The Taste of Salt
The heat in the beco was a living thing, thick as stale coffee and heavy as the silence before a raid. On the rooftop of Tico's place, the highest point in the comunidade they could safely reach, three boys lay on their backs, staring at the stars blurred by the city's glow. For João, the stars were just a distraction. His eyes were on the distant hum of the Avenida Brasil, the artery of a city that didn't know he existed. "Can you hear it?" he whispered. Rico, ever the pragmatist, snorted. "I hear a dog fighting a motorcycle. And your stomach." "Not that," João said, nudging him. "The ocean. The ships." From their rooftop, you couldn't see the water, only the maze of corrugated tin roofs and tangled electrical wires that held their world together. But you could feel it. The humidity carried a salt-tang, a ghost of the vast Atlantic that lay beyond the hills. That salt was their shared dream. It was the promise of the Marinha do B...