Golondrina

<p>This life is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are the product of the author's imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, or persons β€” living or dead β€” is coincidental.</p>

<p>β€”</p>

<p>The seasons change in front of me. Through the bars. The black steel bars I live behind.</p>

<p>My home.</p>

<p>My home β€” and theirs. The home of others. Coming and going. My sentence: seven years. Theirs: different.</p>

<p>The decision was made. A new Mercedes 63 AMG Coupe β€” my entrance fee. My share in a fifteen-foot by fifteen-foot concrete box.</p>

<p>β€”</p>

<p>It is a constant here in Envigado, as we watch through the steel door. A door made of steel slats four fingers wide.</p>

<p>A breeze cools the concrete cell during the heat of the day.</p>

<p>Eighteen men. Eighteen angry, irrational souls. There is no change in their world behind bars. Just a constant.</p>

<p>Most young. Eighteen to thirty-five. A badge of honor, coming from the barrios of Colombia.</p>

<p>A daily ration of food comes through the bars. We clean. We live. A daily evolution of sadistic personalities. The future villains of the world.</p>

<p>β€”</p>

<p>Parque. Cards. Ajedrez. The daily education of passing time.</p>

<p>Hammock or mat on a slab of concrete β€” the place we sleep. The always-functioning society rarely stops to lay its head.</p>

<p>High above in my hammock, I lay.</p>

<p>The city below evolves and grows.</p>

<p>Evil lives in the cells of Envigado, waiting to get out. The time in between β€” a limbo of sanity.</p>

<p>Colombia. Envigado. Prison.</p>

<p>My Hilton. My timeshare. My vacation home.</p>

<p>β€”</p>

<p>The Madman</p>

<p>Engine # 7798060018089</p>

<p>Chassis # WOD2053871F445198</p>

<p>Plate # DOU317 BogotΓ‘</p>

<p>β€”</p>

<p>Golondrina.</p>

<p>Swallows.</p>

<p>I watch them from behind the bars. Small bodies cutting through the air. Unburdened. Unimprisoned. They come and go as they please. The seasons change, and they follow. Instinct. Freedom. Flight.</p>

<p>They do not know my name. They do not know I exist. They pass by the steel slats of my door and see nothing. A dark room. A shadow. A whisper of a man.</p>

<p>But I see them.</p>

<p>I see everything.</p>

<p>β€”</p>

<p>The swallows do not ask for permission. They do not file paperwork. They do not wait for a judge to sign a release. They simply fly.</p>

<p>North in spring. South in autumn. Across borders that mean nothing to them. Over walls that would stop a man but cannot stop a bird.</p>

<p>I have been both. The man behind the bars. The bird that flies away.</p>

<p>Right now, I am the man. But I remember being the bird.</p>

<p>β€”</p>

<p>I wrote this on November 9, 2022. Cell #3. Envigado police station. Two years in. Five years to go β€” or so I thought. The release would come earlier. March 18, 2026. But that day was invisible to me then.</p>

<p>All I had was the steel door. The four-finger slats. The breeze that carried the smell of the city β€” exhaust, cooking food, sweat, life.</p>

<p>And the golondrinas.</p>

<p>Always the golondrinas.</p>

<p>β€”</p>

<p>In Spanish, "golondrina" also means a migrating worker. Someone who moves from place to place, following the work, never settling. A different kind of prisoner. A different kind of freedom.</p>

<p>I have been that, too.</p>

<p>A traveler. A wanderer. A man with no fixed address and no fixed purpose. Moving from country to country, hostel to hostel, bus to bus.</p>

<p>Behind bars, I learned that freedom is not the opposite of imprisonment. Freedom is a state of mind.</p>

<p>The swallows are free. But they are also bound. Bound to the seasons. Bound to migration. Bound to the instinct that tells them where to go and when.</p>

<p>I am bound, too. Bound to my past. Bound to my choices. Bound to the concrete box that holds me.</p>

<p>But my mind β€” my mind flies.</p>

<p>β€”</p>

<p>Engine # 7798060018089.</p>

<p>Chassis # WOD2053871F445198.</p>

<p>I remember these numbers. The Mercedes that brought me here. The silver bullet that carried me through the broken glass and onto the roundabout and into the arms of the law.</p>

<p>I do not regret the car. I regret nothing.</p>

<p>But I remember the numbers. I will always remember the numbers.</p>

<p>β€”</p>

<p>This life is a work of fiction.</p>

<p>That is what the disclaimer says. But the disclaimer is a lie. Or a truth. Or something in between.</p>

<p>These are my words. My memories. My cell. My bars. My golondrinas.</p>

<p>If they resemble someone else's life β€” that is not coincidence.</p>

<p>That is because prison is the same everywhere. Desperation is the same everywhere. The desire to fly β€” to be free β€” that is the same everywhere, too.</p>

<p>β€”</p>

<p>The seasons change.</p>

<p>The swallows return.</p>

<p>And I am still here.</p>

<p>Still watching. Still waiting. Still writing.</p>

<p>My Hilton. My timeshare. My vacation home.</p>

<p>My prison.</p>

<p>My life.</p>
← Back to feed