Índio Mascarenhas and Homero look at him, then at each other, then back at him.
The guy strangled her. Then he pulled out her eyes and cut off her lips.
The singer looks at his plastic cup and downs the remaining liquid in a single gulp.
His daughter reappears with the candy apple and two
Keep the change, honey, says Homero. If it’s okay with your dad.
It’s okay. She knows how to handle money. I give her an allowance. There’s just one thing missing.
Thank you, she recites.
What about you, Gaudério’s grandson? What brought you to these parts?
I decided I wanted to live by the beach after my dad died. I’m a PE teacher. I’m a running and swimming coach.
Nice, nice… this is a good place to practice a sport, isn’t it? Mascarenhas smiles without a trace of sarcasm. His watery eyes are childlike and transmit a naïveté that contrasts with his figure. He doesn’t appear to have noticed the sudden change of subject and the small talk that has taken over the conversation.
This is paradise, says Homero. If you want quality of life, there’s no better place.
The sea is the primordial soup, says Índio Mascarenhas in a loud voice. The source of all life. From the sea we come, and to the sea we return.
True, he says, to be polite. Then the two men excuse themselves and say good-bye cordially. Homero says he has matters to see to later that night, and Mascarenhas, if he understood properly, is going to take his daughter through the crowd on his shoulders to the front of the main stage so she won’t miss the start of the Claus & Vanessa concert.
SEVEN
A
Antenor reduces the speed and slowly approaches the area of underwater rocks as he and Matias discuss the best place to anchor. Matias points at a place almost inside the reef. The two of them ready their spear guns, pull on flippers, secure knives in their shin supports, and put on snorkels. Matias is the first in and swims a short distance toward the reef, towing the signaling buoy behind him, before going under for the first time. It is one minute and fifteen seconds before he surfaces. Then Antenor jumps out of the boat and swims to the left, looking for a different place to fish, then dives down with the help of twenty-pound diving weights attached to his wetsuit. He watches the two men for a few minutes, feeling the rocking of the boat, then puts on his goggles and swimming flippers, much shorter than the ones used for diving, takes off his shirt, gets his spear gun, and slips into the cold sea.