still, it was the cold: his stay in prison, the fear, his despair, reduced to a temperature. Cold food. Cold hands. Cold cement floors. He remembered now how these coils had glowed bright and red, how Rogelioâs smile did too, and was surprised that these images still moved him so.
For their part, the actors were mostly too nervous or excited to notice Henryâs troubled, uneasy countenance; or if they did, they assumed it was in response to their own performances.
Some, it should be noted, had no idea who he was.
But Nelson did recognize Henry. Heâd heard him on the radio that day, and not long after, decided to become a playwright. All these years later, and in many ways, it remained his dream. What did he say to Henry?
Something like: âMr. Nuñez, itâs an honor.â
Or: âI never thought Iâd have the chance to meet you, sir.â
The words themselves arenât that important; that he insisted on approaching the table where Henry sat, absorbed in dark memories, was enough. Picture it: Nelson reaching for his heroâs hand, his eyes brimming with admiration. A connection between the two men, the mentor and his protégé.
When we spoke, Henry dismissed the idea.
I insisted: Did the playwright see something of himself in the young man? Something of his own past?
âNo,â Henry responded. âIf youâll pardon my saying so, I was never, ever that young. Not even when I was a boy.â
No matter. On a Monday in March 2001, Nelson was summoned to rehearsals at a theater in the Old City, a block off the traffic circle near the National Library, where his father had once worked. After a dismal yearâa breakup, a protracted tenure at an uninteresting job, the disappointing aftermath of a graduation both longed for and fearedâNelson was simply delighted by the news. Henry was right: Nelson, almost twenty-three, had a backpack full of scripts, a notebook jammed with handwritten stories, a head of unruly curls, and seemed much, much younger. Perhaps this is why he got the partâhis youth. His ignorance. His malleability. His ambition. The tour would begin in a month. And that is when the trouble began.
2
NORMALLY, Nelson would have shared news of this sort with Ixta. Now he doubted himself. Sheâd been his girlfriend until the previous July, and theyâd parted ways, not amicably, on a day that Nelson considered to be the dead heart of winter. Ghoulish clouds, a fine, gray mist. It was entirely his doingâhe wanted freedom, he said. She scoffed, âWhat am I, your jailer?â and in response, selfish but authentic tears bubbled in his eyes. He was going to the United States and couldnât be beholden to her or anyone in pursuit of his future. They didnât speak for three months, during which time he made no plans and took no steps toward this supposedly brave and life-changing move.
In early October, Nelson and Ixta met for a coffee, a tense affair which led, nonetheless, to another meeting, a few weeks later. Quite unexpectedly, midway through this second encounter, he found himself laughing. And Ixta laughing too. It wasnât tentative, or self-conscious, or polite. And this shook him, the realization that, had he more nerve, he could reach across the narrow table that separated them, andâin front of all these strangersâcasually lay his hand upon hers. No one would notice or think it odd. They might even smile at the sight, or say to themselves something like:
Oh, what a handsome young couple!
He didnât, of courseânot that dayâbut he did make some progress. Slowly. Patiently. At the steady rate of an ant gathering food, or a bird building a nest. And it paid off: by the start of the Christmas season, they were sleeping together again. It happened almost by accident at first, but the second time filled him with hope. They began meeting every two weeks or so, more if Mindo, Ixtaâs new boyfriend,