The Revolutionaries Try Again

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Authors: Mauro Javier Cardenas
whose veiny arms are overtensed by the buckets’ weight.
    I’m with the municipality. This juice’s probably a health hazard. Let me see your permit.
    The defeated look of the juice man seems like an obvious exaggeration, no? As if he’s not used to it? Right. What an actor. The juice man squats to set the buckets down but right before they touch the cement he changes his mind and lets them drop. Flatly they land on the step. The skinned bean jars clink against each other. Splashes of red juice land on his rubber sandals. He submerges his hand into the water bucket, the one where he rinses the jars, retrieves one, and then inserts it inside the other bucket, the one with the juice and the ice.
    Free for you, patron.
    Ah. Much better. Nice and cold.
    A limerick about gluttony is a passing thought as he swills the juice. The juice man is eyeing the smoke clouds nearby. Hoping for what? The smog of retribution? The avenging thunderbolt? Facundo tries to appease the juice man, sticking his teeth out, bunnylike, diligently wiping his curd from the rim of the jar. Nothing. No funnyboneon this one. Facundo hands him back the empty jar. At a miraculous speed the juice man vanishes inside the crowd.
    More arrivals stream to the front, by the stairs, mostly because there’s no line but eventually there’ll be a line and then they’ll be first, not knowing there’s probably a long wait ahead, not caring about crowding the courtyard further, hey, stop pushing, quit shoving. A green balloon escapes from someone’s grip but doesn’t drift up. Facundo swats the limp balloon, which tries to float, like an eyeball above them, toward a magician who’s selling lottery tickets and stuffed pets. The magician releases the balloon as if it were a dove on a mission, find the fig little one, fly. The balloon lollops by the magician’s feet, landing by three businessmen in blue suits. One of them scoops the balloon from the floor, careful not to scratch his cufflinks, holding it from its knot and fretting it against his fist. The other two businessmen are comparing his municipal letter with theirs. The businessmen inspect their surroundings, confirming their suspicions that everyone but the street vendors, those cholos and lowlifes, are also carrying a municipal letter, some of them carrying the original document, others probably carrying a counterfeit of the original document, which states that all municipal employees hired by El Loco will be reinstated to the payroll, your one time appearance is required at the municipal palace. Something’s fishy, one of the businessmen says. I don’t think El Loco loaded this many riffraffs into payroll. I couldn’t get ahold of El Loco today either. The other two businessmen agree. Something is fishy. Shield your wallets, gentlemen, and let’s get the hell out of here. The magician tells someone who tells someone who tells someone what they overheard those businesspeople say, and as the something’s fishy rumor spreads some are saying I don’t care if El Loco’s Loco or Sapo, at least he cared enough to write us a check, which I desperately need to buy textbooks, someone says, to buy powdered milk, someone else says, to pay the water truck, someone else says, to rent a washing machine, someone else says, and I’ve traveled far, someone says, I’ve traveled far. No one flees. Everyone remains in place. The oyster man turns the dial of his portable radio, skipping from song snippet to static to the interimpresident has just announced a new package of tightening measures, to Wilfrido Vargas and his papi no seas así / no te pongas guapo / ese baile les gusta a todos los muchachos. The balloon wanders back to Facundo. This time he picks it up. As he reaches the oyster stand, he digs his nails on the balloon and . . .
    An explosion. A shot? A gunshot? No one’s down. Everyone hunts for the origin of the explosion. Where?

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