Authors: Juan Pastor
But
Bo likes fishing here because he catches fish that
are free, Cutts and Steelies, that have been spawned in the Rio
Colorado, spent years exploring the Pacific and its various
shores, and returned home to their native river to spawn
themselves. And unlike Salmon, which spawn only once, and
then die, Cutts and Steelies come in from their wanderings to
complete two or three spawn cycles. Bo often wondered why
the Steelhead could spawn several times, and Salmon only
once, even though Steelhead were not a true trout, but
Salmon. Even more interesting to him are the Cutthroat‐
Rainbow hybrids. Rainbows really are Steelhead that have not
yet gone migratory, so even they are Salmon, so the CuttBows
were a really true and unique hybrid of salmon and trout. Bo
had even caught a few Char in this river over the years. Char
are really Brook Trout that have gone migrant, and the very
large Arctic Char is an example. And Bo would be the first to
tell you that Char are neither trout or salmon, but another
species unique to itself.
‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐<>{}<>‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐
It is about this time Bo is fishing in this stretch of the
Rio Colorado that the members of my Conferencia Vagina
think it will be much more comfortable if they remove all of
their clothing. They are not wearing much to begin with, but
they want total freedom and comfort. It made a lot of sense
when we did it, as it was very very hot, midday was coming on,
we were probably only a kilometer away from our car, my car.
We had left our drinks in the car. The reason escapes me now.
And then we had walked just far enough to lose sight of the
car. It may even have been in full sight, but the mirages were
playing tricks with our eyes. We were all seeing beautiful lakes
that we all knew we could jump in to cool off, once we got
there, but we never got there. Someone asks where the
compass is.
“It’s in my pocket.” I say.
“What pocket?” I hear a voice ask. I honestly don’t
know who’s.
“The pocket of my dress.” I answer sharply.
“And where’s your dress?”
I feel myself, and feel only skin.
“I don’t know.” I say. I begin to feel panic. I remember
thinking, as I slide totally into the stupidity of my stupor, that
the Virgen Maria and Rosaria aren’t even real anyway, but
apparitions. How are they seduced by the desert? What is
going on here?
The Sonoran sun beats down on us, and bakes our
brains even further, and the dry air sucks the moisture away
from us as quickly as our pores manufacture it. Many things
begin to seem odd.
How is it that Rosaria and the Virgen Maria are
succumbing to the very same symptoms as the rest of us? Why
are all of us getting so tired? Why is Skyler the only one who
keeps urging us on? Why are all of us beginning to look a little
sunburned and rosey, except for Skyler, who isn’t a Latina?
Not only is Skyler not Latina, she is the whitest white woman I
have ever seen, and she continues to remain pure white.
“Sunblock.”
I say, not even realizing I have not asked a
question.
“What?” Skyler asks.
“Did you use sunblock?” I finally get the whole
sentence out. I feel drunk. It’s hard to form words. It’s getting
hard to form thoughts.
“No.” Skyler says.
“Should have…” I say.
“Never use it.” She says. “My skin won’t tan, but it
never gets sunburned either.”
“Are you some kind of freak?” Tejana asks, with a
touch of anger in her voice.
“We’ll see who’re the freaks.” Skyler says, giving back
what she gets. “You’re all so damn smart. But I was once on
vacation with the blackest of black Nigerians, and after a few
hours in the Brazilian sun, he was suffering from terrible
sunburn. His bare scalp began to peel the next day. You will all
look like chocolate lobsters soon if we don’t find the car.”
“Can’t we just sit down and rest a bit first?” Celia asks.
“No. We can’t.” Skyler says.
“Can’t we lay down for a bit?” Tejana asks.
“You know better.” I say to Tejana. But if she only
knew how tired I feel.
“You were going to show us how you survived near
death.” Skyler says to me. “Is this… some… joke?”
I can hear her voice going in and out in my head. I know
I am going to pass out soon. “Cactus.” I say.
“What?”
“We’ve got to find cactus.”
‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐<>{}<>‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐
Bo is landing his dozenth Cutt of the day when the wolf
appears.
He has been using a handmade imitation of a
particular nymph that is abundant this time of year in the Rio
Colorado. Since he has never found any of this fly made to his
satisfaction, he ties his own. The fly rod he uses is one he
constructed for himself when he was in his twenties, when he
first became a fanatic to all things flyfishing, and this rod is still
in service. He uses an Orvis reel. He likes floating fly lines that
are slightly larger, and therefore more weighted, on each end.
When one end shows sign of wear, he reverses it on the reel.
He likes long, light, tapered leaders. He doesn’t like using split
shot for weight on the leader, but tends to like to add the
weight, if he wants to add weight, to his flies as he ties them,
by using thin copper wire.
The
wolf, brightly white in the sun, approaches Bo
warily. Bo wears his handgun, and he is sure the lobo bitch is
aware of it. But the wolf seems determined to get to him in
spite of its awareness of the deadly weapon.
“Eh, la belleza.” Bo greets the wolf. “What are ya doin’
here? Lookin’ for a handout? Lookin’ for a fish?” Bo knows this
old wolf bitch would not approach someone wearing a
weapon just to get a handout. It could easily catch a trout on
its own if it really wanted to, and there would be no risk
involved in its doing so. This loba has grown old and wise by
making very careful decisions ‐ always.
Flashes of yet to be formed thoughts fire in the
synapses of Bo’s mind. He recalls Pequeña’s stories about a
white wolf that saved her. He watches the wolf watch his face
and eyes as he tries to construct some cognition of truth from
all the impulses stimulating his mind. Bo feels the eerie
sensation that this old wolf bitch is reading his mind. And the
wolf knows what he feels.
Bo,
with nose down and eyes up.
“What are you trying to tell me, old girl?” Bo asks.
She takes off, sprints toward the truck, and takes a
leap
that lands her cleanly in the bed of the truck. Bo always
leaves the tailgate down unless he’s worried about something
he’s carrying possibly sliding out of the back. He insists he gets
a higher mpg than if the “wind baffle” is up. Bo notes that the
old wolf would have probably cleared the gate if it were up
anyway. Pretty good for an old bitch.
The
wolf prances around in desperate circles in the
bed. Bo still doesn’t come. The wolf eases her body through
the open rear sliding window of the cab. She sits upright on
the passenger seat, sticks her head out the open door
window, and looks back at Bo.
“I’ll be damned.” Bo says. “Where did you learn that?”
Bo reels in his line, hooks the nymph on the hook guide
near
the cork handle of the rod. He “breaks” the rod in half at
the ferrule, slides each half of the rod into the line guides of
the other half, and takes a rubber band out of his pocket to
hold the two halves of the rod in place. It’s not really a rubber
band but one of those fabric coated stretchy bands that
women use in their hair to secure ponytails. He uses these
because they last longer. He reels the rest of the line slack into
the reel. He takes a small sack, wets it in the river, puts the
small Cutt he has kept for dinner in it, and rolls it up. He heads
toward the truck.
He
is in no hurry as he approaches his truck, nor as far
as he knows, is there reason to be. And since it will take him a
few minutes to get there, now is as good a time as any to
describe his truck. And, as anyone knows who knows
anything, the truck a man drives says volumes about the man
driving it. Bo’s truck is a five year old Chevy Silverado regular
cab 4x4 with a 6‐cylinder engine. Most “real” men like the
bigger V‐8 engines, because nothing makes a man look
manlier than stopping often at the gas station and emptying
his wallet there. The truck does not have remote power locks
and it does not have power windows. It does not have heated
power leather seats. It does not have decals on the rear
fenders that say “4X4” or “OFF‐ROAD” or “Z‐71”. It does not
have these decals because Bo doesn’t think it is worth paying
a few thousand dollars more for some auto dealer’s drunken
uncle to install them. The truck has OnStar, but it has never
been activated because Bo doesn’t think it is anyone’s
business where he or the best fishing holes are except him
and the truck, and they already know because they’ve been
there before. He could have Sirius satellite radio, but he’s
never subscribed. He either listens to NPR or that Mega‐
station in Mexicali where the DJ plays whatever he wants,
including Flamenco and classical Spanish guitar. This truck has
as little chrome as possible, because men don’t need chrome,
and the chrome on modern trucks isn’t chromium anyway, but
plastic made to look like chrome, which it successfully does for
only about two years, then it starts getting cloudy or blackish,
and that’s how you know it is time to get a new truck. It does
have the nameplate “Silverado” and this makes Bo smile every
time he reads it because it doesn’t really mean anything unless
it means a man desperately looking for silver. It is not a real
word like “desperado”, and it’s not even Espanol, because if it
was it would be “Argentado”, and who’s going to buy a truck
called an Argentado?
Bo
lays the wrapped fish near the front of the bed. He
puts his disassembled rod behind the seats along with his vest
and fly boxes. Bo looks at the old wolf bitch. She looks so
stately and regal sitting there in the passenger seat looking
out the windshield as if she is royalty waiting for her chauffeur
to take her to the ball.
“You
may be an old bitch.” He says to her. “But you
sure are a beautiful old bitch! You know that?”
The wolf looks over at him with a “let’s get the show
on the road” kind of look.
“I’ve got to think of a name for you.”
Her gaze returns to the desert, through the windshield.
“Queen? Duchess? Baroness?” Bo says. “What do you
prefer?”
The wolf continues staring out the windshield.
“Marquesa?” Bo says. “What about Marquesa?”
Bo retrieves the key from its hiding place under the
dash. He inserts it in the ignition, and turns. The engine comes
to life. The wolf seems momentarily fascinated by all the lights
that temporarily flash on the dashboard display panel. The
wolf puts its nose in the air, and sniffs. Then it puts its nose to
one of the AC outlets and breathes the cool air in as if drinking
it with her nose.
“Which way, Marquesa?” Bo asks, with a certain
haughty faked inflection in his voice, as if in the presence of
royalty.
The wolf raises her nose slightly, and her eyes return to
the windshield.
“Straight ahead it is, your highness.” Bo says.
November
1
st
. Bo feels a pang of nostalgia. He remembers that
this is the important holiday, the Day Of The Dead, or what
most Catholics the world over call All Saint’s Day. He had
broken up with his first true love on this day once, when she
showed up in a cute short little red riding hood costume, and
wanted him to dress as a wolf, and he told her it wasn’t an
appropriate thing for her to wear for that day, and he sure as
hell wasn’t going to dress as a wolf. Bo has learned to not say
so much of what he thinks anymore. He thinks it and never
turns it into sound. This used to be the day when you
remembered friends and family members who have passed
away, and try to commune with their spirits. The day before is
October 31
st
, All Saint’s Eve, or Hallowed Eve, or Hallowed
Evening, or Halloween. The Dia de Muertos ceremonies in
Mexico last from October 31
st
to November 2
nd
. And
Novemember 2
nd
is kind of a day of atonement, when others
are forgiven for their sins and trespasses, and each person
vows to be a better person, out of love and respect for
honored loved ones who have passed on. In Mexico,
Novemember 1
st
is the Dia de Muertos, everyone used to dress
as ghosts, or ghouls, or goblins, or the imagined spirits of lost
loved ones. You didn’t dress as a Goddam sexpot little red
riding hood or a lecherous wolf. But Bo has had many years to
think this over, and there have been many Halloweens when
he has wished that that girl who once loved him would show
up at his door dressed as Little Red Riding Hood.