April 15, 2009
On the Brink
Mary Morris
Iâm standing in the jungle, ankle-deep in mud. Itâs dark and hot and the heat seeps through my camouflage gear. My boots, my flak jacket and holster, everything is wet. I hear Kim breathing nearby. Sheâs in camouflage as well, black face under her eyes. Her breath is deep and, no matter how many times weâve done this thing, sheâs always a little nervous before we go in.
I suppose I am too. We never know exactly what will occur. How people will react. Lately itâs been kind of slow. Last week I had a guy tell me to go away and let him sleep. I told him that wasnât going to happen and shoved him out of bed with the butt of my rifle. After that he didnât look so amused. In fact he looked kind of scared. Kim says thatâs always the best. When theyâre scared.
Mud seeps into my boots. It will be hard to do the march. This is normally a dry time of year and we hadnât anticipated the rain, but Commando Bill says weâve got to go ahead. We were going to do it Monday, but the guests were delayed. Mondayâs never a good night for a raid anyway. Theyâre always just settling in. Tuesday was their trip to the cloud forest and the jungle climb. We would have done it on Thursday, but the last group was taken on Thursday and weâre afraid this new group has been warned. In fact they probably have. Thatâs what usually happens. And we need the element of surprise.
Surprise is key, Commando Bill says. Heâs my boss, and I do what he says. So weâre standing in the rain, waiting for the signal. Commando Billâs on the other side with Jeremy, the cook. Weâve got the village surrounded. Kimâs maybe only ten yards away but I can hear her chest, going up and down. That flutter in her breath. Iâm having trouble staying focused. Kimâs not really my type in her civilian clothes, but she turns me on when I see her in full gear. Iâm not the kind of guy who wants girls to dress up as nurses or maids, but thereâs something about a military uniform. And Kim looks good in hers.
Iâm thinking about Kim straddling me with her gun at my throat, when I hear Billâs high-pitched whistleâa parrotlike sound. From all sides weâre marching in. The huts, which are made of balsa wood and palm fronds, are lit up with those amber lanterns. Itâs very pretty like an amusement park. Iâm sure theyâve just finished their sumptuous mealâroasted corn, quail, fruit compote for dessert.
Itâs a kind of a joke around hereâthe last supper, their final meal. I wonder what it must feel like to be them. To know we are out here. That we are coming. That at any moment theyâll be taken away even as they sip their pinot noir.
We approach silently and I can see inside the huts now. Their beds have been pulled back. The hurricane lanterns are lit. Gossamer curtains grace the roofs. The silhouettes are moving inside. A man and his young wife look as if theyâre about to make love. An older couple is reading in bed. One family with their teenage son is hanging out, gabbing. No one under sixteen is ever allowed. Commando Bill and Sonya have been very strict about the rules.
Itâs peaceful for that moment before we go inâthe calm before the storm. Iâve heard that people with epilepsy feel this way. Itâs as if the world pauses and everything, and everyone, stands still. Then Bill gives a shout and we raise our guns and rush into the camp. We hear screams as we go from tent to tent. Maybe a little phony, though some sound like shouts of real surprise. âOkay,â I yell, walking into one hut, rifle poised against my chest, âEveryone out.â The guests have told Bill that they are most afraid of me.
This is the hut of the businessman and his trophy wife. Sheâs maybe fifteen or twenty years younger than he is and very nice to look at. Sheâs standing in a nightie, bent over the sink, brushing her teeth. âOut, now.â
She looks up at me. Her blonde hair falls across her breasts. She has gorgeous, thick lips. âCan I finish?â she pleads.
Iâm getting so tired of these groups. Weâve tried everything to get them to be startled and scared, but the truth is more and more theyâre just acting put upon. I guess the word is out about us. Commando Bill must know this because heâs already coming up with new schemes. Heâs put âSuicide Bomberâ back on the table, though Sonya is resistant. She says, âLetâs wait until thereâs another terrorist attack.â Weâve tried âIllegal Alien: Crossing Borders,â but itâs a hard sell, getting our clients to do the trunk of the car thing. And nobody even signed up for âSlumming: A Journey among the Sad, the Sick, and the Starving.â
âGet out. Move,â I tell her. She gives a little snort as I shove her with my gun.
The man and his young wife, who is spitting toothpaste into the sink, are clearly put out. He looks like he was ready to jump all over her. He seems a little sad as heâs shaking his head. I think he was hoping for tomorrow. âDoes it have to be tonight?â he says with that air of entitlement, smiling through his fake white teeth.
What do I have to do? Read him his rights? Show him the contract. Yes, it has to be now. It is now. âMarch,â I tell him. âMove it.â Then I ad-lib. âOr youâre a dead man.â
I hadnât planned on staying in Costa Rica this long. Iâd done a lot of adventure travel. I led white-water rafting through the Grand Canyon and hikes along the Inca Trail. Iâd done some extreme adventure in places where sane people wouldnât go. I started my own company and took a group of lunatics on a three-month journey from Alaska across the Bering Straight. I probably would have settled for something more sedateâpilgrims to the Holy Land, sayâbut when Amy and I broke up, I had to get away.
Amy and I had been together since we were twenty (and now Iâm twenty-five), but she grew tired of my roving ways. She got a dog, bought a house outside of Denver. She bought dishes while I was hiking to Nepal. When I returned Amy said sheâd had enough. She took the dishes and the dog. When I heard that Bill had started an adventure travel company of his own, I gave him a call. âCome to Costa Rica, George,â he said when I contacted him. âItâs not that different from âjuveâ boot camp.â
Thatâs where I met Billâwhen my parents dropped me off at that place in Oregon where they made you hike in the snow. I must say it made a man out of me. Every day we went from outpost to outpost, and Bill was in charge. Iâd been what my guidance counselors called a âproblem childâ and my parents in a desperate move sent me there. I guess it was âjuveâ or jail. At first I hated boot camp, but then it was like being on a long trip. We kept walking in the snow. Only we didnât know we were walking in circles until we moved up to Stage Two. Then we were in on The Big Secret. We were going nowhere fast; that was the message there.
Itâs not so different from this place where we drive our guests in circles too. Only they never have time to figure it out.
âIâm interested,â I told Bill when he asked me. They were opening this eco-resort, but the details were vague. I shouldâve known something was up when he told me it was called âOn the Brinkâ tours. Anyway Iâve stayed.
Iâm going hut to hut. Kim with her tight ass, her pointy breasts, that black face under her eyes, shouts in a way that makes my hair stand on end. âMarch. Outta here. Now!â Her unicorn tattoo shimmers in the moonlight. Sheâs got her gun raised on an old lady and her companion. Sheâs screaming at the top of her lungs and the old ladyâs trembling. God, I want her to scream at me that way. I want to be off with Kim under the stars, my hand slipping under her holster into her cargo pants, and have her shouting at me just like this. âMove the fuck out, now.â
The old woman is trembling. Though she and her husband have read the brochure and know the first rule of captives (âAppear to cooperateâ), tears are in her eyes. Her face is caved in and I realize she doesnât have her teeth. I hesitate and think I should let her go back and get them, but that would break the mood. Obviously she wasnât thinking the raid would come tonight. Nobody would take her teeth out if she thought so. I experience the thrill that theyâre actually scared. I see it in the old ladyâs eyes.
Now we get them out front, hands over their heads. Personally I think we should tie their hands behind their backs. But we tried it once, and the group complained in their post-trip survey. Our numbers went down. Kim and Jeremy have guns pointed at them. The old woman is crying, but I think itâs because she doesnât have her teeth. Her husband just looks tired and tries to comfort her.
âHands over your heads,â Commando Bill says again. The young wife in the nightgown demurs as I prod her with my gun. She raises her arms in her see-through nightie and her nipples point out in the dark. âMarch.â
We line them up single file and head into the blackest of night. Before us is the trail, leading into the woods. They know that they must march. They know they are free to try and escape, but they must be successful. They must be certain they wonât get lost and that they can return to camp without being caught. Otherwise things will go badly for them. Or for those they love. Thereâs always the Solitary Stockade, though we havenât used it in a while. Anyway theyâve all been grilled on the first rule of hostages: âAppear to cooperate.â
It is dark and quiet in the jungle as we follow the trail. The moon is a thin slip. This is the Walk. I like the silence. Itâs very Zen. The way everyone falls into step. They no longer resist or make fun of us. They seem genuinely frightened by the darkness and awed. They have no idea now where they are going or what awaits them.
I hear the old lady whispering through her gums. âIsnât this taking a long time?â
âShush,â her husband says, âIâm sure weâll be there soon.â
I want to comfort them. To tell them it will be all right. I know whatâs ahead. I know how long this walk will be. They march in silence. No one tries to escape. Everyone seems very subdued, which isnât how it should be. This is because they think itâs almost over. They think their ordeal is done. They know too much. Thatâs part of the problem. Iâll have to talk to Bill.
We live in an old army barracks a few hundred yards from the Village. Itâs just some barren rooms with hammocks. Maybe if youâre lucky a table and chair. We have an outdoor shower that consists of barrels of rainwater that trickle through some pipes. Outside of some paltry pay, we get clean sheets on straw beds and three meals a day, which are made mainly from the leftovers that the guests donât eat. I shouldâve left months ago, but Iâm still here.
Maybe itâs because of Kim. I like to be near her. She uses almond soap and has an earthy smell. Or itâs because I havenât really got anywhere else to go. As we head back to the barracks, I sidle up to her scratchy uniform. She doesnât seem to mind, but she doesnât seem to notice either.
Jeremyâs got a meal waiting when we return, much simpler than what the guests are having right now. Boiled cassava root and roasted goat, no salt (Jeremy doesnât believe in salt) and a watered-down and heavily sweetened glass of guava juice. âRebel regime?â I ask him.
âNaw, just leftovers,â Jeremy, a red-headed kid from Santa Cruz, replies.
Kim washes the greasepaint off from under her eyes and returns in jean shorts that make her hips look a little wide and a T-shirt that make her breasts a little small. Sheâs definitely not as sexy out of her camouflage gear, and Iâm always a bit deflated when she changes into her civilian clothes. Still part of me just wants to drag her out into the jungle and ravage her.
âOh, now we wait another week,â Kim sighs. Itâs true that between when we take a village and when we drive them back to the airport thereâs not that much for us to do. A few nature walks and a trip to the hanging vine or the waterfall, thatâs about it. Weâre both excited because weâre scheduled for the âTsunami Specialâ for next week. (âYou Never Know When the Waveâs Gonna Hitâ) But thereâs a rumor that this group might have cancelled.
âWe could go up to the volcano,â I offer, which is something we like to do in our spare time.
âI donât know.â She takes a bite of her cassava root, then pushes her plate away. Jeremy makes a face as he takes her plate away. âIâm just not hungry,â she tells him.
âYou okay?â I lean closer to her across the picnic bench that serves as our dining room table.
âIâm just bored.â Kim sits back and fiddles with a strand of her long dark hair. Let me pull on that hair, I want to say to her. Let me unravel that snarl. I can help you be unbored. âIâm ready to do something else with my life.â
âYeah, me too. Like what?â I stop eating too and go to the cooler for a beer. âYou want one?â Kim shakes her head.
âIâm thinking about going back to school. Maybe in anthropology. I donât know. What about you, George?â Kimâs a good girl. Sheâs from Jersey, actually. Barnard grad. Cultural anthro major. She wound up in this place kind of like me. Looking for adventure, to get away. Try something new. My guess is sheâll be heading back soon, though she never says to what. Or even where. âOh, Iâm saving my money down here.â This is a lie and now I prepare for another. âIâve been thinking about getting my MBA.â Actually Iâve never thought about getting an MBA before, but I think Kim would like this. âYou know, maybe open my own eco-resort somewhere.â Her eyes widen and she does seem impressed. âWhat do you think?â I reach across the table. It is a good excuse to touch her hands.
âI think itâs a great idea.â She squeezes my fingers in her warm paws and a small flame ignites within me. Then Kim gets up and yawns. Not many women look sexy when they yawn, but I like seeing the dark cavern of Kimâs mouth and the way her lips spread out across her whole face. And her teeth. They are very straight and shiny. She brushes them with palm fronds. âIâm going to bed down âŠâ
âMe too âŠâ We head off to our separate barracks. Iâm not very tired, but I ease into my hammock. In the quiet I can hear Kim, breathing, her hammock swinging, through the wooden slats. I hear other things too. Critters like spiders and scorpions crawl around in the dark. Iguanas run across the roof, dragging mango rind. Lying on my back, I imagine Kim. Everyone has been taken. Weâre alone. Itâs just me and her. Her sleeves are rolled up and that unicorn tattoo pulses in the moonlight.
On Sunday we drive the old group back to the airport in the pickup truck. They pile in, and theyâre all smiles. The guy with the trophy wife stuffs some bills into my safari shirt. âThat was a great adventure we had, son.â He gives me a wink. The whole ambush thing turns couples on, but I donât like to think about it. A teenager high-fives me and the old lady has her teeth back and she and her husband have a little lilt to their step as if theyâve been getting it on as well. Everyone looks tanned and well fed. Iâm sure weâll get a good report on this one.
We wave good-bye and there is some exchange of email addresses and weâll be in touch, though we know weâll never see any of them again, and that little flurry of activity that comes with departures. After a few moments I turn to Kim. âYou wanta smoke?â
âSure. Why not.â We head out behind the palapa on the side of the landing strip where we smoke a roach while we await the next group. We sit, smoking on our joint, listening to some monkeys screech their heads off.
Kim takes a drag. âGeorge, how long are we going to keep doing this shit?â Sheâs dressed in a jungle green T-shirt with a scooped neck and a pair of khaki shorts. Her dark ponytail is pulled back tight against her skull. I lean forward. Even though sheâs not in uniform, I want to touch her. I want to dip my fingers into the V of her shirt. I want to draw the tip of my rifle along the side of her face. âHow long?â
Iâve thoughts of dragging Kim off. Take her with me into the jungle. Ravage her there. Iâm not an animal, but there is an animal in me, and it has this strange hunger that I canât explain. I am this close to kissing her. âI donât know,â I reply. âNot much longer.â I take a deep hit, hold it in my lungs.
âI canât stand these people with their North Face duffels and fanny packs, their stupid digital cameras and straw hats.â She digs at the ground with her foot. âAnother month or so and Iâm out of here.â
âIâm going with you.â I am so close I can taste her, but, as always, Kim pulls away.
âThe âTsunami Special,ââ I tell her, holding the smoke deep in my lungs before I let it out, âit will be our last.â
We shake on that, then give one another a hug. I hold her a little too long. Iâm starting to think Kimâs coming around. Perhaps even tonight. Just then a small plane buzzes out of the clouds. It appears in the sky and we cup our hands to see as it lands on the narrow grassy field. Our new group comes tumbling through customs, which consists of a desk with an armed guard in this jungle outpost. Our guests, a motley crew, emerge from baggage, lugging the usual stuff.
Our numbers are smaller than the last. A few months ago, right after that bombing at that supermall, we had twenty or more in each group. Now, with the economy being what it is, and nobody traveling even to Paris or Rome, weâre down to twelve. And theyâre not even under the palapa when I hear one of them say, âWhat is this?â a middle-aged man in a Hawaiian shirt and straw hat asks. âLast year at Sandalâs we had our own butlers!â Complaints about the accommodations while still at the airport are never a good sign.
âOkay,â Iâm pointing along with Kim, âletâs line it up here in the shade,â and they all collapse, fanning themselves into the folding chairs. In the shade of the palapa I check out the new crew in their flip-flops and Hawaiian shirts. Theyâre sucking on their Evian bottles. âSo folks,â I begin as I always do, âtell us about yourselves.â We like to know the demographics.
âWell, itâs kind of a family reunion,â a stocky red-headed woman who seems to be the leader pipes up, and the others agree. There is general laughter and it does seem as if they all look alikeârather square, vault-shaped people without much in the way of waists or necks.
âYeah, Cousin Joey, I havenât seen you in ten years,â one twenty-something young man shouts out. There are some ooohs and ahhs. One kid body checks another, and everyone laughs, but Kim and I stare straight ahead, giving them a nod. It is one of our rules. Never engage.
âWe will drive to the village,â I inform them. âThe ride will take approximately two hours and we will not stop so if you need to make a pit stop, do it now.â The guests gaze at the two palm frond huts, designed for bathroom visits. âAnd I suggest you bring your own tissue.â I slam a roll onto the picnic table as our meager charges straggle off to do their business.
Soon they are piling into the back of the pickup with the usual moans and groans. Roughing it is part of what we offer. We could afford a van down here, but the truck was Sonyaâs idea. âLet them get the feel of adventure, even controlled adventure, right away.â âControlled adventure,â this has been just one of Sonyaâs contributions to the travel world.
Sonyaâs right about another thing. After a terrorist attack, our numbers go up. And we certainly could use one about now. Though I know they wouldnât want to admit it, I think Bill and Sonya are secretly wishing for one too.
After Bill stopped working at juvenile detention camp, where they met (she was one of the graduates), they started âSentimental Journeysââriver trips down the Nile, the Mississippi, nostalgic trips into the pastâcastles along the Danube. But then 9/11 happened and no one wanted sentimental journeys. No one was sentimental anymore. They added some extreme travel to their repertoireâliving with a Stone Age tribe in Brazil, being helicoptered into the rain forest in New Guinea for an indefinite period of time. âAdversity travel,â they called it. But it hadnât caught on.
They needed a theme, Bill said. One night, as he likes to tell it, kind of tipsy, they came up with âOn the Brink Tours: Experience the Best. Prepare for the Worst.â It started as a joke. Then they tossed it around with a few travel agent friends. And somehow it caught on. For a short while, when it was in the news, âThe Tsunami Specialâ (âYou Never Know When the Waveâs Gonna Hitâ) was our biggest success. As was âStranded,â in which a plane makes an emergency landing in isolated terrain. The pilot and crew are ostensibly dead. And youâve got three days of freeze-dried food, though in truth they come and get you after Day l. And Sonyaâs been working hard on âThe Global Warming Packageâ which will include drought, flood, and some mild form of starvation.
This tour, âHostage for a Day,â until now has been fully booked, but I guess not enough is happening in the world. Of course thereâs the usual bombings, the threat of Iran, and the wall going up on the West Bank, but none of this is hitting close enough to home.
After two hours on the potholed road, and the spotting of a pair of toucans and a troop of howler monkeys, which they all go crazy over with their digital and cell-phone cameras, we reach the Village. I like to see the looks on their faces when we arrive. The thatched huts with the sun-bleached linens and white sofas, the hurricane lanterns that glow amber. âPrimitive luxury,â another one of Sonyaâs contradiction in terms. Sheâs got a great oxymoronic mind.
Everyone piles out, dragging their duffels and supplies. We point them in the direction of their huts and the room-temperature showers. Half an hour later they meet us under the main palapa where Jeremy has prepared mimosas, made of guava juice and fresh mint, platters of sliced fruit, and local goat cheese.
Billâs all set up in his camouflage gear and pointer for his PowerPoint orientation. âGood afternoon, ladies and gentlemen. Welcome to our Village. I am Commando Bill.â
âGood afternoon, Commando Bill.â
âYou will alwaysâis that clear, alwaysârefer to me as Commando Bill. In our Village we have certain rules ⊠They are for your protection and safety, as well as for the protection of our staff who must go looking for you if you go off and get lost. The first rule, no one, and I mean no one, leaves the Village unattended. No self-guided tours, please âŠâ
They all laugh, as they always do, when he does the âself-guided tourâ stuff and, before long, heâs deep into the three rules for captives: 1. Appear to cooperate, 2. Befriend your captors, 3. Plan your escape. Some days he gets a little philosophical and this is one of those days. âBe sure you know who the real enemy is. It could be you âŠâ He points to an old geezer and the crowd goes wild with âNot Uncle Bernie.â âOr you âŠâ He holds a mirror up to someoneâs face. A loud sigh. Bill quiets them down with his hands. âAnd remember sometimes the best way to resist is to go along.â
There are some nods from the audience and a few references from the California part of this family about dropping your chi. The red-headed woman who appears to be the leader says, âOh, yeah, thatâs what they teach you in martial arts.â Kim yawns. Her mouth opens and that sexy lip of hers widens across her face, but she shouldnât be yawning now. I make a sign, shake my head. âNo,â I mouth back. And she gives me a grin.
When orientation is over, everybody heads out. The guest go to their huts to get settled and prepare for the evening and we go back to the barracks. That evening over a pot of recycled goat stew, Kim says to me, âGeorge, do you remember our talk from the other day?â I nod. Of course, I want to tell her. I know every talk weâve ever had. âWell, I donât want to go to grad school.â
âYou donât?â
She makes a face and stops eating the greasy stew. âNo. Iâve decided on culinary school.â She whispers so Jeremy wonât be offended, I think.
âCooking school, not anthro?â
âNaw, anthro would make my parents happy, but itâs not what I really want. I like to make stuff in the kitchen. You know, veggie dishes. I like to pickle things.â
âPickle things?â I never knew this about Kim.
âBeets, beans. It relaxes me. I want to cook. Do you think this is crazy?â Her eyes shine at me in the darkness.
âI donât think thatâs crazy. Itâs a great idea.â My mind is racing. Iâm remembering our talk from a few days before. âWe could be partners,â I tell her.
âOh, George,â sheâs giggling now. âI donât think we could work together.â Itâs night in the jungle now and moonlight shines on her face.
âYou could run the restaurant in my resort.â Suddenly this resort is taking shape. Iâm envisioning a beach bar, thatched roofs, an infinity pool. Kim seems to be getting into the idea.
âIâd make only organic food ⊠Or what comes out the sea. Catch of the day,â she laughs, then kisses me on the cheek. I reach for her, but sheâs slipped away. âIâm going to bed,â she says. I get up, thinking that at last Iâll follow her, but she makes a little gesture with her hands. A sort of âno no,â and I sit down.
Bill calls a staff meeting in the morning. Since there are so few of us, he almost never does this, but now he does. Everyone who works at the village and behind the scenes shows up at the barracks. Billâs dressed in an olive green T-shirt and khaki shorts. Sonya has her hair pulled back and sheâs dressed in one of those bright colored peasant blouses she wears. But they are both looking grim. âWell, I wish I had better news to report âŠâ He hesitates, glancing over at Sonya who urges him on. âI donât have to tell you that our numbers are down.â
We all nod.
âSonya and I ⊠We arenât going to let any of you go so you can relax about that.â And we all do. There is a visible sigh. âBut we need to do better. Pump up the enthusiasm.â He raises his arm into a fist. âGet the word out. Weâve got a great product here, but we have to sell it.â Then he breaks the news to us. The âTsunami Specialâ has been cancelled indefinitely. It was very popular for a while, and Bill and Sonya spent a lot of money getting the wave just right. But now the numbers are down. âAnd we just canât afford that wave due to the high operating cost,â Bill concedes.
So weâll have to wait another week for what we spend most of our time doing. âHostage for a Day.â Itâs not that we donât have other things to do. Thereâs maintenance around the village. Chopping back palm fronds and cocoanuts. I take care of the airport transfers to and from San Jose and Kim supervises housekeeping which Sonya refuses to do. And Jeremy, of course, has little time off because heâs got to cook 24/7.
Itâs pretty much a shoe string operation on the back end, but the tourists never know. They get the high-end stuffâthe feather beds and jacuzzis, the gourmet rain forest food. Jeremy has learned to do hundreds of things with casava root. Our guests donât know that itâs just a few of us doing a bunch of odd jobs until the reenactment begins. âOnly the best,â Bill, a golden boy just past his prime, says. âShow them the best.â
He claps his hands like a coach with his players and we all clap ours.
The next night we take them. Even though it is early in their trip, they seem to be expecting us. The kids all have their teeth brushed. The parents are in their pajamas, but wearing hiking boots. Who wears hiking boots to bed? I pull back the curtain of the family with a teenage boyâthe one who buttheaded the other kid at the airport. Heâs sitting on his cot, iPod blaring and doesnât even know Iâm here. His parents go quickly, but he just looks up at me with glazed eyes as if heâs stoned, which is strictly verboten, his head bobbing back and forth like a bobbly toy. âHello, Junior,â I say, âletâs move it out.â
He continues to groove to his music and I know heâs not playing along. âOkay.â I rip his headphones off, hurling them across the floor of the hut and he looks at me in disbelief. I can tell his holiday, probably his whole life, rests in those headphones. âCome on. Youâre outta here.â
âHey man, take it easy. This was my parentsâ idea.â
âI said move it.â He gives me a grimace with his pimply face.
He could care less. He moves slowly, with poised indifference off the bed.
âFuck you, man. Iâm not putting up with any of this shit.â
âOh, yeah,â I tell him. âYou wanta bet.â
Now Iâm standing there, calling his bluff, but really what am I supposed to do? Drag him off? Shoot him? Billâs never given us the drill for this. Can I just say, âSuit yourself, manâ?
No, I cannot.
I am, after all, the tour guide, and he must do what I say. His safety depends upon it. I point the gun at his head. âMove. Or youâre a dead man.â
I surprise myself at how forceful I sound and the kid actually moves out of his hut. Now we get them all out front, lined up, outside of the kid, and heâs docile now, no one resists. âOkay, march!â
We come to a clearing where we make them sit on the ground. âSit down; donât talk. Weâll tell you when to get up.â The man with the trophy wife tries to apply the second rule of captives to us. âBefriend Your Captors.â He offers candy and cigarettes which Iâm sure he slipped into his pocket for this occasion.
âSit down and shut up,â I tell him. Whenever they try to apply the second rule, I apply my own first rule. Never Engage. That is death to any rebel fighter.
âWell, do you mind if I smoke?â the man says, trying a new approach.
âI said sit down and shut up.â And he does.
In the darkness Kim sits across from me. Her greasepaint is applied a little heavily and in the light of the moon she looks like a raccoon. Or a very sleepy lady. Weâre all just staring into space. At last we hear the rumble of the truck. âWhat took him so long?â Bill says under his breath. Jeremyâs driving. This guy wears many hats. Rebel, driver, short-order cook. Itâs a large pickup, the kind youâd transport migrant workers in. Its back panel is down and the group rises before we tell them to rush to it. âNobody move until I say so,â Bill shouts. Heâs very effective as a leader and he likes his power.
When everyone is sitting back down, Bill gives them the look-over. He glares at each one and finally shouts. âOkay, everybody into the truck.â We nudge them with our rifles and they scream, feigning fear as we shove them inside. We hop on board, slam the panel shut.
For half an hour or so we bounce around on jungle roads. They think theyâre being taken somewhere but really weâre just driving around in circles.
Finally the truck comes to a halt and Kim, Commando Bill, Jeremy, and I hop off. Our guests bid us adieu, though there is no promise we wonât be back. They return to their village where their beds have been straightened, clean clothes laid out, and small treats with glasses of cognac wait at their bed tables. In the morning, tired from their ordeal, they will all receive baskets of breakfast delivered by a dark-haired maiden to their huts.
In an hour weâre back at camp. âThat felt more like a fire drill than a hostage situation,â Kim says as she heads to her bed. âIâm getting some shut-eye.â
âDonât you wanta have a smoke?â I plead.
âNaw, Iâm tired.â And she blows me a kiss.
I reach up and catch it. Then I crawl into my hammock, but I canât sleep. I just lie there, listening. I love the jungle at night. I love its hoots and its howls. I like the darkness and the unknown. Lying in the hammock, I like thinking that Kim is just a few doors down. I picture her swinging in hers, gazing up at the stars. I think about going in there and ravaging her, dragging her out into the jungle, and I fall asleep, thinking that one day soon I will.
For our next trip to the airport we need two vans. Weâre picking up twenty-twoâmore than weâve seen in a while. âWay to go,â Bill says when the numbers come in. The news must be getting out on the message board. The CEO of a telecommunication company thought âOn the Brinkâ could serve as great crisis training for middle management, and he booked it overnight. Bill and Sonya couldnât be happier. Maybe itâs also the new Guatemalan chef (Jeremy left in a huff) or the recent school shootings, which always help. Hard to tell, but we are definitely back in the adventure travel zone. As Sonya says, âthe word is out.â
âNow hereâs a marketing angle we hadnât considered,â Bill chimes at our staff meeting before we head to the airport.
âWe can change our business model,â Sonya adds. âWe could have sales conferences here.â
At the airport we picked up ten âsuits,â including the CEO himself, Andy, who looks like heâs twelve years old and has silky brown hair. Then thereâs an assortment of wives and a few teenagers, and Andyâs two boys. They are a rowdy bunch, but more fun and younger than the last. They all seem to have known one another forever, and it turns out that theyâre all zillionaires from some little Internet start-up they began in college âwhile sitting around the frat house, drinking,â one of them shares.
On the way to the village theyâre all slapping one another on the arm. âAnd you said weâd never get out of Atlanta.â
Kim sits in the passenger seat, her body rigid beside me. I donât believe Iâve made any progress on this front at all. Iâm starting to think sheâs gay. Or just not into men. Or not into anyone for that matter. Itâs like she moves through the world with a Lucite bubble around her. Every time I want to reach out and touch her, this invisible shield is there.
We drive them to the village and thereâs no grumping this time. âThis is so authentic,â Andy says. âItâs just what I was hoping ⊠You never know from the Internet âŠâ
âWow,â Pete pipes in, âItâs like an episode of âSurvivor.ââ
They all laugh. It is nice to have a good-natured crowd. Picks the spirits up in the camp. That night at a staff meeting we decide to go in on Tuesday. âThatâll give them a few days to hang out in the rain forest,â Bill offers. âAndy told me they all want to swing from vines.â
âYeah, well, thatâs the idea.â I donât tell Andy that Iâm just a flunky. Just a hired hand. Let him make me an offer I canât refuse. And he does.
âYou know when you come back up to the States, stop in Atlanta. I want to talk to you.â
Just then an armadillo crosses our path, and the cameras are firing away. âOh, my god,â Andy says, âItâs just amazing here.â
After dinner weâre ready to take them. Kim and I put on our camouflage. We rub the greasepaint under our eyes. âThis is it,â she tells me. âMy last one.â
âMine too.â I am so ready to kiss her. To take her in my arms, and maybe sheâll even let me once weâre out of here. For now we just grab our toy rifles and march to the village. Soon we can see the amber lights and hear the laughter. They are unsuspecting, which will make it all the more fun.
Weâre about to take them when I notice a guy standing between me and Kim. Heâs got on camouflage gear as well and the same black greasepaint, but his gun looks pretty heavy and his boots come up to his knees. âNice equipment, buddy,â I say, but he doesnât reply.
Iâm assuming Kim already gave her notice. Iâm about to give mine. I turn to her in a whisper. âHey, whoâs the new guy?â
In the dark I see her shrug. âWhat new guy?â
âYou donât know who he is?â
âCĂĄllate la boca,â we hear him say. And then in English. âShut the fuck up.â I look around and heâs not alone. There are several more all around us. âMuĂ©velo,â he says in that kind of loud whisper just under his breath.
We are moving in unison towards the village. But it appears the others have already been taken. Andy, with his hands over his head, gives me a wink. âHey, buddy,â Andy says to one of the men, âWho sent you guys? Central Casting?â Thereâs a chuckle from the group until the rebel hits him with his rifle butt and Andy sinks to the ground. Pete gives him a hand as we merge with our group onto the trail. This is the walk. I know the four parts. And the rules. Kim is just ahead of me, but I hear her whimpering. âShut up,â I tell her. âDonât let on youâre afraid.â
I will befriend the one behind me. I will plan my escape. But for now Iâm following orders. I am walking in silence with the others. I listen to the jungle sounds. The rustling in the brush. An animal scurrying out of the way. The footsteps and heavy breathing as we march into the unknown.