Thursday, December 19, 2013
girls that cut along with groceries. And downtown Monterrey was our
first sight of thick city dobe neighborhoods with thousands of shifty
hipsters hanging around doorways and whores looking out of windows and
strange shops that might have sold anything and narrow sidewalks crowded
with Hong Kong-like humanity. “Yow” yelled Neal. “And all in that sun.
Have you dug this Mexican sun, Jack? It makes you high. Whoo! I want to
get on and on—this road drives me!” We wanted to stop in the excitements
of Monterrey but Neal wanted to make extra-special time to get to see
Bill Burroughs as quickly as possible and Mexico City and besides he
knew the road would get more interesting, especially ahead. He drove
like a fiend and never rested. Frank and I were completely bushed and
gave it up and had to sleep. I looked up outside Monterrey and saw
enormous weird twin peaks shaped like a wild saddle cutting clouds high
up in the sky. Now we were going beyond Old Monterrey, beyond where the
outlaws went. Montemorelos was ahead, a descent again to hotter
altitudes. It grew exceedingly hot and strange. Neal absolutely had to
wake me up to see this. “Look Jack, you must not miss.” I looked. We
were going through swamps and alongside the road at ragged intervals
strange Mexicans in tattered rags walked along with bolo knives hanging
from their rope belts and some of them cut at the bushes. They all
stopped to watch us without expression. Through the tangled bush we
occasionally saw thatched huts with African like bamboo walls. Strange
young girls dark as the moon stared from mysterious verdant doorways.
“Oh man I want to stop and twiddle thumbs with the little darlings”
cried Neal “but notice the old lady or the old man is always somewhere
around---in the back usually, sometimes a hundred yards gathering twigs
and wood or tending animals. They’re never alone. Nobody’s ever alone in
this country. While you’ve been sleeping I’ve been digging this road
and this country and if I could only tell you all the thoughts I’ve had
man!” He was sweating. His eyes were red-streaked and mad and also
subdued and tender---he had found a people like himself. We bowled right
through the endless swamp country at a steady forty five. “Jack I think
the country
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