This is the sequel to
Alien Girls Find Friends,
you'll enjoy it more if you know the girls and their background :)
Alien Girls, Cousins
What a yummy nap,
Sally stretches, beside her someone's curves are buried in the sheets.
Maybe not just one,
she smiles suppressing a giggle.
A mysterious cousin, my even more mysterious Alice mentioned. Seems strange, my family's from Louisiana, down Baton Rouge way—nobody from Cuba.
Alice's hand slides out from the sheet to toy with Sally's fingers. Light touches, sending tingles, relaxing, images arise, crowded streets, faded clothes, folks flowing, languid in the heat, but eyes sharp, on the lookout.
Alice snuggles closer, decides she likes the whispering the girls do, remembers how mellow the whispers were between Angel and Sally in the cockpit of the plane. Lips brush Sally's ear, as she murmurs, 'Should we visit your cousin or Angel's family?'
'Can't we do both?'
'Angel's family in Havana, yours is in the South.'
'Angel's family then, my cousin's younger than her granny, no?'
...
Out on the street, the fine women stroll down the decrepit boulevard gliding over its uneven sidewalks, stepping lightly over cracked concrete and crumbling curbs. Sweet smiles greet the curious eyes that follow them. Men begin to trail along, eyes on curves and swaying hips and that indefinable something, like the scent of cinnamon wafting from some tucked away bakery.
Sally with her long legs walks ahead with Angel, their arms linked companionably. They've attracted the more aggressive men. They strut and posture, batting at each to get closer to these girls so fine it's hard to believe they'd walk so carelessly in this seedy barrio.
Annie whispers to Alice, 'Will they be safe? I mean you and Susan can...but they seem so oblivious, no sign of fear...'
'They'll take care of themselves.'
Other more menacing men join the rowdy group following the girls. They start pushing the others to the side. Suddenly, Sally stops and turns to look at them. They're shocked to see the high-wattage smile like that of a wining Miss Universe contestant. It seems to glimmer, to reach out. When Angel turns to see what the commotion is. The combatants are stopped in their tracks, pushes at the ready but somehow forgotten.
A half block away, Annie shudders proud to see their fabulous smiles spreading like sunshine, but when Angel turns to walk back to the fighters, Annie shivers, afraid for her.
Angel acts on an impulse she's finely tuned as a stewardess, part firm, part soft, wrapped in the warmth of strong loving mother. Her mind is on the verge of rebelling—
how stupid to be confronting these gangsters
—but something deeper, hard and able, is like an anvil where actions are reshaped, hammered true to necessities nature.
Distracted by this girl now in their face, they've forgotten Sally's smile, and are ready to resume their fight. Angle laughs at them, pushing them lightly to the side.
It's the last thing they expect, this hot girl touching them, not giving way, unafraid, telling them 'If you want to join us, you'll need to settle. How cool would it be to take these pretty
turistas
to your casa, meet your mama, your sisters, your little brothers, impress them?'
The younger one recovers enough to raise his fist. Angel doesn't budge. 'No fists, how do you expect to meet that pretty girl, she glances back at Sally?' But when she returns to face them, her eyes are suddenly like Alice's, deep pools of darkness into which all things seem to float in mindful possibility. Her aggressor is named Jose and his life is a story of pain, the pain of love and comfort and often food just out of reach, aggravated even more by the itch of drugs he can't possibly afford.
Angel sees the child that could have been had he not strayed from his sister, Rosa, his only champion.
'Let's find Rosa, she'll help. You'll get killed running hot-headed like this, ready to become a bigger criminal every day you hunger.'
Jose drops his hands as the images of his past float by his mind's eye, seen as though from a stranger.—He realizes in the rush of memory that there really might be someone who cares whether he livers or dies, someone like Rosa.
'She's gone.'
'No, she's not far.'
As she talks to these strangers, Angel realizes how profound the link is to her strange sisters, marvels at how the crooked lane and the whitewashed house with the tattered curtain across the door present themselves; amazed at how she knows so much about this violent man who could hurt her, how her fearlessness is the defining moment when his threat was revealed to be but a child's long buried pain.
She touches Jose's fist, 'Come on, no more time to waste.' And takes his arm pulling him toward Sally.
Sally smiles at Jose, 'Let's visit Rosa maybe she'll forgive you when she sees you, the true you.'
Angel hooks her arm through his, and grins,
'Tu turistas fantastica.
'
Down a side street then through a littered alleyway, turn to the left, near the blind end of a narrow lane—not a place to be if you're on your own, his friends follow Jose, their leader. They think he's bewitched, at the mercy of some voodoo queen. They remember the witch's shimmering smile but cannot reconcile the docile behavior of the fierce Jose who gives no quarter to anyone.
Behind them Alice and Annie follow. Near one of the side streets they're surprised to find a little bodega with an inviting table in the shade of a spreading tree where none other than Blondie sits at the table laughing with a wizened old grandma. They're sipping lime juice and drinking rum from little paper thimbles.
Blondie hugs Alice and Annie, tickling them, enjoying Annie's surprise.
Annie stares at her. 'How could you possibly think to meet us here? I thought we lost you, not to mention Susan and M!'
'One minute I was smacking Wing's butt complaining,' Blondie laughs, 'telling her I was missing out on your mischief and woosh I find myself at this corner. It must be that space-time thing where Wing and Alice are never really apart.' And kisses Alice, 'Tricky-tricky!'
Alice smiles, 'Let's wait here in the comfort of our
abuela