Read Into the Beautiful North Online
Authors: Luis Alberto Urrea
Tags: #Latin American Fiction, #Mexico
T
acho had a fever by the time they got to 57 North. His fingers felt like sausages, and his head felt swollen. He shivered. He stopped at gas station toilets and rest areas and was amazed he still had anything left in him. Ma Johnston’s minivan, too, was sick. It screeched, banged, and clacked as they drove. When he shut off the engine, it fumed. And when he went to start it again, it coughed and groaned. “I wish you had a license,” he said.
“Almost there, Tachito,” Nayeli cooed. “Almost there. I’ll put you in bed as soon as we get there. Don’t worry. My father will take care of everything.”
She kept up a stream of heroic and uplifting chatter, but all he did was moan. Tacho didn’t believe any of it. He didn’t believe her father was even in Kankakee. They were fools, on a fool’s errand. They had been fools to ever leave Tres Camarones. And they had joined all the other unwanted fools hiding in the long shadows of the United States. He had thought he was going to Beverly Hills, and here he was in Cow Pie Pradera.
Turdy-Birdies,
he thought.
Neoga. Mattoon. What kinds of names were these? Arcola.
He roused himself to say: “¿Arcola? Me arde la cola.”
She laughed. “¡Ay, Tacho!”
He had told her his ass was burning.
Champaign. Rantoul. Freight rail lines ran along their left side the whole way. The sidetracked train cars looked to Nayeli like washed-up boats on the edge of a sea. Abandoned semitrailers stood at angles on the edges and berms of vast dead farms. The dark fields ran away from them until they vanished in the violent skies knotting up and relentlessly stalking toward them from Iowa and Nebraska.
Paxton. Onarga. Chebanse.
“¡Chingado!” Tacho cried. “¡Ya, pues! Where is this Kankakee, for God’s sake? I’m through!”
“Soon, Tachito. You’re doing great. Soon, you’ll see.”
And suddenly, they were crossing the Kankakee River.
“Look!” she yelled. “I told you! I told you! It’s
beautiful!
”
“The Baluarte River back home,” he sniffed, “is better than this.”
Nayeli’s father was near—she could feel him. He would be shocked to see her. He might be angry. But she knew him—knew his good heart. He would be so moved by her brave journey to find him, to save her home. His features would soften and his face would break into a smile, and he would embrace her.
Beyond the river, they saw the KANKAKEE turnoff on the right.
Tacho took in the sight in a swoon of fever. His ears burned. His eyes felt like two coals in his skull. He didn’t trust what he was seeing. He didn’t trust that he wasn’t dreaming. He stopped at a stop sign and stared at the building in front of them.
“Is that there or not?” he muttered.
“Yes,” she said. “It’s a sign from heaven.”
A statue of a huge hand on the roof of the building clutched a globe and held it up to the sky.
“We have been in God’s hand the whole time.” Nayeli smiled.
To Tacho, it looked like the poster for a monster movie at the Cine Pedro Infante.
He turned left.
“Get ready, morra,” he said. “You’re going to get what you asked for.”
“I am ready!” she replied.
The minivan thumped as if Tacho were running over a hundred rabbits. They stared out the windows at sad East Kankakee. Old buildings and old motels. They saw an amazing little Victorian shed that had been some kind of ice cream parlor in its heyday and had now been turned into a Mexican taco stand. El Gallito.
“Menudo,” Nayeli noted.
Tacho bit back on his rising bile.
They passed a carnicería.
“Meat!” she exclaimed, like an insane tour guide of trivial destinations. “And they sell fruit and vegetables. In Spanish! Kankakee has Mexicans! You see?”
“Oh, shut up,” Tacho heard himself saying.
Suddenly, they were in a nice downtown. Red brick and a steely bright building. And out the other side. Strip malls. Gas stations. A building as pink as Tacho’s Pepto. Farther out, they saw an upended bathtub half-buried in a yard and spray-painted silver. A statue of Jesus stood inside it, blessing the dog poo in the yard.
“Tijuana, USA,” Tacho said.
They managed a U-turn, and they banged back through the nice part of town and limped to a motel near the meat market as the engine seemed to come undone and fall apart—great billows of acrid steam cloaked them completely from sight.
“Nayeli,” Tacho said, “you have killed me.”
They were in room 17, on the ground floor. The speeding Iowa rainstorm overtook them there and unzipped the sky. Great crashes of thunder shook the loose glass in the windows. The wind was ancient and cold. Tacho was so embarrassed by his diarrhea that he forced Nayeli to stand outside the motel room when he went to the toilet. She wore the fisherman’s Steamboat sweatshirt and clutched herself, watching the muddy water run down the motel’s drive and flood the street. Black men ran down the opposite sidewalk, grimly holding newspapers over their heads. Cars threw up fans of brown water, made desolate hissing noises on the wet blacktop. She could see houses behind the meat market. An orange plastic child’s wagon lay on its side in the mud. She shivered.
When Tacho came off the toilet, he fell into bed and slept. He was hot—she wet a washcloth and put it on his forehead. He belched the odor of rotten eggs. She cracked the door to let in fresh storm air.
“I’m sorry,” he said. “I let you down.”
“No, you didn’t!” she said. “Tachito! Here we are!”
“But I don’t think… I think I need to stay in bed.”
“That’s all right. I should go find him alone.”
“Really? You’re not mad?”
But he was asleep again before she could reassure him.
In the lobby, she broke one of Tacho’s bills and used the change to buy him a 7 Up from the machine. She bought herself a Dr Pepper and some peanut butter crackers. Not much of a supper, but better than nothing. The rain was still pelting the street. The girl behind the desk took a few minutes out of her Sudoku fix and explained to Nayeli that she could make long-distance phone calls from her room. “Dial nine first,” she said.
Nayeli hurried along the side of the motel with her sodas.
Tacho was snoring.
Nayeli ate her crackers, drank her soda. She brewed some motel coffee in the little electric pot on the bathroom counter. She took out her father’s postcard. Through it all, she had carried it, folded in half, in her back pocket. She opened it carefully, because it wanted to tear apart. The crease through the picture was white, and the paranoid old turkey now seemed to have a lightning bolt coming down beside it. Nayeli saw this as a prophecy. She wanted to ask Tacho: Is there not lightning striking right now? But she didn’t wake him.
She took a shower. The shampoo came in a small foil envelope. She washed her underpants with the tiny soap bar under the steaming cascade of American water. It was different, she had noticed. Mexican water was weaker and had a distinct primordial scent. American water didn’t feel, well, it didn’t feel as
watery
to her as Mexican water.
Nayeli hung her panties on the towel rack and pulled on her other pair and the big sweatshirt and wrapped her head in a thread-bare towel. Tacho had kicked off his blanket. She tucked him back in and kissed his forehead. He was awake enough to mutter, “I don’t care what you do, you wench—I’m not having sex with you.”
She hopped into her own bed and watched the flashes of lightning through the window. She pulled the phone toward her and hesitated. She had Irma’s hotel number written on a piece of paper she had smoothed out beside her father’s postcard.
“¿Bueno?” Irma said.
“¿Tía?”
“¿Sí?”
“Tía, it’s Nayeli.”
“Oh! My beautiful girl! How goes the quest?”
“Ay, Tía.”
“No crying!”
“I’m not crying.”
“That’s my girl.” A pause. “And how is my other little girl?”
“What other—you mean Tacho? That’s mean.”
“I’m just being funny.”
“He is my hero.”
Chastised, Irma sucked her teeth.
“How are things?” Nayeli asked.
“Oh, well. I have my problems, dear girl. Don’t think it’s all just fun and games.”
“What’s wrong?
“Well! It’s Yolo. I swear. She says she’s not going home with the rest of us.”
“What!”
“The fool says she is going to stay in Los Yunaites with Matt.”
Small rings of shock ran down Nayeli’s entire spine.
“What does Matt say?” she gasped.
“Matt! Ha! He came creeping around here, and he confessed he doesn’t want Yolo to stay!”
Nayeli jerked with the news.
“What—what did you tell him?”
“I told him to grow some balls and deal with it himself. It’s hard enough being everybody else’s aunt Irma. I’m not about to start being his!”
“I can’t believe it, Tía.”
“Your turn,” Irma said. “Talk.”
She waited to hear what Nayeli had to report.
“We are in KANKAKEE, ILLINOIS. Tacho is sick, so I’m going out alone to find my father.”
“It’s a great thing you have done, Nayeli.”
“Is it?”
Irma was uncharacteristically pensive.
“Did you get the men?” Nayeli asked.
“Of course!”
“Good, Tía. I’m glad.”
Tacho rolled over and mumbled, “Vieja fea.” Nayeli didn’t know if he was asleep or not. She smiled.
“There were many men,” La Osa said.
“How many?”
“Seventy.”
“What!”
“That was before we closed the doors.” Irma chuckled. “Who knows how many we turned away.”
“So you found all seven?”
“Well…” Irma turned away from the phone and said something. Nayeli heard the deeper tones of a man’s voice but not the words. She stifled a scandalized laugh.
Chava Chavarín was in Irma’s room!
“Well, anyway. We did not accept seventy men. We were, if you will recall, only looking for four more.”
“Yes.”
“So, after long consideration, we took twenty-seven.”
Nayeli shouted, “What!”
“I have standards, you know!” Irma snapped. “By God, I wasn’t going to take all seventy traitors back home!”
“Tía. Tía. We were only looking for seven. Total.”
“Yes, well. Easy for you to say! I had all those men here, begging for mercy.” Nayeli heard Irma light a cigarette and take a long pull. She coughed. “And all the while this fool Chavarín was falling for every hard-luck story! Chingado, you think
every
Mexican doesn’t have a hard-luck story? If we had Yul Brynner, well all right, perhaps seven men could rid the town of bandidos. But with these weaklings? Twenty-seven of these cowards will barely do the job.”
“But… how are we going to get twenty-seven men home?”
“I don’t know, dear. That’s your problem. I’m flying home with good old Ronald Colman here.” Rustling. Giggles. Irma’s love play. It made Nayeli a little queasy. “That Brujo devil worshipper has a truck. Matt will let us use the minivan.”
“We broke it.”
Irma unleashed several of her time-tested epithets.
Nayeli reported on the journey and the breakdown.
“Well,” Irma complained, “so much for that! Take a bus here, unless your good-for-nothing father drives you back. We’ll round up something for the seven. The other twenty cabrones can find their own goddamned way to Tres Camarones! Show some mettle! Oh, by the way, I called my comadre Carmelita Tovar in Tecuala. She’s flying up here next week to interview the rest of the seventy.”