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starrwriter
10-22-2005, 05:34 PM
A mysterious thread ran through my life to Argentina, like a murky path I followed blindly in the fog of time. The path began with Leslie, a young American woman I fell in love with at the age of thirty. She was beautiful and melancholy, reminiscent of a strange wild orchid. Her fondest wish was to visit Tierra del Fuego, the land of fire at the southern tip of Argentina. She called it the ends of the earth and we broke up before she was able to bewitch me into taking her there. I didn't want to go because I was afraid she might choose to stay in such a lonely place or simply vanish into the stark landscape. She was that kind of girl.

A few years after Leslie and I parted, I became a close friend of two Argentine families who had immigrated to my hometown in the U.S. Though it seemed quite accidental at the time, I realize now it was part of the continuing thread that would eventually lead me to Argentina. The family members talked mostly of Buenos Aires -- fairly raved about how cosmopolitan and beautiful it was. With an architecture and lifestyle patterned after Paris, Buenos Aires had the widest boulevard in the world, sidewalk cafes on every street corner, tango nightclubs, museums, theaters and lavish parks in a huge city that never slept. I listened politely to their enthusiastic recollections, never suspecting that they were describing my future home.

Now that I actually reside in Buenos Aires, my existence here retains a certain dreamlike quality that confounds me at times. I live like a fictional character in an old adventure tale about the fabled Antipodes where everything is reversed. July is cold and January hot. The tropics are north while an icy climate lies to the south. Even the water spins counter-clockwise when I flush the commode. I am Gulliver's opposite. I stroll the streets feeling six inches tall in a land of superlatives. Thirteen million people live in this teeming city, but I have gotten to know only a handful of them mainly due to my bad Spanish. I speak baby talk Spanish which sounds hilarious to Portenos, judging from their reactions.

I have a studio apartment with a balcony overlooking a park five storeys below. I eat the majority of my meals in small cafes within walking distance. If I cook at home too often, Elena (the maid) complains about having to wash dishes and threatens to ask for a raise. Although Elena is twenty years younger than I am, she is very much like a mother to me. She scolds me for staying home too much, urging me to go out on the town and meet a good woman to marry. I tell her I am not interested in marriage and she looks at me as if I came from another planet. We have a strange relationship, to say the least. I have never had a maid before and I feel somewhat uncomfortable about it, yet I am too distracted and lazy to clean the apartment myself. In a city where nearly everyone with money is in psychotherapy it is appropriate to say that Elena and I are co-dependent. She enables me to be lazy with a bad conscience while I enable her to support her husband, who is unemployed through no fault of his own.

A sizeable American population exists in Buenos Aires and I used to eagerly introduce myself to any stranger who spoke English, but now I generally avoid my countrymen. They lean on each other to escape culture shock and homesickness, but the whole group is leaning on an illusions for support. One illusion is that Buenos Aires would feel more like home if they could only eat maple syrup and pancakes for breakfast rather than empenadas with dulce de leche, a local syrup made from boiled milk, sugar and vanilla. As if that would change the essence of this radically different place. It was laughable, but I grew tired of laughing at them.

The Portenos (as city residents call themselves) speak Spanish with an Italian accent because so many paisanos immigrated to the country in the early 1900s. More of them have Italian or German last names than Spanish last names. Germans settled here as early as the Italians and during the 1930s Argentina's government was patterned after Mussolini's fascist regime. After World War II, Nazi party members flocked to Argentina to escape war crime trials in Europe. Politically, Argentina is a schizophrenic country. Taxi drivers talk openly about the difference between Marxism and communism a single generation after a brutal "dirty war" in which the military government murdered tens of thousands of its own citizens who had leftist leanings. Even though some of the generals are in prison now, they have the respect and gratitude of whole segments of the upper class. At the same time many young people have posters of Che Guevara in their rooms. (Che grew up as a member of the Argentine middle class.) Moderate views go begging in a land of political extremes. The pendulum swings first one way and then the other. Some day the military will take over again and everyone knows this in his heart, but it is too unpleasant to think about when dreamy nights beckon with goblets of wine and tango dancing until dawn.

I took me two months of scouring Buenos Aires to find Eric Benitez, one of the Argentine family members I knew in the U.S. Eric was astonished to learn I was living here and he seemed glad to see me, but his excitement quickly turned into sadness when I asked him about his family. His wife, Victoria, left him a year ago to live with another man and she took their two daughters with her. She had been unfaithful to him before and he had forgiven her, but this time she had ended their marriage permanently. Eric took me to his favorite bar and introduced me to his friends, a collection of wild-eyed artists, writers and political activists. Although we all got gloriously drunk, Eric appeared to be on the verge of tears when he wasn't laughing.

Eric is an artist as well and he works mainly in leather goods, which is big business in Argentina. He drops by my apartment from time to time, always bringing a bottle of good wine, and we talk for hours about anything and everything except Victoria and their children. Eric is lonely and still in love with his ex-wife. I wish there was something I could do to help him forget her. He needs to fall in love with another woman, the only cure for a broken romance, but I am in no position to arrange a tryst with a pretty senorita for him. I doubt if I could find one for myself if I bothered to look. I'm too old for chasing women until they catch me. At my age I am content to live alone and recall past loves like the bewitching Leslie.

Tierro del Fuego lies yawning to the south, but I stubbornly refuse to go there. I realize that Leslie has influenced the course of my life to an uncanny degree and I don't want to give her this last victory. She had a degree in anthropology, so I majored in anthropology when I finally went to college. She hoped to become a writer and I did become a writer. She yearned to see the ends of the earth and here I am only a Patagonia away from it. Leslie has won a contest of wills in absentia, though I was unaware until recently that the contest had continued all these years.

I stay home and watch old American films on cable TV over and over again. I have gotten into the habit of reading the Spanish subtitles rather than watching the characters, hoping in vain that this will improve my shaky comprehension of the language. I am beginning to watch Argentine soap operas despite the fact that I understand precious little of the dialogue. Something about the animated facial expressions and body gestures is oddly fascinating to me.

Most nights I take long walks in parks or along the waterfront of the Rio de la Plata. Buenos Aires is considered the safest big city in South America and I seldom worry about muggers. The evening air is filled with the perfume of flowers that bloom year-round. Although I have become something of a night owl like most Portenos, I am still not accustomed to eating supper at 10 or 11 p.m. However, I derive an inexplicable joy from watching others dine very late in sidewalk cafes as I make my way home. Married couples bring their children and young couples in love hold hands and kiss furtively. Sometimes I sit at a table hardly touching my glass of wine, absorbing the night scenery in a kind of reverie.

I realize I have used the word home twice in the last two paragraphs. This is difficult to fathom since Buenos Aires remains alien to me in most respects. It is nothing like any other city where I have lived and yet it is my home. I spent most of my life in dull middle-class towns, but I always longed to live a bohemian existence like Hemingway in Paris. I may have been forced to wait until I was an old man to find the right place, but better late than never to realize a lifelong dream.

To me Buenos Aires is a phantasmagoria, always changing and never quite real, like a Salvadore Dali painting set into motion. I don't feel the crush of thirteen million Portenos as I move around the city as if I were floating through a dreamscape. I expect to wake up each morning and find myself back in familiar surroundings, but when I open my sleep-filled eyes I am still here in the dream. A cat yowls in the hallway and I am convinced it is not a real cat. It is a cat figment of the dream with tongue lapping in a bowl of condensed milk.

As I kneel and stroke the feline illusion, I hear the faint echo of Leslie laughing from somewhere far away -- perhaps the opposite ends of the earth. It is strange laughter that reminds me of a Siren's wail. I make a cup of strong Brazilian coffee and take it to the balcony to sip at my leisure. At 6:45 the street below is already bustling with traffic. I listen to hear Leslie's laughter again, but it fades away in the morning sounds of the dream. I am haunted by this surreal city in the Antipodes.

starrwriter
10-30-2005, 02:26 AM
Hello? A total of 35 views and not a single opinion of this story? Is it obtuse or just plain bad? Come on, hit me with your best shot. I feel like posting this story sent it into a black hole where not even light can escape.

B-Mental
10-30-2005, 02:29 AM
I've read this a couple of times starr. I like it a lot. I kind of get a Hunter S Thompson Rum Diaries image. What set you about writing this?

starrwriter
10-30-2005, 02:54 AM
I've read this a couple of times starr. I like it a lot. I kind of get a Hunter S Thompson Rum Diaries image. What set you about writing this?
Thanks for commenting.

A couple years ago I seriously considered moving to Buenos Aires. As in the story, a close Argentine friend I made in Hawaii had returned to his native city and he raved about the place.

Over a period of months I did a massive amount of research on BA, including contacting a dozen or so members of a group of American expats living there. I picked their brains to get the inside story on what the typical daily routine was for gringos in BA. Then things turned hinkey in Argentina, there was suddenly a lot of anti-Americanism, and I decided it would be a mistake to move there.

I had reams of information I had collected and I didn't want all that work to go to waste, so I used some of it to write the short story. After posting the story online, I was stunned (and flattered) to receive an email from an Argentine student attending the University of Michigan. He assumed I had actually lived in Buenos Aires and said my story was the best depiction of the city he had ever read.

B-Mental
10-30-2005, 03:10 AM
Very vivd description of BA. I have a friend that goes to Costa Rica every spring. He writes about the rural parts he visits, but they lack so much. Some day I'll have to see it for myself, maybe when the international community seems a little more open to Americans.

starrwriter
10-30-2005, 03:33 AM
Very vivd description of BA. I have a friend that goes to Costa Rica every spring. He writes about the rural parts he visits, but they lack so much. Some day I'll have to see it for myself, maybe when the international community seems a little more open to Americans.
Costa Rica is a county I have actually lived in. First, the remote port town of Golfito and then the capitol of San Jose.

I worked briefly as a reporter for the English-language newspaper Tico Times. I have written more than one fiction story set in Costa Rica. Beautiful place with very friendly local people. Some time later I'll post a travel memoir about Golfito titled "Tropical Tableau."

Countess
11-01-2005, 12:50 PM
Very well written. Your audience will necessarily be very specific, since the story covers details of Buenos Aires landscape, history, and your character's general impressions of the same.