Zaire
The
air conditioner in the bedroom window whined and wheezed under the assault of San
Antonio’s July. They lay motionless on the bed, drying, hoping to cool off. He
told her about the café on the tip of the Isle St. Louis where they served glace in chilled silver bowls, coated
with frost.
She
said, I’ve never actually been to any
of the really great places. Barcelona, Crete, Paris, Istanbul. Nowhere you’d
really want to live. The only time I ever went abroad it was to Zaire for
chrissakes. Whatever that’s worth.
Really?
What was that like?
Thick.
The dictator, whatsisface, was crazy nuts.
Aren’t
they all? Was it Mobutu? The heat made it hard to remember things.
Yeah,
him, I guess. Ben had some kind of government fellowship to teach at the
university. We hung out with some other expats who all had copper-lined livers.
All we did was drink a lot, dance a little, occasionally get hit on or hit on
somebody else. Once we drove out in the bush to look for elephants, but it
didn’t seem like bush to me. Kind of scraggly, like north San Antonio. We saw some
bones that could have been anything. A cow, maybe. It was hot, yeah. You sweat
constantly. Rivers. I’d have to change two or three times a day. But I had one
girl to wash my clothes and cook and another to clean. The place was so poor, we
had servants! On faculty wages! Anyway, there’s this red-faced guy, always
hanging about, drunk most of the time that everybody knew but nobody seemed to
know what he did. If they did, we weren’t in on it. Once he sat down with us in
a café. He was making a bad job of being sneaky, all hearty and shit. How are you folks? How are the quarters? Bit
hot for us yanks aint it? Then he leans toward Ben, and asks if we’d like to
make a little cash. Ben’s already shaking his head, scared of drugs and his
stipend, but the guy spreads his hands: No-no-no. No drug stuff. He’s with “Our
side,” he says, which we took for the C.I.A. or somebody. We’d be doing a service to our country. We just had to
keep going where we went, and doing what we did with the people we did it with.
Brit officers. American low echelon embassy types. Israeli teachers. Ben’s
Zairean students. Eastern Europeans with no visible means. French traders. Whoever
we’d connect with at embassy parties, faculty receptions. This one grubby
nightclub where everyone drank and danced. And after, we were supposed to tell
him what people said. That was it.
These
were your friends.
I
guess so. I don’t know. They were people we knew.
Was
he asking for anything specific? From anybody in particular?
No.
He didn’t seem to care. Whatever we heard.
Did
you do it?
Are
you kidding? For a thousand dollars a report? That was a lot of money then.
Still
not bad. Do you think he was paying other people?
Duh.
But, here’s the thing. It’s so interesting, when you’re paid to listen. And
other people are—you assume—paid to listen to you. How sparkling and sharp it
all becomes. How rich the conversation suddenly is. How intriguing the
speakers, with all their valuable secrets. How important you feel listening and
trying to hear what they’re really saying or not saying. And what he wants to
know about them and what they’re up to. Even now I can sometimes remember
things people said, almost word for word.
She
smiled, looking not at him, but up at the sleepily turning fan. He was sweating
again. He could smell himself, his spoor, in the air and on the sheets, and
wondered if she’d bother to change them before Ben came home.
--Editor's Favorite Award, 2015
CP
CP
David Ackley lives and writes and tries to stay
warm in the White Mountains of New Hampshire. Previous work has been published
in The Greensboro Review, THRICE
Fiction, Prick of the Spindle and
Litsnack.
2 comments:
David Ackley is one of the most under appreciated craftsman of our generation. His story Zaire is a another one of his brilliant creations--a story of subtle undertones and enormous depth written with marvelous economy.
GLC
Oh this is stunning fiction. I was pulled right in by the voices, setting, and of course the plot. Amazing work.
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