Read We Ate the Road Like Vultures Online
Authors: Lynnette Lounsbury
The door swung door swung open and I was pushed into a small and bare office with a hanging light bulb that glazed the room in brilliant yellow and the captain from our arrest was sitting lazily back in a blue plastic chair, one foot resting on the other knee and bouncing slightly in a dangerously ready rhythm. I walked fully into the room, prepared for the worst, to discover he was not alone. There was another chair in the corner, another dangerously taut body, another contender for my soul. Carousel.
I sagged with relief, knowing that no matter his wrath at my hunting him down like a snow leopard, he wouldn't wish me dead or raped or even to sit any longer in a room full of death and shit. I met his eyes for as long as I dared and knew my only role was to keep silent, something I am not good at or particularly fond of but which, I have discovered, when confronted with a lack of basic human rights, is everyone's best option. I had learned in the last hours that the way to
survive the horrors of life was not, as my movie-going, book-reading career has taught me, to smart talk and bravado my way through. It was dumb luck, sure, but it was silence more than anything, acquiescence, humility and, taking-it-smilingly-up-the-arse, that saved people from holocausts and tyrannical regimes and Third World jail cells.
The captain smiled and spoke with his teeth tight and his accent smooth, a cigarette burning in his mouth the entire time and moving only slightly. âThere are many, many things you are learning, Lulu, aren't there?' He waited and nodded with a type of approval at my downturned face. âYes. Learning that there are different ways of doing things. You were stupid. You did not shoot a bank worker or steal thousands of dollars. You did not fire on the police. But you were there. And that is stupid. Many of the most stupid people in the world were justâ¦there. Isn't that right, Mr Carousel?'
I raised my eyes a little at the name, though Carousel said nothing, his face stone.
âYour first time in Mexico and you are put
in jail. For aiding a robbery. A crime in which several people died.'
At that I jerked up my head and he smiled at me. âMr Ruezinger?'
He watched me slowly, his eyes grazing up and down my torn and bloodied clothes, the shit and piss on my shoes. He settled back into his chair and stared sideways at me, a long lean look that smelled and touched and tasted me.
âYou think you are more than just a tiny part of a very big engine, don't you, Lulu? You think it because you are twelve and you think it because you are white. You think that as you wander around the planet everything else simply wafts in and out of your life, everything is here just for you. You don't consider that you are the very small toe on a large body, and you don't think that for a small toe you are an arrogant presumptive and stupidly dangerous one who would be better locked away so the body can keep living.'
It was soft but I said it, I couldn't help it. âThat's a bit harsh. I just got a ride on a truck. That's all. I didn'tâ¦'
âDo not speak.' He was quieter than me when
he said it but he looked at me with such a strength that even my pride was silenced.
âYou have wreaked havoc across the globe. There's a price on your head girl, almost $200,000 for information about your disappearance, you have thrown yourself uninvited into Mr Carousel's lifeâ¦and, yes, I fucking know who he is. I have read more books in my life than you will ever open. Mexico is hot and poorânot stupid. You have walked into a world he has paid well for, a privacy I have always helped him keep and because your face is on every television screen and every police bulletin across the world, you have put that world at risk. I could use $178,000 myself. My town could use it. Perhaps you owe some of that to the bank?'
My face twitched involuntarily when he said the amount and I felt wry amusement. My fucking parents. I shook my head and smirked.
âYou think this is a funny story do you, Lulu?'
I almost spoke but caught myself and waited till he waved me permission.
âMy parents put up the money, didn't they? They aren't worried about me. They aren't even
searching for me. They're just pissed that I left and want to get back at me.'
He seemed unimpressed and shrugged.
âThe money. It's my money. It's the exact amount of money in my investment account. From my cattle. They think I'll come home if my money is at risk. Bastards.'
Carousel smiled and the captain frowned and looked at me through reptile eyes. âYou have that much money? How is it they can give it away if it is your money?'
âI breed cattle. And when you are
twelve
you have to have a parent's signature to invest money.' I looked at him smugly for a moment, remembered who I was speaking to, and put my head back down. A thick knot of hair hung in my eyeline with a burr that tangled up and around most of the right half of my head, and I had a strange feeling that I would never brush my long hair again. My hair hadn't been cut in five years and was the only part of my appearance that I spent any time on at all, by that I mean I washed it and conditioned it and brushed it every day, something that took about thirty minutes of my
time and used up everything I could emotionally allocate to my body without being disgusted with myself. I knew my hair was fucked.
âPerhaps you deserve to lose your money.' He smiled at me again, that horrible tiny slit.
âI'll make more.'
âWhoring yourself in my jail?' Same smile.
âSomehow.'
Carousel coughed, either a signal to me to shut the hell up or remind the captain of some previous conversation, cos he watched me only a moment longer then sat up.
âYou are too much of a bother for me, Lulu âI don't need you in my jail to be found one day by the American press. And Carousel has offered me his own bounty on your head, which happens to be more generous that your little trust fund anyway. So you are free to get the fuck out of my jail, town and country in the next two days, or I will shoot you in the back of the head and throw you to the coyotes.' He stood up and left the room. I turned immediately to Carousel.
âAdolf?'
âLocal doctor took him in, they may have to fly him to Tijuana yet. Internal injuries, mostly unconscious. Let's get out of here before the captain changes his mind and shoots both of us.'
âYou gave him that much money?'
He smiled broadly. âI pay him almost that every year to keep my home âsafe'. He's Mexican. The rest of the world doesn't intimidate him, it barely interests him. He's the biggest shot in this part of the world and now he's one of the richest. He can afford his desert philosophy and angst. He probably pocketed most of that bank heist as well.'
Carousel led me by the arm through several identical corridors until we reached a final iron door and stepped out into the heat and dust and eye-roasting freedom. A beat-up yellow cab waited for us.
âOnly cab in a thousand miles. He charges like a motherfucker.' Carousel opened the door for me, slid in beside me and promptly fell asleep against the window, sun filling his wrinkles with gold and turning his hair into a wispy halo. I
leaned against his shoulder and fell asleep myself, happy to be shit-covered, bruised, virginal and free.
6
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There ain't no road trip without a car that loves the road.
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I
DIDN'T WAKE UP FOR LONGER THAN IT TOOK
to stumble into the hacienda, swallow whatever pills a concerned Chicco thrust into my hands, and fall onto my filthy face into the huge bed. A second before I slept I noticed that someone had made it up with fresh sheets and I felt a moment of self-condemnation that I had ground such a variety of human effluence into their crispness. Then I slept. And slept for what must have been days of my life cos when I woke it was exactly the same time of day that I had fallen asleep, the bright holy glare of mid-morningâand yet, when I looked in the gilt-edged mirror that hung by the door, I was thirty years old, dirt in my sun wrinkles making them seem deeper than the shit I had just managed to crawl out of.
I wobbled to the bathroom, making myself queasy with my own stench, and ran into Chicco on the way. He swore at me good-naturedly and gripped my shoulder with his gnarled hand. âFuck me. You smell like the arse end of the devil.' He held it a long while and smiled a mysterious smile, concern on his forehead, then he let go and walked past me, hobbling down the dimly lit hallway.
I filled up the tub in the corner and poured in some bottled miracle for rheumatic joints that I discovered in the pharmaceutical cabinet, and sank into the water. I lay down until water flooded my ears, and thought. It was one of those times when I was so struck by the feeling of my own pointlessness that I felt nauseous. I'm sure it happens to everyone, but I've noticed it the most when I am doing nothing, when exciting and dangerous and important goings-on are finished and the next business hasn't started yet. I am still. I feel small and plastic. Perhaps the magnitude of the importance of the day before in my life's timeline of events was such a peak that the moment in the bath was a great trough.
Either way, I felt sick with my smallness, lumps of it sticking in my throat. I couldn't think of a really good plan from here. I had never thought much past finding Jack, imagining that everything would fall into place once I had discovered something important. I wondered if great discoverers had felt thisââ
Oh, look, that land mass on the horizonâI'll call that America. Now what?
' â
Dear Diary, have split the atom, feel small, sad and useless
.'
Not knowing things drove me mad, like itchy mad, until I would get up in the middle of the night and search for answers on the internet so I could finally sleep. It's why my father got internet way out on our property in the first place. To stop me riding the quad bike into town and using the kiosk that sat in an over-lit corner of the service station, the only place within twenty kilometres that was open all night. I had wondered for two years if Jack Kerouac was still writing, I read everything of his I could get my hands on, researched his life, read reviews and essays and biographies and, when I still couldn't sleep, hiked clear to Mexico looking for him. Now I knew. And now I knew nothing.
I sank my head under the water and held my breath as long as I could. I thought about the last bus I had caught before the Mexican border and how I had sat with so many people with nothing interesting to say. I talked a bit to everyone who sat by me. I like to talk and I like to listen to stories even more, and there were so few people with anything to tell, which felt disappointing. I had imagined everyone on the road could tell a story. Some only spoke Spanish, so their stories were lost to me, and some didn't want to talk, but most were going somewhere to see a relative or take a holiday and had no more to say than that. They wanted some cheap drugs, cosmetics and warm weather.
About ten hours into my trip I was sitting by myself when a woman got onto the bus, a bus mainly occupied by sweaty Mexican men, so I was her obvious choice and she took it bringing an expensive and spanking new backpack with her which seemed out of place next to her blue lounge suit. It was a bright sky-coloured soft suit in what looked like fine wool and felt like cashmere when she sat next to me. Too warm
for the weather, but very beautiful. She had dark glasses on but when she took them off I could see she was about the same age as my mother, my stepmother anyway, about her mid-forties, but instead of looking young, like most American women her age, she seemed tired and worn with no makeup, no hair dye, nothing to make herself attractive except the blue suit.
I said âHello' and she nodded but didn't talk for a long time, hugging the backpack to her chest and staring past me out the window, so I asked her if she wanted the window and she quickly shook her head. âOh, no. Sorry, I was just looking at the scenery.' The scenery was nothing but dirt and swirls of dead leaves and dust and rabbit bones. But the scenery in her backpack was more riveting cos when she opened her bag to get a bottle of water I saw dozens of rolls of cash in there, a couple of apples, water and more cash. I pulled the top shut. Now I'm a cash traveller myself, but never that much and I know better than to open a bag full of dirty money on a Greyhound bus.
She turned to me quickly.
âYou need to keep that shut. You really do. I'm not the most streetwise person on the planet but that's asking for trouble,' I whispered to her.
She was absolutely stunned, like it was the last thing she had thought about and, on top of whatever problems she already had, I had opened another great can of worms.
âOh. Okay.' She pulled it shut and looked around a little wildly and seeing, for the first time, the crazies that filled the bus. A few of them eyeballed her back until she sank low in her seat and stared at me.
âIf they steal my money, I'm not sure when I can get more. I'd be stuck out here with nothing.' She was quiet, but sinking into that ditch between crying and hand-wringing panic.
âThe bank? There are banks in Mexico, too.' I smiled to ease her worry.
Her brow was tight and her mouth was bitten. âI don't have a bank account, just the cash. I have two hundred thousand, do you think that will be enough to get me started down here?'
She was honestly serious and, even though I waited for a crack in her naivety, waited for her
to smile and let me know she was kidding and knew more about life than that, she didn't.
âIt will be plenty in Mexico but most people down here don't have much money, so I think you should put it somewhere safe for a while, rather than lugging it around in the backpack.' I kept my voice as low as I could. âYou stole the money, didn't you? And now you're fleeing to Mexico.'
She looked so guilty I think she would have written and signed a confession on the spot if I had been a cop, although knowing now what I didn't know then about Mexican law enforcement, I imagine the blue lounge suit would have been enough to throw her in the shit cell for a few days.