Seeker Magazine

The Innocents

by Harry Buschman

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When the heat of the afternoon had passed, Gunderson and I headed for Palmer's Bar. I'd only been in Cuarto a week, but it didn't take long to fall into the habit.

Palmer is from down river. When the pumping station showed signs of being permanent, he came up from Buenos Aires and built a sit-down bar. It has a long covered porch, screened and protected from the flies and the hot afternoon sun. At that time of day, all company work grinds to a halt, and the only two sounds you can hear are the pumps on the tankers anchored in the estuary and the ice machine in Palmer's bar.

"Look, across the street." Gunderson said, "See that man -- the white man with the beard?"

Standing with his hands folded on his chest was the most disreputable white man I had yet seen in Cuarto. He was dressed in what was once a white linen suit. The pant legs were cut off just above the knee, and the pockets and lapels of the jacket were missing along with one of the sleeves. He wore a frayed, straw coolie hat like those worn by the natives in back country. His hair, a dirty gray, was ragged and unkempt. It merged with his beard, which was almost long enough to cover the fact that he wore no shirt.

Gunderson took a long, slow sip of his gin and tonic. "There but for the grace of God, Bullitt," he quoted.

"Who is he?" I asked.

"Name's Nelson -- used to be a company man like us. I don't know whether Nelson is his first or last name. He's been here six years or more -- ever since the company started up. Went native they say."

"Six years! Didn't he rotate?" I couldn't imagine a company man staying longer than his contract. I was replacing Gunderson after his two-year contract expired. "How can anybody stay in this God-forsaken place more than two years?"

Gunderson shrugged and stood up. He waved to the man across the street, "Hey Nelson -- need a drink?"

Nelson squinted in the bright sun, smiled vacantly, and hurried with a shuffling, limping gait to the porch steps of Palmer's Bar. He stood there, outside the screen door, and nodded in assent -- but he didn't enter.

Gunderson snapped his fingers for the waiter, "A double whiskey for Mr. Nelson . . . yes, in a paper cup, and another round for us, Cookie."

The waiter walked to the porch steps and told Nelson, "No come in. You wait there." He hurried back to the bar and poured a double shot in a waxed paper cup and dropped an ice cube in it. He brought it outside to Nelson, then returned to the bar to make our drinks. Nelson removed his straw hat and bobbed his head. He held his paper cup up to Gunderson as if to say 'thank you,' then shuffled off across the street sipping as he went.

Gunderson shook his head sadly. "Poor bastard. Let him be a lesson to you, Bullitt."

"What's the matter with him?" I asked.

"Like I said, went native. Got involved with a Celota woman -- married her, I guess you could say -- whatever passes for marriage in this wilderness. Decided to stay. Guess he figured Ileya and the child wouldn't fit in back home. Ileya, that was the woman's name."

"Is he still with the company?"

"No, they wrote him off after his contract expired. He became a tribal member -- an honest-to-goodness Celota father -- out there in the jungle with them. But I'll tell you, Bullitt, it's harder for a white man to make it with the Celotas than it would be for a Celota to make it with us. That's the sad part."

Our second round of gin and tonics arrived, and he waited for Cookie to return to the bar. ". . . you can move up but you can't move down -- Nelson never thought of that. Thought they'd take him in as a chief -- after all he was a company man -- civilized, right? Like hell! What good's a civilized man who can't hunt and fish or feed his family? Upshot was, they kicked him out -- even threatened to kill his family if he came back. Now he's . . . well, on the bubble, you might say. Nobody wants him."

We watched Nelson cross the street and sit in the shade of the vegetable market. He put his back against the wall and slowly slid down to a squatting position holding his waxed paper cup in both hands. He tipped his hat low over his eyes and appeared to be asleep, but we could see the paper cup disappear up under the brim of his hat and back out again at regular intervals.

"Then the drink set in -- he's a drunk now, you see, confirmed -- incurable," Gunderson went on. "Drinking is the white man's curse they say." He grinned broadly and drank deeply. "Sure as hell is, down here anyway. The Celotas will have nothing to do with him now. The company doesn't want him either. Imagine, Bullitt! He's an outcast! Our world and this dirt-scratching tribe he bought in to want no part of him -- won't even let him see his son!"

The appearance of Nelson had spoiled the afternoon for me. I couldn't imagine anyone doing something like that. A fling with a native woman? Sure, those things happen, but to swap a promising career for a life in the jungle? Then to find yourself banished by the Celota as well! It was hard to rationalize. Gunderson's attitude disturbed me . . . why hadn't some one stepped in to help him? Why didn't the company send him home?

There was nothing in the company's guidelines about people like Nelson. There weren't supposed to be people like him. We were told there were Celota bush people, whom we would probably never see. Then, there were the outsiders, shopkeepers like Palmer the bartender, who came in up river on our empty boats from Buenos Aires and opened small businesses in 'Port Town' as we called it. That's all. Then there was us -- the whites, in our white linen suits. It took a little getting used to, but on the whole, the social hierarchy was pretty simple. Everybody knew how they should treat everybody else. In the middle of it was poor Nelson -- a living Ishmael, a castaway, an outcast in any man's company.

Gunderson and I had dinner at the only private restaurant in town the night before he left. We took a table by the screened opening that faced the dock. There was the faint smell of burning garbage from the landfill at the edge of town, and any view we might have had of the estuary was blocked by the enormous black wall of the tanker that was scheduled to leave in the morning.

"I've only been here a week, and already I envy you going home, Gunderson. I'm sure I'll be a mental case before the next two years are up."

"Make yourself a promise and we'll drink to it."

"What'll I promise myself?"

"Take a look out there, he's sitting on the edge of the dock." It was him again, Nelson. He was drinking from a bottle wrapped in a paper bag. "Promise yourself you won't go native."

"Is there only one of him?" I asked."

"Far as I know, yes -- and mind you, he's despondent. He's got nowhere to go. If the company pulls out, he's finished."

"You know, I can't believe our company would abandon him -- out here in the middle of nowhere I mean." Our prawns arrived in a cloud of steam, red, hot, and spicy in a Louisiana-type sauce. It was like eating in a Cajun restaurant in New Orleans.

"Look at us, Bullitt. You know where these prawns came from? Not from any waters around here, not any more. There used to be prawns here, and catfish too -- not any more. 'Our company,' as you call it, yours and mine, put an end to that. No wonder the Celota hate our guts. Fish can't live in these waters any more, not with the mess we made. The river is full of oil and sewage. The Celota have to make a two-day trek up river to fish now, and by the time they bring their catch back, the fish are rotten, so they've learned to dry them and salt them down like the Eskimos do. These prawns come flash-frozen all the way from Buenos Aires along with the cook who cooked them."

I had to agree with him. We were like space travelers on an alien planet. The food we ate we had brought with us, along with the water we drank and the books we read. It made Nelson's future even more precarious; he was rootless. If the company pulled out, he had nowhere to go.

Nelson got up from his seat at the edge of the dock. He shook his bottle and upended it -- it was empty. He threw it over the side of the dock and looked around, then he urinated on the ship's ropes wrapped around the pilings. It was nearly dark, a darkness I've only seen here. Here in Cuarto the sun sinks below the rim of the western Andes and a half-darkness with a bright blue overhead sky will persist for hours. Then unexpectedly, night will fall as quickly as if you had snapped off the beam of a flashlight. Until you grow used to the sudden darkness, it's dangerous to be on the streets of Port Town. Nelson knew this more than anyone, and he scuttled away to hide for the night.

When Gunderson left for home, I felt a curious responsibility for Nelson. I offered him what little comfort I could. In addition to the daily double whiskey that he eagerly accepted at the bottom of the porch steps of Palmer's Bar, I would buy him a meal now and then. It was difficult. Neither Palmer's Bar nor the two public restaurants in Port Town would let him inside. Whenever we ate together, we sat on a bench on the dock and ate from paper sacks. There was a make-shift, two-bungalow motel back of Palmer's. and I would rent one of them occasionally for an afternoon so he could shower.

Nevertheless, he seemed to go downhill. It may have been my fault, for the few acts of kindness on my part may have alienated him still further from us and his adopted family. It was difficult to engage him in conversation. When we'd eat together at portside, he would stare at the tankers in the estuary. Long snaky pipelines connected them to the pumping station on shore, and the quiet throb of the machinery was the only sound we heard. He seemed to be unaware of the ever present smell of burning garbage and diesel fumes.

"What is it, Nelson? What are you thinking?"

Then, if he spoke, his voice would be dry and shallow, like the voice of someone used to living alone. "Thinking? . . . Yes, I guess I was . . . sorry, Mr. Bullitt." A stupid question! I couldn't possibly expect an answer.

At such times he would quickly finish eating and leave. I learned not to ask him questions of a personal nature. At other times he could be very frank concerning the company's philosophy and the future of Cuarto. "Once they reach the breaking point of profit, long before the oil is gone -- watch, Mr. Bullitt! They'll pull out of here and leave a wasteland behind them."

He compared the company to the Ti-Ti, a breed of wild monkey that roam this forest in noisy packs. When the fig trees bear fruit in early summer, the Ti-Ti arrive en-masse and litter the forest floor with half eaten figs and their own feces. Then they leave -- without so much as a thank you, without any sense of shame for the filth they've left behind them. "They stay -- so long as the food lasts, they stay. It's the same with that precious company of yours, Mr. Bullitt."

I would see him almost daily when he was in town. Then he would disappear for weeks. During his absences, I would wonder how he got along without someone to buy him a drink or a meal. Then, without warning, he would appear again in the dusty street, with his queer shuffling gait looking as down and out as ever. When I'd treat him to a meal or a drink, he would offer no explanation. We would be just as we had been before, in fact, he would often pick up the conversation where we'd left it a month ago.

While Nelson was an interesting diversion in the routine, my work for the company took most of my time. But time passed very slowly, and my job was not very challenging. This is a common complaint among men in overseas assignments in the field. We grew tired of each other -- testy, too much time on our hands. To preserve our sanity, most of us had a personal hobby. I suppose mine was Nelson.

Toward the end of my contract, Nelson disappeared completely. After two months I had almost given up on him. Then, out of the blue, came a call from Dr. Gibbons at the dispensary . . .

"You know a Nelson Spender?" It was the first time I'd ever heard his full name. He was always 'Nelson' to me, and for a moment I couldn't place him at all.

"I don't think so. . . . Spender you say? Is he there at the hospital?"

"Yes -- raggedy guy. Looks done in. A watchman picked him up in the street about an hour ago and brought him here. I wouldn't have called you, Mr. Bullitt, but the watchman said you knew him."

"My God, Nelson! I'll be right over."

He was the only patient they had, and yet they had quarantined him. The doctor, a sandy-haired youngster from San Francisco, said it was because they had no idea what was wrong with him. "He's got a high fever, he's not responsive, and he looks like he's had the shit kicked out of him."

"How did you get his name?"

"Thing around his neck -- like a gourd or something with his passport and stuff. He used to be a company man I hear -- I suppose we have to do all we can."

He was in a small, windowless room, more like a closet than a hospital room. Gibbons opened the door, and I saw a gauze net hanging from a pipe railing around his bed. Small as the bed was, he looked too small for it. He lay in the very center of it -- trembling violently. His eyes were shut tight, so tight that the effort to keep them shut made him grimace, as though he suffered extreme pain. His arms were bandaged from his hands to his shoulders. His wrists were strapped to the sides of the bed.

"Thanks for coming over, Mr. Bullitt. He's all yours -- maybe he shouldn't have visitors, but just between you and me, I don't think it makes a hell of a lot of difference."

I turned away from Nelson and said, "You think he's going?"

'Wouldn't surprise me, isn't much that's right with him. Stay as long as you want, I'll be outside if you need me."

I pulled over a chair and sat down. He struggled weakly against the canvas wrist straps, rolling his body from side to side as though he wanted to raise himself. I wasn't at all sure he would hear me, "Nelson, it's Bullitt -- can I do something for you?" His motions calmed a bit, and through his closed eyelids, I thought I could see his eyes moving.

"Sit -- sit up! . . . Hard to breathe!" He gasped. What the hell, I thought -- what difference would it make? I rearranged his pillow and slid his slight body upwards in the bed. How light he was, I thought -- as though he was hollow. He breathed a little easier and suddenly opened his eyes. "Killing them! My God, I can't believe the KILLING OF THEM! They tied me down! . . . made me watch them die!" He turned his head away from me and closed his eyes again. This time there were tears on his cheeks. "Mr. Bullitt -- I never believed they would do such a thing! Believe me, I would never have gone back there. They were everything to me. Everything! Eleya and Dimi -- little Dimi! How could they do such a thing, Mr. Bullitt? . . . The horror of it!!"

He was on the point of telling me more, but the words stuck in his throat. He shook his head and said he couldn't -- "I don't have the words," he said. Whatever he'd been through had been so horrible he couldn't put it into words. "It's my fault, Mr. Bullitt. I'm to blame -- I should have stayed away! They killed them because I couldn't stay away!"

Nelson went on like this for more than an hour, then I thought he had slipped into a troubled sleep. I couldn't bear to keep this knowledge to myself -- it was as hard for me to accept as it had been for Nelson. How could the Celota kill their own people? Maybe they realized it would hurt Nelson more by killing his wife and son than by killing him! What were we doing here in this God-forsaken place? Oil! Look where it's brought us . . . the damned oil! It's turned all of us into savages! I got up quietly and went out to see the doctor. I couldn't stand to be alone with Nelson any longer.

He looked up from his week-old newspaper. "Hi. How's he doin'?"

"I don't know; he can't go on like this . . . "

The doctor sighed, put the paper down and picked up his stethoscope, walked over to a medicine cabinet and got a syringe. He looked at me guiltily and said, "I'll check him out. You wait here." He was back in a minute -- "Well, that's it, he's had a seizure -- it's over. I'll need some information from you, okay?" He opened a file drawer and pulled out some forms. "Death is only the first complication," he said.

"I know," I added. "Filling out the forms is the final complication."

Dr. Gibbons stacked the forms neatly in front of him and looked up. "Not quite, Mr. Bullitt -- what do we do with him?"

Yes, that was the final complication . . .

Ten years have passed since that awful night in the infirmary, and I have forgotten none of the details. I think the most poignant of them was that we had no one to notify. Nelson Spender was all there was, and save for the few of us who knew him here in Cuarto, he had no friends. There was no family back home. Ileya and Dimi were the only family he had. He was the first white man to die in Port Town, and the last, so far as I know. We buried him on a small bluff overlooking the estuary the following afternoon. There were only four of us, five counting Palmer the bartender. The stench from the landfill was almost unbearable; there was a grayish brown smog hanging over the estuary. Two turkey buzzards watched us from the trees at the river's edge. I remember thinking -- what a terrible place to spend eternity.


(Copyright 1999 by Harry Buschman - No reproduction without express permission from the author)
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Harry Buschman at HBusch8659@aol.com