Rich
Riming the volcano of garbage are vultures—fifty or
more, their black plumage inky in the smoldering sun. Big as toddlers, they cock their crocked
necks as if they know my thoughts, but they do not, no one does.
Last week my son fought one of these evil
birds. Marco had discovered an uneaten
sandwich in the heap when the creature swooped down. Thank God Marco had the bent-up umbrella he
always carries, sometimes using it as a bat (“Look, Papa, I’m A Rod!”), a
dancing cane, (“I’m smooth like your favorite, Gene Kelly!”), a golf club (“Now
I’m Chi Chi Rodriguez. How do you like
those apples, Papa?”) I watched him beat
the bird, heard their tangled screaming.
We were in the middle of sorting recyclables from other’s people’s
discarded waste. My wife implored me to
intervene, but I knew that would only make Marco soft, and soft does not
survive here.
We used to live inside the dump, among the maggots
and rats, until the missionaries came.
Now we have rows of tin boxes to make our homes. Still, a narrow, dirt road is all that
separates our make-shift town from the dump.
Miles below sits Puerto Vallarta. At night, she shimmers, a bejeweled
gown. A cruise ship glows with its
windows white as American teeth.
When I was young like Marco, I often plotted an
escape. Now that I am wiser, I watch my
family sleeping and feel embarrassed to be this rich.
The Hater’s Club
At the ice cream store, a kid is
staring at me with chocolate melt running down his lips and chin, mouth hanging
open like a grotesque trapdoor. His eyes
are huge, bark-brown olives. Worst of
all, he hasn’t blinked once.
I study my napkin for a solid two
minutes. Looking up, I see the kid’s
expression hasn’t changed a bit.
His head is oversized, a boulder
atop his spindly neck and arms. I
imagine taking a baseball bat and swinging, hearing his cranium crack.
I read the sign that lists flavors
and prices. I look at my fingers and
notice there’s gray gunk under most of the nails.
When I turn back around, I see that ice
cream’s pooled around the kid’s neck, but he’s still ogling me the same way.
I think; Okay, let’s do this.
I stare back. I do it until my pupils dry out and sting.
He still hasn’t blinked.
I sneer.
I wiggle my eyes.
I go cross-eyed till I’m dizzy.
I stick out my tongue
I flip him off.
He just stares.
It’s starting to get monumentally
creepy.
His mom must be constipated, because
she’s been in the can a while.
The Asian guy behind the counter helps
in the sherbet section.
I need someone to see this-- the bizarre
kid who won’t stop staring.
Oh, wait. What?
I’ve been so distracted by the gawking
going on that I haven’t realized until now that he resembles a guy from high
school named Oliver Pratt.
Oliver and I were in the same
Hater’s Club: he hated me and I loathed him.
That wouldn’t have mattered, but one day while I was in the restroom,
Oliver and his buddies jumped me, then stole my pants and underwear.
After that, I bought a voodoo doll
that resembled him, with its twiggy cloth limbs and a puffy, hacky sack pouch
for a head. I stuck a hundred needles
through that ragdoll, concentrating, imagining I possessed supernatural
intuition, a sixth sense that could make the pins real, puncturing Oliver’s
pupils, neck, testicles.
Two days later, Oliver was horsing
around on a department store escalator, fell off, and plunged through a cosmetic
counter made of glass. He bled to death
before they’d even removed all of the shards.
Looking hard at the kid now,
avoiding his goggle eyes but taking in the other features, I see how he’s an
identical version of Oliver Pratt.
This guy is Oliver.
I know it.
I’ve got good intuition. It’s what caused all this in the first place.
When the boy’s mom finally comes
out, she says, “Oh, Ollie! Look at the
mess you’ve made.”
***
Each night and every morning, I wake
with pinprick sensations against my skin.
I know they’re needles ready to be turned into broken blades of
glass.
I stop sleeping. I hardly eat.
I see Oliver’s likeness everywhere.
Something tells me he’s going to get his
revenge, and soon.
I know these things.
No comments:
Post a Comment