Juan felt the room tilt. He looked out the window at the bustling streets of Santo Domingo, where the sun beat down on the asphalt. It felt as though he were standing on the edge of a great canyon, and the only way across was a thin, fraying wire.
Juan climbed the stairs to his apartment, the bird in his chest still fluttering. But now, it wasn't trying to escape. It was simply keeping time with a song that only those on the wire could truly hear.
He realized then that the doctor was right. The struggle wasn't just his; it was the pulse of the island. They were all athletes of the impossible, performing circus acts just to survive the Tuesday afternoon. He began to walk, and as he did, he found a beat in his step. If he had to cross the Niagara on a bicycle, he would do it with a whistle on his lips and a swing in his hips. Juan Luis Guerra - El niagara en bicicleta
By the time he reached his street, the dizziness hadn't vanished, but it had transformed. It wasn't the vertigo of falling anymore; it was the lightheadedness of a dance. He waved to his neighbor, who was fixing a car with nothing but duct tape and prayer. Keep pedaling! Juan shouted over the roar of the engines.
The doctor sighed, a sound of profound exhaustion. We need an electrocardiogram, he replied, but the machine is broken. The technician left months ago because the pay stopped coming. We have no aspirin, no oxygen, and the elevator only goes down, never up. Juan felt the room tilt
The hospital waiting room smelled of floor wax and old anxieties. For Juan, every tick of the wall clock sounded like a drum beat he couldn't quite catch. He sat on a plastic chair that groaned under his weight, staring at a flickering neon light that buzzed in a frantic rhythm. He was here because his heart felt like a bird trapped in a cage, fluttering against his ribs with a dizzying, uneven pace.
I feel like I’m fading, Juan said, his voice a dry whisper. My head spins, and my chest is a storm. Juan climbed the stairs to his apartment, the
When the nurse finally called his name, she didn't look up from her clipboard. She led him down a hallway where the tiles were cracked and the air was thin. They reached a room where a doctor sat behind a desk piled high with yellowing files. The doctor’s stethoscope hung around his neck like a tired snake.