Lost Children Archive: A Novel

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Lost Children Archive: A Novel Page 31

by Valeria Luiselli


  PART IV

  Lost Children Archive

  § ECHO ECHOES

  Mem mem mem mem

  Eather eather eather

  Wa wa wa wa wa

  Em em em em em

  Ow ow ow ow

  Eas eas eas eas

  Eist eist eist eist

  § CAR ECHOES

  Cow, horse, feather, arrow, ow, ow, us playing

  No no no, yes yes yes, us fighting

  Rrrrrr, chupe, chupe, srlssnnn, us sleeping, me thumb-chuping, you snoring

  Blah blah blah blah, bad news, the radio, the radio, more radio

  Stop, go, no, more, less, Jesus Fucking Christ, ist, ist, Ma and Pa talking, arguing,

  Whooooo, hhhhh, hhhhh, all of us breathing, silence

  He-he, ha-ha, heeee, all you fake laughing

  When he woke in the woods in the dark and the cold of the night…

  § INSECT ECHOES

  Teetoo, tootoop, tooop, two ants talking

  Bzzzzz, bee buzzing

  Bzzzz, wachink, bee stinging (you)

  Bzzzzzzzzz, bye-bye, bee

  § FOOD ECHOES

  Rumch rumch, us eating cookies

  Tuc tic tuc tic, crumbs falling on the car seat

  Swish, woosh, us wiping up the mess

  Shhhhhh, don’t say anything

  § STRANGER ECHOES

  Over-easy, milk or no milk, more ice, ice ice, diner conversations

  Fill it up, up, up, gasoline station conversations

  Two double beds yes, yes, yes, motel conversations

  License, please, police conversations

  Stop, stop, stop, military post conversations

  Papers, passports, where are you from, why are you here, ere, Border Patrol conversations

  § LEAVES ECHOES

  Whooosh, whoosh, leaf falling

  Crrp, crrp, leaf crunching

  § ROCK ECHOES

  (Silence)

  § HIGHWAY ECHOES

  Fffffffffffffhhh, cars driving past on highways

  Fffhhhhhhhhhhhh, cars we hear from inside the motel

  § TELEVISION ECHOES

  Not allowed!

  § TRAIN ECHOES

  Rishktmmmmbbbbggggeeeeek, train arriving in station

  Tractractracmmmmmshhhhhh, train leaving station

  § DESERT ECHOES

  Tac, took, tac, our footsteps in desert

  Waaaaahhhh, nooooo, ahhhhhh, me crying

  Wwwwwwzzzzzzzzz, wind blowing across a dry lake

  Shrrrrrr, sssssssss, hsssssss, sss, hhhhh, dust-clouds appearing and disappearing

  Waaaaahhhh, nooooo, ahhhhhh, me crying

  Tac, took, tac, shrrrrrr, sssssssss, walking across a dry lake, footsteps on dust

  Kikikiki…kuk…kuk…kuh, eagles flying

  Slap, flap, blap, plap, wings flapping, slapping

  Tssssss, fsssss, wind through saguaros

  Creek, croook, cccccrrrr, abandoned train car, metal creaks

  Aaaeeee, aeeeeee, oooooh, wind-cries

  Waaaaahhhh, nooooo, ahhhhhh, me crying

  § STORM ECHOES

  Brrrrrrhhhh, krrrrrrrhhhh, thunder far away, storm coming

  Zlap, boooom, rrrrtoooom, thunder all around

  Tictictictictictictictic, rainstorm

  Tictictic…tictictic…tictictic, less rain

  § TOOTH ECHOES

  Crrrakk, shmlpff, blurpm, my tooth cracking and coming out slowly

  DOCUMENT

  This is Ground Control. Calling Major Tom.

  Checking sound. One, two, three.

  This is Ground Control. You copy me, Major Tom?

  This is the last recording I’m making for you, Memphis, so listen carefully. You and Mama will leave tomorrow morning at sunrise from the house in the Dragoon Mountains, in Apacheria, and will take an airplane back home. This recording is just for you, Memphis. If anyone else is listening to it, including you, Mama, it’s not for you. But you probably have already listened to most of it, Ma. After all, it’s your recorder. Maybe I should say now, I’m sorry I used your recorder without permission. And I’m sorry that I messed up the order in your box. It was a mistake, an accident. Also, I’m sorry I lost your map, Ma, and took your book about the lost children, and then went and lost it, too. I left it on the train that took us from Lordsburg to Bowie. Maybe someone will find it one day and read it. And maybe a train was the right place for it to end up. At least I recorded some parts of it in this recording, so not everything is lost. I know you also recorded other bits, so perhaps we have almost all of it on tape. I’m not trying to make excuses, I really am sorry, and also, I don’t mind if you listened to my recording, just as long as you keep it safe for Memphis. As long as you keep it safe and let her listen to it one day, when she’s older. Maybe when she turns ten. Okay, deal, yes? Okay.

  This is the last bit of tape I’m recording for you, Memphis, because this is where the story ends. You always want to know how all stories end. Today is the day it ends, at least for now, for a long time. After Ma and Pa found us in Echo Canyon, a bunch of park rangers came with space blankets to cover us both, and brought apple juice and granola bars, and they carried us back across the canyon to a little office full of posters of bears and trees and some really bad hand-drawings of Apaches. Someone drove Pa to where he’d left our car, and when he came back, he and Ma carried us to it, though we didn’t really need to be carried, and Ma climbed into the backseat with us, held us tight, kissed our heads, and rubbed our backs while Pa drove slowly, very slowly, to the house in the Dragoon Mountains. The house is a rectangle made of stone, with two bedrooms, and a living room and an open kitchen. It has a front porch and a back porch, a tin roof painted green, and big windows with shutters to keep the light and heat of the desert out.

  Today, at sunrise, you and Ma will wake up and leave. I have to keep this last recording short so you don’t wake up before I finish. And I have to put the recorder back into Mama’s bag before you both leave, so she can take it with her. She’ll take it back with her, and then, one day, when you’re older, Memphis, you will listen to this recording. You will also look at all the photographs I put neatly inside my box, labeled Box VII, which Ma will also take back with her because I just left it on top of all your stuff, basically bags and backpacks, which she lined up next to the door of the house, ready for when you have to head out. Pa and I will be sleeping inside the house when the car service comes to pick you up to take you to the airport. Pa will be in his room and I will be in my new room.

  After we got lost, and then were found, I think Ma and Pa did think about staying together, not separating. I think they tried, maybe even tried hard. When we first got to the house after we’d been found again, we tried to go back to normal again. We all painted walls and listened to the radio together; I helped you write out the echoes we’d collected on little pieces of paper and put them in your box, Box VI, which you wanted Pa to keep. Another day, we helped Ma repair a window and also a lamp, we went grocery shopping with Pa and barbecued dinner with him, and we even played Risk, two nights in a row, you in charge of rolling dice, and me and Ma fighting over Australia.

  But I think in the end, it was impossible for them. Not because they didn’t like each other but because their plans were too different. One was a documentarian and the other a documentarist, and neither one wanted to give up being who they were, and in the end that is a good thing, Ma told me one night, and said someday we will both understand it better.

  Remember I told you one day, which seems kind of long ago now though it isn’t, that I wasn’t sure if I was going to be a documentarist or a documentarian, and that I didn’t tell Ma and Pa about it at first because I didn’t want them to think I was trying to copy them or had no ideas of my own but also because I didn’t want to have to choose if I’d be a documentarian or a documentarist? And then I thought maybe I could be both? I kept on thinking about that, about how to be both.

  I thought this, though it was all a bit conf
used: maybe, with my camera, I can be a documentarian, and with this recorder where I’ve been recording, which is Mama’s, I can be a documentarist and document everything else my pictures couldn’t. I thought about writing stuff down in a notebook for you to read one day, but you are a bad reader still, level A or B, still read everything backward or in a mess, and I have no idea when you’ll finally learn to read properly, or if you ever will. So I decided to record sound instead. Also, writing is slower and reading is slower, but at the same time listening is slower than looking, which is a contradiction that cannot be explained. Anyway, I decided to record, which was faster, although I don’t mind slow things. People usually like fast things. I don’t know what kind of person you will be in the future, a person who likes slow things or one who likes fast things. I kind of hope you are the type of person who likes slow things, but I can’t rely on that. So I made this recording and took all those pictures.

  When you look at all the pictures and listen to this recording, you’ll understand many things, and eventually maybe you’ll even understand everything. That’s also why I decided to be both a documentarian and a documentarist—so you could get at least two versions of everything and know things in different ways, which is always better than just one way. You’ll know everything, and slowly start to understand it. You’ll know about our lives when we were with Mama and Papa, before we left on this trip, and about the time we were traveling together toward Apacheria. You’ll know the story of when we first saw some lost children boarding an airplane, and how it broke us all into pieces, especially Mama because all her life was, was looking for lost children. She got even more broken one day, when we were all back together again in the house in the Dragoon Mountains, because she got a phone call from that friend of hers, Manuela, who had been looking for her two girls who’d got lost in the desert, and her friend told her that her daughters had been found in the desert, but they weren’t alive anymore. For days Ma hardly spoke, didn’t get out of bed, took showers that lasted hours, and all the while, I wanted to tell her that maybe the girls who had been found were not her friend’s daughters, because I knew for a fact that many children had telephone numbers stitched on their clothes when they had to cross the desert.

  I knew this, and you’ll also know this, because you and I were with the lost children, too, though only for a little while, and that is what they told us. We met them, and were there with them, tried to be brave like them, traveling alone on trains, crossing the desert, sleeping on the ground under the huge sky. You have to always remember how, for a while, I lost you and you lost me, but we found each other again, and carried on walking in the desert, until we found the lost children inside an abandoned train car, and we thought they were maybe the Eagle Warriors that Pa had been telling us about, but who knows. You have to know all of this, and remember it, Memphis.

  When you get older, like me, or even older than me, and tell other people our story, they’ll tell you it’s not true, they’ll say it’s impossible, they won’t believe you. Don’t worry about them. Our story is true, and deep in your wild heart and in the whirls of your crazy curls, you will know it. And you’ll have the pictures and also this tape to prove it. Don’t you lose this tape or the box with the pictures. You hear me, Major Tom? Don’t you lose anything, because you’re always losing everything.

 

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