Chapter 1

Zach

Two weeks ago…

I follow Moira out

of the airport and step out into the heat of Chicago. She told me

it’s summertime here in the United States, a concept that

doesn’t mean much to me other than it’s hot and it smells

funny, almost like a metallic scent, which is harsh to my nose. I no

longer smell the earthy, green scent of the Amazon, and a painful

longing for my home courses through me.

Moira leads us over

to a yellow car that I know is a taxi. I know it’s a car

because I remember them from my childhood. I know it’s a taxi

because my English-reading skills are still intact, and the word is

printed on the side. My native tongue did not languish during my

years living with the Caraicans, thanks to Father Gaul’s visits

over the years, as he spoke English as well as Portuguese. He not

only conversed with me in English at great length, but also brought

me books to learn from. I had a basic understanding of math concepts

and was fairly proficient on history and geography, having devoured

everything that I could get my hands on to read.

It’s funny…

how I recognize things. Living in the Amazon for the past eighteen

years, my memories of my prior life were like faded dreams, almost

like I could reach out and touch them, but they were just beyond my

grasp. I wondered how much learning I would have to do, and how much

of the “modern marvels” that Father Gaul used to talk to

me about would surprise me.

What I found was

that as I experienced the modern world, I found a distinct

familiarity in what I was seeing. For example, I had no memory of

traveling by plane to Brazil with my parents when I was a child. But

the minute I saw the little Cessna that took us from the Amazon River

into the capital of Brasilia, I knew I had been on one of those

planes before. I didn’t remember it… I just knew it. The

engine didn’t make me uneasy when it started, and I didn’t

have an inherent distrust of the concept of flying. While I didn’t

have specific memories of flying, as my fingers touched the glass

windows of the plane, I suddenly remembered what “glass”

was. The clear, hard material was not only familiar to me, but I

remembered my parents’ house in Georgia when I was little. I

remember running headfirst into a clear, sliding glass door and

knocking myself flat on my butt.

When we landed at

the airport, and Moira led me to a rental car, some clearer memories

did assault me. I remembered being in my parents’ car, sitting

in the backseat and maybe even holding a book that had bright

pictures in it. I even think I remembered my parents’ voices as

they talked with one another.

More things seemed

just inherently familiar. At the hotel where we stayed for a few

days, I was able to easily identify a variety of objects. The bed…

and pillows. Yes, I knew what a pillow was. Moira brought me into the

bathroom and explained how the toilet and the shower worked. It was

coming back to me in little bits and pieces.

Some of these

wonders I took advantage of. The shower was amazing; the water felt

cleaner and lighter than the river waters or standing puddles of

muddy rain that I would normally wash myself in. The smell of the

shampoo made me think fondly of the scent of water lilies. Brushing

my teeth for the first time in so many years was beyond incredible,

and I couldn’t stop running my tongue over my teeth, amazed at

how smooth they felt. No amount of scraping them with reed had ever

made them this clean.

Yes, all of these

things that were oddly familiar ended up being a comfort to me to

some extent. I didn’t have any real moments where I felt

overwhelmed by what I was experiencing… unless you count Moira

driving a little too fast through Brasilia. We stayed there for two

days, as I had to see a doctor for a health screening and to receive

vaccinations, and we had to get my new passport at the American

Embassy. While I had hoped that my passport would be denied, and thus

ending this ludicrous situation, it was pushed through when I was

able to show the consulate proof of my identity. That consisted of

mine and my parents’ original travel documents that I kept all

these years after they died, along with their wedding rings, one

family photo, and our family Bible. The secretary to the American

Ambassador personally handled my documents and gave me a warm,

congratulatory smile when she handed me my passport. I wanted to slit

her throat over her happiness that I was returning “home.”

I wasn’t happy about it, but everyone else thought it was a

wonderful thing.

There were some

things I had a hard time adjusting to. While I briefly cherished the

softness of the hotel bed, I found it a foreign feeling and thus

uncomfortable. I ended up sleeping on the floor each night. The

clothing that Moira had me put on before we boarded the Cessna was

constraining and scratched against my skin. I hated it. The minute I

was alone in my room, I stripped it all away and remained naked as I

was used to.

I refused to eat

with utensils, even though I immediately remembered what they were. I

didn’t do that out of any sense of unease, but rather did so to

show Moira that I would do as I pleased. If I thought I could get

away with shedding my clothes the entire time, I’d do so, but

Moira put a stop to that by telling me there were laws against it.

So I had to make do

with the little things, like refusing to use a fork and knife,

instead using my fingers to bring food to my mouth. I even shunned

the napkin I watched her use to dab at her mouth and wipe her

fingers, instead licking my fingers clean and once, even rubbing my

lips across the material of the shirt I wore just at my shoulder. I

refused to cut my hair when she suggested it, but she merely gave me

a small smile and didn’t say a word.

It makes me angry…

that she is just so accepting of my differences. I fully expect her

at some point to start “insisting” that I behave

according to these new cultural norms. Instead, she merely takes her

time explaining things to me, and only gives me the opportunity to

try something out. If I refuse, she only says, “Maybe some

other time.”

My feelings toward

this flame-haired woman cause dark feelings to twist within me. I

know she is not directly responsible for me leaving my home, yet I

loathe her as if she were the person who came up with this insane

idea. I know she is just doing her job… doing what my

“godfather” asked her to do, but my contempt for her is

as great as for this man named Randall Cannon. Two people that have

put into effect a series of events, which led me from a peaceful and

happy existence.

They are simply my

enemies.

Yes, Moira is my

enemy, but it doesn’t mean I haven’t been looking at her

the way a man looks at a woman. I have an unnatural attraction to the

woman with red hair and green eyes. It was immediate the first time I

laid eyes on her, sitting by the fire her first night in our village.

So very different from the women of Caraica… who are tiny with

brown skin and jet-black hair. When I walked into the village center,

Moira had looked at me directly, no shy eyes hiding the way Tukaba

would do unless I gave her tacit permission to gaze at me. Her hair

is a glorious mass of flame-soaked waves and her eyes the color of

jungle green. She reminds me of a wild and brilliantly colored bird

of the Amazon, but she moves with the grace of a jaguar. So very

different from what I am used to but immensely appealing, which I

find causes me shame.

Because I don’t

want to feel anything for this woman… my enemy… other

than the anger I’m carrying for the way she has turned my life

upside down. When we left the village, I was heartsick. Everyone had

turned out to wish me safe travel, and I could barely look at Paraila

for fear I would unman myself with tears. We started our hike to the

Jutai River around mid-morning, and I did my best to ignore Moira,

but that lasted only for so long.

We were getting

closer to the Jutai as I could smell the tang of river water on the

air. The red-haired woman, Moira, walked in front of me, with Father

Gaul just in front of her, and Ramon leading us all. She stumbled

every few feet over an errant vine or decomposing tree branch. She

seemed enthralled with the rainforest, looking all around at the

wildlife rather than where she should be walking.

She was an

interesting woman, I admitted. Father Gaul explained to me that she

was a teacher of some sort, her knowledge highly prized among her

peers. Her expertise was in something he called “anthropology,”

and she had made it her life to study the cultures of indigenous

tribes in the Amazon. Father Gaul told me that I had a godfather who

sent for me, and he hired this woman to be my teacher so that I could

learn how to be a proper American when I return.

I snorted

internally at the thought, vowing that I would never change a thing

about myself… no matter how much they wished otherwise.

I’d never

seen hair the color this woman possessed. It was as red as the

setting sun and long as well; she wore it in a massive braid down her

back. She was so different from the women of our tribe. So much

taller than them—the top of her head coming up to my shoulder

while theirs barely came to mid-chest. Her skin was pale, like the

color of the moon, and she had tiny, little brown dots sparsely

spread across her nose and cheeks.

I’d heard

her speaking English with Father Gaul. I was sure she knew I spoke it

as well, but she had stayed pretty far away from me since that first

night when she arrived in our village.

When I was inside

of Tukaba, taking my pleasure inside of her willing and warm flesh,

my entire focus was on the beautiful, red-haired woman who watched me

with fevered eyes. I imagined it was her body beneath mine, except I

knew she wouldn’t lay there quietly the way a Caraican woman

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