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Authors: Benjamin Alire Saenz

Carry Me Like Water (17 page)

BOOK: Carry Me Like Water
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She saw Diego moving toward her; she waved her arms and appeared to yell something. Diego could see her Mayan lips move, but he was not close enough to guess what she had said. He motioned to her and pointed at his ear. She laughed—and as Diego moved up to where she was sitting he took out his pad and wrote: “So what brings you to my neighborhood? I thought you hated Sunset Heights.”

“I never said I hated Sunset Heights. It’s nice here, Diego.” He
smiled to himself; she did not seem to remember saying how much she detested this neighborhood. “And what do you mean ‘what brings me here?’ I’m waiting for you, pendejo—what else would I be doing sitting on your front steps?”

Diego laughed and wrote: “Twice in one day, Luz! I don’t know if I can handle it!”

Luz smiled softly. “Twice in one day,” she repeated. “Well, good friends can see each other as often as they like. Don’t you agree, Dieguito?”

He nodded, but he knew Luz was not here simply to make small talk. There was something on her mind, something she wanted to talk about. “So,” Diego wrote, “are you here to take me to a late lunch?”

Luz looked at his pad and laughed. “No lunches, Dieguito, not today.” She stopped talking and was lost in her thoughts for a few moments. “Guess who I saw right after you left me at the bridge? Carlos. He says he’s going to Chicago, says he has a place to live with some people he knows, and he says he has someone who’s going to take him. He says maybe I should think about going with him.”

“Well,” Diego wrote, “are you thinking about going?” He stopped, then wrote: “What will you do in Chicago?”

“What the hell do I do here? I can be a maid anywhere, can’t I?”

“It seems like you want to go.”

She stared at Diego’s handwriting. She was quiet. “Give me one of your cigarettes.” Diego reached into his pocket, handed her one, put one in his own mouth, and lit both their cigarettes. Luz took a deep puff and exhaled the smoke slowly through her nose. “Ay, Dieguito, no se. I just don’t know. I’m tired of this city—I’m tired. I’m so damned tired I could lie down and die.”

“I thought when you got tired you only got madder.”

“God, Dieguito, you really are a pendejo. Do you believe everything I say?” She took another drag from her cigarette and said nothing. Both of them sat in the hot afternoon sun sweating and smoking their cigarettes. She grabbed Diego’s arm: “Diego,” she said slowly, “listen to me. Listen. There’s nothing in El Paso for me.
My sons are gone, and neither of the bastards ever bother to write or send any money. Sometimes, I miss them—and I write to them, but nothing ever comes back. And you know something? They can go to hell along with everybody else. Malditos. Ungrateful pigs—that’s what I raised, and goddamnit, I don’t deserve to be treated like that. Diego, I want to go somewhere. Just somewhere, Dieguito.”

Diego laughed and touched her arm. She brushed her fingers against his hand.

“What do you think I should do?” she asked.

“I think you should go,” he wrote. “What the hell? If you don’t like it you can always come back. El Paso’s not going anywhere. What have you got to lose?”

She nodded. “And you, Diego? Why don’t you come with us?”

“I can’t.”

“Why not?”

“I’d lose my job.”

“Why don’t you tell that son of a bitch you work for to go straight to hell? Tell him to shove Vicky’s blue bar up his ass.”

“What would I do in Chicago?” “Same thing you do here—nothing.”

“Well then, I think I’ll stay.” He printed his letters firmly, stubbornly.

“You’re never going to get anywhere with that attitude, Diego.”

“It’s OK,” he wrote, “as soon as I was old enough to know I was alive, I knew I would never be going too far.”

Luz cackled. Diego could almost picture her laugh in the air. “You have a sense of humor, mi amor. Hold on to it.”

“A sense of humor?” Diego wrote, “Not really, Luz. It’s just that you laugh at everything.”

“You’re damn right, Diego. You learn to laugh at everything. People who cry are boring. There’s nothing more boring than someone who’s always crying.” She flipped her cigarette to the ground and stepped on it. As Diego watched her, he felt the urge to tell her to stay. He wanted to yell at her: “Stay where you belong. Who will I talk to on Saturdays?” She looked at him. “You know, Diego, I’m getting old—but I’m going to laugh until the end. If I stop laughing they’ll treat me like a cigarette butt.”

Diego nodded. He put his pen on his pad and asked: “So, when are you leaving for Chicago?”

“Hell, I don’t know. I have to think about it some more.”

“If you decide to go, come and say good-bye to me at Vicky’s.”

She took his pad away and wrote: “What am I going to do about you, my Diego?” She looked straight into Diego’s eyes and said, “If I’m not at the bridge next Saturday you’ll know I’ve gone with Carlos to Chicago.” She squeezed his hand. “Thanks for the cigarette, Diego.” She rose from the steps slowly and walked down the street. She wrapped herself in a black shawl even though it was too hot to be wearing one. He wanted to grab her and keep her from going. He wanted to scream at her: “Goddamnit, don’t go!” He wanted to hear himself yell it; he wanted to know what it was like to feel sounds coming out of himself, to feel the notes touch the insides of his throat like fingers.

THE HERON DIES
IN FLIGHT

1

“N
O MORE MEDICINE
, Jake. I can’t do it anymore.”

“You’ll die.”

“Then let me.”

“I can’t.”

“When my body wanted to breathe, it breathed, when it was hungry, it ate—now it’s hungry for other things. Let it go, let it die.”

“You talk about your body as if it doesn’t even belong to you anymore.”

Joaquin bit his lower lip, then licked it, his mouth as dry as the soil he was raised in. “I know. But there’s more, there’s more than just the physical, there’s more than—”

“More what? More shit?”

“Not more shit, Jake. I don’t know—”

“Oh, you mean like heaven. Shit, J—”

“I didn’t call it heaven.”

“Oh, the great beyond?”

“Don’t, Jake. You think there’s nothing more to you than your body?”

“It’s a great place to start.”

“But is it a great place to end?”

“We don’t have any options. That’s where it starts—that’s where it ends.”

“There’s more.”

“No—”

“You don’t know.”

“What we—you and I—what we
know
will be gone. Our two bodies, they’ll be gone.
I
don’t care about anything else, J.” “It’s just that you don’t know anything else.”

“Do you, Joaquin?”

He bit his lip again. He stared at Jake for a long time—then reached over and combed his blond hair with his trembling fingers. “I had a dream last night. It was dark and there was light around her and she kept saying, “No tengas miedo, Hijo de mi vida, no tengas miedo.”

“Which means?”

“She was telling me not to be afraid.”

“Who’s the she?”

“My mother.”

“It was a dream.”

“She came for me.”

“That’s ridiculous. What do the dead need from the living? The dead have no lips, they have no voice. The dead don’t speak, J—and even if they did, they’d only speak to each other. Let the dead care for each other—let the living do the same. And it’s the living that matter. Take your medicine.”

“That stuff is killing me, damnit. I know my body. I know what it’s saying.
I
heard it tremble the first time
I
saw you in that bar, gringo, I heard it almost scream. I felt it turn into a fist when my mama died.” His voice was beginning to sound like the desert. “I know my body. You have to help me die.”

“I won’t.”

Joaquin leaned over and kissed his cheek. “Jacob Lesley Marsh, you don’t have a choice.”

Jake pushed him away. “The hell I don’t.” He started walking toward the door.

“When are you gonna start accepting what’s happening to us?
Stupid gringo. Are you just gonna play hide-and-seek until it’s time?”

“What’s that supposed to mean?”

“Jacob, aren’t you tired? Aren’t you ever going to get tired of being angry? What’s so great about being pissed off all the time?”

Jacob stared at him for a long time. “I don’t always want to hear everything you have to say.”

“I’ve heard that line before, Jake.”

“No, I don’t think you’ve ever heard it.”

“Are we going to fight?”

“No, we’re not going to fight.” He slammed the door as he walked out of the apartment.

Joaquin stood at the door and laid himself down on the floor. He felt small and fragile and was afraid he’d break if he made a sudden move. “I’ll be safer on the floor,” he said, forgetting that Jake had just left. He stared at the ceiling and tried to think of a reason to keep fighting.

2

D
IEGO THOUGHT ABOUT
LUZ all week. He felt her breath in his room, smelled it; he dreamed her face fading away like smoke. At night he would stare at his pad and spell “Chicago.” C-H-I-C-A-G-O. It was a strange word and he thought the word looked Aztec, but he had gone to the public library and discovered that Chicago meant the place of bad smells. He wrote a note to himself: “Who wants to live in the place of bad smells?” He thought of sneaking over to the barrio to spray-paint a new sign on the walls:
CHICAGO STINKS! VIVA JUÁREZ
! He thought he might add: “Luz, don’t go. Don’t go, don’t go, don’t go.” He almost ran to the door and down the stairs to buy the spray paint. He pictured himself spraying the letters on the wall; he could see his handwriting, large, angry. But he changed his mind because he felt he would be making a public beggar of himself. How would it look, him begging an older woman not to leave—how would it look?

Saturday morning he woke up, put on the coffee, and went to his desk and grabbed his suicide letter. He did not read it, but took it back to bed with him and held it. He tried not to think about Luz—she’ll be at the bridge, she’ll be there. He drank his coffee as dark and bitter as his room, and did not rise until the light of the morning shone through the window. He combed his hair in the mirror and looked at his face. He saw the lines coming out from
under his skin, from somewhere deep within him. Soon my face will be a map, he thought, a map of crooked roads going nowhere like the steps. He read the newspaper from the day before. The printed words were all jumbled; he could make no sense of the sentences—they seemed to be knots on a string, knots he wanted to untie but somehow he felt his fingers were not gifted enough to undo them. He threw the newspaper down on the floor, lit a cigarette, and puffed on it furiously. He could feel the smoke in his throat and lungs. He puffed on his cigarette faster and faster as if he were trying to catch himself on fire. He lit one cigarette after another until his throat felt as though he had eaten ashes. He sat at his desk, took out a piece of paper and wrote: Luz, be at the bridge. Luz, be at the bridge. Be at the bridge.

At eight-thirty he thought it was time to take himself down to the river. He wanted to run all the way to the bridge, but he dressed himself slowly. He went up the steps that went nowhere, then back down. He walked through San Jacinto Plaza and noticed the Border Patrol eyeing him. Diego watched them watch him. He walked toward Sacred Heart Church making himself walk slowly, making himself count his own steps: one, two, fifty, one hundred. He walked into the church, dipped his hand into the holy water, and crossed himself. He lit a candle before the statue of St. Jude and whispered, “Luz, be at the bridge.” He made the sign of the cross, kissed the feet of the statue, genuflected, and inched himself out of the church heading toward the river. As he reached the top of the bridge where the flags were being tossed by the hot wind, he stared down at the river of mud. Today it was browner than usual and it was running fast, almost angry. He turned away and faced the place where Luz always sat. He opened his eyes. She wasn’t there. He walked up to the place where they first met, stared at the blank spot on the hard cement—and waited. He tried to concentrate on the people hanging around, the people walking toward El Paso, the people selling their goods. A small boy selling Chiclets came up to him; Diego handed him a quarter. He smiled at him, lit a cigarette, and waited. He knew she would not come.

At noon he walked back to Sacred Heart Church and blew out his candle. He kept going to the bridge every Saturday, and every
Saturday he stared at the river, closed his eyes, watched the people—and waited. He did this for a few weeks until one day he stopped going. He stopped working on his suicide letter. Winter in El Paso came early that year.

About the same time Luz left, Mary disappeared. Diego looked for her on the streets but he could not find her. Crazy Eddie and his boss were the only two people he saw regularly and neither wanted to take the time to talk to him. Sometimes he tried to get Tencha, the fruit lady, to talk to him. She was kind, a good woman, but Diego knew his presence made her feel guilty because she could talk and he couldn’t. Some people were like that. She smiled a lot but she couldn’t bring herself to have a conversation with him. Diego stopped writing on his pad. He left his suicide note on top of his desk but he never touched it. He was tired of trying to think of the right words.

One morning he tried to throw his letter out the window, but before he could make himself let go of all the pages as he held them in the air, he pulled them back inside his room. He wadded up the pages, wadded them up into balls, and threw them against the wall. He stared at the white balls on the floor, picked them up, and smoothed them out with his hands. He put them back on his desk.

Mr. Arteago had left for the winter and didn’t turn on the heat. Diego’s apartment was so cold that he was glad to be in Vicky’s kitchen. One night it got so cold that Diego went out and bought a bottle of Jim Beam and got drunk. He jumped up and down on the floor and wished Mr. Arteago was home so it would drive him crazy. He lay there, took another drink, and laughed. He remembered Luz saying “People who cry are boring.” He lay on the floor and laughed to himself all winter.

BOOK: Carry Me Like Water
6.17Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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