operator when I talk. She speaks English at least. Then sweat runs between my ear and the operator when she tells me you can't call this mobile number collect. When I hang up the phone, sweat dammed on top of my ear crashes onto my fucken shoulder, then runs crying onto the road. Probably back into the fucken sea after that.
It pisses me the hell off, actually, that all the well-raised liars and cheats will go to their regular beds tonight, with no greater worry than what they can screw out of their folks tomorrow. Me, I'm stuck in Surinam with a bunch of criminal charges forming an orderly line back home. Anger fuels me back to the store, up to the agent's desk. Nobody else is around right now. The clerk looks up.
âI can't find the password,' I tell him.
âWhat's your name?'
âVernon Little.' I wait for his eyebrows to blow off his fucken head. They don't. He just studies me for a moment.
âHow much you expecting?'
âSix hundred dollars.'
The guy taps at his keyboard, checks his screen. Then shakes his head. âSorry, nothing here.' I pause for a moment, to calculate the depth of my fuckedness. Then the agent's eyes rivet to something over my shoulder.
I'm suddenly grabbed around the waist. âFreeze!' says a voice.
M
y ass jumps into my throat.
I break the grip around my waist and spin toward the entrance, legs coiled like springs. Shoppers stop and stare.
âHappy Birthday!' It's fucken Taylor.
I spin a full circle, looking for the heavies who must be here to get me. But it's only Taylor. The clerk at the wire agent's counter smiles as she wraps an arm around my waist, and leads me shaking from the store.
âYou didn't wait for the wire details, like the password,
dummy
,' she says.
âUh-huh, so you hopped a fucken plane.'
â
Language
, killer!'
âSorry.'
âWell I couldn't leave you stranded. Anyway, I'm bummed back home, and this is my vacation money â I hope you don't mind sharing. Here's three hundred, and we'll work the math out later . . .'
âI'll try to cope. How'd you know it's my birthday?'
âHell-
o
? The whole
world
knows it's your birthday.'
The reality of what's happening starts to tingle in my brain. Taylor's here. I found a beach-house, and Taylor's here, with money. One thing to be proud of: I don't respond to the flood of joy-hormones, the one that makes you want to sniff flowers, or say I love you. I contain myself like a man.
âWait'll you see where we're staying,' says Taylor, dragging me along the street. âIf they'll let you in â you look like an
Indian
.'