NORTHERN MINDANAO
ESSENCE
by Jose Claudio B. Guerrero
WE
had just finished lunch in a small café along Katipunan Road. Two cups
of steamy brew enveloped our table in a delicious aroma.
"So where did you meet?" I asked my friend Patrick as he put down his coffee cup.
"In the Faculty Center in UP."
"Again? How come you meet a lot of guys there? I'm always there and nothing ever happens."
Patrick pointed to his face and smiled.
"Che!" I
replied laughing. But I knew that it was true. Patrick was not really
that good looking, but he had this sexy air about him. And he had fair
skin which is, for most Filipinos, a prerequisite for beauty. I looked
at the mirror behind him and saw my dark, emaciated reflection.
"So
anyway, I was washing my face in the ground floor washroom when in
comes this really cute guy. I've seen him on campus a few times before.
So anyway, he goes and takes a leak," Patrick paused. "You know those FC
urinals, right?"
I nodded. "No partitions."
Patrick
took another sip from his cup and continued. "So anyway, this guy sees
me checking him out. To my surprise, he turns to me, giving me full view
of him in all his glory and smiles. I smile back. And," Patrick took a
deep breath, "the rest is for me alone to know." He ended by dabbing the
sides of his napkin to his mouth.
I
knew pressing Patrick for more details would shut him up just like that
so I let it pass. I could wheedle out all the details later. "So what's
his name?"
"Carlo."
I raised an eyebrow and gave Patrick my you've-got-to-be-kidding look. He laughed and nodded in agreement.
"Yes it's another Carlo. It's always Carlo, or Paolo, or Mike, or Jay--"
"So what name did you use?" I asked, cutting him short.
"My favorite, Paolo." We both laughed. "Enough of me. Tell me about yourself. It's been what, a month since we've talked?"
"More like three weeks," I answered as I motioned to a waiter for the cake menu.
"Oh no. You're ordering cake."
"Why?"
"You order cake when you're depressed."
"No
I don't. And anyway, I'm not depressed this time." The waiter arrived
with the cake menu. After giving our orders, Patrick continued pressing
me for news.
"I told you, I lead a boring life."
"I'm sure," answered Patrick mischievously. "So how's your Chinese boyfriend?"
Patrick's
question caught me off-guard as I sipped from my cup. I snorted and
felt coffee go up my nose. We both started laughing. "He's not Chinese,"
I answered when I had recovered. "He's Korean. And he's not my
boyfriend, excuse me. I'm his tutor."
"I'm sure," said Patrick needling me. "And what are you tutoring him in?"
"English."
"I'm sure. Oh good, here's the cake."
As
I dug my fork into my cake's rich cream cheese, I happened to look at
the mirror and saw the café doors open. A dumpy, fair-skinned guy walked
in. "Oh my God." I froze.
Patrick
saw the expression on my face and looked around for what caused it.
Finding it, he said, "Don't tell me you're still crazy over Mark."
"No I'm not. It's just that, well…"
"Well what?" asked Patrick, his eyes suddenly alive with curiosity.
"It's…you know," I answered. My eyes told him the rest.
"No," he answered not wanting to believe it.
I smiled.
"When?"
"Two weeks ago."
"Why didn't you tell me sooner?"
"You're always busy."
"Well
I'm not busy anymore. Tell me everything." Patrick leaned over to me
forgetting all about his cake. "It's not everyday your best friend loses
his virginity."
"It
happened two weeks ago. Our teacher dismissed us early so I was walking
in the AS parking lot looking for my driver. It was already dark and
only a few cars were left. Well, one of the cars was his. He smiled at
me and asked me what time it was," I paused and took a bite from my
cake.
"And?"
"And what happened next is for me alone to know." I replied mimicking him.
"Fuck.
Don't do this to me. Tell me. I have to know. I won't be able to
sleep," Patrick begged. Noticing his unused fork, he grabbed it. "Tell
me or I'll stab you with this." Just then Mark passed so he hurriedly
lowered his fork. "He looks conscious. Maybe he suspects you've told
me."
I just smiled.
"I
know some guys who are like that. Once something has happened between
you, they suddenly feel awkward when you're around. Eventually you end
up avoiding each other." Patrick studied his cake for a while then
started eating. After some time he spoke up. "I'm so happy for you," he
said smiling as he grabbed my hand and shook it warmly. "I remember all
those times we sat here eating cake and talking about your to-die-for
classmate Mark. Mark and his cologne, Mark and his new cologne, Mark and
his crew cut, Mark and his burnt-out cigarette butt." He considered for
a moment and then said, "Boy, am I glad those days are over." He
laughed. I smiled.
"Is it really true that you took puffs from his cigarette butt?"
My
ears went red and I nodded. "Whatever he touches, he leaves an essence.
When I take a puff from his cigarette butt, our essences meld. We
become one," I hastened to explain. "It's like we've shared something.
Like a bond."
Patrick gave me a pitying look. "At least you don't have to do that anymore."
I smiled and mashed the blueberries on my plate.
We
finished our cakes as we updated each other with what has happened to
our high school barkada. As we waited for our change, Mark stood up to
leave and finally noticed us. He smiled and went out. Patrick pinched me
as I smiled back, my ears burning.
PATRICK
dropped me off at the Faculty Center after lunch and rushed to the
theater for rehearsal. Having thirty minutes to waste before my next
class, I decided to go to the FC washroom and tidy up.
The
faint scent of detergent, cigarette smoke, and stale urine greeted me
as I opened the door. As I expected, the washroom was deserted. I stood
in front of the mirror and took out tissue from my bag. As I dabbed
moistened tissue on my face, the washroom door opened and a woody
cologne scent wafted in.
It
was Mark. He went straight to the urinals. I pretended not to notice
him. When he finished peeing, he joined me by the mirror, washed his
hands, and then straightened his shirt collar. As he looked at his
reflection, he saw me watching him and smiled, "It's you again." I
smiled back and offered him a tissue. He declined and left.
When
the door closed, I hurried to the urinal. I unbuttoned my fly and peed.
I looked down and watched my pale yellow fluid join his, a bit darker
and frothy against the white porcelain. As I watched the fluids mix,
their colors getting more and more difficult to distinguish until
finally no difference could be seen, a warm pleasurable sensation from
within me slowly surged, growing more and more powerful, until finally
shudders of ecstasy racked my still untouched body.
FIREWORKS
by H.O. Santos
ENSENADA
is only one hour south of Tijuana but what a difference one hour makes.
It's still a tourist town--gringos contribute a lot to the town's
economy--but it's more tranquil. Unlike the border town of Tijuana,
vendors in Ensenada aren't always in your face trying to sell you a
souvenir or a bed warmer for the evening. As a matter of fact, many
commercial establishments don't have employees who speak English--we do
very well without you tourists, thank you very much, they seem to say.
Even the popular Hussong's Cantina with its almost hundred percent
gringo clientele is outside of town and doesn't affect Ensenada's
relative calm.
I
love the isolation Baja California provides, all within a day's drive
from Los Angeles. My favorite Baja destination is easily San Felipe, a
sleepy fishing village on the Gulf of California side, and that's where
Barbara and I were headed for. There are many ways to get there from Los
Angeles but my favorite route is the one which goes all the way south
to Ensenada via Tijuana. You then cross the peninsula through the
winding road over the mountains to reach the other side.
Close
to the halfway mark, Ensenada is a good stopping point to take a break.
We hit it at the right time on this trip, at eleven in the morning.
I
was with Barbara Westbay, my girl friend of almost two years. In spite
of her decidedly non-Hispanic surname, she claims to have Latino
ancestors. You couldn't tell from the way she looked--she had red hair,
green eyes, and freckles that showed prominently if she stayed in the
sun too long. Lately it had been fashionable among gringos to claim
Latino or Native American ancestry. I often wondered if she has been
stretching the truth about her ancestry a little too much.
I
never fully understood why she put up with my proclivity for these
trips since she can't take too much sun, an almost impossible thing to
do in Baja. She's envious of women who tan perfectly, those who can take
on a beautiful shade of bronze without burning. She has to be careful
for it's extremely uncomfortable for her to lie down when she gets
burned. I like to think she puts up with these trips because she loves
me but I know she does it as much to get away from the madness of city
life as she cares for me.
I
parked Barbara's Nissan Pathfinder in the center of Ensenada near the
beach. We went to look for our favorite food vendors--the ones who plied
the streets in their pushcarts and lunch trucks. She went to a truck
that sold fish tacos. I found a vendor who served fresh clam cocktails
from his pushcart. He picked a live one from a bucket, opened and cut it
up, then put the meat into a large plastic cup. He squeezed lime juice
into it, added chopped tomatoes, onions, cilantro, and red peppers and
handed the cup to me with several packets of Santos saltine crackers.
We stopped at the corner store to buy two cold bottles of Corona Beer before going to the beach to eat our lunch.
"Have a bite of my fish taco, it's good."
"What did you get this time, the usual shark?"
"They didn't have shark but this tuna is good--it's not overcooked, just lightly grilled." I took a bite and agreed it was good.
"Here, have some of my cocktail, it's pismo clam." I brought a spoonful to her mouth to let her try it.
"Super. I wish we had these vendors in L.A. They're so convenient."
"We're
starting to have them already. I see vendors selling ice cream and
drinks out of pushcarts. They're probably all illegals, too."
"Come
on, you wouldn't know an illegal if you saw one. Just because you see
somebody who looks Hispanic doesn't mean he's a mojado."
"They mostly are."
"I don't think so. As an immigrant yourself, I expect you'd be more sensitive to their plight."
"But I came to America legally. I'm not against immigration, only against those who do it illegally," I protested.
"You
have a lot to learn about how America stole most of the West from
Mexico. All of the Western states from Texas to California used to
belong to Mexico. The 1849 Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo unfairly gave the
West to America. Before, those areas were part of Mexico and people
could move freely because there was no border. The worst part about it
was that land was taken away illegally from their Mexican owners and
given to the new settlers."
"All right, but what are laws for if they're not going to be enforced."
"Some laws are so unfair they shouldn't be enforced."
I
let Barbara have the last word because I suspected she would win the
argument. She once told me that new immigrants like myself who have been
in the U.S. just long enough are sometimes worse than native-born
Americans when it comes to tolerating new immigration. Each new group
thinks the door should be closed after they've come in.
After
lunch, we bought two more six-packs of Corona and stashed them in our
ice chest before going on our way. We were soon outside Ensenada going
east and climbing along the winding road. Some parts of the mountain
range were as high as seven thousand feet although the highway only
reached five thousand. I had a chance to enjoy the scenery as Barbara
had taken over the driving chores.
Along
the mountain road were large boulders that looked like they could roll
down and crush us at any moment. Although I knew they had been there for
thousands of years, it was hard not to get disturbed. I was happy when
we reached the high plateau and left them behind us.
We
stopped to buy gasoline at a small town. The mountain towns didn't have
electricity--gas was dispensed in a primitive but ingenuous manner. The
dispenser was a graduated glass container set high on a stand. An
attendant pumped gas by hand from fifty-five gallon drums on the ground
to the container until the desired amount was transferred. The gas was
then allowed to flow down through a hose to your tank. We took in fifty
liters of regular unleaded gas. I paid in dollars and didn't bother to
count the change which was given to me in pesos. In all the times I've
been to Baja, no one has yet cheated me on the change owed me.
The
gas attendant was an attractive young girl who must have been around
ten or twelve. She wore jeans, a Western shirt, and cowboy boots. She
had light hair and looked European unlike most of the other children
around her who had mostly Indian features.
"You
know, she could easily cross the border and won't even get stopped,"
Barbara commented. "None of her friends will make it, though."
I
knew Barbara was trying to tell me looks had everything to do with who
was mistaken for an illegal alien in the United States. She was good at
giving not-too-subtle hints like that to prove a point.
We
were soon on the eastern slope of the mountain. From here on, the road
is straight for the most part. It didn't need to snake around since the
slope is gentle all the way to the ocean. The landscape also changes
radically here--the marine layer which blows in from the Pacific and
makes the western side of the peninsula green doesn't reach this far. It
is an alkali desert--starkly bright white except for the black cinder
cones of extinct volcanoes that rose from the desert floor in the
distance. Every now and then we would see green farmland made possible
by irrigation. I saw a red double-winged crop dusting plane make a pass
to drop insecticide on the crops below. I thought of Snoopy--he would
have loved to have been on that plane.
After
an hour more, we got to the lowlands and at last I saw the ocean in the
distance. I soon heard the ocean's roar and smelled the salt air. Even
after all the trips I've made to San Felipe, it was still a surprise to
suddenly see an ocean at the edge of a dry and desolate desert.
We
turned right when we reached the main highway. The road was surrounded
by sand dunes on both sides and gently rose and fell but was absolutely
straight. The ocean was only a few miles to our left but it didn't do
much to alleviate the July heat. We had turned the air conditioner off
to spare the car's cooling system and get used to the heat.
There
were no clouds in the sky and it was hard to imagine there was life
around except for the few scrub cactus and stunted mesquite that broke
through the chalky soil. I knew from previous visits, though, that they
were simply hiding from the midday heat and would come out when it got
cooler.
As
we approached San Felipe, billboards touting campsites along the beach
became visible to our left. We turned left at our favorite, the Playas
del Sol, which was two-thirds of the way to the center of San Felipe
from where the first campground was. We left a trail of dust on the
gravel road as Barbara drove to the campground which was half a mile
from the highway. We were lucky to find a cabaña still available--the
shade provided by the thatched palm roof supported on four wooden posts
made all the difference between comfort and torture.
Our
chosen spot was on a bluff fifteen feet higher than the beach. Barbara
and I quickly got our equipment from the car and set them up. Barbara
then moved her car to the west side of the cabaña to block the sun when
it got low. We decided we didn't need the tent--the wind wasn't strong
enough and we could sleep in the open. We worked quickly and changed
into bathing suits so we could get in the water before the tide started
receding again.
High
tide is the only time you can swim in San Felipe. The water is all the
way to the beach then. Fish come close and often jump out of the water.
You can see an occasional flying fish skip thirty yards or more before
dropping back into the water again.
The
water temperature was pleasant--cool enough to be refreshing but not
ice cold like it was in the winter. We stayed only long enough to cool
off and went back to tidy up our little camp area for the evening. It
was better to do this while it was still light because it gets very dark
at night.
I
had some pork chops marinating in a container in the ice chest. While
waiting for the charcoal to get going, I set a couple of beach chairs on
the bluff facing the ocean. We sat on the chairs and watched the tide
go out. Sea gulls were making their last attempts at catching fish
before the tide receded some more. The temperature must have been in the
mid-nineties so we were dry without needing to towel off.
We
had a good dinner--Barbara's salsa was hotter than usual so it required
frequent washing down with beer. Coronas weren't heavy anyway and here
in the hot climate you sweated off the effects of beer faster than you
could drink it.
We
took a shower after we washed our pots and pans in the wash area. The
camp site had free toilets but charged a nominal fee for showers. Fresh
water was trucked in daily from Mexicali which was sixty miles away. The
lack of fresh water is what has slowed developers from fully exploiting
this place, thank heavens.
By
the time we got back, the camp manager had already turned on the
generator that provided electricity to the fluorescent lamps along the
main camp road. Besides the road, the wash, bath, and toilet areas were
also lit. Lights were turned off at eleven o'clock.
At
night, there's absolutely nothing to do in the campground except stroll
on the beach. It's the kind of place that drive Las Vegas types crazy.
We took a flashlight with us to look around--tiny crabs scurried away as
we made our way through the tide pools. The exposed ocean floor was
muddy, and we found an occasional fish or shrimp trapped in the shallow
pools of water.
After
the walk, we sat on our folding chairs, sipping beer again. I loved
Barbara for understanding there were times when you could be with
someone and not need to say anything. The connection was made through
the silence, not the exchange of words.
In
the distance, I could see the lights of Mexican towns on the mainland
and an occasional ferry or fishing boat crossing the gulf which
separated us from them. Looking out towards the mainland made it clear
to me why early explorers mistook California for an island.
I
looked up the moonless sky and through the clear desert air saw more
stars than I could count. The Milky Way and the reddish Magellanic Cloud
were clearly visible. I thought about my namesake, my tocayo, Antonio
Miranda Rodriguez--he must have gazed at these very same stars from this
same spot more than two centuries before.
I
had read he was a Filipino carpenter who passed through Baja in 1781
with a group of settlers who were going to start a settlement, near the
San Gabriel Mission, which would later become Los Angeles. He never made
it because his Mexican wife and daughter got sick. He stayed behind to
take care of them until they died. He ended up in Santa Barbara instead
of Los Angeles.
I
wondered what made him and countless other Filipinos cross the Pacific
on Spanish galleons leaving everything behind, how he must have felt
upon losing his family to illness just when they were getting close to
Alta California where they would have had a better life. It seemed
Filipinos had been going to strange lands to find better lives forever.
I counted three shooting stars in fifteen minutes but didn't make a wish. What I wanted I already had.
"Do you mind if I turned the radio on?" I asked Barbara.
"No, it would be good to listen to some music."
I
fiddled with the dial--I could only get AM. I got stations from the
Mexican mainland, a strong one from Albuquerque, but stopped at a
station from Tuczon that was giving a news summary. The temperature had
been over a hundred in most places along the border and the Border
Patrol had found some illegal border crossers in the desert. Four were
dead and seven were suffering from heat stroke and severe dehydration.
The authorities were investigating whether their coyote had abandoned
them or if they had crossed on their own without realizing how high the
temperature would be that day.
"My God, what a terrible way to die," Barbara said.
"I don't understand why people take such chances. It's dumb," I replied.
"Maybe some day you will. I'll love you even more when you do."
"There are legal ways to get in…"
"Most people can't get in legally. One day you'll meet a real illegal and you'll find out why they do things you consider dumb."
The
news was over. I turned the dial to a Mexican station that played
boleros. It was depressing to hear about people crossing the border only
to die after they make it to their promised land. The music helped me
push the thought away from my mind. I had more beer and watched the
stars until I fell asleep.
IT
must have been already in the eighties when I woke up. The tide had
started to move out again and it was getting quieter. It had come in
during the night, its roar lulling me to a deeper sleep. Its sound is so
soothing you tend to wake up when it goes away.
The
sun hadn't as yet risen but the eastern horizon already had a pink
tinge. Clouds over the mainland were slowly turning crimson. Stars were
still visible on the zenith and towards the western horizon. After a
while, the sun peeked out and the sky was filled with a riot of colors. I
don't think there's a more beautiful sunrise than in San Felipe. Too
bad not many people get to see it because they don't wake up early
enough.
I
placed a towel on Barbara to cover her--I noticed she hadn't bothered
to put her clothes back on after we woke up in the middle of the night
wanting each other badly. She was still sleeping soundly and I didn't
want to wake her up.
I
filled a pot with water and made coffee, then watched the sun rise
higher as I drank my coffee. A few people around camp were now beginning
to stir and move about and so did Barbara. She gave me an amused grin
when she realized she was naked--she hastily put her clothes on. As she
washed her face in a small basin, I made her a cup of coffee. She didn't
say anything but hugged me to give her silent thank you before starting
to fry bacon and eggs.
Barbara
fried our leftover rice with garlic in the bacon fat. I was surprised
how easily she had gotten to like the Filipino breakfast staple I taught
her to make. She fixes it every time she gets a chance.
It
was a lazy morning and by the time we had everything stowed away, it
was already nine o'clock and very hot. We went to town to buy more food,
drinks, and ice.
When
we returned to Playas del Sol, an itinerant vendor was standing in the
shade of our cabaña. He politely waited until we got everything out from
the car before showing us what he was selling. He had jamacas, a very
compact hammock made from hand-tied twine. It was only a few bucks so I
bought one. I didn't necessarily want to sleep in one but I thought it
would be handy in keeping our stuff up from the sand.
I
was hanging the hammock from the cabaña posts when I saw this young
woman carrying a basket on top of her head. She had it effortlessly
balanced and didn't need to hold it with her hands. It had been a long
time since I last saw a woman do that.
She
was walking towards us. She was petite, must have been only an inch or
two over five feet, and had a nice figure. Her skin was deep brown,
perhaps from the sun, and she was wearing an embroidered blouse of rough
cotton. She looked like a typical chinita poblana, a Mexican country
woman of mostly Indian blood, except she was wearing shorts instead of a
skirt. She was a pretty sight to look at--good looking, nice figure,
shapely legs, and walking like a model on a runway. The basket on her
head made her walk in a sensuous manner, her hips and hands swaying
gracefully to keep her balance in the soft sand. I noticed that all the
men around us had turned their heads to ogle her.
She
approached Barbara and showed what she had in her basket--pork and
chicken tamales, she said. She had an intense look in her eyes but they
looked like they were ready to turn into a twinkle anytime.
"Do you have salsa to go with it?" Barbara asked.
"Yes, of course," she answered. "It is good and fresh."
"Let me try one chicken," Barbara said.
I
brought over a paper plate and a fork. The woman put the tamale on the
plate and Barbara split the cornhusk wrapper open with her fork. She
then poured salsa straight from the jar and started eating.
"It's good, I can eat another one. Do you want one, hon?"
"I'll
try one," I said. I got another paper plate and asked for pork tamale.
It was almost lunch time anyway and it was too hot to cook. All we
needed was cold beer and our lunch would be complete.
I pulled the beach chairs into the shade and offered one to the woman.
"My name is Tony, this is Barbara. We're from Los Angeles."
"I
am Lita," she said softly as she sat down. She had been staring at me
for a while. I got a plastic cup and asked if she wanted soda or beer.
"Coke is fine, if you have."
I put ice in the plastic cup for her and poured her some Coke. I got a couple of Coronas for myself and Barbara.
After Lita took a sip, she said, "Dalawa na lang po ang natitira, bilhin na po ninyo para huwag na akong maglakad pa."
I was pleasantly surprised and smiled, "Pinay ka pala. Kaya naman pala napakaganda mo."
She
lowered her eyes and blushed. I turned to Barbara, "Luv, she's
Filipina. She says she has only two tamales left and was wondering if we
want to buy them so she can go home."
"Why not, they're good--I'm sure you can eat another one."
We
sat there in the shade eating our lunch. I offered a tamale to Lita but
she declined saying she couldn't eat one--she made them every day. I
gave her instead a mango we got from town.
"How did you get to Baja?" I asked.
"It is long story, take too long to tell."
"Oh, we got time," I said but Lita didn't say anything.
"Tell
you what," Barbara said, joining in. "We'd like to invite you for
dinner tonight. It's the Fourth of July and we'd like to celebrate a
little bit. Then you can tell us."
Lita thought for a while then said, "Only if you let me cook."
"Nothing
fancy, we don't have a lot of utensils here. I was just going to cook
what we were able to buy in the market this morning."
Lita
checked the icebox. "We have plenty--I bring what else we need," she
said as she picked up her basket. "Let me go now so I tell my family
about tonight--they are very good to me."
"Do you live far? I can drive you," Barbara offered.
"No, I can walk. The house I live is near entrance to this camp. Across street, on left, only house there."
"I'll see you later then--I won't start till you get here."
Meanwhile,
the tide had rolled back in. People were now all over the beach
frolicking in the surf. To the right, I could see Cerro El Machorro,
dark, tall, and majestic. It hid San Felipe from our view. I imagine it
was what fishermen used as a landmark in finding their way back to port.
I wouldn't know--I have never been out to sea in San Felipe.
It
was a lazy and peaceful feeling, sitting in the shade and listening to
the surf. It's hard to imagine how a hot, barren, and remote place could
have attracted settlers hundreds of years ago. But then some people
tend to occupy niches and would gladly settle for a less abundant place
to call home rather than struggle against other people in a more opulent
location. I wondered if I had what it takes to live in such a place or
if I would do what many of them do--cross the border to find better life
in Alta California.
Barbara
had gone to the water to cool off. You can't really swim very well in
San Felipe, the water is shallow in most places. But you can sit on the
sandy bottom and let the cool water splash over you and the strong waves
rock you back and forth. It's a great place to pretend you're a
seaweed.
By
the time I got in the water, Barbara already had her limit of sun for
the day. I stayed in the water for an hour while she dozed off on the
beach chair in the shade of the cabaña.
BARBARA
and I had already showered and changed when Lita arrived promptly at
five o'clock. She was wearing a loose, lavender printed shift that
draped beautifully over her body. It showed off her figure quite well.
She had with her a wok and a small basket filled with vegetables. It
seemed she was ready for some serious cooking and wasn't going to settle
for anything less.
"Lita, you shouldn't have bothered," Barbara said.
"I want to cook good food this time--we don't have much what we cook here in Baja, we're too poor. And I want to practice, too."
"I leave everything up to you, then. I'll help--tell me what you want me to do."
Lita
and Barbara were soon at work--Lita taught Barbara her recipes. I
stayed out of their way and helped by washing the dirty dishes, pots,
and pans.
It
took them a while but when they got done, we had sinigang of mullet,
beef fajitas, pepper fried shrimp, and steamed rice. We had more food
than we could eat so I suggested they take some to Lita's foster family.
Barbara and Lita wrapped food in aluminum foil and took them there. It
was a chance to let her family know how good a cook she was.
While
they were away, I managed to appropriate for our use a couple of wooden
planks which I set across the two ice chests to make a table. I used an
extra bed sheet for a tablecloth. I set the food, paper plates,
napkins, and plastic flatware on our banquet table. It was beginning to
look like a real party and I wished we had dinner candles to make it
perfect.
A
man selling fireworks out of the trunk of his car was making the rounds
when Barbara and Lita got back. I bought a few each of the different
kinds he had. Fireworks are illegal in most of California because
they're dangerous. But what the heck, I was in Mexico and wanted to live
a bit dangerously.
We
ate dinner out of styrofoam plates using plastic flatware. Lita was a
good cook--I especially liked her pepper fried shrimp which was lightly
battered and crispy. I kept going back with my paper cup for additional
helpings of her sour soup.
"Where did you learn to cook?" I asked.
"I
cook at home when I was young girl. Then I live in Hong Kong, and now
in Mexico. I learn all kinds of cooking because I always help whoever
cooks."
"Where are you from?"
"I
am Bicolana, from Daraga, Albay. I went to Hong Kong as maid. I was
sixteen when I left home--I make false papers to show I was eighteen."
"That's interesting. How did you get to Mexico?"
She didn't answer but sipped her tequila instead. Like when I asked earlier, she evaded my question.
"I'm sorry, I didn't mean to pry into your life."
She looked at me and said, "I like to tell people my story but nobody believe me because it sound not true."
Barbara
put an arm around her shoulder and said, "Tell me--I'll believe you."
Barbara was a people person, one who easily obtained the trust of those
she met. I was her exact opposite, I didn't trust anyone and nobody
trusted me.
Lita
began by telling us how she got recruited from her hometown in Albay by
an agent from Manila. She didn't have enough money for fees and airfare
so she signed a promissory note to pay an exorbitant amount for her
expenses. The payments would come out of her pay once she started
working in Hong Kong. She and several other girls were taken to a
residence in Manila where they were briefed on how to behave and how to
conduct themselves. More importantly, they were told how a company
representative would come around every payday to collect the amount due
on the loans.
Things
went fine with her--she was able to send a little money home and save a
little for herself even after making her monthly payments to the
recruiting company. Her dream was to save enough to be able to buy a
modest house and start a little dress shop in her hometown when she
returned.
It
had gotten dark and the camp generator was turned on. People began
setting off fireworks and lighting firecrackers. I got mine out and was
getting ready to join in the celebration when I saw two local boys
looking enviously at everybody else. I called them over and said they
could light my fireworks if they felt like it.
"Gracias,
señor. Feliz Cuatro de Julio!" one said as they proceeded to argue
about who was going to light which rocket. Soon the sky was filled with
rockets bursting into multicolored sparklers that floated down
leisurely. The pop-pop-pop of firecrackers came from all around. It was
strange to see the Fourth of July being celebrated in another country
but tonight San Felipe, with all its visitors, was an American town.
Lita continued with her story as we sipped more tequila.
"Everything
fine until my master's wife visit her family in New Territories.
Myamo came home one night and wanted a woman. He force me--I never been
in bed with a man before. I was scared and wish to die. He did it again
the next night and until his wife return home.
"I
told her what happen but she laugh, say to me I only want money from
them to make accusation. I went to Philippine Consulate and they tell me
go to office that would help. I learn they could not because I cannot
prove--I did not run away or call police when it happen.
"I
become so sad. I do not know what to do, then later houseboy next door
who was good person tell me he leave for America. A ship take a boat
full of people to America. He give money for down payment and pay
balance after he work in America.
"I
ask to come but I do not know if I have enough money so he tell boat
officer we are married so I only pay little amount for down payment."
At
that point it seemed Lita wouldn't continue with her story. Barbara put
more ice in her glass. I poured more tequila and lime soda for her. We
watched the last of the fireworks as Lita continued with her story.
It
took them four weeks to cross the Pacific. The ship's captain first
tried to dump them off in Canada but a navy ship started trailing them
when they got close. Their ship moved south but it was impossible to get
close to the western shores of the United States--the Coast Guard must
have been warned by the Canadian Navy. The ship's officers were getting
desperate so when they got to Mexico they packed their load of
passengers onto lifeboats and let them paddle by themselves to shore in
Baja California.
Unfortunately,
the weather wasn't very good. A few boats capsized and some people
drowned. Most of those who made it to shore were apprehended and taken
into custody. Lita was one of the few who managed not to get caught. Her
brown skin helped her blend in with the locals--the Chinese didn't have
a chance.
Lita
was taken in by a friendly family who lived outside Ensenada. They hid
her from the authorities but after a few weeks took her to San Felipe
where they said she would be safer. They had relatives there who were
just as poor but who understood how it was to hide from the authorities.
After
all the fireworks had been lit and exploded, relative peace settled
once more on the beach. We started putting things away--tomorrow we'd be
on our way back to L.A. Back to routine, back to trying to make enough
money to pay off bills and still have enough left for an occasional trip
like this.
Unexpectedly,
Lita came to me and said, "Manong, if you could be so kind can I go
with you to Los Angeles tomorrow? I think I can pass the border
checkpoint because they know I am not Mexican and they think I come with
you for July 4th vacation."
I was flabbergasted. I felt sorry for her but I knew what would happen if we got caught trying to smuggle her in.
"It's
not a simple task," I said. "If they get suspicious, they'll not only
get you but also put us in jail. Barbara has a lot to lose because they
can take her car away."
"Oh,
I don't mind," Barbara said. "I think it's the best time to get her in
because there'll be thousands of other people returning to the U.S. from
this three-day weekend. The border agents will have their hands full
and won't be able to scrutinize everybody as much as they normally
would."
"Well,
it's still a big risk--we should really think it over before we say yes
or no. If we get caught, they'll take away my green card and kick me
out of the country."
They didn't say anything more but gave me a pained and disappointed look. The mood turned dark.
"Let me take you home, Lita," Barbara finally said. "We'll get this settled somehow."
WHEN
Barbara returned, she was sullen and quiet. I tried to make small talk
but she kept ignoring me. Finally, she blurted out, "Dammit, why can't
you have compassion for other people for once. Here's your chance to do
something good and you refuse to do it."
"You
know I can't take the chance--you're safe because you're American-born.
You know what they would do to me if we get caught."
"You're
so fuckin' gutless you can't even stick your neck out for one of your
own kind. You know what she's been through? You haven't even tasted a
fraction of what she's been through. How can you be so smug in your
self-righteousness about what's right or wrong?"
"I can't take the chance…"
"Look,
if you're so fuckin' chicken you can get out from the car before we get
to the border. You can fuckin' walk across--you have papers. Why don't
you let us take that chance? Just make sure you have enough money for
bus fare to L.A. because I wouldn't want you back in my car… Gosh, I
thought I knew you better."
With
that she started crying and moved her sleeping bag as far away as she
could from mine. Barbara tended to use colorful language when she gets
mad but I had never seen her so agitated before. It bothered me because
it seemed we truly didn't know each other very well.
I
had a fitful night--I wanted to reach out and touch Barbara but she
seemed so far away. I had nightmares about being left behind and walking
all the way across the desert to get back to L.A. The sun was
mercilessly beating down on me and I wanted water but there was none.
The
next morning started out exactly like the last one--hot and muggy. I
didn't feel like drinking coffee so I didn't make any. Nobody bothered
to fix breakfast. I knew Barbara was feeling as badly as I was for her
eyes were red from crying and she was unusually quiet. We packed our
things and loaded them into her car in silence. So this was how
relationships ended. I didn't know it would be so quiet.
I
had a sick and empty feeling as we left the campground. I drove along
the gravel road towards the main highway where I had to turn right to
get back to California.
As
I stopped at the corner to check for cross traffic, I saw through the
already shimmering haze of the midmorning heat a lone shack across the
road on the left--it looked so far from Daraga. I remembered
my tocayo who vainly tried more than two hundred years ago to take his
family north from here to give them a better life.
I
wasn't sure whether it was because borders didn't make sense to me
anymore or if I was simply scared of losing Barbara. Whatever it was, I
crossed to the other side of the highway and turned left. When she
noticed, Barbara reached out to touch my hand and started weeping. Her
touch made me feel good again.
WE
had Lita sit in the front with me, Barbara moved to the back seat. It
would look better that way at the border. Lita only had one duffel
bag--I thought it odd that one can move from one country to another with
so very little. It made clear to me one doesn't need much in life
except his own wits to survive.
We
were quiet on the way back to the border. The long drive gave me time
to reflect on what happened the night before--I began to understand how
my dreams had shaped not only how others saw me but how I perceived them
as well.
Barbara
was right--the immigration officer was busy and only asked how long
we've been away, where we've been, and whether we had purchased anything
in Mexico. He entered our vehicle's plate number into his computer and
waved us through when he found nothing.
When
we got back on the freeway inside the U.S. I told Barbara I needed to
stop in San Diego to do something. I got off the freeway and drove to
the parking lot at the Amtrak station.
I
got out of the car, opened the back door, and picked up my knapsack. I
handed Barbara the car keys and gave her a long, lingering hug. I found
it hard to keep everything in as I said, "Luv, I'm taking the train
home."
HARVEST
by Loreto Paras Sulit
HE
first saw her in his brother’s eyes. The palay stalks were taking on
gold in the late afternoon sun, were losing their trampled, wind-swept
look and stirring into little, almost inaudible whispers.
The
rhythm of Fabian’s strokes was smooth and unbroken. So many palay
stalks had to be harvested before sundown and there was no time to be
lost in idle dallying. But when he stopped to heap up the fallen palay
stalks he glanced at his brother as if to fathom the other’s state of
mind in that one, side-long glance.
The
swing of Vidal’s figure was as graceful as the downward curve of the
crescent-shaped scythe. How stubborn, this younger brother of his, how
hard-headed, fumed Fabian as he felled stalk after stalk. It is because
he knows how very good-looking he is, how he is so much run-after by all
the women in town. The obstinate, young fool! With his queer dreams,
his strange adorations, his wistfulness for a life not of these fields,
not of their quiet, colorless women and the dullness of long nights of
unbroken silence and sleep. But he would bend… he must bend… one of
these days.
Vidal
stopped in his work to wipe off the heavy sweat from his brow. He
wondered how his brother could work that fast all day without pausing to
rest, without slowing in the rapidity of his strokes. But that was the
reason the master would not let him go; he could harvest a field in a
morning that would require three men to finish in a day. He had always
been afraid of this older brother of his; there was something terrible
in the way he determined things, how he always brought them to pass,
how he disregarded the soft and the beautiful in his life and sometimes
how he crushed, trampled people, things he wanted destroyed. There were
flowers, insects, birds of boyhood memories, what Fabian had done to
them. There was Tinay… she did not truly like him, but her widowed
mother had some lands… he won and married Tinay.
I
wonder what can touch him. Vidal thought of miracles, perhaps a vision,
a woman… But no… he would overpower them…he was so strong with those
arms of steel, those huge arms of his that could throttle a spirited
horse into obedience.
“Harvest
time is almost ended, Vidal.” (I must be strong also, the other
prayed). “Soon the planting season will be on us and we shall have need
of many carabaos. Milia’s father has five. You have but to ask her and
Milia will accept you any time. Why do you delay…”
He
stopped in surprise for his brother had sprung up so suddenly and from
the look on his face it was as if a shining glory was smiling shyly,
tremulously in that adoring way of his that called forth all the
boyishness of his nature—There was the slow crunch, crunch of footsteps
on dried soil and Fabian sensed the presence of people behind him. Vidal
had taken off his wide, buri hat and was twisting and untwisting it
nervously.
“Ah,
it is my model! How are you, Vidal?” It was a voice too deep and
throaty for a woman but beneath it one could detect a gentle, smooth
nuance, soft as silk. It affected Fabian very queerly, he could feel his
muscles tensing as he waited for her to speak again. But he did not
stop in work nor turn to look at her.
She
was talking to Vidal about things he had no idea of. He could not
understand why the sound of her voice filled him with this resentment
that was increasing with every passing minute. She was so near him that
when she gestured, perhaps as she spoke, the silken folds of her dress
brushed against him slightly, and her perfume, a very subtle fragrance,
was cool and scented in the air about him.
“From now on he must work for me every morning, possibly all day.”
“Very well. Everything as you please.” So it was the master who was with her.
“He
is your brother, you say, Vidal? Oh, your elder brother.” The curiosity
in her voice must be in her eyes. “He has very splendid arms.”
Then Fabian turned to look at her.
He
had never seen anyone like her. She was tall, with a regal unconscious
assurance in her figure that she carried so well, and pale as though she
had just recovered from a recent illness. She was not exactly very
young nor very beautiful. But there was something disquieting and
haunting in the unsymmetry of her features, in the queer reflection of
the dark blue-blackness of her hair, in her eyes, in that mole just
above her nether lips, that tinged her whole face with a strange
loveliness. For, yes, she was indeed beautiful. One discovered it after
a second, careful glance. Then the whole plan of the brow and lip and
eye was revealed; one realized that her pallor was the ivory-white of
rice grain just husked, that the sinuous folds of silken lines were but
the undertones of the grace that flowed from her as she walked away from
you.
The
blood rushed hot to his very eyes and ears as he met her grave,
searching look that swept him from head to foot. She approached him and
examined his hot, moist arms critically.
“How splendid! How splendid!” she kept on murmuring.
Then “Thank you,” and taking and leaning on the arm of the master she walked slowly away.
The
two brothers returned to their work but to the very end of the day did
not exchange a word. Once Vidal attempted to whistle but gave it up
after a few bars. When sundown came they stopped harvesting and started
on their way home. They walked with difficulty on the dried rice paddies
till they reached the end of the rice fields.
The
stiffness, the peace of the twilit landscape was maddening to Fabian.
It augmented the spell of that woman that was still over him. It was
queer how he kept on thinking about her, on remembering the scent of her
perfume, the brush of her dress against him and the look of her eyes on
his arms. If he had been in bed he would be tossing painfully,
feverishly. Why was her face always before him as though it were always
focused somewhere in the distance and he was forever walking up to it?
A
large moth with mottled, highly colored wings fluttered blindly against
the bough, its long, feathery antennae quivering sensitively in the
air. Vidal paused to pick it up, but before he could do so his brother
had hit it with the bundle of palay stalks he carried. The moth fell to
the ground, a mass of broken wings, of fluttering wing-dust.
After they had walked a distance, Vidal asked, “Why are you that way?”
“What is my way?”
“That—that way of destroying things that are beautiful like moths… like…”
“If the dust from the wings of a moth should get into your eyes, you would be blind.”
“That is not the reason.”
“Things that are beautiful have a way of hurting. I destroy it when I feel a hurt.”
To
avoid the painful silence that would surely ensue Vidal talked on
whatever subject entered his mind. But gradually, slowly the topics
converged into one. He found himself talking about the woman who came to
them this afternoon in the fields. She was a relative of the master. A
cousin, I think. They call her Miss Francia. But I know she has a
lovely, hidden name… like her beauty. She is convalescing from a very
serious illness she has had and to pass the time she makes men out of
clay, of stone. Sometimes she uses her fingers, sometimes a chisel.
One
day Vidal came into the house with a message for the master. She saw
him. He was just the model for a figure she was working on; she had
asked him to pose for her.
“Brother,
her loveliness is one I cannot understand. When one talks to her
forever so long in the patio, many dreams, many desires come to me. I am
lost… I am glad to be lost.”
It
was merciful the darkness was up on the fields. Fabian could not see
his brother’s face. But it was cruel that the darkness was heavy and
without end except where it reached the little, faint star. For in the
deep darkness, he saw her face clearly and understood his brother.
On
the batalan of his home, two tall clay jars were full of water. He
emptied one on his feet, he cooled his warm face and bathed his arms in
the other. The light from the kerosene lamp within came in wisps into
thebatalan. In the meager light he looked at his arms to discover where
their splendor lay. He rubbed them with a large, smooth pebble till they
glowed warm and rich brown. Gently he felt his own muscles, the
strength, the power beneath. His wife was crooning to the baby inside.
He started guiltily and entered the house.
Supper
was already set on the table. Tinay would not eat; she could not leave
the baby, she said. She was a small, nervous woman still with the
lingering prettiness of her youth. She was rocking a baby in a swing
made of a blanket tied at both ends to ropes hanging from the ceiling.
Trining, his other child, a girl of four, was in a corner
playing siklotsolemnly all by herself.
Everything
seemed a dream, a large spreading dream. This little room with all the
people inside, faces, faces in a dream. That woman in the fields, this
afternoon, a colored, past dream by now. But the unrest, the fever she
had left behind… was still on him. He turned almost savagely on his
brother and spoke to break these two grotesque, dream bubbles of his
life. “When I was your age, Vidal, I was already married. It is high
time you should be settling down. There is Milia.”
“I
have no desire to marry her nor anybody else. Just—just—for five
carabaos.” There! He had spoken out at last. What a relief it was. But
he did not like the way his brother pursed his lips tightly That boded
not defeat. Vidal rose, stretching himself luxuriously. On the door of
the silidwhere he slept he paused to watch his little niece. As she
threw a pebble into the air he caught it and would not give it up. She
pinched, bit, shook his pants furiously while he laughed in great
amusement.
“What
a very pretty woman Trining is going to be. Look at her skin; white as
rice grains just husked; and her nose, what a high bridge. Ah, she is
going to be a proud lady… and what deep, dark eyes. Let me see, let me
see. Why, you have a little mole on your lips. That means you are very
talkative.”
“You
will wake up the baby. Vidal! Vidal!” Tinay rocked the child almost
despairingly. But the young man would not have stopped his teasing if
Fabian had not called Trining to his side.
“Why does she not braid her hair?” he asked his wife.
“Oh, but she is so pretty with her curls free that way about her head.”
“We shall have to trim her head. I will do it before going out to work tomorrow.”
Vidal
bit his lips in anger. Sometimes… well, it was not his child anyway. He
retired to his room and fell in a deep sleep unbroken till after dawn
when the sobs of a child awakened him. Peering between the bamboo slats
of the floor he could see dark curls falling from a child’s head to the
ground.
He
avoided his brother from that morning. For one thing he did not want
repetitions of the carabao question with Milia to boot. For another
there was the glorious world and new life opened to him by his work in
the master’s house. The glamour, the enchantment of hour after hour
spent on the shadow-flecked ylang-ylang scented patio where she molded,
shaped, reshaped many kinds of men, who all had his face from the clay
she worked on.
In
the evening after supper he stood by the window and told the tale of
that day to a very quiet group. And he brought that look, that was more
than a gleam of a voice made weak by strong, deep emotions.
His
brother saw and understood. Fury was a high flame in his heart… If that
look, that quiver of voice had been a moth, a curl on the dark head of
his daughter… Now more than ever he was determined to have Milia in his
home as his brother’s wife… that would come to pass. Someday, that look,
that quiver would become a moth in his hands, a frail, helpless moth.
When
Vidal, one night, broke out the news Fabian knew he had to act at once.
Miss Francia would leave within two days; she wanted Vidal to go to the
city with her, where she would finish the figures she was working on.
“She
will pay me more than I can earn here, and help me get a position
there. And shall always be near her. Oh, I am going! I am going!”
“And live the life of a—a servant?”
“What of that? I shall be near her always.”
“Why do you wish to be near her?”
“Why? Why? Oh, my God! Why?”
That
sentence rang and resounded and vibrated in Fabian’s ears during the
days that followed. He had seen her closely only once and only glimpses
thereafter. But the song of loveliness had haunted his life thereafter.
If by a magic transfusing he, Fabian, could be Vidal and… and… how one’s
thoughts can make one forget of the world. There she was at work on a
figure that represented a reaper who had paused to wipe off the heavy
sweat from his brow. It was Vidal in stone.
Again—as
it ever would be—the disquieting nature of her loveliness was on him so
that all his body tensed and flexed as he gathered in at a glance all
the marvel of her beauty.
She smiled graciously at him while he made known himself; he did not expect she would remember him.
“Ah, the man with the splendid arms.”
“I am the brother of Vidal.” He had not forgotten to roll up his sleeves.
He
did not know how he worded his thoughts, but he succeeded in making her
understand that Vidal could not possibly go with her, that he had to
stay behind in the fields.
There
was an amusement rippling beneath her tones. “To marry the girl whose
father has five carabaos. You see, Vidal told me about it.”
He flushed again a painful brick-red; even to his eyes he felt the hot blood flow.
“That
is the only reason to cover up something that would not be known. My
brother has wronged this girl. There will be a child.”
She said nothing, but the look in her face protested against what she had heard. It said, it was not so.
But
she merely answered, “I understand. He shall not go with me.” She
called a servant, gave him a twenty-peso bill and some instruction.
“Vidal, is he at your house?” The brother on the patio nodded.
Now
they were alone again. After this afternoon he would never see her, she
would never know. But what had she to know? A pang without a voice, a
dream without a plan… how could they be understood in words.
“Your brother should never know you have told me the real reason why he should not go with me. It would hurt him, I know.
“I
have to finish this statue before I leave. The arms are still
incomplete—would it be too much to ask you to pose for just a little
while?”
While
she smoothed the clay, patted it and molded the vein, muscle, arm,
stole the firmness, the strength, of his arms to give to this lifeless
statue, it seemed as if life left him, left his arms that were being
copied. She was lost in her work and noticed neither the twilight
stealing into the patio nor the silence brooding over them.
Wrapped
in that silver-grey dusk of early night and silence she appeared in her
true light to the man who watched her every movement. She was one he
had glimpsed and crushed all his life, the shining glory in moth and
flower and eyes he had never understood because it hurt with its
unearthly radiance.
If
he could have the whole of her in the cup of his hands, drink of her
strange loveliness, forgetful of this unrest he called life, if… but
his arms had already found their duplicate in the white clay beyond…
When
Fabian returned Vidal was at the batalan brooding over a crumpled
twenty-peso bill in his hands. The haggard tired look in his young eyes
was as grey as the skies above.
He
was speaking to Tinay jokingly. “Soon all your sampaguitas and camias
will be gone, my dear sister-in-law because I shall be seeing Milia
every night… and her father.” He watched Fabian cleansing his face and
arms and later wondered why it took his brother that long to wash his
arms, why he was rubbing them as hard as that…
TIT FOR TAT
by H.O. Santos
I
cussed her out for making changes after changes, "Get your goddamn
brochure now before you change your mind again--I'm not making any more
revisions." I left the material outside my front door for her to pick
up. I didn't want to see her 'cause I knew she was equally good at
cussing me out. Later, as I was going out I noticed the envelope was
gone. In its place were two bottles of oenophile-grade Chardonnay and a
note that said, "Thank you for your help, I really appreciate it. I love
you."
KATOL
by Anonymous
As the twisting smoke
from a mosquito coil
gives up its shape
so it can rise,
I threw away my spear
and put on shoes
to join my world
of gray faces.
In time, a formless
haze filled both
my room and my world
and they became one.
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