Most times I remember to say grace
before I sit down to eat something, but it's not like I much care
about it, my appetite usually being poor, coffee helping me through
the day pretty well. I say grace so I know I 'am,' though sometimes
I'm just hurting from not eating and I skip to the last line and eat.
The gods hate us.Fuck them.Death to my enemies.
If I don't say grace I feel like I
missed out on something essential in my life, a bit of time to think
about being alive and how lucky I am to be at all, not for long,
just for now. I need that pause to be aware.
There's a cafe in the heart of Iquitos,
nice cafe, The Yellow Rose of Texas, that I've never eaten at because
I hardly eat at all, and it looks too nice for me who prefers beans
and rice and leaf-wrapped river catch on a cracked plate at a plastic
table with wobbly chair on the roadside in the dirt at night, the
lady there spooning out my three soles meal and passing it over the
charcoal burner that heats everything all day and into the late hours
of the night swarming with flies, dogs under the table scratching
fleas and shaking my chipped glass of muddy jungle juice with a layer
of floating wasps drowned in sugar. I sit with people I don't know
and we chat about stuff like how hot it is and how many kids do you
have and I like living here, and the fish is often not so much cooked
through that I can eat it all so I slip the raw bits to the dogs when
the people aren't looking at me wasting good food on a stray who
doesn't do anything but get in the way and slightly pisses people
off. The Yellow Rose of Texas, on the other hand, is a nice place. I
don't really belong there sitting out having coffee. So I don't go
very often. But I went today anyway and had coffee and looked at
things. I didn't eat anything and it meant I didn't feel obligated to
say grace and consider myself.
I've been in a few times, the first
time tagging along with some folks from my place who wanted to go out
for a drink and a sit outside and watch people. I did that. I watched
one of my mates there, a fortyish guy, big and sort of good looking
who talked all the time about how life in Iquitos is so easy for him
because he wakes in the morning and doesn't have to decide whether to
drive his Lamborghini or the Ferrari. It's cheap in Peru, and he can
hardly get by on a hundred grand a year back home. Hit on the
waitress for me, he says, tell her if she wants to be with me she'll
never have to work again, and tell her she's not my type because
she's not the right shape, and tell her, tell her, tell her that. He
might stay or he might fly off to the Riviera or maybe he should go
do business in New York City and wrap up a huge deal that he has been
putting off because he doesn't need the headache right now. Tell the
waitress she's sort of cute and tell her to bend over more so he can
check her out, and tell her I'm not really interested. She has no
clue what a goof this goof is, and I'm sitting far enough away that I
don't have to-- though I do-- think about the gods inventing brass
knuckles just for men like him, my brass knuckles somewhere at the
bottom of my pack anyway because I like Peruvians and I don't want
any trouble. Yeah, I want to kill this guy. I want to. I want to
smash this creep. I want to kill him. Any arsehole can kill a man;
but show me a man can raise him up he laid him down, and that's the
man I will worship him. I shrug it off and sip my coffee and chat
with the waitress a bit, though she isn't paying attention, her focus
on the guy who has her off balance and liking him and wondering. I
just go because I've seen his kind too many times and there's nothing
in him for me to laugh about anymore. I left the cafe, missing the
yellow roses of Texas and the broad blue skies and the brown dust and
the dun dried river beds all cracked and cake, the brittle and tough
tumble weeds, silvery and rolling across the dusty plains....
I went to the yellow Rose of Texas cafe
for coffee today because I'm not too happy about the lady I've been
dating for a week or so now. I wanted to be somewhere else if she
came looking for me. I hit the cafe I seldom go to, The Yellow Rose
of Texas. And there I sat and sat and looked at stuff and thought how
fortunate I am to be alive to do all this stupid sitting and doing
nothing while the waitress has to hustle around for guys like me
doing nothing for almost nothing. Life is good.
I saw this old lady on the street, she
being a lot younger than I, which means not a thing because a woman
ages in a way totally different from a man, like it or not, she being
maybe 40, and she's pushing a wheeled cart with a half dozen or so
coconuts rolling around in the box, and she's walking so fast that
when I try to get her picture from my seat at the cafe I find she's
out of range. So I got up and walked down the street to get ahead of
her, and she was going fast, but I got ahead and she stopped and
leaned on the handle bar of her cart and she was gasping, which is
reasonable because she's a huge fat old thing, and I wanted a picture
of her because she's old and ugly, poverty etched in every wrinkle
and her red teeshirt is blotchy pink and too small so I-- and the
world at large-- can see she isn't wearing a bra, and her grey
stretch pants have dark, liquid stains on the hanging down butt like
she's been dragging herself through the lanes at Belen market after
the rain; and in all she's awful.
This is the picture I was trying to
take because it was really funny:
I'm sitting at the table outside on the
walk, the pine tree slab table rims painted with barbed wire all
round, the tops various ersatz Texas themes, one of which is a fat
lady who looks way better than the local gal down the street with the
coconut cart. Behind me is Carla the waitress having a quiet
melt-down because she thought the mouth who had been on about her was
a good guy and she had been interested in him and questioned me about
where is he and when is he coming to pick her up and told her he's a
goof and has gone back home and didn't bother to tell you baby bye
bye. Carla, a beautiful girl to start with, is putting a good face on
this even though it's easy to see through the stone facade. I don't
care much because she's not keen on me even though she's
professionally polite and wants to kill me for telling her the guy
dumped her and she had no clue at the Yellow Rose of Texas cafe where
my bag is on the table half a block away and I'm not freaking out
that a crack head victim of capitalism is going to grab it and run.
Life is good for me, and I think this photo I'm setting up is pretty
funny because the old lady is pushing this bright colored, hand
painted, rickety old cart with barely legible letters saying: “welcom
to iquitos thank you for you visit” I like it because I know I am
going to put up a photo of a painted fat lady on the cafe table top
and a picture of hotty Carla and I rush over to frame the ugly fat
lady so she and her cart are in front of a nice looking building
front of hand made Portuguese tiles and the contrast is so funny I
laugh; and I walk over to the lady who is now bent over the cart so
her face is staring into the scrap wood box of coconuts and scraps of
crap and a dull knife, and I figure she's exhausted from pushing so
fast so far, and I go up to ask her if she'll stand beside her cart
so I can get a hilarious contrast photo of her, the cart, the
building and put it all together with heartbroken and humiliated
Carla and the cool décor of the cafe and it'll all look so ironic
and I can have a laugh about how arty I am and how I write about
grace and the gods who fucking well hate us and death to my enemies.
I say hello to the ugly fat lady and I
see her gasping, holding down the gasps and heaving, trying to hold
back the tears, and the tears running down her face and dripping off
her chin, she can't look at me and tries to shake her head as she
searches in the garbage and the filth among the coconuts for a bit of
clean cloth to wipe her eyes.
What? That's it? That's the end of this
story?
But no, I found myself sitting on a park bench later in the evening thinking about how badly some guy can treat a girl when a lady sat beside me with her four year old son and they shared an icecream cone, passing it back and forth. There might be some argument that this is sanitary and not weirdly too personal, but I can't begin to speak to that. Instead I spoke to the boy who took some interest in my foreignness and tried to speak to me in child Spanish. I told him I like icecream and I wish I had one, that his looked pretty good and I hoped he enjoyed it. He was pleased and smiled at me a lot, mostly curious that my face is so different from men´s faces he´s accustomed to. And when they finished I said, ¨Buenos noches, senor,¨ and the boy smiled and went away with his mother. Then he let go of her and walked back to me and held out his arm and we shook hands like men do and he returned to his mother, leaving me wondering how to clean off all the ice cream on my fingers.
blog/2007/04/17/is-gerald- mayeaux-the-iquitos-scoundrel/
I say nothing more.
But then I do. I say all this time later, now in late March 2014, a year and a half later, having met the man in question, the notorious Gerald, that I find him to be fascinating. In just pasing through I fell for the first impression of the man and missed the man himself. That was a lazy mistake on my part. Now I intend to find out about the real man, not the cartoon villian he is made out to be above.
But no, I found myself sitting on a park bench later in the evening thinking about how badly some guy can treat a girl when a lady sat beside me with her four year old son and they shared an icecream cone, passing it back and forth. There might be some argument that this is sanitary and not weirdly too personal, but I can't begin to speak to that. Instead I spoke to the boy who took some interest in my foreignness and tried to speak to me in child Spanish. I told him I like icecream and I wish I had one, that his looked pretty good and I hoped he enjoyed it. He was pleased and smiled at me a lot, mostly curious that my face is so different from men´s faces he´s accustomed to. And when they finished I said, ¨Buenos noches, senor,¨ and the boy smiled and went away with his mother. Then he let go of her and walked back to me and held out his arm and we shook hands like men do and he returned to his mother, leaving me wondering how to clean off all the ice cream on my fingers.
***
Yes, there is even more, and it is about my first and second and now total experience of the owner of Yellow Rose of Texas cafe. I refrained from slagging the guy even though I usually don't restrain myself at all from such poor behaviour. I don't want to piss off the locals, even expat.s who know far more and better than I, because I don't know better or more than they. I keep myself to myself often enough even in the face of egregious shit. So, when the locals speak, I feel free to let it all hang out. Here is what they say, cut to the limit, about the owner of The Yellow Rose of Texas cafe:# 32: From Gerald; “Bill please cut off this website. It does not hurthttp://dawnontheamazon.com/
me but Pamela is really upset and she crys to sleep at night. It was
true that I hurt the kids but they upset my custumers and stole from
the, I did hurt
the street kid who threw a bottle at me but I paid his mother $150
compensation so that was like a fine. I do not say bad things about
loretanos anymore and I have not touched a kid for 2 years. Please
take this off for Pamela.
If you do not I will sue you.”
Gerald
# 34: “Gee——let me get this straight—–it is all true but stop it or
I’ll sue you—–hmmmmm”
# 5: “Well done Bill Grimes. I am a missionary (type) that frequently
visits Iquitos. When in Iquitos we regularly dine at the Yellow Rose
of Texas Bar run by Gerald Mayeaux. When last there in November we
heard some terrible things said about Gerald. If they are true then we
will never eat there again. We have heard that he mistreats the street
kids and sticks needles in their arms. We have also heard that about 2
years ago he beat up an 8 year old street kid in the street in front
of some other missionaries. Are these claims true? Can anyone shed any
light on these allegations?”
# 6: “I am a Major in the U.S. Marine Corps and was in Iquitos on and
off from 2000 to 2005.
It is true about Gerald Mayeaux, he admitted to me with great pride
that he pricks the kids with a needle embedded in the skin of his
thumb. I have seen him do it with my own eyes. I don’t think he cleans
the needle either. Terrible man.”
# 8: “I too have been to Iquitos and met the man known as Gerald
Mayeaux. What a piece of slime he really is, Liar, Cheat, Fraud and
Thief. A rumour says he beats his wife, treats his staff badly. All in
all a good all round ***hole.”
# 9: “I was with my wife in the Cumaceba office and I could not fail
to hear Gerald Mayeaux’s loud mouth telling his customers that Iquitos
people were dishonorable, the men were all thieves and that ALL the
women from Iquitos were prostitutes (that includes my wife). My wife
kept me from going over there a punching his lights out. I do not know
how he gets away with it, something should be done.”
# 10: “I know this man very well he is very, very bad. He is well
connected and will bribe officials like the police, prosecuters etc.
to get you into real deep shit. It is true about this man Gerald
Mayeaux . I maintain a false friendship with him because if I told him
what I thought he would ruin me. That’s why I have used a false name.
BEWARE BILL, BUT BE BRAVE.”
I say nothing more.
But then I do. I say all this time later, now in late March 2014, a year and a half later, having met the man in question, the notorious Gerald, that I find him to be fascinating. In just pasing through I fell for the first impression of the man and missed the man himself. That was a lazy mistake on my part. Now I intend to find out about the real man, not the cartoon villian he is made out to be above.
A gentle reminder that my book, An Occasional Walker, is available at the link here:
http://www.amazon.com/Occasional-Walker-D-W/dp/ 0987761501/ref=sr_1_1?s=books& ie=UTF8&qid=1331063095&sr=1-1
And here are some reviews and comments on said book:
http://nodhimmitude.blogspot.com/2012/04/dagness-at-noon. html
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