Authors: David Bergen
Ãso
didn't hear the couple leave, but she thought they had moved on because now all she heard was the surf, which sounded
like a wind that was starting up and then subsiding and then starting up again.
T
HEY
ate breakfast at a comedor on the beachâscrambled eggs and tortillas and fresh pineapple and refried beans. He had slept well. And you? he asked. She said that she had been very hot and the air had been stuffy and there had been people walking loudly past their window. And a couple arguing about shoes. She told him what had transpired. She wanted it to sound interesting, or even a little bit funny, but he found it neither interesting nor funny, and when she had finished the story he asked if the shoes were in the sand by their bungalow. Did he leave them there? he asked.
I never looked, she said.
That is what would finish the story, he said. If they were lying in the sand.
I don't think so, she said. Why does the story have to be finished?
Because if it isn't finished, it isn't a story.
It might be finished in a different way, she said. The man might have thrown the shoes into the water.
Or the woman might have.
This thought was surprising to her, but it didn't seem surprising to him. She looked at his eyes, but he was busy eating. They saw the world in different ways. For him, life was like a story that had answers, or a conclusion that made sense. For her, the story was sinuous and unclear, and if there was happiness to be had, it might arrive unannounced, or it might land in the arms of another person.
Later, they found themselves on the beach, and he touched her, and talked to her, and throughout all his close attention she felt as if she were floating above the scene, looking down on the man and the girl on the beach. She was very quiet and he asked if she was okay and she said that she was tired. She hadn't slept well. At noon they packed and climbed on the motorcycle and rode the five hours back towards the village. Ascending the hills, she was relieved to be leaving the humidity and heat behind her. She'd been lonely in Monterico. Perhaps it was because of the little flies that attacked during the hottest part of the day. Or the mosquitoes. Or the tourists. On the back of the motorcycle, holding him, she still felt very much alone.
S
HE
sometimes chided him for driving too fast. Behind him on the motorcycle, she would grip his waist and shout at him to slow down, and he always did. When he was with her. She knew that when he was alone, riding the back roads or taking the coastal route to the city, he rode even faster, and often without a helmet. He loved the wind and the danger. He said that it made him feel alive.
Tuesday of that week, after a long ride alone into the hills, he was returning at dusk, his hair blowing free, and just as he came up out of San Lucas, before the long climb, he hit a child. The child was chasing a dog that had run out onto the road and Eric hit the dog first and his motorcycle went out from under him and he flew off and his body hit the child, killing the child instantly. Eric was not wearing a helmet, and though the body of the child broke his
fall, he still hit the road heavily, first his shoulder, which broke, and then his head, which gave off the sound of a soft thud, a simple sound, but important. Momentum carried him into the concrete culvert beside the road.
The boy who had been killed came from a family whose father picked coffee at a nearby finca and went into the hills on the weekends to gather wood to sell as fuel in San Lucas. The boy was five years old, the youngest of ten children. His name was Juan. The father was eating supper in his small house when word came that Juan had been hit by a motorcycle and was lying in the road. The driver of the motorcycle was also in the road. They were both dead.
When the father arrived at the scene, he picked up his son and cradled him, and kissed his forehead and his face and he called out for him to breathe. But the boy was limp and lifeless. The father carried him to the side of the road and placed him in the dirt beneath a shrub. Someone brought a blanket and laid it over the boy. A voice called out that the driver of the motorcycle was alive. By now, a crowd had gathered. The father of the dead boy found the motorcycle driver sitting up at the edge of the road, calling out, Soy m
é
dico, soy
médico. He
's a doctor, someone shouted. The father took the doctor's hair in his hands and pulled him to his feet. He cursed at him. He called for a rope. A few minutes later a young man appeared with a rope and handed it to the father. The father looped the rope around Doctor Mann's neck and tied it tight. He dragged him towards a nearby eucalyptus tree that had a branch that was solid and perfectly parallel to the ground. By now others in the crowd were chanting and calling out. Some were
kicking at Doctor Mann's body, at his arms, and when they found the mark, especially his broken shoulder, he whimpered. His pants were pulled down. There was laughter. The doctor said, Soy americano, and then he said, Estados Unidos. For a moment the crowd paused, but it made little difference that this man was an American. He had recklessly killed a child of theirs, and so they converged on him once again.
They would have lynched him if the pastor of the evangelical church in San Pedro, Carlos Iclash, who was also the owner of the small coffee finca where the dead boy's father worked, hadn't been passing by on a return trip from the city. The road was blocked as Señor Iclash approached the scene. Carlos stopped his pickup and rolled down his window and asked a young girl what was happening. Linchamiento, the girl said. Un americano. Carlos carried a pistol. Because he believed it was necessary. He took the pistol from his bag and got out of the pickup and approached the rabble. The people were very excited, like children at a circus. He pushed his way into the crowd. He fired a shot in the air. The crowd halted and then set to again. He pushed through to the inner circle and walked over to the father of the dead boy. The man was pulling at the rope, which he'd strung over the branch of the eucalyptus. He was hoisting the American by the neck, and the American's legs were kicking at the air. Carlos held the pistol to the father's head and told him to release the man.
He killed my son, the father said.
Release him, Carlos said. This isn't for you to decide. There will be proper justice.
The father looked Carlos in the eyes and said that he would release the man, but only because Carlos Iclash had promised justice. And he lowered the body of the doctor. Carlos called out to the crowd to go home. The mob, grumpy and disappointed, mumbled and then slowly dispersed. Carlos bent to inspect the doctor. The doctor was unconscious. He removed the noose. He pulled up the doctor's pants. He asked for help to carry the body to his pickup. No one offered him help. He stooped and picked up the doctor. It was difficult, and he dropped him twice before he managed to hoist him over his shoulder. He walked back to the pickup and laid him in the bed of the truck. Carlos climbed back into his pickup and drove to the clinic at Ixchel, where he knew there were qualified doctors.
Ã
SO
heard the following morning that Doctor Mann had been driven to the city, and that he was in surgery at one of the private clinics there. Her manager told her the details of the accident, and of the attack. She worked that day, but her heart was elsewhere. At noon she sat in the
garden and she put her face in her hands, making certain that no one saw her. She knew nothing about Eric's condition.
The following morning when she arrived at work, she asked after the doctor. Her relationship with him was seen as friendly. It was not known how deeply she cared for him. And he for her. And so she had to pretend that she was simply concerned because he was popular, and they were friends. The news was that he had
suffered a broken clavicle and he had some swelling on the brain. He would be okay. She was amazed at her relief. At the end of the day she found Illya, and Illya, who had heard about the accident, hugged her, and it was then that Ãso cried and cried as Illya spoke softly into her ear.
What will happen? Ãso asked.
He will live, Illya said. Don't worry.
Poor Eric, she said.
The following morning she arrived early at work and asked again after the doctor. She was told that the doctor's wife had been contacted, and that she might arrive soon. Or she would come later. In any case, it was clear that the doctor's wife would be making an appearance. When she told Illya, Illya said that she should go to see him as soon as possible. The next day was Friday, and even though there was work, she should go. Illya said she would tell the director that Ãso was not well. She hugged
Ãso
again, and said, You must.
And so on Friday morning, she went with her mother to visit Doctor Mann. They rode the boat across the lake in the early morning and took a bus up to Sololá and transferred to another bus that would take them into the city. It took a long time to reach the main highway, and after many stops they turned onto the Panamericana. She held her mother's hand and they looked out at the fields and as they ascended the highlands a mist enveloped them and it began to rain and the world disappeared.
The doctor was in a private hospital that resembled an expensive hotel. It was silent and spotless and there was no poverty to be
seen on the faces of those who whispered through the halls. The floors were of hardwood and ceramic, and the chairs in the waiting room were of leather. Her mother sat in one of these chairs while she made inquiries at the front desk. Ãso would be allowed to see the doctor for ten minutes.
A nurse guided
Ãso
to the elevator and then took her to the third floor. The nurse was young and she had a strong jaw and she didn't say much to Ãso except to state that Doctor Mann was known here. He is very fortunate, she said.
Will he live? Ãso asked.
The nurse looked at her as if she were crazy. Of course, she said. Then she said that Doctor Mann did not like to be touched. It upset him. Ãso nodded. She could not imagine Eric not wanting to be touched.
He was sitting up in bed. The nurse went in first and told him that he had a visitor and announced her as Ãso. His face, when he saw her, registered no surprise or curiosity, and it was as if she were a stranger. She went to him and told him again that she was Ãso. He repeated her name several times, as if it were a game. The nurse remained in the room, but this did not stop
Ãso
from standing near his bed and saying his name. His neck was bruised and she put her hand near his throat and asked if it hurt. He shook his head. She was crying. And then she said that all was good, wasn't it? You're alive, she said.
Look at you, she said. Your hair.
It had been cut. He looked like a young boy. Smaller and more vulnerable. His arm was in a sling.
She had many questions, but she didn't ask them, because the nurse was present and because he couldn't move past her name, which he said again and again, as if it were something new that he had just learned.
And she said his name, Eric, over and over. And their ten minutes was wasted speaking each other's name, and saying nothing of importance. And not touching. When the nurse said that
Ãso's
time was up, that the patient needed to rest, Doctor Mann seemed confused. His eyes looked tired. She wanted to ask the surgeon in charge if Doctor Mann would be okayâshe didn't trust the nurseâbut she couldn't locate anyone who might give her a clear answer, and so she and her mother left the hospital and returned to the village.
When she went back alone to the hospital the following weekend, his wife was there, and when she saw the wife she knew that everything was over. The doctor's wife was feeding him pur
é
ed apples from a small bowl, lifting a spoon to his mouth, whispering something that
Ãso
could not understand. He looked even more like a child. He ate slowly. When the doctor's wife saw Ãso, she stood and went to her and hugged her, holding her tightly, and then she stepped back and said, I'm taking him home.
Ãso didn
't say anything.
She sat beside the doctor's wife and held her hand while the doctor held his wife's hand, and so in some distant way there was a connection. The doctor's wife told her husband that Ãso, her keeper, had come for a visit.
Hello, Ãso, Eric said.
Hello, Eric.
He looked at her, and then he looked at his wife, who reached out to wipe saliva from his bottom lip.
Ãso freed her hand, but the
doctor's wife didn't seem to notice.
He'll have to have rehabilitation, she said. He has trouble walking. And he's suffered trauma to the brain. He can't remember anything about the accident. At first he didn't even know my name. What a terrible story, she said. What a godforsaken place. They want to press charges or something horrible. But we have a lawyer and the lawyer says that the sooner he goes home, the better chance we have of no charges being laid. And so we'll go home. She leaned towards the doctor and whispered, Isn't that right, Eric?
Ãso watched all this with horror.
When will you take him? Ãso asked.
As soon as possible. He'll be ready to fly next week.
Is that what he wants? Ãso asked. It was a bold question, but she needed to ask it.
What he wants is impossible to say. He can't make decisions right now. He needs proper care.
Ãso had no words left. She rose, and then she walked around behind the
doctor's wife and approached the bed and she leaned over Doctor Mann and she looked into his eyes. Goodbye, Eric, she said. And she kissed him on the mouth. His face was blank.
Ãso stepped back. She walked
past Susan, who was standing now, her head tilted, her eyes surprised. Ãso walked past her and out of the room. She left the hospital and stepped into the street and walked for a long time until she came to a small park, where
she found a bench. She sat down. She folded her hands in her lap. The sun fell onto her head. It was very warm. She removed her jacket and laid it across her lap. She folded her hands again. And she wept.