Greetings, friends of the Writing Club ,community this is my entry to participate in the Carnival Writing Challenge.
Aunt Silvina's Costume
Those were the years when the carnival gave permission for everyone to take off their masks, and also their costumes, as you read. My aunt Silvina was a reserved, kind, graceful, well-mannered young woman, I could tell now that she disguised herself as people. She was nine years older than me. The story I am about to tell you happened when I was eleven.
I liked her because she was very affectionate with me, her only nephew. In the afternoons she would get together with her friends, paint their nails with that nail polish whose smell was intoxicating, and I would find a way to be close by while she went through the ritual of filing, cleaning and painting, because I knew that at any moment she was going to send me to the bodega to buy something for her.
Silvina would send me to play in the yard with other children, so that she could talk to her friends and laugh quietly; but I was attentive, waiting for her to call me, after the errand she would leave me the change, she always did, they were pennies, which I would then collect to buy: metras, little plastic soldiers or like that time, bags of pumps to fill with water and play carnival, when they gave us permission.
We lived relatively close to grandmother Jacinta's house, who had, in addition to Silvina, Rosa, Elvira, Alfredo and my father Rogelio, the eldest of her children. Every afternoon we liked to go there to play and eat the coconut preserves, mango jelly and rice pudding that my grandmother Jacinta made for sale.
In that carnival my love for playing with water was born and died. I remember that we would gather in front of the house or play in the courtyard, while the adults had fun with dominoes and cards. My grandmother used to make chicken stew and in the afternoon they would call us to get changed to go to the square to see the costumes. I was struck by the fear they provoked in me, some men painted black with a black guayuco and a trinchete that they used to frighten the children and force the adults to give them money.
Carnival Monday was a lot of fun because some friends of my uncles and aunts came to visit and they poured water on each other with buckets. At first she didn't want to play, but when they finally got her wet she joined the group and we stayed together until ten o'clock at night. The adults danced on the wet floor and we slid around on the floor laughing noisily.
On Tuesday my aunt woke up happy, very early in the morning she sat in front of a mirror combing her hair. I remember that she separated her hair into strands, which she would impregnate with beer and then wrap each one around cardboard toilet paper tubes, until she had a head full of them, she looked like a Martian, now that I think about it, although I've never seen one.
In the afternoon we were under the mango tree, talking and playing with a rag ball, in the distance we could hear shouts of noise from other houses; I asked if we could still play with water and my grandmother told me yes, but that we weren't going to get wet any more because the girls had already cleaned the house.
It was about six o'clock in the evening when my aunt Silvina sat outside, next to the kitchen door, brushing her hair and staring into the henhouse; I crept up to her and poured a pot of water on her head. I didn't run, I thought she would laugh like the day before, but she turned into an eagle, grabbed me by one arm and dug her sharp nails into me, causing me pain, one eye was looking at me and her eyebrow was drawing a pyramid, she was dragging me screaming like the siren of an ambulance.
Everyone ran to see what was happening, half of her hair was soaked and covered her other eye; I tried to get away but my nails were digging in deeper and I let myself be carried away like a doll, the peaceful Silvina had turned into a horrendous woman who screamed like the sayona. As she couldn't find anything to throw at me, she reached into a pot of spaghetti and rubbed it on my head and face, she was totally out of her mind.
I don't even know who freed me from her clutches; several people restrained her and my uncle Alfredo took me to the courtyard and washed me with soap and water next to the pan: "you've just met the temper of the angry woman", he said to me, while laughing under his breath.
It never occurred to me to play with water again, I got wet many times and it was inevitable that my aunt Silvina's transformation came back to my mind, when she took off her people's costume and became a hyena, a jellyfish and a malevolent witch, the woman of a thousand disguises. She became the same again, but I never forgot that Tuesday carnival when I learned where beasts come from.
Thanks for your reading
My content is original Images taken from the free pixabay network with their source. I have used the translator DeepL
Saludos, amigos de la comunidad Writing Club, esta es mi entrada para participar en el Carnival Writing Challenge.
EL DISFRAZ DE LA TÍA SILVINA
Gracias por su amable lectura
Mi contenido es original Imágenes tomadas de Pixabay con su respectiva fuente.