Down by the river

I nearly died to take this picture. What a waste that would have been.

Down by the riverbank two men embrace, their clinch lit by the dying embers of the day as the sun slumps below the New Brunswick skyline. One man passes the other a blue canvas bag. They nod to one another and pick up the bikes dumped by their feet.

I’m stood about 20 feet away from them, camera in hand, taking pictures of trees. I’m a real sucker for autumnal hues, you see.

One of the men starts to cycle towards me.

Oh f**k, he’s coming towards me!

I turn away, clench my buttocks and prepare for death, expecting the inevitable stab wound to come at any moment.

I’m going to get stabbed for taking a picture of a tree. This is so typical. He thinks I was taking pictures of him selling a sack of meth to that other man. And he’s going to stab me for it!  

In the corner of my eye I see the cycling man’s shadow approaching me purposefully, like a shark moving towards its prey.

What if he has a gun? He might just shoot me instead! I’d far rather he just stabbed me … getting stabbed just seems less painful … If I live I definitely have to google search ‘is getting shot more painful than being stabbed?’ … I mean, someone has to know.

The cycling shadow grows larger, its wheel spokes spinning the dark rider closer and closer.

Maybe I should just run … but if I run there’s a chance he’ll get angry and stab me more savagely … or shoot me more than once if he’s got a gun … if I just stay here and accept that he’s going to kill me maybe he’ll be more merciful? Perhaps he’ll acknowledge that I’ve tried not to inconvenience him and make it fast.

I glance to my side see and that the umbra is upon me, an ink black storm of pedals, handlebars, spokes and imaginary shivs. My muscles contort, anchoring me to the kill zone. I wait for the cold blade to pierce my kidney.

Why isn’t my life flashing before my eyes?

A metallic squall whirls past and the cyclist rips off into the distance, the blue canvas bag slung over his shoulder.

I’m alive! … But now I feel really foolish for thinking all of those irrational thoughts.

Slowly my buttocks unclench, my arse cheeks sinking like a pair of setting suns.

***

After this brush with death I went back to taking pictures, reasoning that the chances of stumbling into a second drug deal where slim. And I’m glad that I did because the truth is that, even if ugly things do happen here, the banks of the Raritan river are still beautiful.

Coming to ‘merica

Newark Airport. Border control. 11.1.11

“I wasn’t able to fill in the declarations form. I didn’t have a pen.”

“What were yu doin’ fu nine owas?” The customs officer responds gruffly in an accent as deep and thick as the soupy wetlands scattered across northeast New Jersey.

I shrug my shoulders apologetically and wonder if I should just come clean and answer his question honestly. The truth is that I passed the nine hours of my flight crowbarred into the foetal position because the f**kwit in front of me fully reclined his seat as soon as we’d taken off (I would have done the same but I consider it bad manners to drive my headrest into a fellow traveller’s skull). Crammed into this miserable seating arrangement, and for such a long period of time, I soon realised that ruthlessly ransacking the booze trolley would be the only sensible way to endure this journey. And so, tray table flipped down and jammed into my navel, I sat slugging mini-beers as the Atlantic zipped by below. When I finally trundled off the plane, half-drunk on free Warsteiner, I had totally forgotten about the customs declaration form crumpled in my pocket.

“Um, it totally slipped my mind. I’m really sorry,” I say, meekly. “May I borrow your pen?” I nod towards the pen on the kiosk’s desktop.

“Nah. I don’t gotta pen,” he says, ignoring the one lying next to his hairy knuckles. I look at the pen, then up to his face, all monobrow and malice. Doesn’t he notice it? Perhaps it’s a family heirloom and he’s just unwilling to hand it out to strange looking foreigners. I peer over the counter in search of an additional pen and notice that he has a handgun holstered to his side. F**k me, this man is armed! He’s armed and capable of blasting my head to smithereens before I’ve even stepped foot upon American soil. But still, I really need that pen.

“What about this one.” I nod towards his pen. “Can I borrow it?”

“Nah. This is my pen. I need it.” He taps his finger impatiently, starting to look even more pissed off. I wonder if he’d shoot me if I tried to grab it.

“I’ll just be a second. I promise. I write very quickly, I assure you officer.” I smile weakly, my hopes of charming him fading fast.

“You gotta go to the back uh the line. Go getta pen from the guy in the red coat. He’s at the endu the line.”

I turn to look back at the line, see it snaking endlessly across the vast expanse of carpet before me, writhing with tracksuited tourists and duty free bags. I’ve come too far to turn back now, waited too long for this moment. One year to get my visa and then one hour in this hell. It’s as if I’m a mountaineer a step away from Everest’s summit, poised at the threshold of glory, told he must return to base camp to retrieve a pen. A pen! There’s no way I’m going to give up that easily.

“Um, please can I have the pen?” I smile hopefully, wondering if politeness will win him over.

“No.” He furrows his brow and jerks his thick bowling ball head towards the back of the line.

***

“Have you got a pen I can borrow?” I ask the man in the red coat at the back of the line.

“You got 50 dollars I can borrow?” He replies.

***

When I finally reach the front of the line for a second time I’m the last person waiting to be seen. I decide to approach a different border patrol officer, thinking that my chances of getting through might be better. I go for a woman, a big haired smiling woman, smiling with those big American snowdrop-white teeth. Until she sees me.

“You gotta go to the next booth.”

I go to the next booth. Inside a stout Hispanic man shakes his head and thumbs towards the next again booth.

At his point I’m starting to wonder if I’m trapped inside some kind of fable and the officer at the third booth will embrace me, praise my perseverance and let me into America.

He doesn’t. Still, I’m thankful because the third officer only half grimaces when he sees me, as if I’m merely a case of mild indigestion rather than a major pain in the arse. I hand him the large white envelope containing all of my visa information that I’ve been clinching under my arm for the past hour or so. He tears it open, tilts his head and levels me with a withering look.

“K1 visa huh.”

“Uh, yes, that’s right.”

He’s giving me a kind of quizzical look now, like I’m a piece of abstract art that he doesn’t fully approve of.

“You like marryin’ a 90-year-old woman or somethin’?”

“Uh, no. No I’m not,” I reply, wondering if I should take this as a joke or if he genuinely suspects me of being a gerontophile.

“How old is she?”

“Uh, 26.”

“Okay. You gotta come with me.”

***

I’m held in a waiting room that seems to be some kind of immigration limbo. I sit on a leather chair, its upholstery mottled and warped by the wringing and gouging of hordes of nervous fingers. The room has two exits, each to the side of a central bank of raised desks where stoic looking customs officers stand like preachers at the pulpit, handing out passports and deliverance.

One of the exits, a narrow corridor to the left, appears to lead to a series of interrogation booths. Intermittent sobs and wails drift down this doomed passageway. At one point a Hispanic woman charges through, ink black mascara tears zigzagging down her cheeks. An officer, face blank as a taxidermist’s tiger, trails after her, shooing her into the women’s toilets. I hear the muffled echo of howling noises and something that sounds like Spanish.

To the right there’s another exit that, presumably, leads to America.

My name is called out. I walk to the bank of desks, trying to look as inconspicuous and law abiding as possible.

“You have 90 days to get married,” the officer says, handing me my passport. “Welcome to America,” he says, ushering me to the exit on the right.