Authors: Juan Pastor
communication
in the desert. We had already heard over the
radio that a truck driven by coyotes had broken down in the
desert. The cargo of course was men, women, and children.
And since that trip was being run by the coyotes, we knew the
passenger service was “first class”. The only ones who had
food would be the three scoundrels in the cab of the truck.
The men, women, and children in the back, protected from the
scorching desert sun only by a flimsy layer of battered canvas,
had no food, and the water they may have had, if they were
lucky, would be putrid and warm, in a few plastic gallon jugs
filled at the last stop, which had been several hours ago at
some livestock watering hole.
Anyone who has not grown up in a poverty stricken
Third
World country that has been kept under the thumb of
one oppressor after another has no idea what the conditions
were like in the back of that truck. The aforementioned water
would have some form of larvae swimming in it, proof that it
was good for life forms of some type. The back of the truck
would have two dozen people crammed in it. Those people
would have almost no room to move. It would smell like very
bad body odor and stale urine. The men, who were a little
luckier than the women, could pee at the base of the canvas
tarp, or through a hole ripped in it. The bouncing of the truck
over the poorly maintained road made sure that most of the
urine got on the canvas or the floor of the truck bed. If you
had to crap, you either hoped there was a hole in the bed
floor, or that someone had an old newspaper that you could
defecate on, clean yourself with, and then toss the whole
mess out the back of the truck without opening the tailgate,
because, if you fell out of the truck, no one was going to come
back and get you. There was always someone who got sick
and threw up. There was always someone that was wrestling
with diarrhea. There were always several very young children
that had either pooped and/or peed there pants. There were
always one or two people that were so sick or old they should
never have made the trip in the first place, but someone was
always happy to take their money.
These
were the people that the recently assassinated
President said should self‐deport themselves from the United
States, once they had, against all odds, miraculously gotten
there. Most likely it was bullshit like this that had gotten him
elected, and then violently unelected.
Things
hadn’t changed much since Rosaria and I had
had our big adventure. But I was here now, and I had a lot of
people on my side now, so things had changed, but you had to
be lucky enough to get to me to find that out. I had my own
clinic now. I had patched up, put back together, healed,
treated, cured and resurrected enough people, good and bad,
from both sides of the border, that I, and my clinic, were left
alone for the most part. I wasn’t here to judge. “Let he
without sin be the first to cast the stone.” The Biblia says. I
wasn’t here to cast stones. I was here to heal.
When
they could, even the personnel that flew the
unmanned surveillance drones passed information to us about
what they were seeing, like now. I was kind of famous with
these people, for being the “Niña Latina” that killed the quail
that killed the drone. There will be more about this in the next
chapter. The top brass didn’t find it very funny, I’ve been told,
but then, that’s how you get to the top of the military, by
lacking any sense of humor whatsoever.
We
use the Citizen Band for the same reason truckers
used to (and still do). It is free and it is reliable, and once all
the yuppie a‐holes stopped using it, a relatively common‐sense
intelligent person on this end could count on the person at the
other end being relatively common‐sense intelligent.
A
cowboy is driving my rescue truck. At least he looks
like a cowboy. He likes my truck, anyway, and that’s always a
good place for a cowboy to start. At least he seems to. He
hasn’t made any derogative comment about it. It’s my rescue
truck, it isn’t white and it doesn’t have a big red cross on each
side to give someone a nice big target to aim at. It is black, and
it is a Chevy Tahoe. It is a Chevy Tahoe because that’s what
people who mean business in Mexico drive. Maybe a GMC
Yukon Denali once in a while. It isn’t a Cadillac Escalade, and it
isn’t a Lincoln Navigator because nothing in Mexico says
“mess with me, I’m a wannabe” like an Escalade or a
Navigator. Everything I just said is huffing and puffing. The
Tahoe I now have was used as an “unmarked” by a police
force just north of the border, and auctioned off when it was
one year old and had had some of its glass shot out. I bought
it, and had all the damaged glass replaced, except for one side
window with a single bullet hole in it. Here’s the problem I
have with the police. They’ll get a nice SUV like a Tahoe, nice
and sleek and black, but the dealer will put on police‐ugly
wheels as his special gift to the police. If she sees a $40,000
Tahoe with ugly black wheels that have the small lug nut cover
in the middle, everyone and her brother knows it’s an
“unmarked”. I kind of like the “badass” look. I always wanted
to go for the drug kingpin look, but Sin recommended against
it. “Sometimes it’s hip to be square.” Sin says, whatever that
means.
And
speaking of badass looks, that is how I see the
cowboy, but in a good way. How shall I describe him? He is one
of those cream of the crop blue‐eyed blondes with an
athletic/military haircut. That is, it is cut short with the slight
hint of an old‐time flat‐top. I can see his hair because his hat,
which says John Deere on it, is laying in the seat next to him.
He looks for all the world like he could be Sin’s son, for he
resembles Sin as I picture Sin looking before his adventure
with sustenance living, alcohol, tobacco, and drugs. It was Sin
who had delegated (relegated?) rescue driving duties to him. I
wanted to be my own driver, but Sin had asked me, “And how
do you treat someone critical, who you’ve just picked up, if
you are driving?” It was and still is a good point. My “cowboy”
wears no hat, no sunglasses, and his blue eyes stay focused on
the road. His focus on the road is almost too intense, as if he is
expecting an armed attack or the detonation of an improvised
explosive device in the road under our vehicle.
John Deere never talks unless asked a question, and
then
he will answer with as few syllables as possible. I’ve
always been a sucker for blue‐eyed men, but just looking at
this guy with his chiseled features and ripped muscles makes
me a little faint.
“Thanks for driving me.” I say, trying to use my
feminine wiles to seduce him into at least talking to me. I’m
starting to sound like a white woman. What are feminine
“wiles” anyway? Some things a girl keeps in her purse until she
needs to subdue a man?
“Yep.”
One syllable.
“Sin gave you this job?” I ask.
“Yep.”
Ditto on the single syllable.
“Did he see you drive somewhere before?” I ask.
“Uh‐huh.”
Two syllables. Much better. We’re gaining ground.
Let’s see if we can keep this going. “Who did you drive for?”
“Lately?” He asks.
“Yes. Lately.”
“The Prez.”
“The U.S. President? I ask.
He nods his head. We’re going backward now. No
syllables. “Which one?” I ask.
“The dead one.”
“You used to be a driver for the one that got
assassinated?” I ask. “Abhorson?”
“Uh‐huh.” He says. “Feel a wee bit safer now?
“You don’t feel guilty do you?” I ask. I proceed putting
my foot a little deeper in my mouth. “He wasn’t killed while
you were driving him anywhere. He was killed at the Mexican
President’s palace.”
“But I was S.S.”
Not the way I wanted him to open up. But I’m
intrigued. “Will you ever drive for a President again?”
“Not a live one.” He answers.
“What do you mean?” I ask.
“I drove the dead one to the airport. Now I’m going to
stay in Mexico.”
“Do your people know that?” I ask.
“They’ll figure it out soon enough.”
We both are silent for a long long time. I get the eeriest
feeling that he may drive me on forever, we will never get
where we are going. It is important that I break the trance, but
cannot summon the power to do so.
“Why have you decided to stay in Mexico?” I ask.
“Why does anyone stay in Mexico?” He answers my
question with a question.
“Have you ever been anywhere else in Central
America?” I ask.
“Guatemala.” He says it so casually.
“You’ve been to Guatemala?”
“I went to school there. For a short time.”
“Where did you live?”
“Antigua.” He says. “We attended classes there three
days a week. Two days a week we went to the University of
Guatemala in Guatemala City.”
“Did you like Guatemala?”
“Yes.” He says. “But I thought El Salvador was
prettier.”
Quiet again for the longest time. I am overcome with
feeling. Emotions stir in me that have remained dormant, it
seems, since MY days in Guatemala. Could he be one of…?
“I see you don’t have a gun.” I say softly.
“No.”
“You were in the Secret Service?”
“Yes.”
“Were you in the military?”
“Yes.” He says. He hesitates. “Don’t ask me any more
questions, about either the service or the Secret Service.”
“Okay.”
“I don’t have a gun because I don’t like guns.”
Quiet.
I watch in the rearview mirror on my side. What view I
have shows dust billowing up, golden brown, behind our
truck. In my mind is the saying,
A fly sat on the chariot wheel,
and said "what a dust I raise".
“When were you in Guatemala?” I ask.
“Why?”
“I am from Guatemala.”
“No. Really?” He says. “I thought you were Mexican.”
Time to be bold, or I’m going to lose him. A girl knows
these things. “Qué coño te hace pensar eso? (What the fuck
made you think that?)” I say with as straight a face as possible.
He lets a puff of air out the side of his smirking mouth
in an abbreviated laugh.
I’ve still got him
, I think,
putty in my
hands.
“I don’t know.” He says. “I just thought you were.” He
pauses. “I’ve got a question for you. Have you ever felt like
your soul was dead? Or at least lost? NO matter what you do,
you can’t find it anywhere?”
What the hell?
I think to myself.
Finally I find a guy who
makes me hot, and he’s got to get all deep and dark on me.
I remember what my Mama told me. “If you want to
get a man to talk, talk about what he wants to talk about. He
surely is not going to talk about what YOU want to talk
about.”
“My soul is the one thing I’ve never lost.” I say. “But I
did lose my best friend once.”
Right after I say this I realize I am already doing what
my Mama told me not to. Fortunately for me, the cowboy
decides to talk some more.
“I think someday all the world will be a desert.” John
Deere says. “And only the things that have learned to survive
in deserts will survive at all.”
“You seem to have an apocalyptic view of the future.” I
say.
“Have you ever looked at the border wall on a map or
satellite photo?” He asks.
“No.” I say.
“It looks like a snake.” He says. “Isn’t it weird that I
grew up in upstate New York looking with pride at pictures of
the Revolutionary Gadsden’s flag with the rattlesnake and the
words ‘DON’T TREAD ON ME’? At least one redneck on every
street had either a Confederate flag or a DON’T TREAD ON ME
flag. I remember one jerk neighbor who used to sue people
for a living and collected welfare and disability for injuries he
didn’t have. He flew the American flag upside down at half
mast, and right below it was the DTOM flag. He had Ron Paul
for President signs in several streetside windows. To amuse
myself, I used to think
He better hope Ron Paul doesn’t find
out,
and
He better hope Ron Paul doesn’t get elected or this
gravy train will be soon pulling into the station
.”