08 Mar 2008 06:39:57 | Bill Dollar
HAVANA,May 20 (www.cubanet.org) - Cuban
authorities have implemented strict security measures at the
embarkation points for the small ferries crossing Havana
bay.Now, before boarding, all passengers must go through a metal
detector. Newly posted signs warn passengers they can't carry
furniture or birthday cakes...
You know how it is on a stormy night when you take the ferry
across Havana Bay and you smell the fear of the passengers as
the waves call you to your death and the drunken ferry captain
almost falls overboard three times before the rope to the
harbour wall has been cast off. The captain is drunk again, I
said to my brother Ramon.
Not on his salary, Ramon said, He is dizzy with the danger.
Yes that is how it is , I said. But this danger that makes him
dizzy does not affect us. It is not that kind of danger, Ramon
said.
And so we stood on the deck in the rain, all 65 of us, as the
small ferry made its way across the bay. After a few minutes,
Ramon spoke again: It is the other kind of danger, like when a
young chiquita comes down from the hills and sees the city for
the first time. And she brings with her the smell of ripe
bananas and sweet oranges so that when she walks along the
street, the old men look up from their chess board and sigh: Aiy
bananas, while the young men straighten their trousers and moan:
Aiy Chiquita. That is how it is. So we stood on the rain-lashed
deck and prayed to God to keep a firm grip on the captain's
cojones for as long as it took. Five more minutes passed and
Ramon leaned close to me and whispered : La fiesta no es para
los feos. It was the signal to do what we must do and I moved
through the people to get closer to the captain's position near
the front. Yes it is true I thought: this party is not for the
ugly ones, but an ugly one may still start his own party. Did
not Fidelissimo show us how? When I got close to the captain, I
saw it in his eyes that he still had the madness upon him. I
tapped him on the shoulder and when he turned around, I pulled
out the armchair from where I had hidden it in my shirt pocket
and pointed it at his chest. La fiesta es perdido I said. E mas
perdido. I could see from the look that came into his eyes that
he had once been a good man. One of the good ones, maybe even
one of the best, but tonight he stared at the armchair pointing
at him and he knew that death had joined the passengers without
paying a single peso. Verdad.
The captain, although he had once been one of the good ones gave
a loud belch like an elephant getting up from a mud hole and the
cloud of tobacco,tequila and three-bean stew caused the
passengers to stumble back towards the stern of the ferry.
Que pasa? said the captain like a man waking in a gutter who
feels a hand in his trouser pocket that is not his own hand. I
held the armchair against his temple, and if you were not there
you can never know the shiver of fear that wracked his wobbling
frame. I made my voice the sound of the grave. Ramon, give me
the thing, I called and he was at my side like the wind. In his
hands he carried the thing that had kept us alive for the last
five years. The thing that we had traded our mule, two machetes
and a hundred bananas for. The thing we had to have, in the way
that an old and rich man looks at a young chica in her Sunday
dress and becomes an old fool for the rest of his life. Such was
the nature of this thing that we had treasured.
With infinite care, Ramon peeled back the corners of the oil
cloth that wrapped it, and when the light of the moon caught the
shine of it, even the captain drew a quick breath.
While I held the armchair steady on the captain, Ramon leaned
over and placed the thing that we had brought on the shelf in
front of the steering wheel. I stepped back and held the
armchair at my side: Mi Capitan, I said in a firm voice while
the other passengers crowded round,..You will take us to this
thing you see before you. You will not stop until you reach it.
And when we are there, we will sit around a table, you and I,
and drink the best rum with real cocacola and speak of the past
and the future, as men do who have looked at their feet for a
long time but now choose to look at the stars. The captain
looked at me for a long time. I knew you were the one, he said,
you have a light that shines above your head, and also... he
gave a small smile like a man who will not give his cards
away...you have a big armchair... Then he turned to the steering
wheel and took it in both his sun-darkened hands and pushed the
throttle to maximum power while the rest of us stood carefully
and watched the thing on the shelf ahead of him that would guide
all of us to a different day. It was small but Madre Mio it
shone like an angel to guide our way. One of the passengers said
it was named El Statudo de Liberdad...
© Bill Dollar 2005
About Author :
Bill Dollar is a survivor of the record company wars. He
currently lives on a small farm somewhere in the southern
hemisphere, amongst cats,dogs and cobras.He writes songs he
likes, because he's not hearing anything worthwhile on the
radio. Hear what Bill calls music:
http://www.billdollarmusic.com