Chapter 5 โ Scouting Locations
I think in the shower. I get a lot of good ideas there. That morning, I did a lot of thinking. I decided that, as depressed as I was about leaving, I didn't want Felicita to have sad memories of our last times together. I would try to make things more upbeat today. I would do everything I could to emphasize the positive. I wanted both of us to have happy memories of our time together.
After breakfast, I bought my morning Granma and read it on the veranda, as the birds serenaded me. The cool breeze from the harbor felt wonderful. I found an interesting article and mentally filed it away for later.
I got up and walked through the lobby, past the grandfather clock and photo display of the revolution, down the marble stairs, and out to the front of the hotel. I walked up the palm tree lined driveway to the street. I saw a man on a bicycle dropping off his wife or girlfriend for work. After he left, I saw another bicycle, this one with a tiny gasoline powered motor helping its rider climb the hill. I turned to the left, looking for a certain brown-haired girl driving a yellow scooter.
I wasn't disappointed. I could see her smiling face well before I got to the taxi stand. She was as radiant as I remembered, much happier than she had been when she left a few hours ago. Maybe it was the just-fucked look on her face. Maybe it was the joy at seeing me. Whatever it was, I was determined to keep that smile on her face.
"Taxi, Seรฑor?" she asked me as I approached.
"Yes, I would like to hire your taxi for the entire day."
"Certainly," she answered with a broad smile, repeating our daily ritual. I didn't know if we were fooling the other drivers, but it didn't hurt to keep up appearances to protect her.
I boarded the scooter and we took off. As usual, she went a few blocks before leaning back to ask me where I wanted to go. I directed her to an area of downtown. When we got there, I had Felicita park the scooter and we went walking. I explained what I had in mind.
While it was my last full day with Felicita, it was also my last day of work in Cuba. I had come here to do a job. Now it was time to finish the job. I had to scout out locations for the office. I hoped I would be opening the office in the very near future, but I knew it might be a long time from now. Still, I had to get an idea of what part of the city would be best suited for the office. That way, I could set up shop faster when the time came. Today, I was looking at the kinds of offices located in different parts of the city. I looked at the facilities available for businesses. I was also using the time to walk with Felicita. We could spend time together this way; more together than if she was chauffeuring me around in her scooter. Instead of looking at the back of her head, I could walk with her at my side, our hands intertwined. I took pictures of some promising locations, as well as pictures of locations that would help me find these spots later.
I could tell Felicita was also thinking of how our time together was coming to an end. Her mood was ..., well, maybe not dark, but gloomy. I had made a decision this morning to change my mood. Now it was time for me to change hers. I squeezed her hand tighter.
"I'm coming back. You know this," I said, turning to look at her.
"It will be a long time before you can come back. You know this," she answered without looking at me.
"Things will change. They have to."
"No, they don't."
"A famous man once said, 'If there must be happiness, if there must be love, if there must be smiles, it can only be with freedom and dignity.' Freedom will come and I will come back to you."
She stopped walking and looked quizzically at me. "Who said these bold words?"
"Fidel," I told her.
She shook her head as she said, "How can you know this?"
I nodded and laughed as I explained, "It was in an article in this morning's Granma. They were taking about a speech he made some years ago. It is actually a common theme in his speeches."
"He does not speak about the same kind of freedom you speak of." She was still shaking her head.
"Fidel cannot be the President of Cuba forever. He is old." I spoke in a whisper.
"Shhh!! You mustn't say such things here." She was looking around nervously to see if anyone had overheard me.
I continued in a whisper only she could hear. "Change will come. You must wait for it. We must wait for it."
She started walking again, but I could tell she was still thinking about what I had said. I let her think for a few minutes.
I stopped walking in front of an empty storefront and looked in the window. Then I stepped back and appraised the appearance of the outside of the building.
"I think this would be a good location for the office."
"You are wasting your time. This will never come to be."
I let my camera hang from my wrist as I grasped her shoulders, turning her to face me. "You have to believe. It
will
happen." I could see she was starting to change. I was starting to get through to her. I dropped my arms, took her hand and started walking.
When she spoke after we had gone about half a block, her voice was quiet. It was almost like the voice of a little child questioning something. "You really think so, don't you?"
"Yes, I do. I am coming back here. Back to Havana... and back to you."
"Then I will wait for you."
I knew what I had to say next. I hoped it wouldn't sound like I was breaking up with her. Now that I had convinced her that I
was
coming back, I had to make sure she didn't waste away her life in case it did take years. I was treading a thin line, navigating a gulf in fog, in uncertainty.
"While you are waiting..." I paused. I'm not sure if I was gathering my thoughts or gathering my courage. Felicita was looking at me. I had her rapt attention. She looked like she was holding onto my every word as if it was her sustenance. I took a deep breath, then another. "While you are waiting, I want you to live your life. I want you to enjoy life." Now I had to say it. "I want you toโ" I was trying to find the right words. "I want you to sleep with other men. When I come back, I will look for you. If you still want me, if you have not fallen in love with someone else, Iโ"
"I will not fall in love. I won't let that happen," she insisted. Her expression was almost pained. I just didn't want her emotions to turn to anger.
"I know. I know that, but just in caseโ"
"Just in case? No, Christopher. If there is even a chance, then I will not risk it. I will not see anyone else. I will save myself for you."
"No, I don't want you to do that. Just in case it