There's a lot of gray area in Belize. Like they used up all the definitive, bright colors on the children's playground at the center of town.
I knew by Friday that somewhere there was wifi.
I needed to reschedule my flight before all the flights were taken - it was my own oversight booking my flight on Thursday. After the impending storm delayed my flight twice, I was unable to get off the island to make it.
As I attempted to get on the free wifi, I realized how many people were encroaching on the wifi, eager to do something techie - maybe snapchat? Maybe post a vine? Maybe tweet? I just needed my flight changed, but the internet browser churned. I should have bought an international plan for my phone.
I headed back, frustrated. However, I saw the water taxi guys and asked them where they'd be tomorrow in case I could get a flight. They assured me they'd be right by the library.
This is the gray part. If you ask anyone in San Pedro anything, they will give you an answer. You'll take the answer as the truth, as fact, as indisputable.
Then, you'll discover that they were just talking, blabbing, making conversation. I arrived bright and early in town after getting through to my husband to book my flight for Saturday afternoon. The water taxi, was in fact, not there. Frustrated, but hoping they just zipped out for a bit as I was really early, I grabbed breakfast at the Coffee Bar. I was still discovering new places even as I left.
I then went back in a reasonable amount of time to find no one was there except another frustrated American. In America, we expect customer service. We caught each other's eye and realized we both were disappointed customers ready to ask for the manager, and a discount.
I walked back with him to a restaurant so we could call the company. I was tempted to just buy the international plan for my cell phone, but I was so close to shedding my international skin that I thought I could make it one more day. He came out and said the waitress said the taxis were running off the dock on the lagoon. He asked the taxi driver outside, who said there were no water taxis and that all the docks had been wiped away. Their phone number just rang and rang. I was right across from the local airport, which had no seats that day for me.
For such a small island, you think they'd get their story straight.
I did what any rational American would do: I called upon my ancestors who forged a path West, and walked and walked until I found a sign for another water taxi company. My roundtrip ticket for the other company a lost cause, I paid twice what I had paid and had just missed the first one. I had to kill an hour with two pieces of small luggage. I headed for the bar.
The bar was empty at 9 a.m. I talked with Raul, the bartender, for an hour. We somehow fell into his dream to own his own restaurant or dojo; we discovered we both were abandoned by our fathers, but were able to reconnect with them as adults. Instead of the "drunk tourist spilling her life story" trope, I had gotten his. I told him I'd look for his restaurant, or dojo, if I ever returned. I wished him luck, but "there was a boat waiting for me" like some cheesy line from a Tennessee Williams play.
While waiting for the boat, I noticed a dog and a little girl. It made me really homesick. It was the picture I landed on when something got stuck in our rudder; there was still so much debris washing up, so I just prayed they could do something about it. They drove slowly for 10 minutes when finally, the attendant somehow knocked it out. The little girl from the picture awoke suddenly at the jolt, but pressed against her mother's breast in peaceful resignation, just like my daughter did when she was small.
Getting off the island after a hurricane was nearly impossible. If you've not watched Planes, Trains, and Automobiles with John Candy, then you may not be able to relate to what I went through. In 24 hours I had ridden a golf cart, a bike, a boat, a taxi, a plane, a train, a plane, and a car just to get home.
Turns out home was just a bunch of people eating some good food and telling some old stories. Guess I hadn't left after all.



