Passengers on American Airlines flight 1549 to Las Vegas.
Your departure gate C36 has been changed.
Please proceed to gate C16.
The man switches buttocks on the molded black plastic seat, I'm not going to Vegas.
His belly grumbles with great resounding proportions, Oh God! The bean burrito on top of fish tacos wasn't such a good idea.
His
plane is ready at gate C35, the waiting area is packed with
blackberryists, cellphonists and laptopists. He feels lonely in the
crowd, uneasy in this active hive.
He
tries to imagine a palm tree, the beach, anything related to his trip
to Florida. Nothing lasts more than a fleeting instant. He brushes aside
his lack of inspiration with the trite phraseological truism of all
times: I'm sure this vacation will do me good.
His
cellphone vibrates in his clenched left fist, tearing him away from
thoughts concentrating like clouds before a thunderstorm. "You have 72
new messages," says the tiny white characters on the blue screen. He
shakes his head, sighs and presses the download button.
For a moment of exasperating length, he doesn't remember where he is flying to, or from. Those damned Doritos give me heartburn!
A
sense of urgency settles in his gut, literally and figuratively because
he hasn't had any will this last week to seclude himself and write,
even in his head, a single meaningful scene. What's happening to me?
The
thought is frightful indeed, for he hasn't had such a thought about
himself, ever. Oh, doesn't he so perfectly remember smiling with
condescendence to other people afflicted with the curse of the writer's
block? "Write anything, any word, and don't stop, it'll come back before
you know it," he used to tell 'them.' This morning, in his hotel room
at the Holiday Inn, he had brushed his teeth with more vigor than
intended and admonished himself in the bathroom mirror with the same
advice he reserved for others but the words had felt like a leitmotiv
panacean platitude, drooling out of his mouth along with the toothpaste
foam.
Paula Johnson is needed at the F8 counter.
Paula Johnson!
Another
acid reflux forces him to swallow with a twitch of the head. He
searches his belongings for the salvational Maalox, uncaps it with
shaking fingers and quaffs it with relief before he even feels it. His
eyes meet those of a little boy staring at him. He wipes his mouth with
the back of his hand, steals a glimpse at his watch. Regular folks think
that time slips like sand between fingers. For him... Well, when he was
himself, time slipped like butter in The Last Tango in Paris; now, he
wonders about the people around him, busy with gadgets, seemingly trying
to catch up with lost time, communicating among each other without the
need to speak face to face or with one another, having virtual
relationships, getting P2P frills and thrills, making B2B deeds and
deals, and above all appearing to have a hell-of-a-good-time while
ignoring the rest of the world.
Passengers on American Airlines flight 1549 to Las Vegas.
Your departure gate C36 has been changed.
Please proceed to gate C16.
More people keep walking to gate C36. They ask the guy still on the mike. They look puzzled.
I repeat... Please proceed to gate C16.
And
they run the opposite way. Many announcements had been made. Actually,
one every two minutes for the last half hour. But 'they' kept coming and
going, moving apparently on conditioned reflexes, like cattle or as if
sleepwalking. How did this country become so powerful?
He sighs at the world at large and then at the Maalox bottle in his
right hand, the cap in the left and... and then he sees that the child
has come nearer, just a few feet away, and that he is still staring. Gee! How long have I been like this?
He blinks. The image of his morning reflexion in the bathroom mirror
flashes against the screen of his eyelids; closed, the toothpaste foam;
opened, the staring kid; closed, opened, close, open, toothpaste,
staring, foam, kid... This is embarrassing!
Paula Johnson is needed at the F8 counter.
Paula Johnson!
His mind dispels the awful feeling. Why are they making this announcement in the concourse C? He leans down to put the antacid container back in his bag, Who is she, anyway?
He is distracted by the feet of the kid approaching, one, two, one,
two, up to his bag wide open on the floor, "Mister, you have white stuff
all over your mouth," picking his nose and staring. Or waiting. "What?
Where?" Instinctively he wants to rub his mouth, then realizes he's
still holding the Maalox cap, Darn!
He bends swiftly to check the damage in his bag, the bottle stands at a
perilous angle on a heap of blank pages – his next manuscript, as he
calls it – strewed over his personal effects. Am I asleep or what?
He caps the bottle with a sigh, his third or fourth, then he remembers
the little boy, "Thanks, kid!" But the kid is already going away, down
the row of seats, stopping by someone else as he had with him, to point
and say something, and the person would get active, awake perhaps, or so
he thinks that's what's happening, he's not sure, something bothers
him, That guy looks familiar. And then he becomes dizzy, This is me?
Not only that, but the scene repeats itself on and on like an infinite
series of mirror reflections, "Hey, kid! Come back here!"
The
spell disappears, he finds himself waving his right hand above his head
vehemently, squeezing on the fortunately-capped Maalox bottle. Nobody
pays attention to him, maybe it's his lucky day. He wonders if the kid
were not an angel come to give him a sign, shake his torpor, his
numbness. Nah, I'm just imagining things. He ponders, Wow, is my brain working now? Thanks to the kid. Where is he?
He scans the waiting room, surfs over fat slouching bodies, shaking
white-haired heads, kissing youngsters, Texas hats and cowboy shirts.
What else is there in a Texan airport at a Florida departure gate? The
question is a silly one, of course, but it leads him to search for more
colorful descriptions.
A
vibration calls his attention to his lap where he dropped his cellphone
to get his medicine. "Download finished successfully," blinks the
message behind which he sees the kid's face winking at him before
vanishing. WOW! With his free left hand, he wipes his face one more time. There are traces of dry Maalox in the palm, The kid was right! He picks up his cellphone mechanically, I've got to know who he is.
A
few people stand, unmistakably gawking in one direction; in fact, most
of the eyes of the travelers to Florida are aiming in the same
direction. He rubbernecks, then takes another gander. His look lands on a
petite femme walking around in an extremely light, short and
practically transparent beige batik dress with V-cuts in the fabric on
her arms, chest and back. Now, that is...
What he means to say is rather incoherent and he's most certainly not
far from the truth; a good percentage of the male population at the gate
could care less if she was, or not, wearing a dress made up with
scarves knotted together for either artistic or exhibitionist purposes.
Like tennis spectators, they follow her fast-paced sylph-like motions
through the waiting area, back and forth to the counter, or to the trash
bin at several occasions for no apparent reasons but, perhaps, to cool
off. Or to cool down,
points the man to himself because it is obvious that, first she isn't
dressed for winter, and second she isn't wearing much on her tan slim
hips. Could be one of those teeny-tiny skin-color thongs.
Past
the first languid moments of bewilderment, he is filled with curiosity:
who walks around dressed like this and talking vehemently... Oops, I just used that adverb.
Who walks around dressed like this and talking with such conviction on
her cellphone stuck between shoulder and ear while flapping the air with
both arms like a mad orchestra conductor?
Paula Johnson is needed at the F8 counter.
Paula Johnson!
Maybe she's narcissistic or she wants to attract everybody's attention. Nah, that'd be too easy, she's calling for help.
His mind turns her into a princess, a princess kept prisoner in a
remote ancient monument in the middle of a jungle infested with
blood-thirsty insects, animals and ghosts; the sexy outfit turns into
remnants of her royal clothing savagely torn by her jailer, another King
Kong who ripped her undergarments to make a quilt with the rest of his
collection.
Passengers on American Airlines flight 1549 to Las Vegas.
This is your final boarding call.
The
other passengers seem to be the hirelings guarding her; the plane, a
resting withstander dragon, perhaps a colossal anaconda, maybe an
optical illusion created by a powerful wizard to hide the escape route
from her dungeon whose ceiling is filled with odors of sulphur and burnt
flesh coming from lit pyres and other hell fires strewn on the red
earth.
Please proceed promptly to gate C16.
He
becomes a modern Don Quixote, now perfectly aware of the challenges,
imbued with knowledge to solve ancient alien puzzles, highly trained to
fight and kill countless orc minions, to fend off wandering souls
seeking to control his body, he's ready to climb the highest mountains,
to descend the most hellish underworld and if necessary to enroll an
army under his banner. I will come, I will see, I will conquer!
Paula Johnson is needed at the F8 counter.
Paula Johnson!
Across
the waiting area, she flits about like a butterfly with her anorexic
body barely veiled by the fabric miraculously still hanging on her
fragile silhouette crowned by a long lank and floppy maroon mane which
flies around her as much as her tissue trappings.
What
he sees is a diaphanous queenly damsel in peril; he knows she's
surrounded by the undead, bound to sacrilegious grounds, enslaved for
eternity, unless...
She
stops strolling, stopping the movie in his head, stopping life around
them, stopping time even. Has she read his mind? She examines him
intently. Besides her tiny but grown-up female external shapes, her true
womanhood resides in her eyes, as if they knew every person's wildest
dreams.
He is shaken by her scrutiny. He doesn't blink, he doesn't breathe.
Good afternoon passengers on American Airlines flight 2034 to Fort Lauderdale
This is your pre-boarding announcement.
At this time we will be boarding our first class passengers.
We are also inviting those passengers with small children...
and any passengers requiring special assistance, to begin boarding.
The houri activates herself to pack computer, phone, iPod.
Several wives elbow their better halves into a deep state of helplessness.
His reason comes back, prompting him to get ready, Back to earth: she's a passenger, I'm a passenger, life goes on and I'm a fool.
He gathers his papers, quietly zips his bag closed. But the knight
errant in his mind rushes in the belly of the beast to secure the
princess's escape route, to kill approaching enemies.
Moments
later, he sits in the far back of the so-called monster. He can't
ignore the mental turmoil of the speaker announcements about safety, the
overhead compartment and all electronic devices to be turned off.
The
behemoth snake of his imagination swallows hordes of dybbuks, fiends,
gnomes, hobgoblins, imps, Nibelung, ogres, sprites, a few freak
free-lance foreign freebooters and three mercenaries from Belgium. The
ruffians settle down without attacking our hero, almost ignoring him.
He feels insulted by being deprived of his creative control, This doesn't make sense!
The knight errant observes the scene as well, This is mostly strange, have I turned invisible to them? He ruminates his chances of success, No need to kill them, then; they'll stay and rot in hell after our escape.
Nonetheless, he is jumpy about the brouhaha and the gesticulations of
the army in front of him. Not for long, the crowd freezes. He stretches
his neck, seeks for hints, Have they killed her? Is somebody bringing her corpse in? That would explain why they didn't attack him, for their guardian duties would be over. Alas, I fear she is no longer and my quest remains unfinished.
The
seething and the hubbub from the mongrels resume; she's alive and well,
there she is, entering the stomach of the monster. He jumps back into
his armor. The herd begins to stand up. He's armed to the teeth. She
motions for the throng to calm down, to sit. They obey. She walks the
aisle like a real princess. He was mistaken; it's her plane, the
passengers are her subjects, their heads turn and bow reverentially at
her passage. She keeps walking and smiling, walking and smiling all the
way to where her savior sits in white shiny armor, she knows he loves
her as her own personal knight errant.
But he's not a knight errant, he's on vacation to cure his writer's block and therefore he has to imagine something else,
Quick, quickly, quicker! She is coming. The only free seat is at the
window on my right. OK, I got it, maybe she's a famous actress from 1st
class looking for the bathroom. No, they have their own in the front.
She is getting closer. Wait, perhaps she is restless. Oh god, this is
going too fast, what am I going to say, what's going to happen?
He
wouldn't have time to prepare, to even react, she'd be right over him
in an instant and she'd say, Sorry to disturb you, I'm late, I was on
standby, they waited until the last minute to (Ladies and gentlemen welcome on board Flight 2034) And he'd say, Oh, the window seat? (with service from Dallas/Forth Worth) And he'd stand up, Sure. I mean, (to Fort Lauderdale) yes, of course. (We are currently third) And she'd smile. (in line for take-off and) I don't mean to (are expected to) but you have (be in the air in approximately seven minutes time)
some white stuff all over your mouth. And he'd say, What? Where? And
she'd say, There and there, and there; everywhere, in fact. And he'd
say, I couldn't hear you. (We ask that you please fasten) What? (your seat belts at this time) The announcements! (and secure all baggage) Hi, my name is (underneath your seat) WHAT? (or in the overhead compartments) And she'd repeat, Paula Johnson. And he'd think, What!?! But he'd say, Please to meet you. (We also ask that your seats and table trays are in the upright position for take-off)
And he'd want to put a name on her perfume, some Oriental scent for
sure, he'd replay over and over their handshake, her dry icy long
fingers without rings lying inert in his palm as if she were truly back
from the dead, he'd try to peek at his prisoner princess, not as
glamorous as he had imagined, almost androgynous, borderline android
like Minako the cyborg from his previous story. (Please turn off all personal electronic devices, including laptops and cell phones)
And he'd think that reality is indeed stranger than fiction but then
he'd snub it as too much of a cliché, and he'd turn his head to the
window, to her Junoesque silhouette drawn against the light of the day. (Smoking is prohibited for the duration of the flight) And she'd catch his eyes and she'd say, I wish they'd stop (Thank you for traveling with us) WHAT DID YOU SAY? (Enjoy your flight)
I said I wish they'd stop those announcements.
Yes, me too.
She arranges the loose folds of her sheer silk vesture, I saw you in the waiting area.
Yes, me too.
Her
face appears darker in contrast with the outside brightness; her body,
as sculpted in a black marble polished like a Rodin sculpture, I noticed
you were staring at me, oh yes you did, but your eyes didn't pop out of
their sockets like the other people. Her statue animates itself with a
shudder and then a laugh, These planes are freezing, aren't they?
Can I offer you my jacket, fetch you a blanket?
Can I ask you a personal question, instead? What were you thinking when I introduced myself?
You wouldn't believe me.
I
know what you were thinking. You were thinking, this girl... they were
calling her name all over the speaker system for at least an hour and
now she's here with me. Right? Do you want to know why I'm here with
you? I'll tell you why. I wanted to catch the next plane to anywhere.
That's why I was on standby. Kind of daring, isn't it?
Yeah, I agree. I'd never do a thing like that.
Oh, but at the gate you were thinking of me as a captive in some sort of Gehenna.
How do you know?
I just do. So, weren't you trying also to catch the next plane to anywhere?
Well, you've got a point.
I know.
My turn to ask you a personal question.
Shoot.
I don't mean to pry... but why did you want to catch the next plane to anywhere?
She
dismisses my polite excuse, Don't be so politically correct. She
shivers one more time, I think I could use one of these blankets now.
It's a long story but, I guess, we have plenty of time before our
arrival, haven't we? You see, my real name is not Paula Johnson. Give me
another blanket, please.
Why are you telling me that?
Because
you were dreaming of me so nicely, I like the idea of a knight errant
to save me from my enemies. She pulls on her hair and rubs energetically
her bald-smooth skull, Leukemia, they gave me three months. Do you mind
cuddling with me under the blankets? I'm scared of flying.
. . . .
. . . .
"Sir?"
"Hey...
what?" His neck is stiff, his heap of papers is blackened with his
handwriting, the Maalox bottle in his left hand is empty. "What do you
want?"
"Are you flying with us today? We're about to close the door of the airplane."
"I'm coming."
"One more thing: do you know you've got white stuff all over your mouth?"