Wednesday, December 18, 2013
and rotten jungle all over from hair and face to feet and toes. Of
course I was barefoot. To minimize the sweat I put on my bug-smeared
T-shirt and lay back again. A huddle of darkness on the blacker road
showed where Neal was sleeping. I could hear him snoring. Frank was
snoring too. Occasionally a dim light flashed in town and this was the
sheriff making his rounds with a weak battery and mumbling to himself in
the junglenight. Then I saw his his light jiggling towards us and heard
his footfalls coming soft on the mats of sand and vegetation. He
stopped and flashed the car. I sat up and looked at him. In a quivering
almost querulous and extremely tender voice he said “Dormiendo?”
indicating Neal in the road. I knew this meant sleep. “Si, dormiendo.”
“Bueno, bueno” he said to himself and with reluctance and sadness turned
away and went back to his lonely rounds. Such lovely policemen God
hath never wrought in America. No suspicions, no fuss, no bother: he was
the guardian of the sleeping town, period. I went back to my bed of
steel and stretched out with my arms outspread. I didn’t even know if
branches or open sky was directly above me, and it made no difference. I
opened my mouth to it and drew deep breaths of jungle atmosphere. It
was not air, never air, but the palpable and living emanation of trees
and swamp. I stayed awake. Roosters began to crow the dawn across the
brakes somewhere. Still no air, no breeze, no dew, but the same Tropic
of Cancer heaviness held us all pinned to earth where we belonged and
tingled. There was no sign of dawn in the skies. Suddenly I heard the
dogs barking furiously across the dark and then I heard the faint clip
clop of horse’s hooves. It came closer and closer. What kind of mad
rider in the night would this be? Then I saw an apparition: a
wild-horse, white as a ghost, came trotting down the road directly
towards Neal. Behind him the dogs yammered and contended. I couldn’t see
them, they were dirty old jungle dogs, but the horse was white as snow
and immense and almost phosphorescent and easy to see. I felt no panic
for Neal. The horse saw him and trotted right by his head, passed the
car like a ship, whinnied softly, and continued on through town
bedeviled by the dogs and clipclopped back to the jungle on the
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