The Tortilla Curtain by T. C. Boyle

The Tortilla Curtain by T. C. Boyle

Author:T. C. Boyle [Boyle, T. C.]
Language: eng
Format: epub
Tags: Literature
ISBN: 9780140238280
Publisher: Penguin Books; Penguin Group
Published: 1995-01-01T18:38:43+00:00


The fire snapped and fanned itself with a roar. Sparks and white flecks of ash shot straight up into the funnel of the ravine, trailing away into the night until the dark drank them up. The night was warm, the stars were cold. And Cándido, feeding the fire with one hand while skewering a sausage with the other and cradling a gallon jug of Cribari red between his thighs, was drunk. Not so drunk that he’d lost all caution—he’d observed the canyon from above, on the trail, with the fire going strong, and reassured himself that not even the faintest glimmer escaped the deep hidden nook where they’d made their camp. The smoke was visible, yes, but only in daylight, and in daylight he made sure the fire was out, or at least reduced to coals. But now it was dark and who could detect a few threads of smoke against the dark curtain of the sky?

Anyway, he was drunk. Drunk and feeding the fire, for the thin cheer of it, for the child’s game of watching the flames crawl up a stick, and for the good and practical purpose of cooking sausages. A whole package, eight hot Italian sausages, not as good as chorizo maybe, but good nonetheless. One after another, roasting them till they split, using a tortilla like a glove to squeeze them off the stick and feed them into his mouth, bite by sizzling bite. And the wine, of course. Lifting the jug, heavy at first but getting lighter now, the wine hot in his gut and leaking from the corners of his mouth, and then setting the jug down again, between his legs, in the sand. That was the process, the plan, the sum of his efforts. Stick, sausage, wine.

America, grown modest in proportion to the way the baby was changing her shape, stood off in the shadows, by the hut, trying on the clothes he’d brought back for her from the Goodwill in Canoga Park. They’d been working up the street, repairing stucco on an apartment building that was changing hands, and Rigoberto—the Indian who worked for Al Lopez—told him about the store. It was cheap. And he found maternity c!othes—big flower-print shorts with an expanding waistline, dresses like sacks, corduroy pants that could have fit a clown. He’d selected one shapeless dress with an elastic waistband—pink, with green flowers all over it—and a pair of shorts. She’d asked for blue jeans, something durable to wear around the camp and save her two dresses, but there was no sense in buying her jeans that wouldn’t fit for another three or four months, and so he’d settled on the shorts as a compromise. She could always take them in later.

All that was fine, but he was drunk. Drunk for a purpose, for a reason. Drunk because he was fed up with the whole yankee gringo dog-eat-dog world where a poor man had to fight like a conquering hero just to keep from starving to death,



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