Eslabon - Trans Mexico - Chapter 2
TransMexico
Tecate.
Mexico/United States Border
So many days have been spent flying
over the country side like a pair of sparrows going south for the winter. As many of us, we cheat the hard times and do
as the animals. We have come to look for
America - Central America that is - with outdated maps, an unmarked day planner,
an empty journal and vast horizons. Just
like a pair of sparrows we base our direction on passing songs of places afar.
A ballad was sung of Baja and its’ sweeping landscapes where shrubby mountain
rolls into the sea. And then there was
the full choir of praises for the sapphire blue waters of the South Pacific
Coast of Mexico. Michael and I have
chosen the latter.
The sun rises from the left and sets
to the right, and nights are troublesome for driving on the blind serpentine roads
that hug tight to dry crumbling ridges blanketing Mexico south of San Diego. Juggernaut freight carriers don’t mind nicking
a motorcyclist to get around one another, and no one signals these power moves,
so Michael is in constant adrenaline high, eyes wide and bloodshot behind his
driving goggles. I’ve felt my heart leap
in my throat countless times when he plays chicken with those assholes. I hit the back of his helmet and scream at
him to slow down, but he doesn’t mind. My nose has been running for four days. I think it’s the stress.
We’ve found it’s easier to pull over
and sleep under the stars with a few blankets once our side of the Earth rolls
away from the sun. The roadside hotels
are eerily vacant, and I feel hair raising silent stares through their empty
windows. I’d rather have an open fire
and an open sky to sleep under.
So far Mexico has mostly been populated by
Michael and me. And all of the months we
have traveled together from Montreal have left us little to say to each other. I
have heard his joke about the mushroom who walks into a bar and is asked to
leave so many times I swear he tells it in his sleep. Somehow my annoyance is my fault.
“I know Michael…The mushroom asks
‘Why? I am a fungi!”
My annoyance might truly come from
the half-an-inch of dust, dirt, and dead bugs that cake the statuesque vision
of Michael and I on the road. “We are in
a desert landscape. What more would you
expect?” Michael chides me. Still, I
don’t have enough scarves to tie around my face. At some point the side facing my mouth is
just as dirty as the side caked with Mexico.
The maps are folded and zipped into
my jacket pocket as we ride. I pull them
out to give direction less and less. South of the Tecate the maps become
blissfully blank. Nothing but a small
snaking road due South and the white nothingness I interpret to be mountain, valley,
dry riverbeds and mysteries to be unfolded.
Nothing signifies the villages we pass through. We have no idea if it will be the last one
before a stretch of wide desert.
The white blanks on the maps we have
left behind are a new form of keeping track of what has been. I am filling the spaces with interpretive
sketches of what I saw there and what happened to us when we visited. Michael
in his leather cutting the dust like a Hells Angel and me holding tight with a scarf
around my mouth, looking into a colorful sunset with my yellow sunglasses takes
up a third of the first page. There
isn’t much to work with. My old boss at the Clerk of Courts in Montreal
would expect no less of me. My map in a
practical sense is shit.
Last night I drew the trio of perro
chained to a roadside restaurant at the start of a village. And when I say restaurant I mean Mexican
restaurant - a street vendor with polo on a stick and beans and rice. The trio
howled into the evening sky, overtaking the broken cave-man conversation I had
with the old man.
Two sticks of boneless bird dressed with chili and lime and all of the beans
and rice for later.
With all of the pointing and
grunting we bought the old man out. And
as we got back onto Bohemia, a tan little beast whined at Michael to share his
meat with him. Michael being Michael, he
took a huge juicy bite of it, swallowed and spit at the hound. To my astonishment, the hound leapt into the
air and snatched that skewer out of Michael’s hand and zipped away fast enough
to eat the whole thing before Michael could kick him. The old man was livid and probably cursed
every swear word under the moon as we sped off.
Much further down the road, as the
dark took us, I felt a queer bubbling in my stomach and tapped Michael’s helmet
till he slowed down enough for me to spew my dinner across the pavement. The hills just off of the road offered some
cover for the night, and we went as far in as we could before I could no longer
handle the jarring bumps of the strewn rocks.
Michael gathered brush and twigs for a fire and I unraveled the sleeping
blankets with clammy hands.
Over a crackling fire, he muttered
something about paying Karma, which I rejected because it was his debt to the
old man and his dog that needed to be paid, not mine. I wasn’t the asshole. He chided me for
assuming knowledge of how the universe works and had me wrap up in his blanket as
well to stop the chills. I laid my head
on his knee and watched the flames lick the sky while the coyote howled and
roamed the hills around us. Michael
howled back, and I tried to sit up to see them but he had me down with a hand
on my shoulder.
“You need to rest Lone Wolf.”
“I do what I want to Coyote.”
“Not when you might puke on my
blanket.”
I had to laugh. With gentle hands, he stroked my hair and
forehead till the red embers cooled and my fever finally broke. We slept holding each other out of comfort and
care, and though my slumber was broken and short, I felt him wake up now and
then to check on me, and that made me feel all of the more rested.
And
now as Michael snores into the morning mist catching up on lost sleep, I have a
moment to actually write, not only draw what has happened since we left San
Fran. But true to duty, in a blank space
near the top of the map, I sketched out the sharp feathers of our fire reaching
into a star studded sky. And on the
slopes of the hills I penciled in a coyote dancing in the flames, and in the sliver
of the crescent moon - a lone wolf.
Acapulco
In the North leaves may be falling,
but here is a never-ending summer and White Man’s paradise. Hot, sticky tequila courses through my veins,
rising as steam from my browned skin. My
nerves have finally settled, and a large purple bruise is blossoming over my upper
right arm. I am not happy, but I have had
worse. Here I am, wrapped in a white linen tunic that falls just past my hips,
perched in a window bathed in the flashing strobe lights that signal what
awaits us in the bay.
The casitas is a wreck. Dirty plates, old wrappers and Michael’s
belongings are strewn across the tan tile.
I’ve taken a breather from collecting my things from around the pallet
Henry set up for Michael when we moved into his hotel room. My head is spinning, but I haven’t written
for weeks and Michael is down at the lobby settling the deal, so I don’t have
much time.
Since our arrival here I’ve never
seen so many Speedos or tan white people in my life. The
holiday life is a stark difference from life on the road. My face is clean, my golden tangles are
brushed out, and cabana boys serve
me pina coladas at the resort pool at Villa Vera where the Kennedy’s frequented
only five years ago. My bill is usually picked up by wealthy gray foxes by
siesta time.
When I am alone I ride Henry’s bike
to the inner city and visit the bull fights.
Or else I look for a prime place to watch the Mexican marching bands
while sipping a cola. The broken, dusty
streets are full of nickel-and-diming panderers who haunt my steps - some of
them shirtless children. “Uno
Bracelet! For your Madre! No?
Then you tour of Frank Sinatra’s favorite spot?” I’ve taken to ignoring them, however
underfoot they can be.
The city didn’t take long to know.
We settled first for a musky group hostel just off of the main drag downtown where
we slept in rows of ten on massive bunk beds.
There was no such thing as sound sleep when the whole building shook
from incessant snores. So I started gate
crashing the upper crust private beach Condesa and its’ swanky bungalows in my
coral bikini and sun hat while Michael gambled in the dive bars - until two
weeks ago when I met Henry and we moved out.
I had set my purpose that night to
find a woman for Michael out of entertainment.
I made him comb his hair and shave. He looked smart in his khaki shorts
and white button up, like he belonged in Mallorca. At his request, we went to some of his
favorite places. Los Flamingos was
packed with foreign men who had the same agenda, so our stay was brief. The beach zone bars were teaming with
beautiful dark skinned women who flipped their skirts up when they danced. A margarita and a few conversations proved
that Michael already knew them, and that they are exactly the kind of women I
am steering him away from. He deserves
to have a woman he doesn’t have to pay to bed.
The Palladium at Las Brisas is
always hot, so we dodged the beggars and entered the huge pleasure dome perched high on the cliff. With a
wall of windows 160 feet wide and 30 feet tall with views of the entire bay, I
had the perfect visage to seek out Michael’s type. The dance floor, ringed by banquettes,
cantilevers out over the cliff so that dapper gringos in button-down shirts and
leather shoes and their women in form-fitting tank tops and short skirts appear
to be dancing in the sky.
Through the glass, leaning on the
outside bar overlooking La Perla cove, I spied a shapely woman with long dark
ringlets that framed her curves pleasantly sipping a martini in a way that
suggested availability. Michael was in a
polite conversation with a man painted silver wearing an Aztec headdress whom
was on break from entertaining the dance floor.
I excused us for a smoke break and guided us to the deck only to find the
woman had disappeared.
A spray of fireworks guided my eyes
to the edge of the terrace where a group had gathered, chattering
excitedly. A glimpse of dark ringlets
among them had me pulling Michael to see what the spectacle was. The woman was looking down the cliff to deep
tidal pool where a faint light shone up from the water. On a closer look it was torch light being
carried by a man swimming toward the far cliff.
To my astonishment the man hoisted himself onto the rock wall and began
climbing at a steady pace, holding the torch still in his left hand.
Forgetting my purpose I asked the
woman who it was scaling the cliff. To
which she replied, “Henry, my date.” I quickly
redirected my intentions, and introduced myself and Michael, still placing
Michael in between us. Henry had only
reached the top of the cliff when we all cheered him into the most stunning
free dive. Slicing the water, he was still
under when the torch came falling right toward where he just disappeared. The woman’s breath caught and her martini
slipped from her hand right as the torch hit the surface. But she didn’t see Henry resurface
victoriously unharmed because her martini glass was perfectly caught in
Michael’s grasp, and her eyes where fixed on his charming grin.
By the end of the night, after
dancing breathless with the handsome young Henry to ease his bruised ego from
the sight of Michael and his date flirting in a dark corner, we had his
invitation to stay at his casita up the hill at La Brisas. Henry is a lawyer for a hedge fund in England
on an extended vacation after just trading a behemoth of a deal. He brought money to blow but no friends to
blow it on.
But for the past two weeks things
have been heating up at the casita between Michael and Henry. Despite his deep pockets, the women prefer
Michael to Henry, and as I am not interested in being anyone’s woman, my presence
is another form of frustration for him.
All of the sex in Acapulco cannot satisfy Henry’s need for conquest. He is an obsesser and a collector in the
worst ways. Lately he has taken to
asking me every day to be his girlfriend even whilst dating other women. He only wants me because I don’t’ want him as anything
more than a good time. But as a proud man,
he will not ask us to leave, instead he picks on Michael.
Henry says to Michael “men drink
tequila, not cervaza.” Or he will encourage
Michael to gamble in hopes of embarrassing him in front of the women. Mostly he will make a big show of paying for the
table. But Michael will just dance with the
band or do an Elvis impression and the ladies swoon.
Tonight took the cake. In the haze at El Torino’s in the heart of Alcapuclo
City, we clunk shots of tequila with a pair of Americans over a game of poker. The mariachi were overwhelming a table next to
us and Henry was late, so I went to the bar to talk to Eduardo the bartender about
finding work. He told me I needed a work
visa to get a job at an establishment, but there were other means of making money
if I needed someone to show me the ropes. I declined.
At the table Michael and gringos were
all drunk and getting along famously, talking animatedly and making grand gestures.
It had me curious. And as I danced over to
join them, my arm was yanked and I was pulled to face Henry’s angry face. His breath reeked of tequila and he could barely
stand.
“Who was that twat you were talking to?
Are’you zleeping with him too?”
“Let go.”
“Talks to me woman!”
He shook me till I was seeing stars.
Michael’s hands appeared from nowhere and locked around Henry’s neck. He yanked him back and I flew from Henry’s grasp
into the mariachi band. The whole establishment
was watching when the gringos and Michael jumped Henry all at once. They knocked over chairs and glasses and patrons
flew out of the way. Henry was unconscious
when they lay him outside in the parking lot, and Michael and I were in a bust as
to what to do. The Americans offered us an
arrangement.
Now as I look around the messy casita,
taking in the warm salty air from the bay, I loathe packing my life into my suitcase
again. I wonder how much Michael will get
for Bohemia. As much as it pains him to let
her go, we will not need a motorcycle on a boat.