I hear fireworks
going off somewhere outside our hotel and lean far out the
window to see them. But there is nothing to see in the ink blue, star-filled
skies above Havana, Cuba. The night air is heavy with heat, humidity, and the
salty smell of the ocean.
The
babysitter hired to look after me and my siblings is dozing in a chair, my
sister and brother sound asleep in one of the bedrooms. Mom and Dad went off to
a nightclub show and casino a couple of hours ago and I am bored and indignant.
I am almost ten – I know we don’t need a babysitter, especially one that does
nothing but sleep.
More
small explosions – another attempt to see the elusive fireworks. I stamp my
feet impatiently.
The
Havana we have seen over the last couple of days is lively, noisy, and
aromatic. The night streets are full of laughing people and street musicians
playing intoxicating Cuban rhythms, so surely it is not out of place to have
fireworks.
It
is summer 1958 and our family is on its way back to Canada from Jamaica. We had
moved there for a few years while Dad helped build a bauxite plant in the hills
of Ewerton for Alcan, the international aluminium manufacturer.
Dad
insisted we stop in Cuba on the way home. Cuba was famous for its music, its
nightclubs, and its rum. A perfect way to celebrate the end of our stay in the
Caribbean. Mom was a bit nervous. She had heard of a rebel named Castro who was
creating some trouble, but Dad had faith in the power of our passports. “We’re Canadian. We’ll be fine.”
So
here we are.
We
spent our first days in Cuba wandering the streets of Havana. Instead of
English or the lilting Jamaican dialect, we were treated to the rapid rhythms
of Spanish and warm, welcoming smiles everywhere we went.
We
walked along the Malecón, the legendary promenade through Old Havana that
parallels a seawall smashed by endless waves that send tangy spray over anyone
walking too close to the edge. And visited El Morro, the ancient fortress,
complete with turrets, cannons and a moat, built in the 16th century
at the end of the harbour to protect Havana from invasions by enemies of the
Spanish crown and attacks from marauding pirates of the Caribbean.
We ate spicy Cuban dishes of chicken and rice
in small, local restaurants and played in the pool at our hotel, the Havana
Hilton.
Later we toured one of the city’s busy cigar factories. The overwhelming scent of the thin brown tobacco leaves lying in bundles is still in my aromatic memory banks and I only need to smell a cigar (a rare occasion now in 21st century Canada) to be back in the low-ceilinged hot room full of workers, mostly women, at long wooden tables, rolling and shaping the leaves into fine cigars.
Their
stained brown fingers and nails almost blurred as they rapidly create
masterpiece after masterpiece. Even as a kid, I knew how prized Cuban cigars
were.
That
was daytime, now at night, I’m hearing the small explosions from outside.
I waken the babysitter and try to make her
listen. I’m no longer polite.
“Where
are the fireworks?”
She simply shakes her head and refuses to answer me. I keep pestering. I gesture with my hands and try to make firework sounds.
“Boom.
Boom.”
Finally, she answers in broken English: “No
fireworks. Bullets. Rebels. Castro.”
I
tell my parents the next morning about what I heard and learned; they agree
that it’s a good thing we are leaving the next day.
So, we five Canadians leave Cuba and return
safely to peaceful Canada.
Six months later, Castro captures Havana and
takes over the country. A few days later a Toronto paper runs a picture of our
Havana hotel, now named the Havana Libre. Castro sets up his headquarters here
and the Soviet Embassy takes over two floors. Outside, one of the walls is the
backdrop for a Communist firing squad as they execute former government
supporters.
My
brush with revolution. At ten I begin to understand that the world is not a
totally peaceful place. Nine years later I will be in Russia as they celebrate
the 50th anniversary of their revolution —a story for another
day.
Jo Anne Wilson is
a retired marketing executive and college professor who now devotes her time to
family, friends, volunteering, travel and writing. Recently she decided to take
the writing bug she’s had since her childhood and see what might happen when
she devotes time and energy to it.
One
of her fondest writing memories is of finishing a grade eight exam early and
using the remaining time to write a story. The school principal “caught” her,
was impressed with the story and read it to the entire school.
Read more short stories, essays, and reviews by your fellow writers here (and scroll down).
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