Authors: Juan Pastor
We
change. Things change. The emphasis is shifting to
Halloween,
and
the
promotion
and
merchandising
of
Halloween. Bo can’t blame the American influence, but the
American culture is pervasive, and it is hard to resist its
seductive effect. Whereas Dia de Muertos was meant to be a
sacred ceremony, Halloween has become one more reason to
party among dozens of other reasons to party. The girls wear
their sexy costumes and the boys dress as superheroes and
other girls dress as sexy superheroines and other boys dress
as macabre antiheroes, and alcohol lowers the inhibitions and
makes it seem like fun until the alcohol wears off and you look
at the pictures and you wonder what it was that you thought
was fun about it. And then you make your plans with others to
do it again next year.
Bo
had once loved this holiday but, like many things, its
fascination, for him, was waning. When he saw little children
running around the narrow cobblestoned village streets,
laughing and giggling in their costumes, and begging for candy
or pastries, and threatening joyously to trick people who
refused to ante up something good, Bo feels a strange
longing. The longing startles him. He wants to have little
children of his own. He wants to find a beautiful, kind, shy
woman who wants to have a whole houseful of children with
him. He always thought it would be a Latina woman. But Bo
knows now nothing can love you as fiercely as a Latina
woman, or crush your heart as thoroughly as a Latina woman.
Still… With children maybe the holidays will mean something
again. As things are now, the holidays are cruel farces…
‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐
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The apparition startles him. He has just turned the
headlights
on. The truck has auto headlights, another of the
annoyances the designers thought would be a good idea. If
the headlights of a vehicle were on even during the day, it
would be more noticeable, and therefore safer, wouldn’t it?
Yes, until that vehicle blended in with the other hundreds of
vehicles that had their headlights on during the day. Bo always
just twisted the knob to turn the lights off during the day. In
Bo’s mind there is something just plain wrong with a truck, or
anything, that does all your thinking for you and decides what
is best for you.
The
apparition standing on the shoulder of the road is
ghostly white in the headlight beams, with white hair teased
by the evening breeze. Bo pulls off on the shoulder and slows
to a stop within twenty feet of the spectre who stands there
and shields her eyes from the light. Bo kills the headlights, but
leaves the light knob turned to parking lights. He opens the
door, goes to the front of the truck, and studies the ghostly
naked woman illuminated now by a softer yellow light.
“Skyler.” He says.
“Bo.” The woman says. “Is that you?”
that
a wild wolf is in the truck. The wolf will not budge. It has
no intention of giving up its seat. Skyler shivers in the night air.
She has goosebumps. Bo doesn’t have much to offer her in
the way of clothing, except for an old Carhardt hooded jacket
stuffed behind his seat. Skyler puts it on.
“What’s that smell?” Skyler asks.
“It’s either me, the wolf, or the dead fish in back.” Bo
says.
“Smells like fish, tastes like fish.” Skyler says, but it
sounds
kind of stupid as she says it.
“What?” Bo asks.
“Nothing.” Skyler says. “I can ride in the back with the
fish,
if you want.”
“No.” Bo says. “You’ll get hypothermia from windchill.
You’ll
ride in front.”
Bo opens the driver side door. He reaches in and raises
the
center console to seat position. Everything that was in the
little
storage
pocket,
loose
change,
keys,
fishing
paraphernalia, a few tools, spills to the floor behind the seat.
The
truck is high, but Skyler puts one leg in, and swings
herself into the seat. She looks over at the wolf, and the wolf
retracts its lips and bares its fangs. Skyler mimics the wolf’s
threat. Amazingly, the wolf backs down. Skyler slides over into
the middle of the seat.
Bo
sits himself effortlessly in his seat. This is one of the
reasons Bo likes pickup trucks. He actually fits in this one, with
an inch to spare over his head, if he takes his hat off. He starts
the engine.
“Which way?” Bo asks Skyler.
“East.” She says. “They’re a little scattered near a
patch
of Saguaro that Pequeña found. But where are you
going to put them when we round up the rest of the flock? In
the back of the truck?”
“That’s always been one of my fantasies.”
“What?” Skyler asks.
“To load up my truck with a bunch of crazy naked
Latina
women, and bring them home with me. How many are
there, all together?”
“Well.” Says Skyler, “When we set out there was me,
Tejana, Pequeña, a seamstress friend of Pequeña’s named
Celia, and two other strange women who I don’t really know,
but who Pequeña seems to have known for some time. They
were the ones at the cantina. Pequeña calls the older one the
Virgen Maria. Then there’s Rosaria, the one you guys were
calling Rosie.”
“So six women then?” Bo asks.
“Yes.” Skyler says.
“You wouldn’t have a cell phone with you, would you?”
Bo asks.
“Yes.” Skyler says. “It’s here in my purse. Oh, damn. I
left my purse out in the desert with my dress.”
Skyler watches Bo push the little blue button on a
console at the base of the rearview mirror. The button lights
up, and a voice says, “OnStar”.
“I’d like to activate.” Bo says, with not a trace of
sincerity in his voice.
“Would you like the 3‐months‐on‐us trial?” The voice
asks.
“Yes.”
“Alright.” The voice says. “I’ll need some information.”
Bo gives the voice the information.
“And what can we do for you at this time?” The voice
asks.
“I am searching for five women lost in the Sonoran
desert.” Bo says. They have been out there since early today.
They have probably had nothing to eat and nothing to drink all
day. Right about now, they are most likely suffering from
exhaustion, exposure, and since the night is getting kind of
chilly – hypothermia.
“Are they dressed for the desert?” The voice asks.
“They aren’t dressed at all.” Bo says.
“Is this some kind of joke?” The voice asks.
“I assure you, it’s not.” Bo says. “I’ve got one of them
with me, and she doesn’t have a stitch on except for the jacket
I gave her.”
“Uh‐huh.” The voice says. “Lucky you.”
“I promise you I’m not pulling your leg.” Bo says. “I
think they must have all suffered heatstroke to some degree.”
Bo says. “The one with me at least didn’t succumb to strange
behavior, hallucinations, and disorientation. When I found her,
I think she was attempting to find me. Can you notify the
authorities, have a ‘copter start looking at the coordinates
you’re getting for my truck? If my truck stops moving, I’ve
found them.”
“I don’t know if a chopper will be available.” The voice
says. “It’s been a wild Dia de Muertos.”
“Look.” Says Bo. “I’m a personal bodyguard for the
Mexican El Presidente. I’ve got the 1
st
Lady of the U.S. with
me in my truck. The 1
st
Lady of Mexico is still out in the desert
somewhere. The woman who runs the Sonoran Clinic is with
her, and so are three others, to my knowledge. If a ‘copter
isn’t available, make one available.”
“Are you sure this isn’t a joke?” The voice asks.
“Do you really want to find out the hard way?” Bo asks.
The wolf begins to whine and scratch at the door of the
truck. Bo leans across Skyler’s legs and lifts the handle of the
passenger door. The wolf launches itself from the truck. Bo
turns to the southeast to follow Marquesa and does his best
to keep up with her.
rock
outcropping in the Saguaro stand. I can’t explain it, but
the joy I feel as the wolf licks my face with its wet raspy
tongue seems the greatest joy I have ever known. When the
wolf is sure I’m okay, she disappears into the night.
‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐
<>{}<>‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐
In a cloud of brightly floodlit nighttime Sonoran dust,
the
helicopter lifts off and takes us to the Clinic Rosaria, and a
team of doctors and nurses is there to greet us as we land on
the large red cross on the roof of the Clinic.
Bo carries Skyler, who has fallen asleep, into a room
reserved
for the “President” and his 1
st
Lady. Sin sits in the
chair all night and watches her sleep. The Sin I and Tejana
knew, is gone, and we two women know it. Sin is in love, and
it isn’t with either of us.
El
Presidente and Tejana are making the effort to repair
their marriage. There are occasional fireworks, but Tejana will
tell you that fireworks are better than boredom. And when
the fireworks fizzle out here again, she will look for them
elsewhere. And she won’t look long.
Celia
is asked to join the staff of the Clinic, and she
accepts with grateful tears pouring from her eyes that have
seen everything.
V
‐Maria and Rosie spend the night, but sneak out,
without saying good‐bye, as sacred spirits often do, before the
gold‐orange Sonoran sun rises.
‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐
<>{}<>‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐
Bo and I talk all night but mostly it is me who talks
because
I expect sympathy and hugs and love like he gives
Skyler and the other women but he tells me how stupid and
selfish and self‐pitying I am and I tell him to take his shit
outside because I’m not going to take it and he says alright
he’s going to take his shit outside and fertilize the flowers
outside with it and I say yeah and stay outside while you’re at
it I don’t want you in here with me anymore because you
make me very angry and you have no heart and you are
incapable of love and you are mean and you will always be
alone and you stink like a fish and he says Pequena what the
hell were you thinking when you took these women out in the
desert and I tell him I’m so tired of people saying they
understand when they don’t understand and they will never
understand because they can’t understand because they have
never had a bullet tear through them and they have never had
a best friend in the world forever shot right next to them and
not been able to do anything to keep her from dieing their
best friend and what was the point in going to the doctor
when we didn’t want to me and my best friend before we
began our trip to get birth control pills even though we think
birth control is a sin but we take it in case we may get raped
and our clothes hung in a rape tree and what is the point
anyway if one of us is going to be killed and the other of us is
going to lie bleeding at some stupid wall and why are people
so callous and cruel and brutal and when Jesus and Mary is it
ever going to end and Bo looks at me and he says nothing
because what can he say he doesn’t have the answer no more
than I do and I can see that it pains him that he doesn’t so I ask
him if he would like to lay beside me and he takes off his size
18 shoes American size and lays beside me and he is so big I
think the bed will break in half because he is so big and I am so
small and is this a good idea he is so big and I am so small but
he puts his arm around me anyway and his arm is as big as my
thigh and I feel safe because he is there and I realize I have
never really felt safe before but I do feel safe now so safe that
I can finally dream…
Time
heals all wounds, say the complacent,
But I think it is not so much time that does it,
but determination of spirit.
‐ Honor Harris, in Daphne du Maurier’s
The King’s General
an
abstraction in his mind called a “line”. In nature there really
is no such thing as a line. But this person placed this imaginary
thing called a line on the sand. Then he told someone else that
the line was not to be crossed. Many people spent many years
trying to maintain and defend this abstraction, this idea. Many
others insisted they could not see the line; the first person
built a wall to make the line much more noticeable, and to
prove to the second person that there was, in fact, a line
exiting there. Even with the wall, many more people spent
years trying to cross the line, insisting that just because there
was a wall; it didn’t mean that the line existed. Even if it did
exist, it meant nothing. It was no more than the threshold of a
doorway, which one made meaningless by stepping over it, or
if the door was shut, looking for another door.