Authors: Juan Pastor
© 2013 by Juan Francisco Pastor.
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced, stored
in a retrieval system or transmitted in any form or by any means
without the prior written permission of the publisher and author.
First Printing.
All characters in this book are fictitious, and any resemblance to real
persons, living or dead, is coincidental.
All illustrations by Juan Francisco Pastor.
ISBN
‐13: 978‐1494417246
ISBN‐10: 1494417243
Printed in the United States of America
“In the desert
I saw a creature, naked, bestial,
Who, squatting upon the ground,
Held his heart in his hands, and ate of it.
I said: “Is it good friend?”
“It is bitter‐bitter,” he answered;
“But I like it because it is bitter,
And because it is my heart.”
Luke 10:19
Behold, I give unto you power to tread on serpents
and scorpions, and over all the power of the enemy:
and nothing shall by any means hurt you.
Mark
16:18
They shall take up serpents; and if they drink any
deadly thing, it shall not hurt them; they shall lay hands on the
sick, and they shall recover.
Chapter
Page
The Gatekeepers
10
La Loba
29
Symbiotic Relationships
35
A Dialectic
40
Dust The Way You Are
47
Cueva de la Murciélagos
54
Adipose Tissue
59
Heartpunch Beer
63
Entheogens
67
Stigmata
72
Green And White Tips
80
The One Who Crushes The Serpent
91
Extremophiles
97
Single Point Of Failure
102
For A Small Fee In America
114
A Postcard From The Promised Land
118
Powerball
121
Grouse Shooting In New England
128
Two Birds With One Stone
140
You
Got To Let Me Know
150
Reunión de los Jefes de Gran
155
With The Worm
159
The Stepford Trophy Wife
170
A Good Old Mexican Standoff
173
Every Girl Deserves A Party Dress
180
Already Seen
184
Cantina Latina
199
Don’t Spin The Tires
205
A Full House
209
All The King’s Horses
217
We Can Rebuild Him
221
The Garden Of The Clinica Rosaria
228
The News Conference
232
Conferencia de la Vagina Internacional
236
Gone Fishin’
243
Desperados And Silverados
250
Dia De Muertos
254
Shepherd Of The Flock
258
So Safe That I Can Dream
263
Dust And Ash
266
come
out. The colors hide all day from the harsh glare of the
Sonoran sun. In the cool of the evening, they come out to
play. The sun is setting. Not all poetry is written. Some poetry
defies the semiotics and symbolism of language. Some things
refuse to become symbols.
The
sandy gravel on which I lay is already beginning to
cool. I can see its very top, like the shiny pate of a bald man.
The full moon is rising.
Bats
flit to and fro above me, pursuing flying insects
which neither they nor I can see, but which we both know are
there. Most people are afraid of bats, and think they are ugly.
We call them murciélago, which means “blind mouse”.
The lobos begin to howl.
My dearest friend, my closest friend, my only friend, is
sprawled
face down, about fifty feet from me, near a Saguaro
cactus. We had come so far, seen so many things.
So close, I thought. So close. So close. So very close.
I can not get the bleeding to stop. It had happened
mid‐afternoon, when the sun was still high, and the air was
hot. At the first crack of the rifle, my companion had fallen. At
the second crack, something hot tore through my left side. I
fell to the ground because I did not want to hear the crack
again.
I was playing zarigueya, but I could not get the
bleeding to stop. The flow has slowed considerably, and I have
packed both the entry and exit wounds with ripped pieces of
my blouse. Still, there is blood all over everything, including
the Sonoran sand, which drinks it thirstily. It is starting to dry,
thick and sticky, on my abdomen.
The shots had come from somewhere near the barrier
wall. An example of the “Consequence Delivery System”
which is the philosophical strategy behind US/Mexico barrier
and border patrol efforts. Most likely, some bored border
vigilante with nothing better to do that day had fired the
shots. Then he had probably gone home for some cerveza
with his friends. He is probably bragging now.
For some reason the situation makes me think of the
Fairy Tale where the troll is guarding the bridge. But who is
this troll? If I let him visit my country, why can’t I visit his?
Could he even be one of the people that visited me? No,
probably not. I couldn’t bear it if it were one of the blue‐eyed
boys who looked into a scope and fired the shots at us.
The coyotes had run as soon as the shooting had
started. The coyotes promised they would get us through the
barrier, over the border, one way or another, safe and sound.
Now they had all our money, and we were not safely across
the border. So much for the brave coyotes. At least they
hadn’t raped Rosaria and I, and hung our undergarments in a
“rape tree” as proof of their conquests.
These particular coyotes are Mexican. Mexicans think
of anyone south of Mexico as not quite up to par with them.
They
think
of
themselves
as
superior
to
Salvadorans,
Guatemalans,
Belizeans,
Hondurans,
Ricans,
and
Panamanians,
just
as
Nicaraguans,
Costa
Americans
think
of
themselves as superior to Mexicans. Of course, the Americans
think of themselves as superior to everyone the Mexicans
think they’re superior to. I’ve always thought it had something
to do with latitude. The further north one lived, the more
superior one thought himself to be. Except Americans think
they’re superior to Canadians too. Maybe because of Alaska.
Of course, there does seem to be a reverse snobbism. Many
Canadians consider themselves above the Americans, but
most likely it’s because many of them are descended from
people who lost the Revolutionary War to what they
considered the 18
th
Century’s version of ignorant rednecks,
and had to flee to Canada.
Just to amuse myself, I try to imagine a wall across the
US‐Canada border, with Canadian guards trying to keep the
Americans where they belong.
Mexicans try to be Americans. They use all the
profanities Americans use. They’ve discarded the good Latino
profanities, the well‐cultivated maldiciones and vulgaridades,
in favor of the overused ghetto profanities Americans are so
fond of. If you hear someone talking, and every fourth word
he says is “f‐‐‐“, then you are probably listening to a Mexican.
Or, if someone threatens to shit on you, your mother, father,
sisters, brothers, and everyone and everything you love, and
everything holy you worship at church, and then the very
church itself, you are probably listening to a Mexican.
But what does it matter now? Maybe it would have
been better to be raped, our undergarments hung in trees,
than to be shot at. Does it matter if one is virtuous, like
Rosaria, if one is dead?
The sun is gone, and the moon has changed all the
playful reds and oranges of the late day desert into more
respectable golds and silvers. I see the first star. Then a
second. Twilight. Twilight isn’t what people think it is. It is that
brief period between when one sees one star and then three
stars. Twilight means “two lights” or “twin lights”, and is that
time during which only two stars are visible in the evening sky.
It is a brief enchanting encounter between one soul and an
entire cosmos that comes once each day. But let me correct
that. There are really two twilight events in each day. There is
a morning twilight, when the stars start to disappear because
the sun is rising, and then I see three stars, then two stars, one
star, no star – except our sun. This twi‐twilight in each 24‐hour
period is a twin crepuscular event. That is, anything appearing
or active before sunrise, or at dusk, is a crepuscular
happening.
It’s a funny thing about stars. I’ve heard learned men
claim that some of the stars we see are really just the light
reaching us from stars that died billions of years ago. I never
believed this, but now I can relate. Moonlight emanates off
Rosaria. But Rosaria is dead.
The things one thinks about as she lies on the desert
about to die.
In French, the word for wounded is “blessés”. The
adjective “blessé” can mean injured, hurt, stricken, or
bleeding. It is one of those strange sacred words that seem to
have two meanings at the same time. Blessés is where the
word “blessed” comes from. In Latin “sacer” can mean both
“accursed” and “holy”. In Greek ”haghios” can mean both
“pure” and “soiled”. So I am blessed, and Rosaria is a sacred
martyr. Aren’t we the lucky ones?
How does a poor teenage girl know such things? How
does she dare to be so sacrilegious?
You must be wondering.
Rosaria was from La Ventosa, in El Salvador. I met her
at the University in Guatemala City. I am from Antigua,
Guatemala. She wanted to be a doctor. And I, well, I don’t
know what I wanted to be. Mostly happy, I guess. It seemed
so little to ask for at the time.
Then we both ran out of money for tuition. Then we
worked as maids at an inn that American college students
were staying in during their semester abroad. The students
told us about their homes, showed us pictures of their
families. We liked the Americanos, especially a few of the
boys, who looked like Greek gods with their hair like Mayan
gold and their blue eyes like the Pacific. And they all smelled
so good. Americans always smell so good. When the American
boys were off at classes, and I cleaned the bathrooms, I used
to like to smell the American soap they used, especially Irish
Spring. And I liked the deodorant they used, like Gillette
clinical sport. And I liked Jovan musk. And I liked Yakshi
sandalwood. One time while emptying out the wastebasket in
the bathroom of one of the boys, I noticed what was left of a
bar of Irish Spring soap. We do not throw away bars of soap in
Central America, no matter how small. We use them until they
disappear. Or, if we should be so fortunate as to acquire a new
bar of soap before the old one is gone, we stick the old piece
to the new piece, and create an even newer, bigger bar of
soap. I kept the sliver of soap, wrapped it in tissue, and put it
in my aparador at home. Whenever I thought of this boy, I got
out the bar of soap so that I could smell him.
Rosaria was very shy and quiet. I wasn’t. Then the
Americanos, like they always do after they’ve stirred things up
a bit, went home.
That’s when Rosaria and I decided to go to the
promised land, where there were, probably, hundreds, if not
thousands, of blonde haired, blue eyed boys, and maybe some
of them were rich, and maybe some of them were lonely.
Maybe some of them were very messy boys, and needed
someone to put their lives in order.
‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐<>{}<>‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐
The howling of the lobos is getting louder and closer.
Lobos don’t howl “at” the moon. They howl because of the
moon. Lobos aren’t like the wild gatos, which can see in the
dark. The lobos need a little bit of light to hunt, and night in a
desert is a good time to find prey. Of course, as I can attest,
with Rosaria just fifty feet away, daytime in the desert is as
good a time to find prey as the night. It’s just that now the
night shift is going to work.
Even if the moon was not out, and the stars were not
visible because the sky was cloudy, which it almost never is
over the desert, the Sonora would not be dark, it would not be
black. If black is the absence of light, or the total absorption of
light, so that none of that light is ever reflected back to our
eyes, how is it that we can “see” black, how is it that we can
see the thing that our mind tells us is black, and how is it that
that black thing can be glossy black, satin black, or flat black,
and how is it that we can see a shadow in a dark alley and a
black skinned man dressed in black casting the shadow?
All of this is irrelevant because the Sonora is never
black just as it is never quiet. This is what I tell myself.
I hoped to make my family proud of me. Make enough
money somehow to be able to return to Antigua. That seems
unlikely now. Antigua is a beautiful little city just 23 kilometers
southwest of Guatemala City. Although it is only 23 kilometers,
it takes over an hour to get there because of the mountainous
roads. The best way to get there is to go through San Lucas
Sacatepequez, but parts of the road are one lane. People drive
crazily. Guatemalans have a fatalist view of life. They believe
when it is time to die, one will die, whether one is careful
about life or not. The roads have many crosses and signs
memorializing people who have died on the roads. There are
even places where the wreckages of cars or buses still lie
rusting at the bases of mountains because it was impossible to
remove them after they careened off the road and tumbled
down the mountainsides. Some wrecks still hold the skeletons
of those whose time it was to die.