Afterwards, It was never the people she remembered,
never
faces or bodies or voices — even Alfredo’s. It was always the wind,
blowing
from the east side of the island, and the frigate birds, balanced on
their
wingtips against the sky. They flew high above her, so black and stark
they
seemed made of leather or scales, too finely drawn to be feathered.
oOo
It was March, the beginning of the rainy season,
and she had
come to Isla Mujeres to leave her husband. That she had done this some
half a dozen
times before did not escape her and she had a kind of despairing
fatalism about
it. Probably this time, too, she would return. Her name was Jean Summat.
Her
husband, Marc, lived the professor’s life in Boston. She, it was
supposed, was
to live the role of professor’s wife. This was something she had never
quite
accepted.
Isla Mujeres. Island of Women.
She sat in a small pier cafe that jutted out into
the water,
waiting for her first meal on the island. In a few minutes it came. A
whole
fish stared glassily up at her from the plate. Delicately, she began to
carve
small pieces from it, and ate. She glanced up and a Mexican man in a
Panama hat
smiled at her. She looked back to her food, embarrassed.
Boston was cold right now and covered with a wet
snow as raw
as butcher’s blood. But here in Mexico, it was warm. More importantly,
it was
cheap and people’s lives here were still enmeshed in basics, not
intricately
curved in academic diplomacy.
She left the restaurant and stood on the pier
watching the
birds, feeling the warm heavy wind, sour with the hot smell of the sea.
The
late afternoon sun was masked with low clouds and in the distance was a
dark
blue rain. She had a room, money, and time.
oOo
The Avenida Rueda was clotted with vendors selling
Mayan
trinkets, blankets, pots, T-shirts, and ice cream. Several vendors tried
to
attract her attention with an “Amiga!” but she ignored them. A
Mexican
dressed in a crisp suit and Panama hat sat in an outdoor cafe and sipped
his
drink as he watched her. Just watched her.
Lots of Mexicans wear such hats, she told herself.
Still, he
made her nervous and she left the street to return to her room. On the
balcony
she watched the frigate birds and the people on the beach.
oOo
Jean swam in the warm water of Playa de Cocoa. When
she came
from the water she saw the man watching her from one of the cabañas as
he
sipped a Coke. She walked up to him.
“Why are you following me?”
The man sipped his Coke and looked back at her. “No
entiende.”
She looked at him carefully. “That’s a lie.”
There was a long moment of tension. He threw back
his head
and laughed. “Es verdad.”
“Why — what the hell are you doing?”
“You are very beautiful, Señora.”
“Jesus!”
“You need a man.”
“I have a man.” Or half a man. Or maybe more than a
man. Do
I still have him? Do I want him? Did I ever?
“With specifications?”
She stared at him.
oOo
Hector led her through the rubble at the end of the
Avenida
Hidalgo to a small concrete house nearly identical to all the other
concrete
houses on the island. It was surrounded by a wall. Set into the top of
the wall
were the jagged spikes of broken soda bottles. She looked down the
street. The
other houses were built the same. There was a burnt-out car leaning
against one
wall, and a thin dog stared at her, his eyes both hungry and protective.
Inside, it smelled damp. It was dark for a moment,
then he
turned on a blue fluorescent light that lit the room like a chained
lightning
bolt. Leaning against the wall was a tall, long-haired and heavily built
man
with Mayan features. He did not move.
What am I doing here?
“This is Alfredo.” Hector was looking at her with a
considering expression.
She shook her head. The air in the room seemed
thick,
lifeless, cut off from the world. “Alfredo?”
“Alfredo. I show you.” Hector opened a suitcase and
took out
a box with a complex control panel. He flipped two switches and turned a
dial
and the box hummed. Alfredo pushed himself away from the wall and looked
around.
“Good God.” She stared at him. Alfredo was
beautiful, with a
high forehead and strong lips. His body was wide and taut, the muscles
rippling
as he moved. Hector touched a button and he became absolutely still.
“You like him?”
She turned to Hector startled. She’d forgotten he
was there.
“What is this?”
“Ah! An explanation.” He spoke in a deep
conspiratorial
whisper. “Deep in the mountains north of Mexico City is a great research
laboratory. They have built many of these — andros? Syntheticos?”
“Androids.”
“Of course. They are stronger and more beautiful
than mortal
men. But the church discovered it and forced them to close it down. The
church
is important here — “
“That’s a lie.”
Hector shrugged. “The Señora is correct. Alfredo
was a
prisoner in the Yucatan. Condemned to die for despicable crimes. They
did not
kill him, however. Instead, they removed his mind and inlaid his body
with
electrical circuits. He is now more than a man — “
“That’s another lie.”
“The Señora sees most clearly.” He paused a moment.
“You
have heard of the Haitian zombie? The Mayans had a similar process. My
country
has only recently perfected it, coupling it with the most advanced of
scientific — “
Jean only stared at him.
He stopped, then shrugged. “What does it matter,
Señora? He
is empty. His mind does not exist. He will — imprint? Is that the
correct word?
— on anyone I choose.”
“This is a trick.”
“You are so difficult to convince. Let me show you
his
abilities.” Hector manipulated the controls and Alfredo leaped forward
and
caught himself on one hand, holding himself high in the air with the
strength
of one arm. He flipped forward onto his feet. Alfredo picked up a branch
from a
pile of kindling and twisted it in both hands. There was no expression
on his
face but the muscles in his forearms twisted like snakes, the tendons
like dark
wires. The branch broke with a sudden gunshot report.
Hector stopped Alfredo at attention before them.
“You see?
He is more than man.”
She shook her head. “What kind of act is this?”
“No act. I control him from this panel. The —
master? maestro?
— would not need this.”
Control. Such control.
Hector seemed uncertain for a moment. “You wish to
see still
more? You are unsure of how he is controlled?” He thought for a moment.
“Let me
show you a feature.”
In the stark light and shadows, she had not noticed
Alfredo
was nude. The Mayan turned into the light.
“There are several choices one could make when
using
Alfredo.” Hector manipulated the box. “Pequeño.”
Alfredo had a normal sized erection.
She wanted to look away and could not. The Mayan
face was
before her, dark, strong, and blank.
“Medio,” said Hector softly.
She looked again and the erection was twice as
large,
pulsing to Alfredo’s breathing.
“Y monstroso!” cried Hector.
Alfredo looked fit to be a bull, a goat, or some
other
animal. There was never any expression in Alfredo’s eyes.
“Y nada,” said Hector. And Alfredo’s erection
wilted and
disappeared.
She couldn’t breathe. She wanted to run, to hide
from
Alfredo, but she didn’t want to be anywhere else.
“You are pleased, Señora?” Hector stood beside her.
Jean tried to clear her head. She looked away from
both of
them. No man could fake this. It was real, a marvelous control, a total
subjugation. Was this what she had wanted all this time?
“A very nice show.” She took a deep breath. “How
much do I
owe you?”
“You owe me nothing, Señora.” Hector bowed to her.
“But
Alfredo is for sale.” When she did not answer immediately, he continued.
“He
imprints on the owner, Señora. Then voice commands are sufficient. He
will show
initiative if you desire it, or not. He is intelligent, but only in your
service.”
“But you have the controls.”
“They do not operate once imprinting occurs.”
Crazy. Ridiculous.
“How much?” she heard herself asking.
Alfredo followed her home, mute, below the birds
and the
sky. She could smell him on the evening wind, a clean, strong smell.
“Do you speak?” she asked as he followed her up the
steps to
her room.
Alfredo did not answer for a moment. “Yes.”
She asked him no more questions that night.
oOo
His mind was like a thunderstorm: thick, murky,
dark, shot
through intermittently by lightning. These were not blasts of
intelligence or
insight but the brightness of activity, the heat of flesh, the
electricity of
impulse. He was no more conscious of what happened or what caused his
actions
than lightning was conscious of the friction between clouds.
Occasionally, very
occasionally, a light came through him, like the sun through the distant
rain,
and things stilled within him.
He was a chained thunderbolt, unaware of his
chains.
oOo
She copulated with Alfredo almost continuously the
first
three days. It was as if a beast had been loosed within her. If she
wanted him
to stroke her thus, he did so. If she wanted him to bite her there,
it was done. Something broke within her and she tried to devour him.
It was only when she fully realized she owned
him,
that he would be there as long as she wanted him, that this abated. Then
it was
like coming up from underwater, and she looked around her.
Alfredo had cost her almost everything she had,
nearly all
the money she would have used to start a new life. She could not go back
to
Marc now. Perhaps buying Alfredo had been an act ensuring that. She
didn’t
know. There were jobs on the island for Americans, but they were tricky
and
illegal to get.
At the end of the first day of a waitress job, she
came to
their room tired and angry. Alfredo was sitting on the edge of the bed
staring
out the window. It was suddenly too much for her.
“You! I do this to feed you.” She stared at him. He
stared
back with his dark eyes.
“I can’t go home because of you.” She slapped him.
There was
no response.
She turned away from him and looked out at the sea
and the
birds. This wasn’t going to work.
Wait.
Jean turned to him. “Can you work?”
He ponderously turned his head toward her. “Yes.”
“You do speak Spanish?”
“Sí.”
“Come with me.”
She looked through her toilet bag and found a pair
of
scissors. They were almost too long for what she wanted but they would
do. The fluorescent
light in the bathroom glittered off the steel as she cut his hair, a
sharp,
pointed light. After a few moments, she turned his head up toward her.
The hair
was nearly right. His cheek was smooth against her hand. Impulsively,
she
kissed him and he moved toward her but she pushed him back down in the
chair.
“All right,” she said finally. “Take a shower.” He started the water and
she
watched him for a long minute. After that, she thought, after that,
we’ll see.
oOo
Alfredo a job almost immediately and made enough to
keep
them both alive. Now, Jean lay on the beach and tanned. Alfredo worked
hard and
his strength was such that he could work through the siesta.
He had only to watch a thing done and then could do
it. The
workers on Isla Mujeres grumbled. Jean shrewdly noticed this and sent
him
across the bay into Cancún where the wages were higher.
Two weeks after this they had enough to move into
the El
Presidente Hotel.
That night she looked at him. “Ever the
sophisticate,” she
murmured. “Go get clothes fit to wear here.”
Alfredo did and she went to dinner in the Caribe on
his arm.
He looked so strong and dignified the other women in the room looked at
him,
then away. Jean felt a thrill go through her. Over dinner she murmured
instructions which he executed flawlessly. She felt quite fond of him.
Over coffee, the waiter brought them a message from
a Lydia
Conklin and friend, inviting them for cocktails.
She read it. Alfredo did not — yet — read and
stared away
toward the open doorway of the bar.
“What are you looking at?” she asked.
He turned to her. “Nothing.”
“Look around the room regularly like a normal
person.”
He did not answer but instead watched the room as
if bored
or waiting for the check.
Jean read the note again.
She shrugged and signed the check. The two of them
went to
the bar for a drink.
“Excuse me.” A woman stood up in front of them. “I
am Lydia
Conklin.”
Jean looked first at her, then at Alfredo. “I’m
Jean Summat.
I got your note — “
“I was dying for American speech.” As she spoke she
only
glanced at Jean. Her eyes were full of Alfredo. “You don’t know what
it’s
like.” Now, she turned to Jean. “Or perhaps you do.”
“I’ve been here a few weeks.”
“Señora Summat.”
That voice Jean knew. Behind and to her left was
Hector.
“Good evening, Hector.”
“You know Hector too?” Lydia said idly. “How
wonderful.”
“Sit with us, Señora. Please.” Hector pulled out a
chair for
her. Jean looked at Alfredo. Alfredo paused a moment, watched her
closely, then
sat across from her at the table.
Hector sat next to Jean. He leaned toward Lydia.
“Señora
Summat, Alfredo, and myself were business partners.”
“‘Were’?” Lydia raised her eyebrows.
“The business is accomplished. It is of no matter.”
Jean interrupted. “Are you down for a vacation,
Lydia?”
Lydia shrugged. “In a way. I’m down for my health.
This last
year I went mad.”
Hector laughed. Jean smiled uneasily. Lydia
shrugged again.
“Señora Conklin makes a good joke.”
“It was, I suppose.” Lydia sipped her drink. “I
came down here
two years ago and fell in love with a Mayan. I’m back to see if
lightning can
strike twice.”
Something in her face was hard to look at for more
than a
moment. Jean looked away. “What was the Mayan’s name?”
“Alberto. Hector is helping me find another.”
Hector seemed nervous. He turned to Jean. “I
introduce
Señora Conklin to eligible men — “
“He pimps for me.” Lydia lit a cigarette. “Your
Mayan
reminds me of Alberto.”
“Alfredo. His name is Alfredo.” Jean looked at
Alfredo. His
face was impassive.
“The names are almost the same.” Lydia blew smoke
in the air
above the table.
“Did Alberto care for you?”
“He — “ Lydia paused a moment “ — he adored me. He
was my
slave.”
“Señoras? Would you care for more drinks?” Hector
was
perspiring now.
Jean and Lydia stared at one another.
Jean turned to Alfredo. “What do you think of
this?”
Alfredo did not speak for a long minute, watching
the two
women. Then he smiled at Jean. “A Mayan is no woman’s slave.” And he
laughed.
Lydia stared at him with an open mouth. Hector
frowned.
Jean looked at them both in triumph. “I suspect
that may be
the definitive Mayan answer. Alfredo, would you take me to my room?”
Alfredo stood quickly and led her away.
Jean was thinking: What is in him? What
is in
there?
oOo
It was June now and the island was somewhat hotter
and much
more humid. The frigate birds flew low over the buildings as if the wet
air
could not support them. The Mexican fishermen brought in great nets of
snapper
and bonita. The American sport fishermen disappeared in search of marlin
and
sailfish.
Lydia Conklin stayed. She always seemed to be
watching
Alfredo. Hector seemed to leave the island regularly but he always
returned.
Jean fancied she could tell when either was around just by the feeling
of eyes
on Alfredo.
Often Lydia would invite them to dinner, or cards,
or for
drinks. Usually Jean turned her down. Sometimes, though, they would go
and Jean
never could figure out why. There was a dance here, a dangerous ballet
that
attracted her.
One evening, they were drinking in Lydia’s
apartment in the
Presidente.
“You know,” Lydia began, swirling tequila in a
brandy
snifter. “I’ve been seeing you both for a couple of months now. I don’t
know
what Alfredo does. What do you do, Alfredo?”
Alfredo sat back in his chair and looked at Jean,
then back
to Lydia. “Do?”
“How do you support yourself?”
For a moment, Alfredo did not seem to understand.
“I do
contract work.”
Jean glanced at him over the rim of her glass. Good
God.
What have I got here?
“Contract work?” Lydia came over to him. “Did you
build
these great strong arms at a desk job?”
Alfredo shook his head. “I do nothing with a desk. I
work
with bricklayers. Tilers. Those who build walls and houses.”
“Ah!” Lydia leaned back. “You are a contractor.”
“That’s what I said.”
“This is how you support her? This is what she left
her
husband for?” Lydia stiffened and swayed, looked down at him. “Christ,
you have
sunk low.”
Jean didn’t know which of them Lydia was speaking
to.
Alfredo looked at Jean and suddenly there was
pleading in
his eyes.
“I think it’s time we left, Lydia.” Jean carefully
put down
her drink. “Thanks and all.”
Lydia threw her glass against the wall shattering
it. “I’m
sick of this! I owned him before you — then, I left him. Hector sold him
to me
first! Do you understand? To me!” She knelt before him. “Alberto.
Tell
me you remember me. Tell me I didn’t come back for nothing.”
Jean couldn’t move.
Alfredo put out his hand and touched her cheek. He
traced
the line of her jaw, then held her head in both hands. He tilted her
face
toward his. Her tears were clearly visible now, hot and pouring. He
looked at
her closely, staring, searching her face with his eyes.
“I don’t know you,” he said softly and let her go.
She fell at his feet and started sobbing.
Alfredo took Jean’s arm and led her out. “It’s been
a lovely
evening,” Jean said as they left.
oOo
Later: in bed.
It took her a long time to catch her breath
afterward. She
was covered in a light sheen of sweat that made her cold in the air
conditioning.
“What are you?” she asked quietly.
He did not answer.
She drew the tip of her finger down his chest.
“Answer me.
What are you?”
He looked at her in the dark and she could see a
glow in his
eyes.
“I don’t know.”
oOo
You could not call it consciousness, for
consciousness
determines its own needs and he could not do that. He was predetermined.
He was
programmed. Neither could you call him a person, for a person has a
complex
assortment of drives that come from many sources. His drives were simple
and
their source was singular.
He was a tool: intelligent, willful, resourceful. A
tool
aimed at a specific purpose.
oOo
Jean followed him to Cancún.
She sat in the far back section of the crowded
ferry, away
from him. There had been a storm the day before and though the air was
clear,
the resulting seas kept the big automobile ferry at dock. But the little
ferry
that carried only people plowed through the sea. It was close and hot
aboard
the boat and it stank of animals, sweat, rotten fish, diesel fumes. The
sea
pitched them back and forth until Jean was sure she was about to be
sick. A
large rip in the fabric covering the deck rails showed the bobbing
horizon and
she stared at it until she had the nausea under control.
Alfredo did not seem to notice. He sat on one of
the benches
leaning on his elbows.
When the boat docked he hailed one of the cabs and
left.
Jean was barely able to hail one in time to follow him.
His cab stopped just outside the Plaza Hidalgo next
to the
site of a new library. Alfredo stepped out of the cab and Jean didn’t
recognize
him at first. He’d changed in the cab. His workman’s dungarees and loose
shirt
were gone. Now, he was wearing a tie and short-sleeved white shirt and
slacks.
He walked over to the contractor’s office, never noticing her following
him.
She saw him talking with the architect in rapid-fire Spanish. He seemed
to be
in charge of the construction. She withdrew before he could see her.
As Jean left the construction site she saw a woman
sitting
on the park bench across the street from the office. The woman smoked a
cigarette and watched Alfredo through the office window. It was Lydia
Conklin.
Jean moved into the shade behind her to watch.
After an hour or so, Alfredo came out with a soda
and sat
down with the foreman to discuss some detail of the construction. Lydia
put out
the cigarette and crossed the street to him. He stood to meet her. They
spoke
for several minutes. Suddenly, Lydia raked his face with her nails —
Jean could
see the blood — and left him, walking hurriedly.
Jean left hurriedly, too. She had no desire to see
Lydia.
Jean returned to the ferry and stood on the open deck this time,
smiling,
watching nothing but the open sea and the frigate birds flying in the
wind.
She checked her bank account in Isla Mujeres. There
were
several thousand dollars more than there should have been. Alfredo must
have
been in this position for some time. It made her laugh softly.
He is mine, Lydia. He is mine to touch, make,
and mold.
oOo
The storm in him gradually calmed. The needs that
drove him
called out other needs, other traits. A sluggish thought blew through
him, an
inarticulate gale across the continents of what should have been a mind.
It
shook him. It broke the back of the incoherent storm that raged in him
and let
in the light. He stood blind and trembling in that light, trying to
speak.
oOo
Jean awoke and he was not there.
She sat up suddenly and looked around the room. He
stood,
nude, on the balcony staring at the sea. The sliding door was open. She
could
smell the ocean through the air conditioning.
“Alfredo?”
He croaked something unintelligible.
She followed him out into the air. “Alfredo?” He
was
dripping with sweat. The moonlight made him glow. “Did you have a
nightmare?”
Ridiculous. Why would he have nightmares?
He turned to her and his face was wet with tears,
the long
scabs from Lydia’s fingernails dark on his silver face. He shook his
head,
buried his face in his hands.
“What’s going on?” She started toward him.
He looked at her in such pain she stepped back. “I
am.…”
Suddenly, Jean did not want to know. She left him
and
reentered the apartment. Alfredo followed her, reached out to her. She
backed
away. He was huge. He filled the room — she remembered the night in
Hector’s
house, how strong he was. He was dark in the shadows of the room,
looming over
her.
“I am…,” he repeated. “I am a man.” He reached for
her
again.
Jean dodged him and ran to the other edge of the
table.
“Stay there.”
“Jean…I have become a man for you.”
“Stay there! That’s an order!”
He followed her. They circled the table. Jean
grabbed the
scissors from the table and held them in front of her. “Stay away from
me.”
“Jean. I love you.”
The moonlight struck his face and it was all
shadows and
silver. His eyes glowed for her, his face was transfigured by some
secret
knowledge. He leaped the table toward her and she fell back and he took
her
shoulders. She screamed and drove the scissors deep into his chest.
His hands fell away from her and she stumbled
against the
wall, staring at him.
Alfredo touched the handles of the scissors, looked
at her
and began to sway, caught himself, fell down to his knees. He looked at
her
again and full realization of what had happened seemed to touch him. He
fell on
his back, twitched twice, and was still.
Jean crumpled into a chair and watched the body.
Finally,
she pulled the scissors from his chest and washed them in the bathroom
until
they were clean. She drew her finger down the blades. Not sharp. Not
sharp at
all. But sharp enough. She smiled. She felt filled somehow. Satisfied.
Jean packed carefully and when she was done, she
kissed
Alfredo good-bye on his cold lips and walked down to the ferry dock. She
reached the Cancún airport in time for the early morning flight to New
Orleans.
From there, she took a flight to Boston.
As she lay back in her seat watching the clouds
move beneath
her, she thought about Marc: if he had waited for her, if he had
divorced her.
She would like to start again with him if she could, but she would
survive if
she couldn’t. She felt alive with possibility.
Jean fell asleep and dreamed of frigate birds
circling
endlessly above her.
oOo
Hector found him an hour after dawn. “Mierda,” he
said when
he saw the blood. “That she could.…” He shook his head as he opened the
suitcase he had with him. With tools he had brought with him, he cut
open
Alfredo’s chest and sewed the heart and lungs back together, then closed
the
chest cavity. From the suitcase he brought two broad plates connected to
thick
electrical cables and attached them to either side of Alfredo’s chest.
Alfredo
convulsed as Hector adjusted the controls inside the suitcase. Alfredo
moaned
and opened his eyes.
“Good,” said Hector. He detached the plates and
returned
them to the suitcase.
“Hector.…” Alfredo shook his head from side to
side. “She
hurt me.”
Hector watched him carefully but did not listen. He
flicked
two switches and watched the meters.
Alfredo sat up. “I am a man, Hector.”
Hector nodded absently and adjusted his controls.
“Certainly, she thought you were. Or she would never have tried to kill
you.
Stand, por favor.”
Alfredo stood. “I am still a man.”
Hector shrugged. “For the moment.”
“You can’t take something like that away.” Alfredo
clutched
his hands together and looked out the window. “I must follow her.”
“She doesn’t want you. She’s gotten what she
needed.”
Alfredo turned and noticed the suitcase. He watched
Hector
adjusting the controls. Alfredo pleaded with him. “I love her. She needs
me.
You can’t take something like that away.”
“No?” Two needles appeared on either side of one
dial.
Carefully, Hector brought them together.
“Hector! Don’t. Please.” Alfredo’s hands clutched
the air
and his face twisted. “Please,” he whispered. “You can’t — “
Hector flicked a switch and Alfredo stiffened. A
blank look
descended on Alfredo’s face.
“Of course I can,” said Hector and stood up
himself. “Señora
Conklin? He is ready.”
Lydia entered the room. “He is? Wonderful.” She
turned to
the Mayan. “Alberto.” The blank eyes turned toward the sound of her
voice. “I
am so glad to see you again.”
Copyright © 2010 by Steven
Popkes.
http://www.stevenpopkes.com/
First published in The Magazine of Fantasy &
Science
Fiction, January 2003