Traverse 12 | Page 65

my own efforts to ingratiate myself I gave her a pastelito, a hard-baked triangular pastry containing guava jam which I’d bought from a man selling them as he walked around the port. She accepted it but wouldn’t be bribed into giving us any information until the ferry was due to leave. With one last look at the pelicans which had been diving into the sea as we waited, we made the decision to head inland and westwards and see where we ended up. A puncture caused de- lay but Chris always carried two spare wheels and as he was obviously used to doing this procedure, swapping over didn’t take long. Roadside stalls provided us with cheese and recon- stituted ham bocaditos (sandwiches), Cristal beer, and local rum, probably made round the back of the stall. It was good to be on the road after burning in the sun all day. We shared it with stately relics from Detroit’s past and boxy Lada's from Russia’s more recent dominance. We were heading for the north-west coast, because Chris wanted to reconnoitre Puerto Esperanza. He had a boat in the UK which he planned to sail to Cuba. Puerto Esperanza might be the place for her anchorage. Artemesa was our stopping-place that night. Its central square with trees and seats surrounding old colo- nial buildings now occupied by cafés gave it a holiday feel and people were at 8am the following day. Then we passenger hydrofoil trip to the is- went to a beach bar and drank rum land. Hector couldn’t travel on it but doing what they could to provide interesting restaurants and a relaxed all afternoon whilst watching the there was a ferry for freight which atmosphere. Chris picked a Chinese sea. Something in the distance that took twelve hours. The combined restaurant for dinner but when we got started as a speck gradually became cost made a single trip prohibitively there they had no Chinese food so we a man who had been fishing way out expensive, let alone the return. So into the sea in an inner tube. He we waved goodbye to the large, com- opted for something at a hotel on a landed himself and his catch on the manding cashier at the booking office corner which was doing its best to be grand whilst offering a very limited beach. who I had been observing all day. Before dawn we thanked the guard- She wore a tee-shirt bearing a drunk- menu. All the staff were pleasant, polite and served our food with pride. pig and went clattering through the en leprechaun and the words ‘Luck I was still hungry after dinner. dark, sleepy streets to the port. of the Irish’. We thought she’d been My salad had consisted of shredded At four in the afternoon, we accept- withholding information and was cabbage and half a tomato. Not to ed defeat and left. It had taken all rather unsympathetic to our cause. worry, I had spotted a large ice-cream day for those that had the informa- Either through devotion, fear or tion to pass it on to us. Finally we dis- subservience, a man knelt before her parlour nearby. An extensive fla- covered that there was a three-hour to do up the straps of her sandals. In vour-choice was advertised but inside TRAVERSE 65