Later that night, as I lay above Luna in our cement bunk beds, she chattered at me in the dark. The first night I thought she was just being nice and talking to me, but now I realized she had to talk to fill the darkness. Her chatter soothed and made me drowsy.
Luna said, Can you believe that there are only twenty-six letters to say everything? There are only twenty-six letters to talk about love and jealousy and God.
Yes.
Have you realized that the words of the day are not the same as the words of the night? Luna asked.
Yes.
In the dark I could hear large trucks and buses drive by the jail. The outside sounds could only be heard early in the morning and late at night.
If you’ve been here for two years, why haven’t you been sentenced or extradited? I asked.
Princess, I never called a lawyer, or the Guatemalan Embassy, or my family. I think everyone has forgotten that I’m here.
I’m sure they miss you.
No. You might ask how can the world forget about a human being, but it happens all the time.
But don’t the people here in the jail wonder?
They assume I’m working on it. No one can imagine that I’d rather be here than anywhere else, but it’s true.
You want to stay here?
Some like it better inside than outside, Luna said. This is the best place I’ve ever been. In my village the government massacred everyone.
In Guatemala?
I lost most of my family in just two years. I walked around thinking a cold bullet was going to pierce my body at any moment. A cold bullet.
The wind that had begun as a breeze during the collage workshop was now strong and the cold air entered the building in great gusts.
I thought going to the United States would be better. I heard all the stories, Luna said.
Some say there’s nothing worse.
I’ve heard people get so thirsty they cut their arms and suck out some blood. This is in the desert. Arizona. I’ve seen cuts on a man who tried to cross but was sent back. A border guard shoots you like a wolf, if you’re lucky. If a cartel kidnaps you, like the Zetas, then you go to the land of dead immigrants, a special death place, without a birth certificate or gravestone, and nothing is worse than this.
The first big drops of rain fell on the roof and the air smelled like a mixture of water and cement.
My father’s in the United States, I said.
Imagine that a gun shooting at you is the last thing you see when you die. Imagine that being the very last image of life that you take to heaven. Do you think that the last thing you see matters?
My father is in New York, I said.
Listen, no way do I want to be buried in a cemetery with all those dead people. I want to be cremated. Do you?
I feel cold.
Yes, it’s cold.
I need some blankets soon or I’m going to get sick.
You can come down here and sleep with me, Luna offered. I don’t mind.
I sat up and scrambled down the side of the bunk bed. Luna lifted up the covers for me.
Get in, she said.
We curled up together and her body warmth entered my skin.
There, there, she said and hugged me with her arm. I felt the ghost limb of her missing arm surround me. Luna used her teeth to clench the top of the covers and pull them up to our chins.
I had known the mercy of scorpions. Now I knew the mercy of a killer.
Aurora’s cell smelled like the fumigation poison. It was a larger cell than mine as it had two bunk beds and four women lived in the room. It also had a toilet, sink, and small shower all lined up in a row at the back of the cell.
Aurora received no help from the outside. She had to take the jobs that no one wanted. She had been the jail fumigator ever since she’d been sentenced over a year ago.
There was no one in the room but Aurora. She was lying down on one of the bottom bunks. She beckoned for me to come in.
I sat on the edge of her bed while she lay under the covers. On her bed, pushed up against the wall, were dozens of plastic supermarket bags and two fumigation canisters and their hoses. Aurora’s eyes followed my gaze.
There’s no storage space in this room, she said. We all have to keep our belongings on our beds.
Aurora’s plastic bags were filled with clothes and objects that prisoners had given to her. In jail there was a superstition that if you took your belongings with you, you would come back. Aurora was a pack rat and accepted everything.
When you leave here, don’t forget to give me your things, she said.
I don’t have anything, I said.
Oh, but you will, you will.
Through the transparent plastic of one bag I could see a collection of hairbrushes and spoons.
Earlier that morning, Luna had told me that no one liked to share a cell with Aurora because of the odor from the fumigation canisters and because she hoarded everything. Luna said that her cellmates would leave the room as soon as they could and go to the patio or the large room where everyone gathered for classes and meals. This meant that Aurora had the cell to herself for the day. She slept most of the time.
Georgia called Aurora Sleeping Beauty, Luna said. She sleeps because she prefers dreams, not because she’s tired. Aurora opens the spout on the fumigation canister and smells the poison, Luna continued. She takes the fumes deep into her body and this makes her sleepy. It’s her sleeping potion.
As I sat on Aurora’s bed, the smell was overpowering. The odor had penetrated her bed, belongings, clothes, and skin. No insect would ever come near her.
Do you have any aspirin? Aurora asked.
In that cluttered jail cell filled with poisonous fumes, I learned that Aurora met Paula at McClane’s ranch.
The day Paula arrived it was McClane’s daughter’s fifteenth birthday party, Aurora said. I was in a tent with the other stolen women. Most of them had been taken when they tried to cross the border into the USA. All these men kept coming in and looking us over. I was already older. This was the third time I had been sold. Paula said she was from outside Acapulco. She was so beautiful.
I nodded. Yes, she was.
I thought of our angry piece of land that once held a real community, but was ruined by the criminal world of drug traffickers and the immigration to the United States. Our angry piece of land was a broken constellation and each little home was ash.
Aurora struggled to breathe. She sat up on her elbows but stayed under the blankets. I perched on the edge of the bed, as there were so many bags and things around her. There was no room. Aurora’s bed was a garbage dump.
A man who was the son of a huge drug lord in Tijuana took me, Aurora explained. Because of this, I did not live on McClane’s ranch, but we would visit often and there were parties. Sometimes I would go to Matamoros or they would come to Tijuana. So, I didn’t see Paula that often, but I saw her. I remember once I went to McClane’s ranch for a birthday party and she had a tattoo that said Cannibal’s Baby on her arm. I’d never seen that before. Of course one of McClane’s nicknames was Cannibal. They called him that because he was always making jokes about eating people, especially women.
Did he really eat people?
He’d say things like, You’re so pretty, I want to eat your arm. I’ll shake some salt on you and roll you up in a tortilla. Things like that. We all knew that when we gave ourselves to these men it was like washing dishes or taking out the garbage.
What do you mean?
It was like being a urinal.
Aurora coughed and reached for a plastic bottle filled with water and took a long drink. When she finished, she offered the bottle to me. I didn’t want to, because she seemed so sick, but I took a sip. I knew I was drinking her spit.
Paula’s tattoo was something new, Aurora continued. I was surprised she had that done, but maybe she just had no choice.
Yes, she had that tattoo, I said. And the cigarette burns.
Those men loved t
attoo parlors and they always went to one in Tijuana. McClane had Saint Death tattooed on his back and the Virgin of Guadalupe on his chest. I never saw Paula again and we never said goodbye.
She made it home. It was not expected.
The rumor was that she’d managed to run away. They said one night she just walked out of the ranch and walked and walked and never came back. We thought he might have killed her. You never knew. We hoped she had not tried to cross to the United States because she would have been stolen again for sure.
What happened to you? I asked as Aurora lay back on her bed. She had no pillow so she had to lie flat.
I took the rat poison out from under the kitchen sink and mixed it in with the coffee.
Aurora’s eyes were so pale they made me think of the light blue color of dead jellyfish on the beach in Acapulco.
Where are you from? I asked.
Aurora was from Baja California. She grew up in the village of San Ignacio. Her father worked as a tour guide taking tourists out in his boat to see the California gray whales.
Look at this, Aurora said.
She pulled out a piece of cardboard from under her pile of plastic bags. It was a collage of a beach with a whale on the surface of the water and several starfish and shells cut out from magazines and glued to the brown sheet.
I cut the starfish from black paper, she said. No magazine in this jail had a photograph of a starfish!
I like it, I said. It’s pretty. It reminds me of beaches on the outside of Acapulco. I’ve never seen a whale though.
You have to understand, the first time I was stolen I was only twelve, Aurora continued. I was only a small fish, the kind you always throw back into the ocean because it is too small to eat. They should not have done that! I was the only girl in the village with light eyes.
Her eyes were like the glass in a glass-bottom boat.
No one could believe it at the ranch. Who would ever have thought that Aurora, the sweetest and most obedient of all, could have done it, but I did.
I could see into Aurora’s eyes and down into her body of light brown sand and shells.
I killed five men. Isn’t that so special! They were gathered at the ranch for a meeting. It took them two days to die in a hospital in Tijuana. The police came and arrested me when the doctors proved that the men had been poisoned. The police tested the coffee cups and they tested positive for poison. And I’d even washed them over and over with Ajax! Everyone knew I made the coffee for the rats’ meetings. Everyone knew there was a bottle of rat poison in the rats’ kitchen under the sink. Rats need to be poisoned, right?
Aurora rummaged through one of her plastic supermarket bags. She unknotted a bag filled with buttons and a stack of nail files that were held together with a rubber band. From here she also pulled out a small pile of old newspaper clippings.
Here. Read this, if you don’t believe me. It was even in the newspapers!
I read the newspaper article and then handed the clipping back to her and she placed it back into the pile.
She was proud of killing those men. It was her act of justice.
I boiled the water. I added the coffee. I let it sit.
Yes.
I placed the cups on a tray with a bowl of sugar. I could hear the men talking in the dining room. I stirred the coffee grounds in the pot.
Yes.
Aurora paused and tried to take a breath. She only seemed able to breathe out. She tried to breathe in not only with her lungs but also with her whole body, in heaves, but failed.
How did you do it?
It just took one minute. It was easy. I took out the bottle of rat poison from under the sink. I poured it into the coffee. It was so easy. It was like adding sugar or Coffee-mate.
I reached over and took her arm. The surface of her skin felt coarse as if it were still covered in beach sand. I looked into the sea landscape of her eyes and saw the whales and dolphins.
Please tell me more about Paula and McClane, I said.
Aurora told me that McClane not only had ranches all over the north, he also had businesses and properties in the state of Guerrero.
Near you, Aurora said. I never saw this, but other women told me that he had a mansion outside of Acapulco where one Christmas he built the North Pole and even brought in real reindeer on an airplane.
Yes, I answered, I’ve heard about that.
Did you know that McClane loved his horse so much that he buried it in a coffin in a cemetery as if it were a person?
No, I did not know that.
They say he wants to be buried in his car.
The cemeteries are full of men buried in their cars. I have heard about this.
I watched Aurora take another sip from the water bottle. How did Paula make it back? Aurora asked. Did you see her?
Aurora rested her head back down on the mattress.
Did she tell you about McClane’s ranch? Aurora asked.
Paula’s mother fed her from a bottle, a baby bottle, and even fed her baby food, Gerber, from a jar, I said.
Aurora listened and yawned. Her eyes closed and opened a few times. Then she turned on her side and fell asleep.
I looked at her. With her face quiet, in repose, without struggling to breathe, I could see she had been beautiful. She had been worth stealing. Today she was like a malnourished dog lost on the highway.
I curled up at the bottom of her bed among the plastic bags and fumigation canisters and fell asleep too.
For the first time in jail I had a dream. I knew the poisonous fumes had given me the dream. It was about Julio. We were lying on the grass, side by side, in the garden of the marble house in Acapulco. We lay on our sides looking at each other. I could see inside of his body. Under his flesh I saw the stars and the moon and I knew he was born from space.
The sound of Aurora coughing in her sleep awoke me. The light in the room was dim and I realized I’d been dozing there for several hours. It was as if being with someone who knew Paula, who knew something about my life, had given me the comfort to be able to sleep. Aurora had carried me home.
As I opened my eyes, I saw the shape of a person in the bed across from Aurora. It was Violeta.
I sat up.
She was naked and her hair was wrapped in a towel. I could see a few drops of water trickle out from under the towel and behind her ear. On the floor there was a trail of water that led from the tiny shower stall to her bed.
On her bed, against the wall, she had many stuffed animals. In the pile I could make out a panda, a giraffe, and at least four teddy bears. It was a zoo.
Her body was covered in tattoos. Down the side of her upper arm that faced toward me I could see the word Tom. Around the wrist of that same arm she had tattooed bracelets that looked like barbed wire.
She was sitting cross-legged with another towel opened on the bed in front of her. On the towel she had a few ink jars. I could see red and green in the jars. She also had several syringes and long needles spread out on the cloth.
Violeta looked at me.
Good morning, she said.
Is it morning still?
Hey, don’t you want a tattoo? Everyone in here has a tattoo. I’ve got the works here. I can carve you up.
When Violeta spoke, Aurora stirred and awoke.
No. Not yet, but thanks. If I walk out of here with a tattoo my mother will kill me!
Violeta, let her be, Aurora said.
Did anyone tell you, Princess, that on the outside people cry over you for exactly three days and then they forget you exist? Violeta said.
She reached over and pinched the skin of my upper arm. She took my skin between her fingers and turned it as if it were a key in a lock.
Stop! That hurts!
Why? she asked and let go of my arm. Why do good people always think they’re right? Huh?
What did I say?
In here we are not people who turn the other cheek, she said.
Luna appeared at the doorstep. She was holding a th
ick beige-colored sweater in her hand. She held it out to me.
I got this for you. It’s yours. One of us got out today and said I could have it. Here, put it on. It will keep you warm, Luna said.
I didn’t even give it a thought. The jail was so cold I could feel my body turning into wet cement. I took the sweater, and pulled it over my head. It smelled like the body of another woman. It was like the smell of rice boiling on the stove.
Let me sleep, Aurora said. Please.
Violeta looked at Luna and then back to me. Here we sleep two in each bunk bed, head to foot, because it is better to sleep with someone’s foot in one’s mouth than their stinky face and bad jail breath.
Yes, Luna said. We know.
You two get to have your own bunks. That’s not fair!
Stop it, Aurora said. Since when did you go looking around for the world to be fair?
Let’s go. Come on, Luna said.
A tattoo will make you feel good, Violeta called out to me as we walked away. Think about it. I’m not expensive.
As I walked back to my cell with Luna at my side I thought this day was almost finished. My whole being was leaning toward Sunday Visitors’ Day. Only one more day and I would see my mother. I imagined that by now she was in a cheap hotel somewhere near the jail. I could feel it.
That Violeta! She’s such a glutton, Luna said. When she eats chicken she feels love. When she eats a steak she feels happiness. I’ve seen her eat a whole cake.
Why did she kill all those men? I asked.
It was just part of her gluttony, Luna said. I figured it out. Killing was like eating.
As we walked, I told Luna about my dream. I told her that the universe was inside of Julio.
You need to thank God for resolving your destiny in the dream and thank Him for His warning, Luna said. A long time ago I promised God that I would heed every single one of His messages.
What do you think it means? I asked.
It’s so obvious.
Well?
It means that you want to see the hands of the clock go backward. Back in time everyone is the same.
I don’t think so. That is not what it means.
What does it mean then?
Prayers for the Stolen Page 16