Book 1: Revelation at Tikal - Ch 11: Speed Run to Mexico City

MAY 6, 202617 MIN
Revelation at Tikal | Literary Adventure Fiction Podcast

Book 1: Revelation at Tikal - Ch 11: Speed Run to Mexico City

MAY 6, 202617 MIN

Description

In Chapter 11 of Revelation at Tikal, Cutty decides that time is the enemy. Floey circled Palenque in her books. She might already be there. She might have found whatever she was looking for and moved on. So Cutty does what Cutty does best and worst: he tells himself a story that makes the reckless thing sound necessary. He takes a black beauty without telling Paula. What follows is an all-night speed run south through Mexico, fueled by amphetamines, gas-station food, Coca-Cola, and the desperate hope that he can close the distance between himself and his missing sister. The drug hits hard: the road slows down, the curves become almost beautiful, and Cutty's body stops complaining long enough for him to ride far past the point of common sense. Paula, riding behind him, slowly realizes something is wrong. They reach Mexico City after dark, cold, wet, and half-lost in a freeway system that seems to end without warning. A patient guard gives them directions south toward Córdoba, and Paula solves the mystery of semáforos before Cutty does. But the road ahead is worse than either of them knows. By dawn, they are in Córdoba. Cutty takes another pill in a filthy gas-station bathroom and keeps going. Paula asks the question he has been avoiding: what is he taking? His answer is half joke, half confession, and not nearly enough. The ride continues through bad roads, truck stops, strange diners, and the tropical wreckage of fatigue. In Minatitlán, Paula nearly falls asleep at the counter while Cutty orders food he cannot read from a Spanish menu. For a few quiet minutes, over steak, onions, peppers, and coffee made from hot milk and instant crystals, they almost feel like a couple with a future instead of two people outrunning consequences. Late that night, they finally reach Palenque. Outside town, they find two gringo motels facing each other across the road: Alicia's Looping and Motel Bonampak. Cutty chooses Bonampak because of a new hand-painted sign hanging out front. The letters look like Mayan glyphs. The background is a tangle of colored whorls. The paint is fresh. It looks like Floey. Cutty gets two rooms, as Paula requests, then rides the motorcycle up a plank and into his bungalow, because by this point nothing about the trip is normal. He tries to ask the night boy who painted the sign, but his Spanish fails him. Tomorrow, he tells himself, he will find someone bilingual and shake the place for answers. But sleep does not come easily. In the small motel room, with the BMW parked at the foot of the bed and Paula breathing somewhere through the wall, Cutty finally has to stop moving. His pulse is too fast. His body is too wired. His sister may be close, or already gone. And Paula, who has become more important to him than he knows how to admit, suddenly feels just as easy to lose. By the end of the chapter, Palenque is no longer just a place circled in Floey's books. It is the next threshold. In this episode Cutty secretly takes a black beauty before the ride south Paula begins to sense that something is wrong A wired, dangerous motorcycle run across Mexico Rain, cold, bad roads, and a confusing Mexico City freeway The mystery of semáforos A dawn gas stop in Córdoba and Cutty's second pill Paula confronting Cutty about what he is taking A strange highway diner in Minatitlán Truck-stop food, improvised coffee, and exhausted tenderness Arrival in Palenque after a brutal ride A fresh Bonampak motel sign that may have been painted by Floey Cutty parking the BMW inside his motel room A sleepless night between Paula, Floey, and fear Why this chapter matters This chapter pushes Cutty's search for Floey into more dangerous territory. He is not just riding hard now. He is chemically forcing himself forward and lying to Paula by omission. The chapter also deepens the emotional triangle that will shape the story from here: Floey ahead of him, Paula beside him, and Cutty caught between his need to save his sister and his fear of losing the woman who has chosen to ride with him. Palenque becomes the first place where Floey's presence feels physically close. The motel sign may be her work, and that possibility changes everything. Cutty is no longer following only rumor. He may finally be standing where his sister has just been. If you're enjoying the story Follow Revelation at Tikal so you don't miss the next chapter. Leave a rating or short review. It helps other listeners find the story. Visit cuttybraughn.com for more material from the road to Tikal and beyond.