This tiny huddle of unpainted wooden shacks has a name, but I can’t pronounce it. Tlacoteotalpan or something like that. The Nahuatl syllables come out all wrong when I try to mimic them. The pueblo nestles into the horseshoe bend of a lazy river, its surface roiled by the neverending rain. Overhead is the leaky umbrella of a high canopy of trees. Water pours down in isolated torrents, and the road — just a dirt track, really — is still an impassible flow of mud dotted with puddles. Impassible to vehicles, anyway. I squelch along in my Nikes and jeans that are slimy from the knees down.
Like all the villages in this part of the jungle, Tlacoteotalpan is Nahuatl-speaking and way too small to have an inn. The moneypouch dangling from my neck is almost empty, so instead I barter in pantomime with an amiable gap-toothed wife. Together we root through my backpack, trying to find something to trade in exchange for food and lodging in her shack. Not the laptop with the PROPERTY OF UCLA security sticker, wrapped in thick layers of banana leaves. Not the antique Polaroid camera and its film, zipped in a plastic bag. Not this notebook, or my favorite purple swirly pen. Finally there’s nothing left but my bra, which I shed hours ago in the wet heat. The scrap of underwear passes between us like an unwanted thing. She’s probably a D cup, and I don’t have any boobs at all. Neither of us has any use for it.
Unable to make conversation with anyone and unwilling to wade back into the mud, I sit in the shack’s doorway and watch chickens scamper around. They cluck noisily, pecking at ants and bugs that are apparently being knocked off trees by the rain. Naked little kids are trying to feed grass shoots to piglets. Through open windows I can see their moms hanging up laundry on lines strung indoors.
Darkness is crashing down when the husband returns from the river, where he’s been netting. Two gangly boys — their sons, I slowly realize — help him carry in several slimy-looking fish with foggy eyes. The fish are laid on the plank floor of the kitchen, where they occasionally gulp. The wife squats to descale and fillet them with a knife rusting at the hilt. Meanwhile the husband and sons banter. Once it’s apparent that I can’t speak Nahuatl and they don’t speak Spanish, my presence is barely acknowledged.
The fish are mouthwateringly delicious when baked with pineapple. I’m embarrassed to find myself competing with the boys for second helpings of the fish and rice. But that doesn’t stop me from gorging myself. I’m eating for two now, and this is the first meal I’ve had all day.
In the morning I awake before dawn, shivering despite the heat, my t-shirt and jeans plastered to my skinny limbs. I tiptoe past curtained doorways with snoring figures, the wife and her husband in one room, the sons in another. Squishing through the mud toward the outhouse, my Nikes are sucked right off my feet. I complain tiredly in Farsi and retrieve them from the muck. Puddles still quiver with the impact of raindrops, but it’s only sprinkling now. Through a gap in the ghostly clouds I can see the sky, velvety and lustrous with stars.
In the outhouse I pull down my jeans and hiphuggers and settle myself on the well-worn wood. Great. Diarrhea again. Last night’s fish and rice went right through me. I slump into a comfortable position and breathe through my mouth, trying to ignore the stench. Tickling sensations dance across my buttcheeks. Cockroaches are welling out of the latrine and across my butt and down my muddy pantslegs. Normally I’d freak out, but I’m just too exhausted to care. I drift in and out of a twitchy shallow sleep. Every once in a while I hear a door rattle or a bird scream, but the sounds barely rouse me.
Eventually I emerge into morning, squinting against the harsh low glare of the sun, a flaming vermilion orb climbing over the forest canopy. My toes tickle in the mud. But I discover that my body is a leaden thing, too heavy to drag all the way back to the shack. I sit down on a convenient stump instead.
Rubbing my eyes into focus, I stare at a different part of the village, one hidden from my limited doorway view yesterday. Corn grows in plots that have been clearcut, then burned. Several burros stand in a crude corral, chewing grass. A homemade swing hangs from a tall gumtree. The details are banal and fascinating at the same time, and I try to memorize them, hoping I’ll never be back.
Someone is calling in Nahuatl. I turn around gingerly on my stump, trying to avoid splinters. The younger son is wading towards me, all smiles for the gringa, and carrying something in an open palm. A thick slice of fresh bread slathered with something green. Avocado, probably. Up close the aroma is so enticing my jaw aches. Then a reflex goes wrong inside me, and I retch long and emptily into the mud between my bare feet.





