Irma Voth

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Book: Read Irma Voth for Free Online
Authors: Miriam Toews
tell her about the four-part cure. I wanted to convince her that everything good was easy to get and all that was terrible was easy to endure.
    Hey Aggie, I said, you know what?
    What? she said.
    Oveja’s stoned right now and thinks he’s a philosopher. When it wears off he’ll go back to attacking people. I don’t think we have a lot of time. Then Aggie told me that her friend Aughte’s dad, Alfredo, was going to play the husband in the movie. That Diego had promised him and his wife and kids a two-week all-inclusive resort package in Cancún when it was over and now everyone was mad at him too, and maybe after the movie they’d all move to a colony in Veracruz and she’d lose her best friend and Alfredo would find out that I was working for Diego too and tell our dad and that would be it, curtains.
    And Mom’s pregnant again, said Aggie. And doesn’t want to get out of bed and doesn’t smile anymore and I haveto do everything now and Dad just yells and prays and I have chigoe bites all over my legs. So, why did you have to be such an idiot and go and marry a cholo?
    He’s not a narco, Aggie, I said. Let me see.
    She lifted her dress a bit. There were ugly red sores all over her ankles and shins where the fleas had burrowed beneath her skin.
    Let me sleep at your place tonight, Irma, please?
    That night I had a dream about my mother and the next morning I saw her for the first time in months. I was up early, ready to start my new job, and I was standing in my yard waiting for the sun also to rise and warm me up. In my dream I was thinking about my dad yelling and praying and wondering if he got them mixed up sometimes and forgot who he was talking to. In my dream I looked at the road and there was my mother walking slowly, proud and majestic, or maybe just exhausted, like one of those giraffes you see briefly in shimmering sunlight on the savannah. She didn’t look real and for a second I thought my mind had conjured up the thing it craved, the way a pregnant woman cries so she can taste the salt her body needs. Which is actually a lie my mother told us to explain away all her tears. But I was thinking about that stuff while I was running and then I was hugging her and I knew she was real because she was holding me so close to her it hurt and I was coughing trying to catch my breath and I could smell fresh bread and soap. I touched her stomach. She was farther along than I had thought.
    Another one? I said.
    Is Aggie with you? she said.
    She’s still asleep.
    Send her home now, Irma, quickly.
    I wanted to tell her about my dream but she had already begun to walk away and I stood there, like always, like forever it seemed, in the middle of the road waiting for something or someone to revive me, God or a parent or my husband or any of those things or people or ideas or words that by their definition promised love.
    Diego suggested I keep a diary of “the shoot” after I mentioned a few things that Marijke had wondered about. For instance, why her character would be serene all the time. Was she in a depressive fog or not quite human or just plain stupid? He told me that he found it easier to understand certain ideas when he wrote them down or captured them on film and that I could try to do the same thing by keeping a diary of the shoot rather than by worrying about his ideas. Or something like that. He gave me a black notebook and a pen with a small light bulb on the tip.
    Does this pen light up? I asked him.
    Yes, there’s a switch, he said. It doubles as a flashlight.
    Thank you, I said.
    The first thing I wrote down in my new notebook was:
YOU MUST BE PREPARED TO DIE!
    That’s what Diego told us this morning before we headed off to our first location. This is commando filmmaking, hesaid. The little red dot in the white of his left eye shone brighter than usual, like fresh blood on snow.
    This is guerrilla filmmaking, he said. When it’s time to work, it’s time to work. If you’re not prepared to risk

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