-
“Hotter than Satan’s arse”, he said to no one in particular as they stepped off
the flight.
-
And perhaps just as humid, he thought to himself, as he surveyed the tropical
foliage. His brief musing was interrupted by the sound of the children screaming
their entreaties of going to the beach.
He had come of age in a city by the sea,
and longed for the water all the more now that he lived in a high desert
environment. There, in his adoptive home, the nearby lake sometimes experienced
enough evaporation to become as salty as the Dead Sea itself. But the limpid
expanse now stretched out in front of him was very different from those other water
bodies. Admittedly, the aquamarine ocean was a far more
breathtaking sight than the muddy brown waters of his childhood, but regardless
of hue, the sight of water stirred something primordial in him, perhaps a
desire to return to it following a long absence. In some ways, he identified with other
exiles who experienced a sense of belonging as well as profound alienation, no
matter where they lived. Inspired by Camus, he ordered an absinthe-based cocktail
and imagined that he was lounging on a beach in Oran. Not surprisingly, like his literary
idol, he had a generally grim view of the world. He liked to call it his
existential dilemma, this delicate balancing act of Optimism and Absurdism. She ascribed
it to his inherent grumpiness. He took a gulp of his drink, savoring the anise
flavor over all the other competing ones. He had not thought it previously possible,
but his spirits seemed to lift as the cool liquid coursed through his veins.
There they were, the locals; their faces
a beautiful pastiche of indigenous features and European complexions. They were
a proud people, once subjugated by disease and tyranny, now perhaps
experiencing their long overdue resurgence, if only in this instance by
servicing the hospitality industry. He was still conflicted about the legacy of
imperialism, military and economic, contemporary and historical, having grown
up in a former European colony himself. As he looked at the locals, he half
expected them to speak to him in the Queen’s language, knowing that his
features were different from theirs. He found it altogether strange when one of
them spoke to him in a Romance language familiar to him from the country where
he lived- for they assumed he was one of them. In his adoptive country, this was
the second most commonly spoken language. Yet, for reasons both cosmetic and
political, many people still considered it a “foreign” language and imbued it,
as well as its native speakers with a distinct sense of otherness. In another
time and place, a similar exoticism may have been labeled ‘Orientalism’. But
here he was, unambiguously an alien, yet strangely at home, much like back
‘home’, where even rank strangers would inevitably ask him where he was ‘really
from’.
She had remarked earlier that the beach
was a great place for “people watching”, and he had only half-heartedly agreed.
He thought it instead to be a great social experiment, replete with
opportunities to observe and comment on human behavior. But this was their way,
her un-fussiness contrasted against his pretensions to philosophical grandeur, both
usually conveying the same idea, his invariably the more verbose. As he looked
around and listened, he was able to discern several different strains of conversation.
In them, he could easily tell apart his ‘countrymen’. They were usually the
loudest and most self-assured among the lot. One could almost imagine them
with their bravado, standing in a foreign land with combat fatigues, masters of
all they surveyed. Here, their commands were directed at the local wait-staff,
asking to be served a chilled beverage or food. Usually this involved adding extra
accents aigu and tildes to the local language, hyper-foreignisms that did not exist,
in an attempt to sound more authentic. Looking around, he saw some
well-scrubbed teenagers, younger compatriots by the sound of their accents,
running towards the water excitedly, yet with a certain practiced restraint.
Like the older generation, the youth were endowed with some of the same cool
self-confidence. He looked further, and saw a handsome man trying, with little
success, to embrace his youngest daughter whilst getting the mother to take a
photograph for posterity. He then looked at his own young ones, deeply
catatonic as they stared into their electronic devices, only occasionally rising out of
this state, when the vagaries of the sea breeze interrupted the
certainty of their connectivity to the invisible web of information. The
younger one looked at him for an instant with a flicker of recognition, and then
quickly back at the screen, where an imaginary purple dinosaur with an
unfailingly cheery disposition held her undivided attention. Inwardly, he
smiled.
It was, the locals said, an unusual
summer. There was an unprecedented amount of Sargassum in the water, and this was
being deposited on the beach like berms. The local authorities had resorted to
cleaning off piles of the seaweed to ‘beautify’ the beach for the tourists, and
every morning, he saw a group of locals (almost certainly being paid less than the
local minimum wage) picking up and carting away wheelbarrows of the stuff. This
was, in his mind, a Sisyphean endeavor, as the next morning, there were more
berms, and more cleaning to accomplish. As he looked around in what seemed to
be a beehive of activity, he saw them, the woman with the alabaster skin,
and her much older male partner, both bathers, meticulously picking up seaweed
from the water and depositing it on the beach. She was young, beautiful, slender,
and seemed wedded to the task with a certain air of resignation. He, on the
other hand, seemed to assume a more supervisory role, picking up a clump every
now and then, with a certain delicacy to his movements. It was obvious they
were lovers, and he looked old enough to be her father, but he held his chest
up with the pride of a man cavorting with a much younger woman. A few clumps
later, perhaps having achieved a certain sense of accomplishment, they stood
still, facing the water. He surveyed them, and mused about the absurdity of it
all- the woman, the seaweed, the old man, and the sea.
His eyes continued to scan the
water, out to the distant horizon. There, high-rise buildings on the nearby
island appeared and disappeared in the blue haze, like mirages in the desert. On the sea in
front, an oil tanker; gigantic, utilitarian, and covered with rust, the sea in
front of it usurped in turn by a speeding white yacht. Closer at hand, on the
beach, obsequious locals responded to the beck-and-call of moneyed tourists. He
was certain that they were secretly thankful for the favorable exchange rate of
the currency of their nearest neighbor to the north, political invectives notwithstanding. A study in contrasts, he
thought to himself.
The bathers converged on the beach
despite the sweltering heat. They looked like seals of different sizes, all
beached to take in the life-giving light. ‘Skin cancer’- he thought, as he quietly
retreated to the shade of a beach umbrella. His pathos stemmed from the
realization that dark skin was no protection against painful sunburns. He
thought about this as he looked at his own arms. A travel brochure touting a
beach destination might have well described his tan as copper or bronze, but to
him, the reality was much more mundane- he looked like the color of burnt toast. Oh well…
His eyes scanned the beach again. In the
far distance, a group of people played beach volleyball. Closer, a woman with a Mohawk haircut sat among three other people and was engaged
in an animated conversation with them. With the passage of time, she nonchalantly
whipped off her bikini top, baring her breasts to the group, and by extension,
to the world beyond. Whether this was a profound philosophical statement or merely
the desire to tan evenly was unclear to him, but the four-way conversation seemed
to proceed without obvious pause, or even a furtive glance by the others in the
direction of her chest. He looked around, averting his gaze guiltily. In front
of the conversationalists, a dark skinned man in beach shorts juggled what
appeared to be three very sharp sword-like objects. As he looked at this triptych,
he tried to determine who, if anyone was most out of place at the beach.
His observing session was pleasantly
interrupted by her and the children asking him to join them in the water. He looked
at her, beautiful and tan in her gold bathing costume, straight out of
a French Art-Deco travel poster in the style of Broders. She looked radiant,
like the day he had first seen her. The children jumped around happily in the waves,
skin glinting from sunscreen lotion. He pushed up his sunglasses and waved back
at her, miming that he preferred to rest in the shade. He laid his head
back down on the deck chair and took another sip of his cocktail. “This is
the life”, he thought to himself, as he lapsed into a deep, languorous slumber.
Love the vivid and detailed descriptions of the sights and scenes of your vacation. It's wonderful to read! I hope you are enjoying all the food in addition to what sounds like the fabulous drinks. Mexico has such fresh, vibrant flavours and colors. (God bless my friends from the country who have introduced me to the authentic fare of their home.)
ReplyDeleteI've mentioned this before, but the two years of my life I spent away from easy ocean access were enough. Never, never again. Cool, warm, muddy, I don't care. It has to be there. That's all I ask of it.
Wishing you a relaxing and fabulous rest of time there, taking in all of the local colour and vibe and telling us about it.
-Sharmila
Thanks Sharmila!
ReplyDeleteI enjoyed this so much. It touched on each one of my senses. Wonderfully written. Please share more.
ReplyDeleteThanks for taking the time to read, as well as your kind comments, Ash
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