The day after I learn that the island is not reopening, I walk into town to
the bank, hoping to figure out a way to transfer money from my account in New York here. The bank is closed, but near the docks a bright collection of tables have been set up underneath a tent. Masked for safety, locals move up and down the aisles, picking up wares and chatting with each other. It
looks like a flea market.
I hear my name, and I turn to see Abuela waving at me.
Although Abuela and I do not speak a common language, Iโve learned a few Spanish phrases, and the rest of our communication is still gestures and
nods and smiles. She worked, I now know, at the hotel where I was going to stay, cleaning the rooms of guests. With the business closed, she is happy to cook and watch her telenovelas and take an unscheduled vacation.
She is standing behind a card table that has been draped with an embroidered cloth. On it are a few folded aprons, a box of some menโs clothing, two pairs of shoes. There is also a cake pan and a small crate of vegetables and fruits like the ones Gabriel brought me. A word-search
magazine is open in front of her, with a little sheaf of G2 postcards (does everyone have these?) stuck inside as a placeholder.
Abuela smiles widely and points to the folding lawn chair she has set up behind the table. โOh, no,โ I say. โYou sit!โ But before she can respond, another woman approaches us. She picks up a pair of the shoes, looking at the tongue for the size, and through her mask asks Abuela a question.
They exchange a few more sentences, and then the woman sets on the table a large tote. Inside are jars of preserves, pickled garlic, red peppers. Abuela takes out one jar of jam and another of peppers. The woman slips the shoes into her tote and moves off to the next table.
I glance around and realize that although transactions are going on all around me under this tent, no one is exchanging money. The locals have figured out a barter system to combat their limited supply chain from the
mainland. Abuela pats my arm, points to the chair, and then wanders down the aisle to survey the wares other locals have carted from home.
I can see double-jointed racks of used clothing, mud boots lined up in size order, kitchen utensils, paper goods. Some tables groan heavy with homemade bread or sweets, jars of beets and banana peppers. There are
fresh cuts of lamb and plucked chickens. Sonny, from Sonnyโs Sunnies, has brought a full array of bathing suits and batteries and magazines and books. A fisherman with a cooler full of the catch of the day wraps up a fish in newspaper for a woman who hands him, in return, a bouquet of fresh herbs.
I could trade, too. But I donโt have a surfeit of clothing or food Iโve grown or the ability to cook anything worth bartering for.
I run my hand back over my hair, smoothing my ponytail. I wonder what I could get for a scrunchie.
Just then, a zephyr of boys blows between the rows of tables. One small one straggles at the back, like the tail of a kite. Heโs red-faced and clearly trying to catch up to the bigger boys, the leader of whom is waving a battered comic book. As I watch, another boy sticks out his foot and trips the little one, who goes flying and lands headfirst under one of the tables.
His crash stops the chase. Rolling onto his back, he sits up and shouts at the boy still holding the book. Even in Spanish, itโs clear he has a lispโwhich the bigger boy mocks. The bully rips the comic book in half and tosses it onto the smaller boyโs chest before sauntering away.
The boy on the ground looks around to see who witnessed his humiliation. When his eye catches mine, I wave him closer.
Slowly, he walks toward me. He has dark brown skin and ravenwing hair that catches the sun. The mask heโs wearing has the Green Lantern symbol on it. He clutches his torn comic book.
Impulsively I pull one of the G2 postcards from Abuelaโs magazine and root around for the pencil she was using to do the word searches. I flip the postcard to its empty side, and with quick, economical strokes, I begin to sketch the boy.
The summer between high school and college, I spent a month in Halifax, doing portraits of tourists in the Old City. I made enough money to stay at a hostel with my friends, and to spend the nights in bars. It was, I realize, the last time I traded in art of my own creation. After that, I spent every holiday building up my rรฉsumรฉ for the internship slot at Sothebyโs.
Every artist has a starting point, and mine was always the eyes. If I could capture those, the rest would fall into place. So I look for the dots of light on his pupils; I draw in the flutter of lashes and straight slants of brow.
After a moment, I pull at the strap of my mask, so that it swings free of my face, and then motion to him to do the same.
Heโs missing his front four teeth, so of course I draw that smile. And
because confidence is a superpower, I give him a cape, like the hero in his torn comic book.
What feels rusty at first begins to flow. When Iโm done, I pass the postcard to him, a mirror made of art.
Delighted, he runs the length of the tent, thrusting it toward a woman who must be his mother. I see some of the boys whoโd been bullying him drift over, looking at whatโs in his hands.
I sit down, satisfied, and lean back in the lawn chair.
A moment later the boy returns. He is holding a fruit Iโve never seen before, the size of my fist, and armored with tiny spikes. Shyly, he sets it on the table in front of me and nods a thank-you, before darting back to his motherโs table.
I scan the tent, searching for Abuela, and suddenly hear a small voice.
โHola.โ
The girl in front of me is thin as a bean, with dusty bare feet and braids in her hair. She holds out a dimpled green Galรกpagos orange.
โOh,โ I say. โI donโt have anything to trade.โ
She frowns, then pulls another postcard from Abuelaโs magazine. She
holds it out to me, and tosses her braids over her shoulders, striking a pose.
Maybe Iย do.
When Abuela and I leave theย feriaย two hours later, I am no richer in cash, but I have a straw sunhat, a pair of athletic shorts, and flip-flops. Abuela
cooks me lunch: lamb chops, blue potatoes, and mint jelly that I received in return for my portraits. Dessert is the spiny fruit the boy gave me: guanรกbana.
Afterward, belly full, I leave Abuelaโs so I can take a nap at home. It is the first time, in my own mind, Iโve called it that.
To:ย [email protected] From: [email protected]
Itโs crazyโeverythingโsย been shut down. There are no flights out, and none in, and no one knows when thatโs gonna change. Itโs probably safer that way. Even if you could fly
into the U.S., itโs a shit-show. Youโd probably have to quarantine somewhere for a couple of weeks, because we donโt even have enough Covid tests right now for the people who are coming into the hospital with symptoms.
The truth is that even if you were home, I wouldnโt be. Most of the residents who have families are staying at hotels, so they donโt infect anyone accidentally. Even though Iโm alone in the apartment, after I peel off my scrubs in the entry and stuff them in a laundry bag, the first thing I do is shower until my skin hurts.
You know Mrs. Riccio, in 3C? When I came home last night, I saw people I didnโt recognize going in and out of her apartment. She died of Covid. The last interaction I had with her was five days ago, in the mailroom. She was a home health aide and she was terrified of catching it. The last thing I said to her was, Be careful out there.
One of my patientsโshe was extubated successfully but was in multiorgan failure and I knew she wasnโt going to last the dayโhad a brief moment of consciousness when I went in to see her. I was in full PPE and she couldnโt see my face well so she thought I was her son. She grabbed my hand and told me how proud she was of me. She asked if Iโd hug her goodbye. And I did.
She was alone in her room and she was going to die that way. I was crying under my face shield and I thought: Well, if I catch it I catch it.
I know I took an oath. Do no harm and all that. But I donโt remember saying Iโd kill myself to do it.
Once we saw a movie, I donโt remember the name, where there was a WWI soldier who was all of twenty, in a trench with a new recruit who was eighteen. The bullets were all around and the twenty-year-old was calmly smoking while the younger kid shook like a leaf. He asked,ย How can you not be scared?ย The older soldier said:ย You donโt have to be afraid of dying, when youโre already dead.
Whatever is going to happen is going to happen, I figure.
I read that the Empire State Building will be lit up red and white this week for healthcare workers. We donโt give a fuck about the Empire State Building, or about people banging pots and pans at 7 P.M. Most of us wonโt ever see or hear it, because weโre in the hospital trying to save people who canโt be saved. What we want is for everyone to just wear a mask. But then there are people who say that requiring a mask is a gross infringement of their bodily rights. I donโt know how to make it any more clear: you donโt have any bodily rights when youโre dead.
Iโm sorry. You donโt need to listen to me vent. But then again, this probably isnโt even getting through to you.
Just in case it is: your momโs place keeps calling.
A few days later, while Beatriz is occupied making tortillas with her grandmother, I ask to borrow Abuelaโs phone to leave another message for Finn. Gabriel has taught me how to dial direct internationally, but calls are expensive, and I donโt want Abuela to incur the costs, so I keep the conversation briefโjust letting Finn know Iโm all right, and Iโm thinking of him. I save everything else for the postcards Beatriz mails.
Then I call my motherโs memory care facility. Although I havenโt received any emails or voicemail from them, that may be a function of the internet here, since Finn said theyโve left messages on our landline at the apartment. The last time The Greens reached out so doggedly, there was a
glitch in the direct deposit that paid my motherโs monthly room and board.
The administration was all over it like white on rice, until I smoothed out the mistake and their money came through the wire. It will not be easy to sort out another bank error from a quarantined island.
I dial the number and a receptionist answers. โThis is Diana OโToole,โ I say. โHannah OโTooleโs daughter. Youโve been trying to reach me?โ
โHold please,โ I hear.
โMs. OโToole?โ A new voice speaks a moment later. โThis is Janice Fleisch, the director hereโIโm glad you finally called back.โ
It feels pejorative, and I try not to get my hackles raised.
I look over at the counter, where Abuela is showing a recalcitrant Beatriz how to knead lard into flour to make dough. Curling the phone line around me, I turn, hunching my shoulders for privacy. โIs there a problem with my account? Because Iโm not in New York at theโโ
โNo, no. Everythingโs fine there. Itโs just that โฆ weโve had an outbreak of Covid at our facility, and your mother is ill.โ
Everything inside me stills. My mother has been sick before, but itโs never merited a call.
โIs she โฆ does she need to go to the hospital?โ Were they calling to get my permission?
โYour mother has a DNR,โ she reminds me, a delicate way of saying that no matter how bad it gets, she wonโt be given CPR or taken to the hospital for life-sustaining measures. โWe have multiple residents whoโve contracted the virus, but I assure you weโre doing everything we can to keep them comfortable. In the spirit of transparency we felt that youโโ
โCan I see her?โ I donโt know what I could possibly do from here; but something tells me that if my mother is really, really sick, I will know by looking at her.
I think of Mrs. Riccio, in apartment 3C. โWeโre not allowing visitors right now.โ
At that, a crazy laugh breaks out of me. As if I could even come. โIโm stuck, outside the country,โ I explain. โI barely have any phone service. There has to be something you can do.ย Please.โ
Thereโs a muffled sound, an exchange of words I canโt hear. โIf you call back this number, weโll get one of our aides to FaceTime with you,โ I hear, and I fumble around for a pen. Abuela has a marker attached to a
whiteboard on her fridge; I grab it and write the digits down on the back of my hand.
When I hang up, my hand is shaking. I know that people who catch this virus do not always die. I also know that many do.
If my mother sees me on video, she might not even recognize me. She could get agitated, just by being forced to talk to someone she canโt place.
But I also know I need to see her with my own eyes.
I am so focused on this, I forget I am in a place that lacks the technology to make this possible.
I hang up Abuelaโs phone and punch the new number into my cell, but
there isnโt a signal. โDammit,โ I snap, and Abuela and Beatriz both look up. โIโm sorry,โ I mutter, and I dart out to the porch, holding my phone up in
various directions as if I could attract connectivity like a magnet.
Nothing.
I smack my phone down beside me and press the heels of my hands to my eyes.
She has been an absent mother, and now I am an absent daughter. Is that quid pro quo? Do you owe someone only the care they provided for you? Or does believing that make you as culpable as they were?
If she dies, and Iโm not there โฆ Well.
Then you wonโt be responsible for her anymore.
The thought, shameful and insidious, vibrates in my mind. โDiana.โ
I look up to find Gabriel standing in front of me, holding a hammer. Has he been here the whole time? โMy motherโs sick,โ I blurt out.
โIโm sorry โฆโ
โShe has Covid.โ
He takes a step back involuntarily, and rubs his free hand across the nape of his neck.
โSheโs in an assisted living facility and Iโm supposed to video-chat but my stupid phone still wonโt work here andโโ I swipe at my eyes, frustrated and embarrassed. โThisย sucks. This justย sucks.โ
โTry mine,โ he suggests. He pulls out his own phone, but itโs not the device thatโs the problem. Itโs this whole damn island. While the local cellular network seems to function, anything that requires any real bandwidth is a complete loss.
Gabriel types something into his phone and then says, โCome with me.โ I fall into place beside him, but he is walking so fast I have to jog to keep up.
He stops at the hotel I was supposed to stay at. Although Iโve tried to steal its Wi-Fi, as Beatriz suggested, the network hasnโt shown upโlikely
because the business is shuttered. This time, however, Elena is standing outside the door, waiting with a ring of keys. โElena,โ Gabriel says.
โGracias por venir aquรญ.โ
She dimples, combing her hands over the long tail of her braid.
โCualquier cosa por ti, papi,โย she says.
I lean closer and murmur, โDo I want to knowโโ
โNope,โ Gabriel cuts me off just as Elena loops her arm through his and presses herself up against him. She glances over her shoulder at me and
whips her head back to Gabriel so fast her braid smacks against my arm. Is a hotel with no guests even a hotel? The lobby feels small and stale,
until Elena turns on the lights and an overhead fan. She boots up a modem behind the front desk, chattering to Gabriel in Spanish as we wait. She
seems to be talking about her tan or a bra or something because she pulls
aside the fabric and peers down at her bare shoulder, then sends a blistering smile toward him.
โUm,โ I say. โIs it ready?โ
She glances at me like sheโs forgotten Iโm here. When she nods, I find the network on my phone. I dial the memory care facility number I was given and wander off into a small room filled with tables, each wearing a bright cotton tablecloth.
When a face swims into view on my screen, I blink. The person on the other end is nothing more than a set of eyes above a mask, and thatโs behind a plastic face shield. She has a paper cap covering her hair, too. โItโs
Verna,โ the woman says, and she gives a little wave. I recognize her name; she is one of the aides who takes care of the residents there. โWe were starting to wonder if you were ever going to call back.โ
โTechnical difficulties,โ I say.
โWell, your momโs tired and she has a fever, but sheโs holding her own.โ
She holds up whatever device sheโs on and the view changes; from a distance I see my mother sitting on her couch with the television on, just like normal. My heart, which was racing, slows a little.
I let myself wonder, for the first time, what I was so afraid to see. Maybe vulnerability. My mother has been a gale force wind that blows in and out
of my life before I can reorient myself. If she were still and silent in a bed, then I would know something is terribly wrong.
โHi, Hannah,โ the aide says. โCan you look over here! Can you give me a little wave?โ
My mother turns. She doesnโt wave. โDid you take my camera?โ she accuses.
โWeโll find it later,โ Verna soothes, although I know my mother does not have a camera in her residence. โI have your daughter here. Can you say
hello?โ
โNo time. We need to jump on the press convoy to the Kurdish village,โ my mother says. โIf it leaves without us โฆโ She coughs. โWithout โฆโ She dissolves into a fit of coughing, and the phone tumbles dizzily before coming to rest on a flat surface. The image goes black; I can still hear my mother hacking away. Then Vernaโs masked face reappears. โI have to settle her,โ she says, โbut weโre taking good care of her. Donโt you worry.โ
The line goes dead.
I stare at the blank screen. There really isnโt any way to tell if my motherโs delirious, or if it is just her dementia.
Okay. Well. If she gets worse, they will call our apartment again. And if that happens, Finn willโsomehowโupdate me.
Finn.
Immediately I try to video-chat him, too, making the most of the internet service. But it rings and rings and he doesnโt pick up. I imagine him bent over a patient, feeling the buzzing in his pocket, unable to answer.
My mother has Covid,ย I type into a text.ย So far sheโs stable.
I tried to call you while I still had Wi-Fi but you were probably working. I wish you were here with me.
I tuck my phone into my pocket and make my way back to the front desk.
Everything about Elenaโs body language suggests she is trying to pin Gabriel against any wall she can. Everything about Gabrielโs body language resists it. When he sees me, relief washes over his features. โGracias,
Elena,โ he says. He leans in to give her a quick kiss on the cheek, but she turns at the last minute and presses her mouth against his.
โHasta luego,ย Gabriel,โ she says.
As soon as we are out the door, he turns to me. โYour mother?โ โSheโs sick,โ I tell him. โShe has a cough.โ
His brows pinch together, then smooth. โSo, thatโs not too bad, right? I bet she was happy to see you.โ
She had no idea who I was. The words are on the tip of my tongue, but instead I ask, โIs Elena your ex?โ
โElena was one night of extremely poor decision making,โ Gabriel says. โI donโt have very good luck with relationships.โ
โWell, Iโm ninety-nine percent sure my boyfriend was going to propose to me here on our vacation, so thereโs that.โ
He winces. โYou win.โ
โMore like both of us lose,โ I correct.
Gabriel misses the turn to Abuelaโs, heading further into town toward the docks.
I say, โFar be it from me to tell you youโre going the wrong way, but โฆโ โI know. I just thought โฆ maybe you didnโt want to spend today
worrying about your mother.โ We stop on the pier, near a string of small pangas, the little metal boats fishermen use.
โWhat about Beatriz?โ
โI already texted her. My grandmother is watching her.โ He shields his eyes, looking up at me. โIย didย promise Iโd show you my island.โ He steps into a boat and holds out his hand so I can follow.
โWhere are we going?โ
โThe lavaย tรบneles,โ Gabriel says. โTheyโre on the western side of the island, about forty-five minutes out.โ
โWeโll break curfew.โ
He scrabbles for a key under the plank seat and turns over the engine.
Then he glances up, one side of his mouth quirked. โThatโs not all. Where weโre going is closed even to locals,โ he says. โWhat is it youย americanosย say? Go big or go home.โ
I laugh. But I think:ย I wish.
Fishing, Gabriel tells me, is dangerous here.
He expertly moves the panga he has borrowed from a friend beneath
delicate lava arches formed by volcanoes. We weave through the formations like thread through needles, the tide edging us precipitously close to the
narrow walls of rock. Columns rise from the water, capped by land bridges with cacti and scrub growing over them. For some, the connector has already crumbled into the sea.
โFishermen can catch bluefin tuna,ย blanquillo,ย cod, swordfish. But I had friends who headed out, and never came back,โ he says. โRiptides โฆ
theyโre unpredictable. If your engine fails for some reason, you can get caught in one that moves three meters per second.โ
โSo you mean โฆ they died?โ I ask.
He nods. โLike I told you,โ he says. โDangerous.โ He navigates through the steampunk maze of risen rock. โLook, over there, on theย aaย lava.โ
โThe what?โ
He points. โThe spiky rock,โ he explains. โPahoehoeย lava is the other kindโthe stuff that looks like itโs melting.โ I follow his finger to see two
blue-footed boobies. They face each other, bowing formally to the left and then to the right and back again, twin metronomes. Then they attack each other with their beaks in a frenzy of nips and clacks. โTheyโre going to kill each other,โ I say.
โActually, theyโre going to mate,โ Gabriel says. โNot if he keepsย thatย up,โ I murmur.
He laughs. โThat guyโs a pro. The older the bird, the bluer the feet. This isnโt his first shoot-out.โ
It takes me a moment. โRodeo,โ I correct, grinning. I watch him hop out of the boat and drag it onto the beach. โI know Beatriz learned in school, but how come you speak English so well?โ
โI had to for my job,โ he says. He reaches under the seat again and tosses me a snorkel and mask. โYou know how to use these, yes?โ
I nod. โBut Iโm not wearing a bathing suit.โ
Gabriel shrugs, kicks off his flip-flops, and wades into the water fully dressed. It laps at his hips, his waist, and then he dives forward, surfacing with a shake of his shaggy hair. He fits his own snorkel and mask to his forehead. โCoward,โ he says, and he splashes me.
The water is a dizzy mirror of the sky, the sand like sugar under my feet.
It feels strange having my shorts float around my legs and my shirt plastered to my body, but I get used to the sensation as I tread water. Gabriel dives a few feet away and a moment later I feel him tug at my ankle.ย โVamos,โย he says, and when he ducks beneath the surface this time, I follow.
The undersea world explodes with color and textureโbright anemone jewels, runnels of coral, wispy fronds of seagrass. For a little while we
follow a sea lion that keeps playfully slapping Gabriel with its tail. Gabriel
squeezes my hand, pointing out a sea turtle rhythmically sawing through the water. A moment later, in front of my mask floats a bright pink sea horse, a question mark with a trumpet nose and translucent skin.
Gabriel surfaces, pulling me with him. โHold your breath,โ he says, and still grasping me, he kicks us powerfully to the seafloor, where a rocky promontory juts, polka-dotted with sea stars and a ripple of octopus. Gabriel twists until we are hovering in front of a small crevice in the boulder. Inside I see two small silver triangles. Eyes? I swim closer for a better look. But when I do, one moves, and I realize I am staring at the white-tipped fins of sleeping reef sharks.
I kick backward so fast that I create a wall of bubbles. Without looking to see if Gabriel is following, I swim as hard and as fast as I can back to shore. When I crawl onto the sand and rip off my snorkel, heโs right behind me. โThat was,โ I gasp, โa fuckingย shark.โ
โNot the kind that would kill you.โ He laughs. โI mean, maybe just a good bite.โ
โJesus Christ,โ I say, and I flop onto my back on the sand.
A moment later, Gabriel sits down next to me. He is breathing hard, too. He pulls off his soaked shirt and throws it to the side in a soggy ball. When he lies back, the sun glints off the medallion he wears.
โWhat is that?โ I ask. โYour necklace.โ โPirate treasure,โ he tells me.
When I look at him dubiously, he shrugs. โIn the sixteen and seventeen hundreds, pirates used the canal between Isabela and Fernandina Island to hide from the Spaniards after raiding their galleons. Back then, this was a place where you could disappear.โ
Still,ย I think.
โThe pirates knew the galleons went from Peru to Panama, and after they stole the gold, they hid it on Isabela.โ He raises a brow. โThey also nearly hunted the land tortoise population to extinction, and they left behind donkeys, goats, and rats. But that wasnโt nearly as interesting to a seven- year-old boy who was digging for buried treasure.โ
I come up on an elbow, invested.
โIt was back in 1995 on Estero Beachโthatโs near El Muro de las Lรกgrimas. Two sailboats showed up, full of Frenchmen who were exploring Isabela, digging for treasure. I helped them for a few daysโor at least I
thought I did, I was probably more of a nuisanceโand they found a chest. I helped them dig it out.โ
My eyes fall on his medallion. โAnd that was inside it?โ
โI have no idea what was inside it.โ He laughs. โThey took it away, still sealed. But they gave this to me as thanks. For all I know, it came from
inside a cereal box.โ
I smack him on the shoulder. He grabs my hand to stop me from swatting him again, but he doesnโt let go. Instead, he squeezes it, and looks me in the eye. โSpeaking of thank-yous,โ Gabriel says, โBeatrizโโ
โIs a great kid,โ I interrupt.
He releases me, and seems to be carefully choosing his words. โWhen she would come home from school, there was always a wall between us.
Every time I thought about knocking it down, every time I got close enough, I could feel so much heat on the other sideโlike a fire, you know. If you think thereโs a fire on the other side of a door, you donโt rush in,
because with even more oxygen, the flames are going to consume
everything.โ He draws a line in the sand between us. โThis past week, I donโt feel as much heat.โ
โSheโs angry,โ I admit softly. โShe was ripped out of her comfort zone.
Itโs not fair, and itโs not her fault. When you canโt see light at the end of the tunnel, itโs hard to remember to keep going.โ
โI know,โ Gabriel says. โIโve tried to do things like this with herโ distract her, you know, by taking her around the island? But she only goes through the motions, like itโs a chore.โ He rubs his forehead. โFor years, she lived with her mother, and God knows what Luz said about me. And then
she was at school. And then when the virus hit, she called me, begging to come home.โ
Clearly, I misunderstood. โI thought sheย hadย to come home,โ I say. โSheโs spent school vacations with her host family beforeโalmost all of
them,โ Gabriel says. โI donโt know, maybe she was worried about the virus? Whatever it was, it was a gift. I was just happy she wanted to come back. I thought if we spent time together, sheโd figure out that I wasnโt actually a monster.โ He smiles a little. โI wish I could do what you do so easily.โ
โTalk to her?โ
โMake her like me.โ He pulls a face. โThat sounds pathetic.โ
I shake my head. โWhen you lose something that matters, you grieve,โ I say carefully. โRight now, Beatriz thinks sheโs lost her mom, her friends,
her future.โ I hesitate. โSo maybe thereโs a reason she keeps you at a distance. You canโt grieve something if you donโt let yourself get close enough to care.โ
His gaze snaps to mineโthis seed of doubt is the absolution I can offer: the chance to think that Beatrizโs aloofness might not be because she hates him, but the opposite.
Suddenly a marine iguana runs right between us, making me shriek and scurry backward. Gabriel laughs at me as the big lizard crawls with surprising speed into the water, bobbing a few times before it dives under the surface. โWhy arenโt those things as afraid of me as I am of them?โ I mutter.
โTheyโve had the run of the island longer than humans have,โ he says. โNot surprising, since they look like baby dinosaurs.โ
โYou should see the land iguanas in San Cristรณbal. They turn turquoise and red during the mating seasonโwe call them Christmas iguanas. Thatโs how they get the ladies.โ He nods toward the water. โBut the marine
iguanas are my favorite.โ
I lie back down on the sand, looking up at the sky. โI canโt imagine why.โ โWell, they used to all be land iguanas. The ones that arrived came by
accident ten million years ago, rafting in from South America on debris. But when they got here, there wasnโt any vegetation. The only food was in the ocean. So their bodies changed, slowly, to make diving easier. They got salt glands around their nostrils to expel the salt when they went underwater. Their lungs got bigger so they could take bigger breaths and sink deeper.โ
Gabriel turns, rising on his elbow. Very slowly, he takes one finger, and traces the slope of my throat. โEvolution is compromise,โ he says softly. โWhen humans evolved to speak, our throats got longer to make room for that precise tongue, and with that came risks. Food had to travel further to get to the esophagus โฆ but manage to miss the larynx.โ
His thumb rests in the spot where my pulse flutters at the base of my neck, and I swallow.
โSo unlike animals, we can now sing and speak and scream โฆ but unlike animals, we also can choke to death if our food goes down the wrong pipe.โ He looks at me, almost as if he is as dazed to find himself touching me as I am. โYou canโt move forward without losing something,โ Gabriel says.
I clear my throat and swiftly sit up.
Immediately, so does he, and the moment breaks like a soap bubble.
Before I can process what just happened, Gabriel scrambles to his feet. A boat putters closer to shore, idling where the waves are breaking. I shade my eyes with my hand and see a man in a khaki uniform and a brimmed hat. As he approaches I squint to read the patch on his shoulder, which
looks official.
โGabriel,โ the man says.ย โQuรฉ estรกs haciendo aquรญ?โ
โThis is Javier.โ Gabrielโs voice is perfectly even, but I can feel him stiffen. โHeโs a park ranger.โ
I remember what Beatriz said at the swimming hole with the mockingbirdsโif the park rangers find you trespassing on a site thatโs closed due to Covid, you can be fined. And if youโre a tour guide, you can lose your license.
Gabriel spills forth a river of Spanish. I donโt know if heโs trying to be placating or act clueless or justify our journey here.
I wing a wide smile at Javier and interrupt.ย โHola,โย I say. โThis is all my fault. Iโm the one who begged Gabriel to take me hereโโ
I do not know if the park ranger speaks English, but I hope I am rambling enough to draw attention away from Gabriel. And it seems to work, because Javierโs gaze jerks toward me. โYou,โ he says. โYou were at the feria.โ
I feel sweat break out between my shoulder blades. Was it illegal to trade at that market, too? Will park rangers go after the locals, or just the tourist? And if I canโt pay a fine, then what happens?
I know there is no hospital on the island, and no ATM. But with my luck, thereโs a functional jail cell.
โYou drew pictures,โ the ranger continues. โUm,โ I say. โYes.โ
I can feel Gabrielโs eyes on me, like the stroke of a brush. โMy son gave you a guanรกbana.โ
The boy, I realize, who was being bullied.
โYou are talented,โ Javier continues, smiling a little. โBut more important
โฆ you are kind.โ
I feel my cheeks heat with both compliments.
The ranger turns back to Gabriel. โYou know, Gabriel, if I saw you here, Iโd have to report you. But if I turned away and you were gone, it might just have been a trick of the light,ย sรญ?โ
โPor supuesto,โย Gabriel murmurs. He reaches down for his shirt, stiff with dried salt, and pulls it on. I pick up the discarded snorkeling equipment and follow him to our panga. The surf whispers around my ankles while he holds the boat steady, letting me climb in before he pushes off from the
shore and hops aboard, revving the engine in reverse.
I donโt speak until we are out of the cove and through the tรบneles, bouncing over the chop of the ocean. โThat was close,โ I say.
Gabriel shrugs. โI knew it could happen when I brought you here.โ โThen why did you? He could have taken your tour guide license.โ โBecause this is Isabela,โ he says. โAnd you should see it.โ
On the way back to Puerto Villamil, we do not talk about what happened the moment before Javier interrupted us. Instead, I find myself thinking of the hollow bones of birds, of the long necks of giraffes. The changeable skin of leaf frogs, the insects that disguise themselves as twigs. I think of
girls who are dragged from safe havens into the unknown, and men with secrets as deep as the ocean, and grounded planes.
Itโs not just animals that must adapt in order to survive.
Dear Finn,
Beatrizโthe girl I wrote you aboutโtold me that before there was a real mail service in the Galรกpagos, sailors would put their letters in a barrel in Post Office Bay, on Floreana Island. As other whalers showed up in their ships, theyโd sort through the post, find ones
addressed to their home port, and then hand-deliver them. Sometimes the mail wasnโt delivered for years, but it was the only way the sailors had to communicate with the people they left behind.
Beatriz says now, tour boats go to Floreana. Tourists leave
postcards in the barrel, and claim postcards others have left to deliver when theyโre back home.
The barrelโs small; I wouldnโt fit in it. Otherwise, Iโd probably crawl in and hope someone would carry me back to you.
Love, Diana
The day I met Kitomi Ito, and found myself standing alone with her in front of her painting, I realized exactly what was wrong with the Sothebyโs pitch, and why we would likely lose the opportunity to Christieโs or Phillips.
Everyone seemed to be concentrating on Sam Pride, whoโd bought the
painting. But no one had stopped long enough to think about who he gave it to, and why.
I began to talk fast. I didnโt know if Eva would interrupt us, and if my boss heard me actively subverting her plan for the Toulouse-Lautrec painting, Iโd be out of a job before the elevator hit the lobby.
โWhat if the auction wasnโt about fame,โ I said, โbut about privacy? It seems to me that everything was a big show for your husbandโeven,
forgive me, his death. But this paintingโit wasnโt any part of that circus. It was just for you, and him.โ When Kitomi didnโt respond, I took a deep breath and plunged ahead. โIf it were up to me, I wouldnโt use this to
headline the Imp Mod sale. I wouldnโt reunite the Nightjars. I wouldnโt make this public at all. Iโd build a private sale in a room with simple staging, good lighting, and a single love seat. And then Iโd extend a confidential invitation to George and Amal, Beyoncรฉ and Jay-Z, Meghan and Harry, other couples you might think of. It should be a privilege to be offered a showing. A nod to the idea that they have a love affair thatโs timeless, too.โ I turn back to the painting, seeing the vulnerability in the
eyes of the pair, and the rock-solid belief that they were safe in sharing it with each other. โInstead of the buyer having the upper hand, Ms. Ito, youโd be choosing the couple that gets to continue the love story. Youโre the one giving it up for adoption; you should be the one to pick the new caretakers
โnot the auction company.โ
For a long moment, Kitomi just stared at me. โWell,โ she said, and a slow smile tugged at the corner of her mouth. โShe speaks.โ
Just then Evaโs voice cleaved between us like an ax. โWhatโs going on here?โ
โYour colleague was just presenting an alternate approach,โ Kitomi said. โMyย associate specialistย does not have the authority to present anything,โ
Eva replied. She shot me a look that could cut glass. โIโll meet you at the car,โ she said.
The driver hadnโt even closed the door behind Eva when she started lacing into me. โWhat part of โdo not speakโ did you not understand, Diana? Of all the moronic, irresponsible things you could say, you managed to find something so โฆ so โฆโ She broke off, her face red, her chest heaving. โYou do realize that the reason you have a salary is because the company survives on massive public auctions that attract an obscene amount of money, yes?
And that silly little romantic love letter you proposed will make us look like
kindergartners, compared to whatever spectacle Christieโs is offeringโfor Godโs sake, they probably said theyโd find a way to throw in a posthumous Kennedy Center Honor for Sam Prideโโ
She was interrupted by the ring of her phone. Eva narrowed her eyes, warning me to be quiet under penalty of death, as she answered. โKitomi,โ she said warmly. โWe were just discussing how muchโโ Her voice broke off, and her eyebrows shot to her hairline. โWell, yes! Sothebyโs is honored to know you trust us to showcase your painting at auctionโโ Her voice
broke off as she listened to Kitomi speak. โAbsolutely,โ she said, after a moment. โNot a problem.โ
Eva hung up and frowned down at her phone for a moment. โWe got the account,โ she said.
I hesitated. โIsnโt that โฆ a good thing?โ
โKitomi had two conditions. She wants a private auction for couples only,โ Eva said. โAnd she insists that youโre the specialist in charge.โ
I was stunned. This was my break; this was the moment I would talk about years later, when I was interviewed by magazines about how Iโd advanced in my career. I had a vision of Beyoncรฉ hugging me after she placed the winning bid. Of a corner office, where Rodney and I would close the door at lunchtime and share bowls from the Halal Guys and gossip.
I felt heat creeping up my collar and turned to find Eva staring, as if she was seeing me for the first time.
To:ย [email protected] From: [email protected]
Before I forget: The Greens called again and left a message at home.
Itโs 72 hours old, though, because thatโs how long Iโve been at the hospital.
Of course, a shift that long is technically against the rules, but there arenโt rules anymore. Itโs Groundhog Day, over and over. We have it down to a routine. Thereโs me, a junior resident, and four nurses. My job is to put in central lines and arterial lines, to manage a patientโs other comorbidities. I put in chest tubes when they get air around their lungs, caused by the vents. I call the families, who ask for readings they donโt understand on oxygenation, blood pressure, ventilation levels.ย I hope sheโs getting better,ย they say, but I canโt answer because I know sheโs a mile from better. Sheโs dying. All I hope is that she gets off the vent or ECMO, and that thereโs not a cytokine storm that sends her back to square one. The families canโt visit, so they canโt see the
patients hooked up to wires and machines. They canโt see with their own eyes how sick they are. To them the patient is someone who was perfectly healthy a week ago, with no chronic illness. They keep hearing on the news that thereโs a 99% survival rate; that
itโs no worse than the flu.
Thereโs one patient whoโs been haunting me lately. She and her husband came in together; he died and she didnโt. When she was extubated, her adult kids didnโt tell her
that her husband was dead. They were too afraid sheโd panic and cry and her lungs couldnโt take it. So she made it all the way to rehab thinking that her husband was still in isolation at the hospital. I think about her all the time. How she thought this was temporary, the separation between them. I wonder if she knows, yet, that itโs forever.
Jesus, Diana, come back.
Sometimes I lie in bed at night and think:ย What was I trying to prove? Why didnโt I turn around and get on that ferry and go back to the airport?
Sometimes I lie in bed and think:ย What kind of partner was I then, if Finn wasnโt in the forefront of my mind, when I stood on the brink between staying and leaving?
For that matter, what kind of partner am Iย now,ย when there are times he is not in the forefront of my mind? When heโs slogging through hell and Iโm in a different hemisphere?
My fatherโs father fought in World War II, and when he came back from it, he was never quite right. He drank a lot and wandered the house in the middle of the night, and when the car backfired once, he dropped to the ground and burst into tears. As a little girl, I was often told that the war did this to him, created an invisible scar heโd never lose. Once, I asked my grandmother what she remembered about the war. She thought for a long moment, and then finally said,ย It was hard to get nylons.
Thereโs a part of me that thinks this is exactly what my grandfather would have wanted: to risk death every day so that my grandmotherโs life could stay mostly unruffled. But thereโs another part of me that recognizes how shallow, how privileged it is, to be the one whoโs an ocean away.
These days when I am swimming in pools as clear as gin or hiking green velvet mountains or frying a tortilla on a cast-iron pan in Abuelaโs kitchen, there are whole swaths of time when I forget the rest of the world is suffering.
I am not sure if that is a blessing, or if I should be cursed.
Theย trillizosย are three collapsed lava tunnels in the center of the island.
Beatriz and I start our hike there before dawn, which means we get to watch the breathtaking artwork of the sunrise as we climb into the highlands. Iโve been on island for just over three weeks now, and it keeps surprising me with its beauty. โHow old are you?โ Beatriz asks me, just as the last streak of pink becomes a bruise of blue sky.
โIโm going to be thirty on April 19,โ I tell her. โHow old areย you?โ โFourteen,โ Beatriz says. โBut emotionally, Iโm older.โ
That makes me laugh. โYouโre a veritable crone.โ
We walk a little further and then, lightly, I ask if sheโs heard from her friends at school.
Her shoulders tense up. โCanโt check social media when the internet sucks.โ
โRight,โ I muse. โIt must be hard.โ
Beatriz doesnโt look at me. โThe silver lining is that I donโt have to see what people are saying about me.โ
I stop walking. โIs that something you usually have to worry about?โ
What if her cutting is tied to bullying somehow? I still donโt know much more about Beatriz than I did when I first saw her on the ferry. She guards her secrets like her life depends on them. For a teenager, I suppose it does.
I have been wondering if I should intercede in Beatriz and Gabrielโs relationship. From my vantage point, all I see is misunderstanding. But then I think I have no right to involve myself in someone elseโs relationships when my own are a mess.
Finnโs emails are now shorter and more desperate.
For the past two nights, Iโve awakened in the middle of the night, convinced I hear my motherโs voice.
โWhen was the last time you talked to your mother?โ Beatriz asks, as if sheโs reached right into my mind.
โBefore I came here. I visited her,โ I say. โAlthough I canโt really say it was a conversation. Itโs more like she talksย atย me and I try to keep up.โ
โMy mother used to send me cards for my birthday, with money in them.
But that stopped last year.โ Her mouth tightens. โShe didnโt want to have me.โ
โBut she did.โ
โWhen youโre pregnant and seventeen and the guy says heโll marry you, I guess you do it,โ Beatriz muses.
I tuck away this information about Gabriel.
โI think unconditional love is bullshit,โ Beatriz says. โThereโs always a condition.โ
โNot true,โ I offer. โMy father would have loved me no matter what.โย But is that true?ย I wonder. I adored the same things he didโvisual art and painting. If Iโd been obsessed with geology or emo rock, would we have clicked the same way? If my mother hadnโt been absent, would he have been as attentive?
โAnd Finn,โ Beatriz says. โDonโt forget about him. How did you know he wasย the one?โ
โI donโt know that,โ I bluster. โIโm not married to him.โ โBut if he proposed here, werenโt you going to say yes?โ
I nod. โI think that I used to believe that love was supposed to feel like a lightning stormโsuperdramatic, with crashes and thunder and all the hair standing up on the back of your neck. I had boyfriends like that, in college. But Finn โฆ heโs the opposite. Heโs steady. Like โฆ white noise.โ
โHe puts you to sleep?โ
โNo. He makes everything โฆ easier.โ Saying this, I feel a surge of love so fierce for Finn that my knees go weak.
โSo heโs the first person you felt that way about?โ Beatriz asks, probing.
She isnโt looking at me, but thereโs a stripe of heat across her cheekbones, and I realize she isnโt really asking about me. If not for this pandemic, Beatriz would be at school and would likely be confiding in a friend her own age about her own crush.
Then I think of what she said about being flamed on social media. I remember that Gabriel told me Beatriz begged to come back to Isabela.
Suddenly she breaks into a jog, and stops at the edge of a yawning hole that seems to reach to the belly of the earth. Itโs about sixty feet wide, with a ladder mounted at the lip, twined with several thick ropes. Ferns and moss grow on the walls, which narrow and narrow to a black hole further down. I peer into the abyss but it looks only dark and endless.
โPeople rappel to the bottom,โ Beatriz says.
I feel the walls of the tunnel pressing on me, and Iโm not even inside it. โI amย notย rappelling to the bottom.โ
โWell, you can climb partway,โ she says. โCome on.โ
She scrambles down the slippery wooden rungs, wrapping the ropes around her arm as a safety measure. I follow her more cautiously. The tunnel narrows around us. The vegetation smells ripe and lush as I
concentrate on stepping firmly with my foot down, down, down.
When Beatriz descends into the neck of the tunnel, I lose sight of her. โBeatriz!โ I call, and her voice floats up to me.
โCome on, Diana, itโs magic.โ
The further down we go, the hotter it gets, as if the tunnel is tapering toward hell itself. There is no more vegetation, just lava rock that is light and porous, and that shimmers in the faint light from above. I keep moving
methodically and nearly scream when I feel Beatrizโs hand close over my ankle. โThree more rungs,โ she says, โand then the ladder runs out.โ
She shifts so that we are clinging to the same bottom rungs, side by side. โLook up,โ Beatriz says.
I do, and the sky is a tiny pinprick of hope. When I glance back down and breathe in, it feels like the air from someone elseโs mouth. I canโt see at first in the dim muscle of the tunnel, and then all of a sudden I canโjust the shine of Beatrizโs pupils. It feels like weโre sharing a heartbeat.
โRemind me why weโre here,โ I whisper.
โWeโre in the belly of a volcano,โ she says. โWe could hide here forever.โ
For a few moments, I listen to the moan of wind from what must be a hundred feet above. Something wet drips onto my forehead. It is terrifying being here, yes, but it is also almost holy. Itโs like crawling back in time.
Like preparing to be reborn.
It feels like the place to confide a secret.
โTruth or dare,โ I whisper, and I hold my breath, waiting. โTruth,โ Beatriz says.
โYour father told me you wanted to come back here, but you donโt want to be here.โ
โWhatโs your question?โ I donโt answer.
She sighs. โNeither of those,โ Beatriz says, โis untrue.โ
I wait for her to elaborate in this cocoon of darkness, but instead, she turns the game on me. โTruth or dare,โ she says.
โTruth.โ
โIf you could change your mind three weeks ago and take the ferry home, would you?โ
โI donโt know,โ I hear myself answer, and it physically hurts to say it out loud, in the way that truth can sometimes be a knife.
The whole time Iโve been here, Iโve told myself that being stuck on Isabela was a mistake. But there is also a small, new part of me that
wonders if it was meant to be. If Iโm delayed because the universe decided Beatriz needed someone to depend on; if I had to distance myself from Finn to see our relationship more clearlyโits strengths, and its flaws.
Unconditional love is bullshit. โTruth or dare. Is there someone at school you wish you could be with?โ
I have wondered if, when I eventually leave, Beatriz will go back to
Santa Cruz, back to her host family and, maybe, this crush. If that would stop the cutting. Would make her happy.
โYes.โ The syllable is no more than a breath. โBut she doesnโt want to be with me.โ
She.
I hear the quiet hitch of Beatrizโs breath. Sheโs crying, and Iโm pretending not to notice, which I suspect is what she wants.
โTell me about her,โ I say softly.
โAna Mariaโs my host sister,โ Beatriz whispers. โSheโs two years older than me. I think Iโve always known how I feel but I never said anything, not until there were rumors that school might close because of the virus. When I thought about not seeing her, like even just at breakfast, or walking back from classes, I couldnโt breathe. So I kissed her.โ She curls herself closer to the ladder rungs.
โIt didnโt go well,โ I state.
โIt did at first. She kissed me back. For three daysโit was โฆ perfect.โ Beatriz shakes her head. โAnd then she told me she couldnโt. She said her parents would kill her, if they found out. That she loved me, but not like
that.โ She swallows. โShe said I was โฆ I was a mistake.โ โOh, Beatriz.โ
โHer parents wanted me to stay during lockdown. I told them my father wouldnโt let me. How could I live in the same house as her, and pretend it was all fine?โ
โWhat will you do when school opens?โ
โI donโt know,โ Beatriz says. โI ruined it. I canโt go back there. And thereโs nothing for me here.โ
Thereโs something for you here,ย I think.ย You just canโt see it.
โWill you tell my father?โ she whispers into the dark. โNo,โ I promise. โBut I hope you will, one day.โ
We cling to the ladder in the hot throat of the world. Her breathing evens again, in counterpoint to mine. โTruth or dare,โ she says, so softly I can barely hear it. โDo you ever wish you could do part of your life over?โ
The truth is yes.
But โฆ itโs not these past three weeks. Instead, itโs everything leading up to them. The more time I spend on this island, the more clarity I have about the time leading up to it. In a strange way, being stripped of everythingโ
my job, my significant other, even my clothing and my languageโhas left only the essential part of me, and it feels more real than everything I have tried to be for years. Itโs almost as if I had to stop running in order to see myself clearly, and what I see is a person whoโs been driving toward a goal for so long she canโt remember why she set it in the first place.
And that scares the fuck out of me. โDare,โ I reply.
A beat. โLet go of the ladder,โ Beatriz says. โAbsolutely not,โ I answer.
โThen Iโll do it.โ
I hear her release her fingers from the rung, feel the shift in the air as she falls backward.
โNo,โ I cry, and I somehow manage to snatch a handful of her shirt. With the ropes wrapped tight around my free arm, I feel her deadweight dangling.
Donโt let go donโt let go donโt let go
โBea,โ I say evenly, โyou have to grab on to me. Can you do that? Can you do that for me?โ
A thousand years later, I feel her fingers clutching my forearm. I grab back, forming a tighter link, until she is close enough to the ladder to grasp it again. A moment later, with a sob, she falls against me and I wrap my free arm around her. โItโs okay,โ I soothe. โItโs going to be okay.โ
โI wanted to know what it would be like,โ she cries, โto just let go.โ
I stroke her hair and think:ย You cannot trust perception. Falling, at first, feels like flying.