Wednesday, December 18, 2013
An ambulance came balling through. American ambulances dart and weave
through traffic with siren blowing; the great worldwide fellaheen Indian
ambulances merely come through at eighty miles an hour in the city
streets and everybody has to get out of the way, and it does not pause
for an instant or any circumstance and flies straight through there. We
saw it reeling out of sight.The drivers were Indians. People, even old
ladies ran for buses that never stopped. Young Mexico City businessmen
made bets and ran by squads for buses and barely jumped them. The
busdrivers were barefoot and sat low and squat in T-shirts at the low
enormous wheel. Ikons burned over them. The lights in the buses were
brown and greenish and dark faces were lined on wooden benches. Downtown
Mexico City thousands of hipsters in floppy straw hats and long-lapeled
jackets over bare chests padded along the main drag, some of them selling
crucifixes and weed in the alleys, some of them kneeling in the beat
chapels next to Mexican burlesque shows in sheds. Some alleys were
rubble, with open sewers, little doors that led to closet-size bars
stuck in adobe walls. You had to jump over a ditch to get your drink. You
came out of the bar with your back to the wall and edged back to the
street. They served coffee mixed with rum and nutmeg. Mambo blared from
everywhere. Hundreds of whores lined themselves along the fronts of dark
and narrow streets and their sorrowful eyes gleamed at us in the night.
We wandered in a frenzy and a dream. We ate beautiful steaks for 48
cents in strange tiled Mexican cafeterias with marimba musicians and
wandering guitars. Nothing stopped; the streets were alive all night.
Beggars slept wrapped in advertising posters. Whole families sat on the
sidewalk playing little flutes and chuckling in the night. Their bare
feet stuck out. On corners old women cut up the boiled heads of cows and
served it on newspaper. This was the great and final city that we knew
we would find at the end of the road. Neal walked through with his arms
hanging zombie-like at his sides, his mouth open, his eyes gleaming, and
conducted a ragged and holy tour that lasted till dawn in a field with a
boy in a strawhat who laughed and chatted with us and wanted to play
catch, for nothing ever ended. We
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