The
airline stewardess said, "Those of you on the left can look out to see the
statue of the Good Ram that overlooks and protects the city of
Mac.,
who was on the left side of the plane, looked through the plastic window to see
the giant bronze ram standing on a peak. He followed the ram's gaze to see the arced
shoreline of the Buenos Aries harbour and the long island protecting it from
the
"I
wonder who made it," said his seatmate, her voice deepened by its
proximity to his resonating bones.
Mac. slowly turned
his head, instinctively allowing her to back off. "We'll be on the ground
in ten minutes."
He
saw her squirm. "I want to get swimming right away. There's
whales."
"Oh really. I didn't think of bringing my bathing
suit."
"There's
a clothing-optional part to the beach, you know."
Mac. threw a big
white hotel towel down on the white sand and disrobed completely and
unashamedly in his mind.
He
said, "That's not really my thing."
She
briefly looked down at his hands in his lap. "To each
his own, I guess."
Mac. thought of
asking what hotel she was staying in, this young college girl travelling 'I
swear for the last time' with her parents who were in the seats behind and
possibly watching through the gap between the seats.
Sotto
voce he said, "To each his own, yes. What hotel are you staying in?"
"The Green Hotel. What about you?"
"I'm
in the Green Hotel too."
She
raised an eyebrow. "Perhaps I'll run into you somewhere there."
He
crossed his hands and was quiet as the plane banked, descended, and landed.
The
college girl and her parents got up first, breathing anxiously along with the
others who all seemed driven insane by the thought of staying on a cramped
airplane one minute more than they absolutely had to. Mac.
had the chance to calm down a little as the plane
slowly emptied. Soon the family was well out of sight and Mac. chose that moment to stand and hit his head sharply against
the storage compartment.
He
caught up to the college girl and her parents in the terminal where the luggage
was collected. He didn't go over to her to talk to her but he saw her glance at
him twice. He saw them collect their three suitcases and head off, with her
mind undoubtedly on something else, something sandy.
Mac. swimming
naked saw her swim up to him in shallow waters and then she stood up in his
mind.
He
rolled his blue polyester suitcase over to where the shuttle buses left. His
ticket was in order and off the rolled, four people talking in another language
and him not talking in language at all.
At
the desk of the Green Hotel he said to the moustached gentleman wearing the
common suit of hoteliery, "Good afternoon. I
have a reservation of sorts. Here."
The
gentleman looked at the crumpled sheet Mac. held forth.
"Ah, yes sir, you're one of the prize-winners. Some of your fellow
prize-winners are here already."
"Oh yeah? How many, what are they like?"
The
gentleman answered the first question. "I suppose seven or eight or so
have arrived." And ignored the second. "You
are all staying on the same two floors: the top floors." He dinged a bell.
Mac. said, "I
can take my bag up myself, thank-you."
"It
is hotel policy. You are an honoured guest."
"Okay,
okay. So what are these other winners like?"
"They're
all sorts. Young, old, male, female, tall-short
fat-thin." He leaned forward. "We are not to take too much
notice or ask many questions."
"Hmm."
The
bellhop arrived and yanked the suitcase away from Mac. The gentleman tossed the
bellhop a ram-bronze key. "This way, sir."
Going up in the elevator, Mac. asked,
"Have you seen the others?"
"The others? Who are the others?"
"The other prize-winners."
"I
know nothing about any prize-winners, sir."
"You
can tell me."
"I
don't know anything."
The
elevator stopped. The door opened and there stood the college girl with towel
in hand. The bellhop said, "Going up," and the college girl backed
away. She looked at Mac. and said, "Hey! Off to
the beach!" then the elevator door closed.
Mac. wondered how
she had gotten here, settled, out of her clothes, into her swimsuit, then into
her clothes again so quickly. Mac. wondered
if she had a swimsuit.
The
door opened again and the bellhop said, "This way, sir."
Mac. followed the
bellhop to room 1104 and inside.
The
bellhop said, "The directory's over there along with room service
information and so on. I hope you enjoy your stay."
Mac. found some
coins in his pocket. "Oh, here you go."
The
bellhop said, "You can't do that. You're a special guest. Everything is
free."
"But
tipping is something else."
"We
were told not to accept tips from the prize-winners."
"Ah,
so you do know something about the
prize-winners."
The
bellhop put his hand on his hip and said sharply, "Did you really expect
me to tell you anything more? Look, it's all we were told. Look, enjoy your
stay."
And
that was the last Mac. would see of that particular
bellhop.
As
he was unpacking his stuff there came a knock at the
door. Mac. peeped through the
peeper and saw a fat man. He opened the door and the
fat man said, "So you're one of our special little group.
I'm number six. And you are?"
"Mac. I'm number seventeen. What's your real
name?"
The
fat man shook his head. "That doesn't matter in the least. I'm number six
and you're number seventeen and that's all anyone needs to know. Want to go for
a drink?"
"Ah,
I thought I'd go for a swim."
The
fat man shook his head again. "You're not to leave the Green Hotel, at
least for today. Tomorrow the rules might be different. Come on, the bar's
upstairs." Mac. followed
number six down the hall to a metal staircase with newels connected by rope,
all painted yellow. "Seems there's a nautical theme
going on here."
Number
six said, "What'll you see the bar."
Yes,
the bar was indeed nautical. The ceiling was low and dark. Ship wheels were on
the walls and they looked real. The bar itself was decorated with all kinds of
seashells inlaid, and the top surface of it was old oak beams under glass. The
chairs and tables were likewise made of old oak as if scavenged from some caravel's
destruction. Two people were sitting at a table and the bartender was wiping
down a glass. One of the two sitters waved.
Number
six said, "Come meet numbers eight and nineteen."
"Okay,"
said Mac.
Number
six said to numbers eight and nineteen, "This here is number
seventeen."
Eight
and nineteen were women. One was about thirty and the other maybe fifty. They
were both attractive.
Number
six pointed to the one who was about thirty. "This is number eight, and
this"‑to the other‑"is number nineteen."
Mac. said,
"Hello, number eight. Hello, number nineteen."
Number
six asked, "Anyone need some refreshment?"
Mac. patted his
pocket and number six touched his arm. "Everything is on the house. Everything."
"Well
then, I guess I'd like ... scotch."
Number
nineteen said, "I'll take another gin and tonic. They're very sweet."
Number
eight said, "Nothing for me right now, thanks."
Number
six went off to the bar and Mac. sat down, saying,
"Pleased to make your acquaintances."
Number
eight said, "We get the idea."
Mac. ignored this
and continued, "Are we the first ones here? I mean, the guy at the desk
said seven or eight contestants had arrived."
"We
haven't seen 'em," said number nineteen who
appeared a bit drunk.
Late
afternoon light was coming in the windows. The sky was very blue. Number six
came back with a tray and drinks. "For you, and for you,
and for me."
Mac. said,
"So we don't care about names at all, is that right?"
Number
eight said, "Nope. No names are allowed. Didn't you read the rules?"
"Not
entirely, I thought I'd have some time to myself alone first."
"We're
not to talk about any of that."
Number
six said, "Actually, we won't be disqualified for slips we might make.
This isn't Battle Royale. Our heads won't ... blow
off or anything." He laughed.
Mac. said,
"Oh. That's good. Can anyone answer me a question, if the question is
allowed?"
"Give
it a shot."
"Are
we cardinals or ordinals?"
"What
do you mean?"
"Am
I number seventeen, or am I seventeenth? Am I behind you, six and eight, and
ahead of you, nineteen? Or are these numbers just, I don't know, like assigned
lanes in a road race?"
Number
nineteen said, "I don't have the faintest idea. I guess I thought I was nineteenth," and here she preened and fluttered her
lashes, "but really: how could this
be nineteenth?"
Number
six said, "Maybe we'll find out tomorrow. Hard to judge when there's only
four of us here so far."
"If
we didn't know anything about what we were to expect," asked Mac.,
"why did we all come?"
Number
eight said with a shrug, "It's a free trip to Buenos Aries. What's not to
like?"
Mac. finished his
drink and said, "I'm still unpacking my stuff," and got up.
Number
nineteen grabbed his arm. "You can do that later. It's not even five
yet."
Mac. gently pulled
free and said, "I'll catch up with you all here, say in about an hour. I
have to phone someone."
"Who?"
"My cat-sitter. I didn't have the chance to talk to
her."
Mac. found the
elevator and couldn't remember his room number and realized he didn't have his
key anyway. So down to the lobby he went in embarrassment.
Down
and down....
The
door opened at the lobby and there stood the college girl. Her hair was wet.
"Hello!" she said. "The water's great. C'mon, come
swimming with me."
"I
have to get my room key, wherever my room is."
"That
can wait." Did she know her shirt was translucent with moisture? "You
can get a towel down there. They have all sorts of towels down there."
"I'm
not sure about this."
"The
water's really nice. Something to do with the Galapagos."
"It
seems like I have to."
"C'mon."
They
went out of the Green Hotel and across the road and onto the sand. They walked
and talked. She said, "I hear there's a bunch of contest winners in the
hotel."
"Yes,
I'm one of them."
"What
was the contest?"
"I'm
not sure, but I came in seventeenth, or I'm contestant number seventeen, I
don't know which."
"You
came without even knowing what the contest was?"
"Seemed
like a good idea at the time." He was twice her age at least.
"I'd
like to know what happens."
They
came to a sign that read, the English part of it anyway, Proceed at own risk,
no lifeguard, clothing optional.
He
stopped. "Are you sure about this?"
"Don't
be shy."
And Mac. decided not
to be shy.
They
walked in about a hundred yards or so. Mac. was surprised to see so many good-looking naked people. He
wondered how he would measure up. He tried to get himself mentally
half-prepared by the power of imagination.
"Here
we are," said the college girl who quickly pulled off her shirt and undid
her pants. She stopped. "Oh, a towel. Up there,
in that booth." Mac. looked
and saw a booth filled with white towels. He went over to get a towel and when
he returned she was standing naked for every other of the hardbodies
to see.
Mac. shrugged,
threw down his towel, and took off all his clothes. The college girl smiled and
said, "Okay."
He
walked to where the waters rolled onto the sand and kept walking. She was
beside him. The water was cold but it didn't matter. He wondered if he was
precisely twice her age or more than that. He looked at her body. It was more
than that.
After
splashing around for some time and swimming out kind of far he decided it was
time to head in because the sun was low in the sky and he remembered something
about sunburning at dusk, something he'd read
somewhere. As he stood by the towels she lay down on her back. "It's nice
here," she said.
He
said, "Aren't you worried about burning?"
"You
can't get burned at dusk."
"I
heard this is the worst time."
"That's
an old tale, like, from last century. It's not at all true."
Mac. lay down beside
her. He could feel the heat from her. She moved a little, and their bodies were
touching, and he didn't know how or want to move away.
He
said, "I wonder what the other contestants are up to."
She
said, "My, don't you have a one-track mind."
They
were quiet for a while then she said, "I'm getting hungry."
So
they got dressed and returned to the Green Hotel, to the dining room on the
ground floor. They ordered steaks and drinks and he was told it was on the
competition's dime.
"Oh
hey," said someone, and Mac. turned to look and
it was number six. "Are you still in?"
"In what?"
Number
six sighed. "I've been eliminated from the competition."
"Already?"
"Yeah. Damn! But apparently I can stay on to
the end. They're not giving me the old heave-ho or anything."
"How
many were eliminated?"
"Ten.
Were you eliminated?"
"I
don't know. I haven't heard anything. We were swimming."
Number
six looked at the college girl and said, "Howdy."
She
said, "Howdy."
"So
you left the hotel. On your own. Pretty
ballsy. So maybe you're eliminated and just don't know it yet.... But on
the other hand they knew how to easily find me.... Well, I guess we'll just
wait and see."
"I
guess so. I'll see you around."
Number
six smiled at the college girl. "Sorry for interrupting."
"It's
okay," she breezed.
Number
six went away, heading toward the oak bar lit with fuchsia potlights.
Mac. turned back
to the college girl who said, "Maybe you're a finalist! Wouldn't that be
exciting?"
Mac. shrugged.
"I'm hardly thinking about it."
"'Oh,
look at the time,'" she said archly, looking at her wrist. "Would you
like to see my hotel room?"
She
could not have been more obvious. Kids today. "Do
you think your parents would appreciate that?"
She
figured out what he meant and said, "Oh, no, we're not all in the same
room. That'd be like so last century. They're not even in this hotel."
"They're
not?"
"No,
they're off in the Orange Hotel, down the way."
"The Orange Hotel."
"C'mon.
Sign the bill and let's go."
Mac. signed the
bill. As they walked to the elevator he said, "Is this really happening?
Is this really happening, to me?"
She
said, touching his arm lightly, "Nothing has very much happened yet, you
know. And maybe it won't."
The
college girl's hotel room was identical to Mac.'s
hotel room, so far as he could remember what his room looked like. There were
two beds with six fat fluffy pillows on each, and a desk with a lamp, a
balcony, and a bathroom. It was really no different than millions of hotel
rooms all over the world, save that this one had a view of the twilit arc of
the grey
"Never?"
"No.
Just boys."
Dawn's
hot fingers through vertical blinds were clawing the stucco ceiling when Mac. awoke. In just a couple minutes he and the college girl were
up and dressed and back at the restaurant in the Green Hotel for bacon, eggs,
good strong coffee, and toast. They made tentative plans for the afternoon‑perhaps
a bike ride? perhaps a climb up to the Good Ram?‑then
Mac. signed the bill and they went their separate
ways, the college girl off to visit her parents and Mac. to
the front desk to get a key to his room so he could finish the unpacking he
hadn't finished the day before.
Mac. opened the
door to his hotel room. A notice was awaiting him on the floor. He picked it up
and read it. It informed him that at
Remembering
to pocket a key this time out, and still without unpacking conscientiously, in
the hall he found the stairs that led to the bar in which he had the day before
talked with numbers six, eight, and nineteen. He climbed those stairs and found
himself again in the nautical bar. The place was empty and hollow, as if nothing
had ever happened there. He saw double doors off beside the bar so he went to
them and yes they opened and stairs led him up onto the roof.
There
was nothing to see. There were no banners or portents. It even seemed, as one
could have observed, a bit 'dusty.' How was it possible that in a little over
an hour and a half a major contest would be decided?
Having
accomplished this reconnoitre, Mac. went
back to his room to wait for the college girl's return. He realized he wouldn't
be attending the
At
At
She
said, "I know the way."
Mac. said,
"How?"
She
said, "I read the map. We go behind the hotels and a couple blocks that
way (pointing) and we'll see the start of the path. From there I guess it'll be
obvious."
They
walked past the hotel and turned right at the next street to get to the avenue
that ran along the backsides of the hotels. Further along she
pointed out to him the sign reading Good Ram Trail. Mac.
looked up the mountain and saw there were a couple
dozen people switchbacking their ways up, holding
sometimes onto a wise rope barrier. He said, "If I can't make it up‑"
"You'll
make it."
The
path started with a wooden deck with old benches roughly-hewn that turned into
wooden steps going up a couple flights to what appeared to be another deck.
Together they started up the stairs and pretty soon reached the platform. There
was only one bench on that platform and a nice view. From there the path was a
dirt path with the wise rope barrier running alongside.
Mac. didn't think
to count the number of switches but it seemed well over twenty. Once upon a
time he had been afraid of heights but on this trip he was too busy looking up
at the college girl to think about anything much.
Finally
they were at the Good Ram.
"I
can't believe I made it," Mac. said.
"Look
at that view! You can see the roads on the island!"
The
Ram towered over them. Ah, it was made of plaster mixed with rock, painted a
metallic brown. It wasn't bronze after all. They must have sculpted it up
there.
"Do
you think we'll find out: Why a ram?" she asked.
"We
could ask.... Oh look there's a funicular."
They
paid some money and got on the funicular. Down they went in comfort and joy.
Back
at the Green Hotel they went to Mac.'s room. Another
notice had been slipped under his door, this one saying that the grand prize
winner would be announced at
The
college girl looked at it. "Are you expected to go?"
"I
don't know. In any case, that hike wiped me out, I think. I think I need to lie
down."
"I'll
lie down with you."
Forty
minutes later there was a cautious knock at the door. Mac.
pulled on some underwear and toddled quietly over to
the door. Just then the voice‑it was number six‑said,
"Seventeen, are you there? The big contest's a-coming. By deduction we figured
you're one of the finalists. You in there?"
Mac. quietly
toddled back to the bed. They were quiet for a couple minutes.
Mac. whispered,
"I don't think I'll go."
She
whispered, "That's good. I can introduce you to my parents over
dinner."
"Okay."
He looked around the room. "I wonder what happens if I win."
"Do
you get to stay longer? I mean, when do you have to leave?"
"Tomorrow
afternoon. That's when the room's to. But I guess I could stay longer if I
wanted to."
"Move
into my room. I'll give you a key."
"How
long are you planning on
staying?"
"Oh, for another week at the very least. Tomorrow I have my two best friends
coming down. We'll all stay together. My parents are leaving in two days. We'll
stay as long as we can, all four of us. Until the money runs out. We'll push the beds together.
We'll have a great time."
‑‑August
2016
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