Response In the tempest’s wrath I longed for a glimmer of hope in the heat of July I seek the tanned smooth body of the woman and the north wind said find your path in your ancestor’s footsteps lean and reverently lift the marble over their gravesite to feel their warmth and I asked the southwest wind where is my sunshine and it said, it hides in your heart
Now Hakim finds the opportunity to get back to the subject which has been on his mind for the past two days. “Please tell me, my uncle, what you know about Jennifer’s dad and the Admiral? What work, in particular, do they do for the CIA?” Ibrahim looks at him closely, “It is a long story,my son; however, you deserve the truth. I promise we’ll discuss that on our trip to New York; leave it alone for the time being. By the way, let me ask you a question. How do you see your relationship with young Jennifer? How do you see yourself in the next little while with her, or is she just a flirt whom you’ll leave behind when you return home? You know, you may find yourself with a lot more responsibilities than you have in mind so far.” Hakim is unprepared for such a discussion, but Ibrahim is right; he has to make up his mind regarding his relationship with Jennifer, sooner or later. He asks himself the same question sometimes and doesn’t have the answer. He’s not sure where he wants their relationship to go, not yet. “I don’t know, my uncle; I like Jennifer. I like her a lot, but I haven’t thought of anything beyond the present. She’s just a girl I see these days.” “You mean she hasn’t touched you in a special way?” Really, has she touched him in a special way? He wonders. He turns and looks deep into his uncle’s eyes, and the old man who knows life sees in Hakim’s eyes a young man in love. He smiles at him and says, “I see that she has touched you in a lot of different ways, my dear son. That being said, you are a young man, and a young woman will always be welcomed next to you. Whomever you choose to have next to you is going to be my favorite one. Remember, always remember the priority of things and devote the necessary time to each. You will learn as you go. She also has to know how far she can go with her wants, when you need to put extra time into the family business. Women are always welcome in the life of a man, particularly a young man. Our relationships with them are of a certain kind; each of us has his own way of defining that, and each of us learns from his own experience with a woman who we are and what we like in life. But always remember that you give your woman the part of you that belongs to her, and the rest of you belong to you and nobody else.” Hakim appreciates his uncle’s comments and doesn’t hesitate to let him know. “I know, my uncle, I appreciate your advice on everything. Your opinion is always most important to me. That’ll never change, I promise.” “Thank you, my dear son.” Before they part Hakim learns he has to be at the hotel the next morning at about seven, as their flight is at 10:15 a.m. and they have to be at the airport two hours earlier.
Sweat broke out on my nape and forehead. The woman watched me closely, giving me the annoying feeling that she could read my thoughts. Perhaps she was a witch. When a gourd filled with a milky beverage of uncertain origin arrived under my nose, I began to miss my countrymen. Tamanoa held it while the rest awaited my reaction. The children giggled and I smiled, raising one eyebrow at them. I took the gourd out of Tamanoa’s grasp, noticing the quizzical expression in his eyes. “It’s chicha,” he informed me. I sat down on the ground and crossed my legs, minding the Seraphic Rosary so that it rested on the cloth of my cassock stretched between my knees. I raised my eyes to heaven, as much to bless the chicha as to ask for help. Well, Salvador, if you want the dog, you’ll have to accept the fleas, I told myself, and took a gulp. It wasn’t completely unpalatable. Had I known that its fermentation was aided by the spittle of the women who concocted it, I might have been less inclined to drink it. I passed it along, fighting the urge to retch, eyes watering. Mater Dei, please tell me that gourd never covered anyone’s genitals, I prayed. The sight of another male with his foreskin neatly strangled with a cord that went about his hips, his balls—wrinkled and saggy—hanging like a cockerel’s wattles, made me regurgitate the devil-sent chicha. I kept swallowing it back until, able to escape unnoticed, I hid behind a tree and vomited my guts out.
We neared Nueva Segovia de Barquisimeto, a city founded in 1552, along a murky river the Caquetíos Indians had called Variquesemeto long before the Spaniards began renaming everything. Diego de Losada led the way on his magnificent black Andalusian horse, which seemed to share its master’s dreams of greatness. All horses except my Babieca were proud, elegant beasts with thick necks, strong chests and powerful, arched croups. Bred from the first horses to arrive from La Española,