2/18/15

The fortune at the bottom of coffee cups: a short story

* This is a short story I wrote for my first book. I tried to translated it to English. Here it is.


The Fortune at the bottom of the coffee cups



Jumping, running, pretending and climbing. The adult males were all together, pretending to be serious after the Sunday meal, digesting and discussing serious subjects comfortably seated in chairs around the porch, while the adult females served coffee and desserts. Joanna killed two big chickens for the supper. The chickens were alive and noisy just before their necks were broken. Right after that, inanimate objects, almost as if they were pillows. Large, quiet feather pillows resting in the morning sun.  Having  witnessed  the occurrence of death, felt me with disgust.  I couldn´t eat the roasted chicken. I feared I would swallow death, or that I would end up the killing, tearing up the meat fibers with my milk teeth. I had mashed potatoes with those round and green things… peas!  And there were also roasted pork, huge, its skin turned into a crispy surface, its open mouth holding an apple, its eyes turned into hard pieces of charcoal. And then, the desserts. My mother´s delicious pudding, creams, cakes and fruits in syrup: peaches, plums and sanguine oranges. The garden´s lawn was deep green; the sun was always there, over our heads. Don´t stay in the sun after eating, my mother yelled at me, I can see her by the porch, her hands around her mouth. It was winter, my uncle took a nap at the hammock, my grandfather smoked his old pipe, I do remember. Women served desserts and coffee. My grandfather looked so old! He read the future in the coffee powder that rested in the bottom of coffee cups. “Where is he, my grandpa?” Dead; I can see him inside his casket, old and wasted, but, no, he is alive, reading people´s fortune in the coffee powder that rested at the bottom of coffee cups.  Once, he told me: you going to live many, many years.   “How many years, grandpa?” “Many, many years. Many more than I would live”. So I asked if live many years was a good or a bad thing. He laughed, showing his ugly teeth.   It´s so bright today, isn´t it? It´s the sun, always there, over our heads.  Grandma Henrietta was older than grandpa. She had a mouth with no teeth in it, her tongue danced around as it could sense something her eyes couldn´t as lizards do. The difference was she had legs she couldn´t use, and a blanket covering their uselessness. And there was Cousin Joachim, such an evil creature. He used to kill birds with a slingshot, targeting the most beautiful ones because he was so ugly and he hated being condemned to a live standing in his both feet, unable to fly. He knew, he knew that even though he could climb the tallest trees and pretend to be a bird, he would end up as all the other humans; we belong to earth, to the soil we have under our feet. Life is made of some ups and some downs, most downs, mainly once we reach the old age, and then there is the moment we end up under the soil we once have under our feet. He would kill the birds in revenge. But, this Sunday sunny afternoon, there was no trace of death and the old ones were my grandpa and grandma Henrietta with her legs covered with a sad blanket.
Cousin Joachim, I hated him, but I also admired his ability to never miss one single shot. I would beg him not to, beg him to spare the little sparrow, but he wouldn´t listen, he never listened, and the result was I had a dying bird in the palm of my hand and wanted to cry and wanted to kill my cousin for having killed. My hand would tremble, my body would crumble, as it does tremble and crumbles today. He also killed ants and snails with the help of a magnifier. The sun light and the sun heat would be magnified by the lens and the ants and snails would burst in flames, what an awful death.
He challenged me saying I would never climb the old guava tree. I said I would, so we made a deal. If I didn´t, he would have my collection of stamps. If I did, I would have his collection of butterfly wings.
I was scared, but would never have him have my collection of stamps, a present from my daddy.  I thought about my dad and a dull pain pierced my chest. My dad, where is he? A salesman making a living from selling things around the country far, far away from us, from everything. When he returns, it´s like he had never left. He always brings us presents. For me, stamps and adventures books, for Lao, a knife or a magnifier, the one that Joachim later used to kill the ants, for Leah, a nice ribbon for her light brown hair, for my mother, a nice piece of cloth, a perfume. My mother, where is she? I do remember a ceremony at the church, a closed casket with someone inside.  I was so scared.
“Cut it now, stop crying. Don´t you see? It was meant for him to die”.  I recall my father´s voice and the image of his long legs in front of me. Why, I asked. “That´s life. He gave his life so we could have what to eat, that´s why we raise animals. Tomorrow is Easter”. A bunny or a lamb? A lamb. So tiny, so fragile… I was responsible for caring and giving him food. But now, the lamb is dead, my father killed my lamb. “No, dad, no!” I yelled at him, I hated him. He killed my lamb, and I yelled at him, I called him murder, and then I run away from him, away from the sight of the butchered lamb. I climbed the highest tree of my aunt´s garden and I stayed there, I would have stayed there forever, but I came down because she begged me to, or because I was tired and needed to go home. When I got home, my mother wanted me to tell me father I was sorry, but I wasn´t, so I wouldn´t. She hit me hard, five times. But I didn´t say I was sorry because I wasn´t.  I remember my father´s eyes at me. He was sad, I was furious. The next day, it was Easter. I was grounded and didn´t have lunch. And then, my father travelled. I didn’t say goodbye, I couldn´t forgive him. After he left, I almost felt happy with his absence, but time passed and passed, and he wouldn´t come back.  I started to wish he would come back.
“It´s about time to get inside, dad”. 
Dad? The sun light is so bright I can´t hardly see.  Daddy ´s back! But my legs hurt, I can´t move them. Joachim and I, we were there, high up there at the highest branches of the guava tree . And I fell. My legs hurt so badly, I couldn´t move. My dad came to rescue me, took me in his arms and then to the doctor who lived nearby. Don´t you worry, son, everything´s going to be all right, he said to me, looking into my eyes with his good old eyes. His hair has grown gray, so gray. Dad, I am sorry, I didn´t know, I was mad at you, I am sorry, can you forgive me, daddy?  My legs hurt, I cannot move. The lamb, the roasted pork, the snails and the ants. You going to live many, many years, the coffee powder at the bottom of the coffee cups.
 No, I don´t want to! I want my dad, my dad is with me right now, taking care of my broken legs. I feel the pain, I feel I cannot control my legs, my life. Where is my life? Where are my brother and sister, my cousin, and grandfather, my mother and my father?
 Father?
 “Ok, daddy, that´s enough. Relax now. Let´s go inside. You´ve got to rest a little”.
My grandfather used to read people´s fortune by looking at the coffee powder at the bottom of coffee cups. Once he told me: you´re going to live many, many years.
“How many, grandpa?”
 “Many more than I would live”.